In recent years so-called "new historians" or
"post-Zionists" like Professor Sasson Somekh of Tel Aviv University
have emerged. They have tried to downplay the importance of the
pogrom, distort the facts or deny them. Salim Fattal's book is a
brave attempt to fight back against this destructive tendency.
Arab propaganda arguments have already made use
of Sasson Somekh's Farhud revisionism. Egyptian author Jamal Ahmed
al - Rifai wrote a review article that appeared in the Arabic Hilal
magazine (May 2007) and the magazine Al - Sharq that appears in
Israel. Even more bizarre was Sasson Somekh's claim three years ago
in a lecture at Vanderbilt University in the United States that more
Muslims were killed than Jews in the pogrom:
Salim Fattal (pictured) is a Jew of Iraqi
origin who was born in Baghdad in 1930 and came to Israel in 1950. A
communist by background, he abandoned this movement in the
mid-Fifties. He studied at the Hebrew University and was a pioneer
of Israeli radio and television programmes in Arabic. In 1989 he
directed a series of documentaries about the Jews of Babylon.
The pogrom (Farhud) of Baghdad broke out in
early June 1941, after sixty days of the pro-Nazi regime of Rashid
Ali. The pogrom killed 200 Jews. It was well organised and planned.
The Jews were taken by surprise. Salim Fattal notes that the pogrom
was a critical turning point that led to the Jewish exodus from
Iraq.
In recent years so-called "new historians" or
"post-Zionists" like Professor Sasson Somekh of Tel Aviv University
have emerged. They have tried to downplay the importance of the
pogrom, distort the facts or deny them. Salim Fattal's book is a
brave attempt to fight back against this destructive tendency.
Arab propaganda arguments have already made use
of Sasson Somekh's Farhud revisionism. Egyptian author Jamal Ahmed
al - Rifai wrote a review article that appeared in the Arabic
Hilal magazine (May 2007) and the magazine Al - Sharq
that appears in Israel. Even more bizarre was Sasson Somekh's claim
three years ago in a lecture at Vanderbilt University in the United
States that more Muslims were killed than Jews in the pogrom:
"We forget that while 150 Jews were killed, at
least 200 Muslims were killed in those riots and those 200 Muslims
were killed because they wanted to protect their Jewish neighbours
and this fact should be written in letters of fire."
Salim Fattal patiently explains, in a
well-reasoned manner, how Somekh's claim is unreasonable and
unacceptable. First he asks whether anyone questioned the families
themselves who these dead Muslims are. He gives an example of
Hussein Mansour, a Druze officer who saved a 13-year-old Jewish girl
from drowning while he drowned. Mansour immediately became a hero
and a model of human relations between Jews and non-Jews. Salim says
it is a classic story of a single rescue and a single sacrifice.
"But in Baghdad in 1941 it is claimed there
were 250 such stories. Just imagine what eternal fame those brave
Arabs would enjoy in Iraq and abroad. They would be immortalized in
books, movies, theater, media..." Salim Fattal adds another layer to
this argument: "For this reason alone, no Jew or Arab can forget and
/ or erase the pogrom and 250 of the alleged Righteous Muslims." But
Somekh, according to Fattal, calls himself an Arab Jew: it seems
that "a growing Arab-Jewish identity causes the positive image of
the Arab side to cancel out the negative impact of the pogrom."
Salim Fattal here raises another comparison:
just as you can not imagine that the residents of Kafr Qassem should
forget the 1956 massacre in their village, so there is no basis for
the Farhud pogrom to be forgotten in the collective consciousness of
the Iraqi Jews. Somekh argues that continuing economic prosperity
made them forget the pogrom in the Forties, but is it conceivable to
argue that because economic prosperity Kafr Qasem residents have
forgotten their massacre? Fattal continues: "Remember, the Kishinev
pogrom became a symbol among Jews of the world. The memory of the
pogrom in Kfar Qassem became the symbol of its residents and the
residents of Israel, both Jews and Arabs. And the pogrom of Baghdad,
the most deadly of the three, is declared by Somekh as forgettable."
Here Salim Fattal confronts Somekh's claim that the pogrom was not a
historic turning point and produces other evidence that it was the
most crucial turning point for the deportation and emigration of
Iraqi Jews.
Fattal summarizes Somekh's attitude as
"sub-sensitive" to the suffering of the Jewish community, and
greatly sensitive to the suffering of the Arabs.
In another case, Fattal visited scholar Reuven
Snir, a scholar of Arabic literature who published a 'vegetarian'
study on Iraqi-Jewish literature published by the Ben Zvi Institute
(2006) failing to mention that the actual voices of the Iraqi Jews
were silenced by the repressive regime. Salim Fattal details at
length the restrictions and discriminatory laws Iraq imposed on the
Jews between 1948 to 1952, the humiliating deprivation of
citizenship and expropriation of their property.
Salim Fattal argues against an artificial 'Arab
- Jewish' identity invented by a collection of new post-Zionist
historians to rewrite history through politically-motivated flattery
and subservience to the Arabs.
Salim Fattal says that the phrase 'Arab Jew'
did not exist for the Jews of Arab countries and therefore was not
used in Iraq, nor by the people, nor the press or media, not in the
textbooks and governmental institutions. " They were 100% Jewish,"
says Fattal. "Only in Israel have we become 'half-Jews'."
In summary the book by Salim Fattal represents
the voice of the silent majority among Iraqi Jews in Israel and the
Middle East who feel a partnership with the fate of the Jewish
people. They are ready to pursue dialogue and talk peace with the
Arabs. Salim Fattal himself says he is rooted in Arab society, but
under no circumstances are the Jews willing to forget memories of
exile in the days of Ishmael.
Fighting revisionism - and this blog's part in it
*An idol in the temple of the Israeli
academy - Remembering the pogrom against the Jews of Baghdad in
1941: a struggle over Jewish identity and historical truth
(Jerusalem: Rubin Mass Press, 2010) 192 pp. by Salim Fattal
Shammai Fishman is Chairman of the Motzkin
centre for the promotion of Arabic language instruction. He has an
MA from the Department of Arabic Language and Literature from the
Hebrew University.