Position of Jews in Iran is more precarious than ever

After decades of uneasy coexistence, the Jewish community’s routine declarations of loyalty to the Iranian regime and condemnations of Israel may now not be enough to guarantee their safety: more than 700 Jews have applied for refugee status. But the Trump administration has ended nearly all refugee admissions by executive order. The signs in Iran are ominous, writes Royal Hakakian in The Atlantic:

Roya Hakakian

The Islamic Penal Code does not treat non-Muslims—or women, for that matter—as equal citizens before the law. And because the country’s official forms require applicants to state their religious affiliation, Jews and non-Shiite minorities, including Sunni Muslims, have been effectively excluded from careers in academia, the government, or the military. In other words, Iran has never had laws that discriminated specifically against Jews, but it does have laws that discriminate in favor of Shiite Iranians, especially regime supporters.

Jews have remained in Iran partly because the mullahs wanted them to. As the regime matured and grew more confident in its power, it recognized the political value of retaining a Jewish community. By the 2000s, with the rise of a new cadre of clerics into the ranks of leadership, the existence of Jewish Iranians inside the country became an important symbol, especially in contrast with the absence of Jewish life in other Muslim countries in the region. In 2003, the reform-minded Mohammad Khatami became the republic’s first president to visit a synagogue. This new revolutionary generation boasted of the Jewish presence in Iran as evidence of its Islamic tolerance. It liked to showcase Iran’s Jewry to Western governments, which is why the sole Jewish representative from the Iranian Parliament, the Majles, has on several occasions been included in Iran’s delegation to the annual United Nations General Assembly. Iran’s Jews became the regime’s principal defense against accusations of anti-Semitism—even as some leaders notoriously questioned the veracity of the Holocaust. After all, how could the republic be anti-Jewish if Jews felt safe enough to live there?

Jewish survival within the world’s most overtly anti-Zionist nation-state reveals how keenly aware Tehran is of what sways global public opinion. But it also says a great deal about how indiscriminate brutality toward dissidents and minorities creates a common bond among all those who are not regime supporters. If Jews suffer at the hands of unjust, authoritarian rulers, they also know that their experience is shared by many, many non-Jewish Iranians. This nuance is lost on most Western observers. Like with other paradoxes of post-1979 Iran—such as the existence of perhaps the world’s most dynamic feminist movement, in a country where gender inequality is ruthlessly policed state policy—Iran’s Jews are indeed second-class citizens, but of a regime that makes second-class citizenship the norm for all except its loyalists. The suffering that Jews experience is common to so many others that its universality has created a measure of equality in the face of misery.

This status quo was shaken by the deadly October 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel, which led to the war in Gaza and a wider confrontation between Israel and Iran’s regional ally in Lebanon, Hezbollah. Tehran’s customary anti-Zionist theatrics were swapped for actual drones and missiles fired at Israel the following April, in response to Israel’s attack on Iran’s consulate in Damascus; in turn, Israel retaliated by taking down Iran’s air-defense systems. Amid these heightened tensions, the grinding reality that had defined Jewish life in Iran for more than four decades took on a new, more menacing urgency. In an attempt to extend the old order by invoking Khomeini’s original formulation of Jewish–Iranian relations, Iran’s chief rabbi, Yehuda Gerami, issued a statement condemning Israel’s attack as “cruel, aggressive, and inhumane” and lamenting “the martyrdom of a number of our dear countrymen at the hands of the Zionist regime” (my own translation). He tried to dispel suspicions of Jewish disloyalty and proclaimed solidarity with fellow Iranians: “Iranian Jews, as a part of the great nation of Iran, condemn these attacks and stand by their countrymen.”

The events of the past month have cast a perilous shadow over Iran’s Jewry, reawakening the fear that had followed Habib Elghanian’s execution and an urgency about the need to leave Iran. The chances of doing so, however, have greatly diminished since January of this year, when President Donald Trump ended nearly all refugee admissions into the United States by executive order. Some 14,000 members of persecuted minorities in Iran—among them more than 700 Jews—had registered with HIAS, originally known as the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society, a major refugee-resettlement organization that has facilitated the passage of thousands of Jews and other minorities into the United States; none of these applicants for refugee status has been able to leave Iran. Mark Hetfield, HIAS’s president, hopes that the Trump administration might yet make an exception. “Given their increasing vulnerability, and President Trump’s expressed commitment to religious freedom,” he told me in a recent interview, “we pray that he would expand their escape route.”

