Israel relaunches effort to register Jewish losses

The Souery family in Cairo, 1933 (courtesy: Suzy Vidal)

The Israeli government appears to be renewing its efforts to register losses suffered by Jews whose property and assets were seized or abandoned in Arab countries. Dr Avi Bitzur, director-general of the Pensioners’ Affairs Ministry, told Pirlee Shahar yesterday on Israeli radio that he wanted to do a complete inventory of losses. He re-stated much of what he said in this Jerusalem Post article from 2009. Let’s hope that this time, the campaign really takes off (with thanks: Sylvia):

The Pensioners’ Affairs Ministry has created a new department over the past two weeks that will begin to collect specific claims by Jews who lost their property when they left Arab countries during the 20th century. More than 850,000 Jews fled or were expelled from Arab lands and Iran, most after Israel’s founding in 1948. Estimates of the value of the property they were forced to leave behind are hard to come by, ranging from as low as $16 billion in known assets to as high as $300b. when estimates of the value of their abandoned real estate are included. “Israel has talked about this on and off for 60 years. Now we’re going to deal with it as we should have all along,” said Dr. Avi Bitzur, director-general of the Pensioners Affairs Ministry.

The ministry established a department with an initial staff of five to begin to collect the claims of the Jewish refugees, about 80 percent of whom settled in Israel. Bitzur will host a panel on the issue at next week’s Herzliya Conference, and over the next two weeks hopes to pass a decision through the cabinet mandating discussion of Jewish refugees whenever the question of Arab refugees are raised in peace negotiations.

According to Bitzur, who is also a political scientist at Bar-Ilan University, the new effort comes to fill a gap in awareness both in Israel and abroad. “The UN has dealt at least 700 times with Arab refugees and their property, but not once with the issue of Jewish property,” he says. It’s also time for Israelis to get to know better the history of the Jews of Arab lands, who make up some 60% of the ethnic ancestry of Israeli Jews.

“It’s time to deal with this amongst ourselves,” says Bitzur. “I say that as a citizen, as a father and as an academic. We should know the history of the pogrom in Baghdad in 1941, of the Libyan Jews who ended up in Bergen Belsen. It’s time for people to know that there was this part of the Jewish people and its history was brought to an end.”

In late 2007, Baghdad-born American Jew Heskel M. Haddad, representing the World Organization of Jews from Arab Countries, called on the Israeli government to begin to seriously examine the issue of Jewish property left behind in Arab lands. At the time, Haddad told The Jerusalem Postthat WOJAC had a staggering 100,000 square kilometers in property deeds.

To hear the
Israel Radio interview (Hebrew) with Dr Bitzur scroll down to ‘Yuman Ezrahi’ on 25.12.11 at 00.12.21

2 Comments

  • At least two of the Souery brothers came to Melbourne and their children were either very young when they came, or were born in Australia. By the time I met the children, they spoke French to their parents and English at school.

    Hels

    Reply
  • First and foremost, thanks for including the picture of my wonderful Souery family: dispersed thanks to Nasser, the majority went to israel. They are all gone now but by extraordinary luck I went to see them when we left that country (Egypt).
    As for those who fight for our rights, I congratulate them. I want nothing to do with these people (Egyptians) not until they express regrets.Is it so hard to do?
    As I said before who will give us back our health and mental security? It has no price. "NOT ALL THE PERFUMES OF ARABIA"…can wash away the pain, even today, at this very moment.All we have left are the pictures and these we could get out because of the bachsheesh to the customs officers.
    suzy vidal

    Reply

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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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