The following are
excerpts from an interview with Iraqi author
Dr. Rashid Al-Khayoun, which aired on Al-Arabiya TV
on December 4, 2009.
Dr. Rashid Al-Khayoun:
When you meet an Iraqi Jew today on the streets of Europe or elsewhere,
he remembers his co-existence with his Muslim or Christian neighbor.
Interviewer:
When did the Iraqi Jews begin to lose that sense of security and tolerance?
Dr. Rashid Al-Khayoun:
When pan-Arab nationalism grew stronger in Iraq, from the late 1940's
to the early 1950's. The Jew began to be the target of deliberate affronts.
Iraqi Jews are known for their patriotism. They have nothing to do with
Israel. The issue of Israel and Zionism...
Interviewer:
But many of the Jews moved to Israel.
Dr. Rashid Al-Khayoun:
They were coerced to move.
Interviewer: Who
forced them?
Dr. Rashid Al-Khayoun:
The wave of pan-Arab nationalism within Iraq.
Interviewer: So
they thought that Israel would be better for them than Iraq?
Dr. Rashid Al-Khayoun:
They did not go [straight] to Israel. First, they went to European countries,
to Iran... They tried to find an interim region from where they could
later return to Iraq. You shouldn't be surprised if I told you that
the first to study [the possibility] of expelling the Jews from Iraq
was the so-called Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, Amin Al-Husseini.
Interviewer: What,
Amin Al-Husseini banished the Jews of Iraq to Palestine?
Dr. Rashid Al-Khayoun:
Yes, Amin Al-Husseini played a significant role, along with German Nazism,
in dragging the Jews out of Iraq.
Interviewer: How?
Dr. Rashid Al-Khayoun:
In the days of the "Farhoud" pogroms, at the end of May and
the beginning of June 1941 – which was called the revolution of Rashid
Ali Al-Kilani... This is well known. The "heroes" of the Farhoud
were Amin Al-Husseini, and some Syrian and Palestinian teachers. I am
not accusing these people of collaborating with Israel, but I am accusing
them of political stupidity. You drive out a group of peoples who are
doctors, blacksmiths...
Interviewer:
How did this happen? How did they pressure the Iraqi Jews to move to
Israel?
Dr. Rashid Al-Khayoun:
By organizing the Farhoud. This was determined by government investigations...
Interviewer:
Tell us the story.
Dr. Rashid Al-Khayoun:
Amin Al-Husseini was in Iraq then, and so were teachers from Palestine
and from Syria. They believed that every Jew was a Zionist, but they
failed to understand the mentality of Iraqi Jews. Iraqi Jews lived in
Iraq 3,500 years ago. When Cyrus, the Persian king who invaded Babylon
and occupied it, he issued a decree, inscribed on a clay cylinder –
which can be found at the British Museum. The decree stated that any
Jew who wants to return to his country, to Jerusalem, may do so. Only
very few returned. The [others] said: This is our country. At the beginning
of the modern Iraqi state, the French commander met with the dignitaries
of Iraqi Jewry – the English commander, pardon me – and talked to
them about the Balfour declaration. They said categorically: "This
is our country, and Jerusalem and Palestine are holy places, and we
go on pilgrimage there, like the Muslims go to Mecca." This was
the position of the Jews.
Interviewer: In
the case of Farhoud specifically, how can you accuse Amin Al-Husseini
and German Nazism?
Dr. Rashid Al-Khayoun:
It is not me who is making accusations. These are legal investigations
by the government. The pan-Arab nationalist incited the mob to attack
the Jews for two days.
Interviewer: On
June 1941?
Dr. Rashid Al-Khayoun:
At the beginning of May 1941 and the beginning of June. Later, there
was a decision to banish Amin Al-Husseini from Iraq because of this.
[...]
There are still people
who miss the Jews of Iraq, and are saddened by the departure of the
Christians and the Sabeans. But this is not up to the people. It is
up to the gangs – whether Al-Qaeda or the sectarian militias, whose
agenda is to drive non-Muslim Iraqis out of the country.