The signs in Iran are ominous—and the pleas from Iranian Jewish elders may now go unheard. The community’s old talisman may no longer hold its charm. An overlooked victim of the 12-day military operation against Iran is Iranian civil society, especially its minorities, particularly Jewish Iranians, who were already at risk. Since the war, their conditions have infinitely worsened—a fact that should lead the Trump administration to reconsider its refugee ban. The United States took on a moral responsibility for Iran’s persecuted citizens when it became a combatant against their oppressive regime.

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Trump ban may be keeping out 700 Iranian Jews

New Pinto video: the Jews of Yemen

After his video on the Jews of Morocco, Israeli tour guide and advocate Oren Pinto homes in on the Jews of Yemen, who for centuries lived in isolation.(With thanks: Suzie)

Oren begins in Rehovot where Yemenite Jews today have an impressive cultural centre. They settled in two districts of the city, Sha’arayim and Marmorek.

Oren takes us through the troubled history of the Jewish minority of Yemen. It is an ancient community built on the incense trade until the destruction the temples in Jerusalem.  Yemenite Jews are very pious and have umpteen synagogues. They pride themselves on speaking, and spelling, perfect Hebrew.

Persecution drove them to seek advice from Maimonides but did not prevent them from developing a rich religious, cultural and artistic heritage. Today Yemenite influences can be felt in Israeli food, song and dance.

Jewish journalist was arrested in Lebanon

Dan Brotman’s passion is to travel to unusual places, including to countries where Jews are not welcome. This ex-IDF soldier has a multitude of passports, yet his arrest in Lebanon received almost no media attention. He tells his story to the Jerusalem Post:

Brotman spends his free time “going to different parts of the world, telling the stories of ordinary people,” showing people, for example, why we shouldn’t be afraid of Iran, because “we should understand that the people of Iran are very much against their government and deserve a lot of sympathy.”

Of the many stories that Brotman shares on his social media, he goes out of his way to look for the Mizrachi Jewish component – something slowly being lost to time and the rewriting of history after most Jews were purged from the Middle East.


In Damascus, under the new government, he spent time with one of the country’s six remaining Jews. In Lebanon, he visited a Jewish cemetery, and in Iran, he filed formal permission with the regime to spend time with the Jewish communities of Isfahan and Tehran.

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A corner of Bat Yam that is forever Jewish Libya

It’s an unassuming site in the Tel Aviv suburb of Bat Yam. Its  basement entrance is so discreet that it is easy to miss. But once you are through the door, the building opens out into an airy 400 sq metre space. This is the Or Shalom museum,  named after a Libyan rabbi, and dedicated to the memory of an extinct community.

Libya had 38,000 jews in 1948. Today not a single Jew lives there.

The 2,000-year-old community in Tripolitania and Cyrenaica preceded Islam and the Arab conquest. Jews lived in troglodyte caves among the Berbers in southern Libya.

Troglodyte caves in southern Libya

In the 16th century the community was re-invigorated by an influx of Jews fleeing the Spanish inquisition but were still subject to the dhimmi rules under Islam. Libya became an Italian colony in 1911. The Jews  acquired more rights and embraced modernity.

       

Jews in traditional costume and embracing modernity under the Italian colonial administration

But the fascist regime under Mussolini ushered in anti-Jewish laws in 1938. During WW2 Libya became a battlefield and its residents suffered grievously from bombing. The dreadful camp at Giado took a heavy toll on its Jewish inmates : 600  died of typhus or starvation.

Several hundred Jews of British nationality were deported to Bergen Belsen. Some did not survive. At least one man froze to death when the Nazi guards turned a hose of icy water on him.

in 1945, a pogrom claimed the lives of 130 Jews in the Tripolitania area. A second outbreak of deadly violence in 1948 led to the exodus of almost all Libyan Jews.  The remaining  six thousand Jews fled after a violent backlash to the Arab defeat in the Six Day war.

The museum is the brainchild of one man, a sprightly and charming gentleman by the name  of Pedatzur Benattia. Pedi Benattia has never lived in Libya, but he has dedicated himself to collecting and preserving what he could of Libya’s Jewish heritage. He has an impressive collection of documents and photos, but his insatiable thirst for information has led him to dispatch visitors to Libya to find out more, although in recent times Libya has been torn apart by conflict and is inhospitable to Jews. Several Israelis with European passports have been asked to take pictures. The journalist Tzur Shezaf took with him a TV crew and encountered no problems. Rafram Haddad was not so lucky. He was imprisoned for five months by the Gaddafi regime .

The museum began life in 2005 as an offshoot of the larger and  better-known Museum of Libyan Jewry at Or Yehuda. Or Shalom is now independent and is supported by the Israeli government. It is undergoing refurbishment, but the 7 October attacks and war have delayed its formal opening.

The museum is composed of several chambers. The first replicates religious life: paper maché figures lean over a Torah scroll. The ark is a replica of the one in the city of Zliten. The scrolls,  housed in elaborate tiks, were brought over in the mass aliya of 1948 when 90 percent of Jews left Libya for Israel.

The museum boasts a replica of a Libyan synagogue,  featuring a copy of the ark at Zliten

The next chamber demonstrates the trades practised by Libyan Jews: ostrich feathers were exported to Europe to adorn ladies’ hats. Jewish craftsmen were involved in metalwork –  gold, silver, copper,They fashioned wooden or leather objects for ritual or everyday purposes.

Isacco Barda was a silversmith and the museum boasts a photo of his shop. The museum  has examples of intricate lacework, embroidered by the women. They wore ceremonial gilets  or zdad, embroidered with silver thread,  and outsize earrings.

(more…)

Islamists are still fighting Hitler’s war against the Jews

It is hard to extract the greatest insights from a 94-page report into Islamic antisemitism by Daniel Allington, a reader in social analytics at King’s College London, for the Counter Extremism Group. It is all important. While the document is intended to alert British policy-makers to the dangers of Islamism in the UK, the report delves into the roots of Muslim antisemitism, the influence of European anti-Jewish hatred on the Muslim world and the lingering legacy of Nazism. Read it all!

The Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin al-Husseini, meeting Hitler in November 1941

As this study has shown, genocidal and conspiracist antisemitism — as opposed to mere denigration and persecution of Jews, such as was practised in much of the Muslim world for over a thousand years — is ideologically ‘baked into’ several forms of Islamism, especially with regard to the way in which their adherents understand the Israel-Palestine conflict, and the exaggerated importance which they place upon that conflict.

Furthermore, this study has additionally shown that the specific forms of genocidal and conspiracist antisemitism adopted by Islamists are both genetically related to and ideologically distinct from older forms of antisemitism in the Muslim and Western worlds, having been forged from a variety of influences, both Western and Islamic, with the latter including not only longstanding traditions but also anachronistic inventions, such as the ahistorical fantasy of an ancient religious war between Muslims and Jews.

Recent though it is in origin, the conspiracist and genocidal antisemitism of today’s Islamists predates the foundation of the State of Israel, having emerged through a confluence of interests between the Mandate-era Mufti of Jerusalem and the Austro-German Nazi regime. Indeed, far from being a product of the Israel-Palestine conflict, their antisemitism appears to have played a major role in creating that conflict, by preventing the acceptance of a two-state solution by Arab leaders in 1947.

Moreover, the influence of Nazism and the Protocols did not end with the Second World War, as Nazi personnel continued to be involved in propaganda (and even in military action) for some years, and the Protocols were not only published in the region but cited as an authority in the Hamas Charter.

The Muslim supremacist character of much ‘pro-Palestinian’ discourse, as well as the genocidal ideology of some of the extremist organisations involved in the conflict, are unfortunately misrecognised by many in the Western world, in part because of the persistence of counter-accusations of genocide and an ‘anti-colonial’ framing for antisemitic actions, both of which have their origins in Nazi propaganda.

Thus, while Küntzel analyses the 1947-1948 war as an ‘aftershock’ of the Second World War one could go further, seeing the extremist movements which the Nazis nurtured and inspired in the Muslim world — some of which have since taken control of states or state-like entities — as the last remnants of the Axis, still fighting Hitler and al-Husseini’s war against the Jews. Paradoxically, it is this Nazi heritage which has enabled Islamists to build bridges with sections of the Western left, whose history of demonising and delegitimising Israel combines a superficially compatible opposition to Western imperialism and colonialism with specifically left-wing forms of conspiratorial antisemitism dating back to the 19th century.

Read document in full

Melanie Phillips: the need to acknowledge Muslim antisemitism (JNS News)

How a rootless Iraqi writer found ‘home’ in food

Linda Dangoor was exiled from her native Iraq because she was Jewish. She tried hard to put down roots in all the countries she had lived in, but has found ‘home’ in the food she cooks. Her new book From The Tigris to the Thames is part memoir, part cookbook. Interview in the Jewish Chronicle by Elisa Bray:

“The fact that my motherland rejected me because I was Jewish has left a scar,” says food writer Linda Dangoor. “I just couldn’t fathom why.”

Uprooted from her birthplace of Baghdad in Iraq aged ten, after a military coup overturned the monarchy, Dangoor and her family lived for two years in Beirut before emigrating to London. When the Iraqi government threatened to withdraw their citizenship and seize their property if they were not to return, she became exiled with her family.

After two years in Beirut, they moved to London to be near other family members who had settled there. Dangoor attended school here, and then, at her mother’s suggestion, studied art at the Central School, before working as a designer in the capital. A romance took her to Paris in 1979 where she stayed until returning to London in 1994.

It is this journey which has led Dangoor to write a memoir blended with a cookbook From the Tigris to the Thames, encompassing the recipes of her motherland, London, Paris and from Ibiza, where her parents took her for a holiday.

While some people were happy to leave Iraq, that was not the case for Dangoor. And ever since, she has written down her feelings of being “rootless”, trying so hard in each country to be part of it. “But it just didn’t work,” she sighs.

“My preoccupation with leaving home and trying to find a place I could call home has been with me for so many years,” she says. “Even going to France and feeling French and feeling part of that country and culture, I still felt rootless. It’s been rumbling away in my mind.”

When they first came to England in the Swinging 60s, they loved everything new: the TV adverts, the food, the sweets – even the rain, which initially had felt novel. But their enthusiasm started to wane. “After a while, it really did feel that I was in exile.”

She would have been a writer, because she so loved the Arabic language, but living in the UK they were encouraged by their parents to speak English and let their mother tongue go. Gradually it faded from their daily lives.

“That was my first loss,” she says. “When you lose your home and your language, that’s quite a lot of loss.” But they kept their roots alive through their daily cooking.

“When you cook, it’s like an act of resistance, because you’re cooking dishes that remind you of home. Yet it’s subconscious. Cooking is the only last thing that lasts, because you cook every day. It is an act of preserving, and because you do it every day, it continues, and it also evolves.”

Read article in full

Lawee grandson urged to sue for restitution of frozen property

Ezra and Khedouri Lawee were forced to leave Iraq in the 1950s, abandoning their home, which became the French embassy. Ezra’s grandson Philip Khazzam is suing the French government for unpaid rent after Saddam Hussein directed France to pay his regime instead of the rightful Jewish owners.  Jewish property has been frozen, but not expropriated and we are told that Khazzam has been ‘given the green light’ by ‘past Iraqi prime ministers’, presumably to sue for restitution. This would set an important precedent, as no Iraqi Jew has yet gone to law to get their property back. Jerusalem Post interview with Khazzam:

Beit Lawee became the French embassy in Baghdad in the 1960s.

“It’s acknowledged by the French government that the property is in our name, but it’s a frozen property,” Khazzam continued. All such properties were frozen, not expropriated, as Hussein took over, meaning that part of the Iraq government was responsible for all the properties, and took a cut of the rent.

The real problem is not the Iraqi side, Khazzam said, but the French government, which rented the property at a very low price, “maybe a tenth of what it should have gone for.”This made it a case for “unjust enrichment, France enriched themselves by 90% of the rent,” said Khazzam.T he property has been valued by Iraqi certifiers, and the unpaid rent is estimated at more than $20-million and counting.

He believes the reason they never contacted us is because they knew if they took over, we’d charge them the full rent. “It may have been somewhat okay from an individual, but from a country? They took advantage of a family,” he said.

Various Iraqi prime ministers have given a nod to us to unfreeze the property, no one is standing in our way, but there is a lot of red tape when it comes to unfreezing properties in Iraq.”

Khazzam could go down the legal route for unfreezing but his hope is that France will “pay the back rent and purchase the property.”

“We have no interest in renting it to the French,” he said.

The slight advantage in the case is that the property was never sold or transferred, and remains in the family’s name.

Read article in full

More about the Beit Lawee case

5 March is a red-letter day for Jews of Iraq 

Scores of discriminatory laws were passed against Iraqi Jews

 

Algerian-Jewish refugee in France: ‘We were seen more as Arabs’

Despite a mostly happy childhood, Madeleine Sabbagh experienced some antisemitism from her French settler classmates in Algeria. She explains to the Jewish medium Tenoua  the circumstances of her arrival in France – a shock on many levels.

In this school photo Madeleine is in the third row, third from the left

What was the situation like for your Jewish family in Algeria? Did you experience anti-Semitism?

I grew up in a modest Jewish family. We weren’t religious, but traditions were important, especially the holidays of Passover and the Day of Atonement, Yom Kippur. Since the age of 5, I’ve always fasted; it’s a reminder of our ancestors. Life wasn’t easy on a daily basis; we weren’t rolling in money. My father was a tailor; he sometimes traded fabrics for boiled eggs so we could have something to eat. My brother didn’t have schoolbooks like his classmates… we couldn’t even afford those kinds of things.

I remember some girls saying to me, “You’re pretty for a Jew. Are you really Jewish?” I heard that two or three times. I was about ten years old. At the time, there was a sort of separation between Jews and Catholics, whom were called settlers. We didn’t really socialize, except at school, but it didn’t go much further than that. We were almost closer to the Arabs. We had more similar ways of life, even though our cultures were different. I remember a friend at the Mostaganem high school calling another girl a “dirty Jew.” The principal didn’t react; that was how it was at the time. The feeling of being Jewish in a world that rejected us was even harder to live with than poverty.

How was your departure for France organized?

I left around May 1962. There was one boat a day, so everything was done in a hurry. On July 5th, Independence Day, there was a terrible massacre in Oran, 80 kilometers from Mostaganem. That day, while a crowd from the Muslim suburbs was celebrating independence in the European neighborhoods of the city center, everything went downhill.

A large number of French people were lynched, captured, mutilated, massacred. Some were beaten to death, others thrown into the lake. We weren’t expecting it at all; it was supposed to be a day of celebration. A real massacre. Many people we knew died that day. The Arabs entered homes and killed people in their homes. This caused a wave of panic among the French people of Oran. Many fled in a hurry afterwards. We still don’t know exactly how many died. But for us, the pieds-noirs, that day remained a shock, a trauma.

Fortunately, I had already returned to France to take my baccalaureate. I made several stops before arriving in Paris, staying with those who were willing to welcome me. I stayed with aunts and cousins, all over the place, with my belongings. My parents arrived six months later. They tried to save what they could, but it was complicated, and we were all affected by the deteriorating situation in Algeria.

How did you experience it at the age of 19?

Leaving also meant leaving those you loved. My grandmother died just before I left, and my grandfather was left alone. When I went to see him, I knew it was the last time. He was in the courtyard calling my name; we both knew it was over. It was heartbreaking to leave, to leave my family, to no longer be able to visit my grandparents’ graves. It’s a void, a pain that you carry for a long time. My grandfather died shortly after I left. That’s how it was; you couldn’t take everything with you; you left everything behind, including your roots.

How were you received in France? What life change did it represent for you?

We were very badly received n France, where there was still an anti-Semitic climate. There was neither sympathy nor indulgence. We were seen more as Arabs than as French here. We were eligible for assistance for repatriates, but we had to queue for hours. With that money, I was able to buy a coat and fur-lined gloves, because I had nothing to wear, especially not warm clothes. It was very cold in Paris, it was raining, it was grey. We got a violent shock on all levels.

Read article in full (French)

JIMENA: Once again, Zionism is being used to persecute MENA Jews

The arrest of dozens of Jews in Iran as alleged spies for Israel is a pattern MENA Jews know only too well, states JIMENA in a powerful Instagram post:

Hundreds arrested in Iran under the pretext of “Zionist collaboration.” Some reportedly include Jews.
This isn’t new—it’s a pattern we know all too well. Across the Middle East and North Africa, Jews have long been scapegoated during times of war with Israel.
In Iraq, Egypt, Libya, Syria, Yemen—and now Iran—accusations of Zionism have been used to justify persecution, imprisonment, exile, even execution.

As of June 30, 24 Iranian Jews remain in prison, while approximately 11–14 have been released. According to Ynet, several were released on bail, though many others remain in custody.

At JIMENA, we’ve seen this pattern before—many of us or our families lived it, and we are deeply concerned.

Across the Muslim-majority Middle East and North Africa, governments have repeatedly used wars with Israel to criminalize Jewish identity through discriminatory laws:

  • Iraq (1948–1951): Declared Zionism a capital crime; Jews were executed or expelled after renouncing citizenship.
  • Egypt (1956): Jews labeled “enemy nationals,” arrested, expelled, and coerced into surrendering assets.
  • Syria (1967–1973): Blocked emigration, froze property, and detained Jews on espionage charges.
  • Libya (post‑1967): Revoked Jewish citizenship, seized property, and expelled the entire community.
  • Yemen/Houthi areas: Enforced exit bans, imprisonment, and bans on Jewish religious practice.
  • Iran (1979–today):

In 1979, Habib Elghanian, a leading Jewish philanthropist, was among the first civilians publicly executed by the new regime on trumped-up charges of “Zionist treason.”
He was one of many Jews arrested, tortured, and in some cases executed in the years that followed.
In 1999, thirteen Jews from Shiraz and Isfahan were imprisoned for alleged ties to Israel.

See JIMENA’s  Instagram post 

‘Prominent Iraqi Jews’ are among visitors to Nahum’s shrine

Several dozen Jewish visitors have paid a visit to the shrine of Nahum at al-Kosh in Kurdistan since its restoration by the Alliance for the Restoration of Cultural Heritage. The Times of Israel reports:

The restored shrine of the Prophet Nahum is cared for by Christians (photo: Adam Tiffen)

Neglected for decades and threatened by war, the tomb of Nahum quietly reopened to visitors three years ago following a secretive restoration led by an American preservation group. Since then, a significant number of Jewish visitors are believed to have made the pilgrimage to the ancient shrine, including Israelis, despite its sensitive location.

According to Adam Tiffen, deputy director of the Alliance for the Restoration of Cultural Heritage, who led the original restoration effort, among those who have made the journey to the tomb and adjacent synagogue since it reopened in 2022 are members of prominent Iraqi Jewish families from the country’s once-thriving community.

“While we do not maintain a formal registry, we estimate that several dozen Jewish visitors have likely made the journey since the site was restored,” he told The Times of Israel via email. “Visits are possible, but they must be arranged in advance due to the site’s sensitive location and custodial oversight by the local government.”

Read article in full

More about al-Kosh

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This website is dedicated to preserving the memory of the near-extinct Jewish communities, of the Middle East and North Africa, documenting the stories of the Jewish refugees and their current struggle for recognition and restitution.

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Jewish Refugees from Arab and Muslim Countries

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forgotten Jewish refugees - updated daily.