When Iraq had its Kristallnacht

By Sarah Ehrlich

Created 26 May 2011 - 10:12am

·         Lifestyle features
<http://www.thejc.com/lifestyle/lifestyle-features> 

For a dwindling number of Iraqi Jews, the holiday of Shavuot brings back
each year the traumatic memory of one of the worst racial attacks in modern
history. Over two days in 1941 around 800 Jews were murdered in their homes
in Baghdad by a huge mob of Muslim rioters as the British army, forbidden
from entering the city, looked on from the outskirts.

June 1 and 2 this year mark the 70th anniversary of what became known as the
Farhud ( "violent dispossession" in Arabic). As significant as
Kristallnacht, the pogrom sounded the death-knell for the oldest community
in the diaspora and was a clear demonstration of the hatred exported to the
Middle East by Hitler. The Farhud brought to an end 2,600 years of Jewish
settlement, yet little has been written about it, very little is taught in
Holocaust studies about it, and the British role has never been fully
investigated, although many survivors still bear a lifelong distrust of
Britain. 

The Jews of Iraq had been living peacefully for millennia in Baghdad since
the time of Babylon and by 1941 numbered around 150,000, over a third of the
population. Professor Heskel Haddad, now an ophthalmologist in Manhattan,
was 11-years- old at the time and recalls a happy and secure early
childhood. "We had many Jewish and Arab Muslim neighbours and we were very
friendly with them. I was Jewish in religion but I felt very much Iraqi. I
loved Iraq and I loved the people, whether Muslim or Jew."

One month before the Farhud a violent coup brought a rabidly pro-Nazi
lawyer, Rashid Ali al-Gaylani, to power, forcing the country's regent, a
friend of the Jews, to seek British protection. Rashid Ali brought to his
side the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, a man with strong ties to the Third Reich
who had fled from Palestine. Together, they indoctrinated the country with
Nazi propaganda; children in Iraqi schools were taught to praise Hitler and
that Jews were the internal enemy; Radio Berlin began regular broadcasts in
Arabic. Their aim was to rid Iraq of the British presence and turn the
country's oil reserves over to the Germans.

Next, Rashid Ali ordered Iraq's military to destroy the British RAF base in
Habbaniya, west of Baghdad –– a non-operational flight training centre
equipped with antique planes, manned by cadets. Despite the odds, the Iraqi
campaign failed drastically. With his forces humiliatingly defeated and
British ground troops advancing on the city, on May 30 Rashid Ali fled the
country leaving the capital in a vacuum. 

The regent's return was announced two days later, to the relief of the Jews
celebrating Shavuot. Their joy turned to horror however when the Muslims
mistook their celebrations to be the result of the country's downfall at the
hands of the British. A huge mob gathered, armed with knives, swords and
guns, chanting "Ketaal al yehud" ("Slaughter the Jews"). Eleven-year-old
Haddad was with his family having a festive meal. "Suddenly we heard
screams, 'Allah Allah', and shots were fired," he recalls. "We went out to
the roof to see what was happening - we saw fires, we saw people on the
roofs screaming, begging God to help them. There was a guy across the street
from our house screaming: 'Help me! Give me water!' and my father didn't let
me give him water because he was afraid that I might be killed by the gangs.
The voice of this man ended an hour or two later when I guess he died."

Salim Fattal was also 11, living with his family in the Jewish quarter of
Tatran. Like everyone, they were completely unprepared for the violence that
hit the city. "We were hiding with all the children and women in the cellar
listening to the whistling of bullets around our house," he says. "We had no
weapons and there were four men trying to defend 21 women and children with
just some sticks and knives. We knew we couldn't defend the house against
these armed invaders. It was terrifying."

Taken by surprise and with no protection, Jews either defended themselves
with whatever they could find or else bribed Iraqi policemen to protect
them. Fattal's mother found one near their alley and approached him with a
parcel of money. The policeman agreed to stay with them until midnight. 

The violence worsened during the night and the mob was soon in its tens of
thousands, targeting every Jewish home in the city. The task was easy as a
red hamsa - a traditional hand symbol - had been painted on the exteriors. 

"We could hear screams from our neighbours which was a horrifying sound,"
continues Fattal, even now crying at the memory. "All of them all started to
shout and scream and it would last for two minutes or so, and then the sound
died. Then the same sound would renew from other directions. These voices
have never left me. They were so strong, so close and so clear."

By the second day, Fattal could see from his balcony that the mob was
attacking his neighbour's house. "We could see them right under our noses
and if they had decided to attack us then, no one could have stopped them as
it was very easy for the rioters to move from roof to roof. So we called our
armed policeman from outside and begged him to fire a few bullets in the air
to scare them away. Our policeman insisted on more payment and my Uncle Naim
argued that we had already paid him generously. But our policeman kept
repeating: 'How much will you pay?' while our situation was getting more and
more threatening by the minute. Finally they agreed upon half a dinar per
bullet. Had he refused, we would have taken his gun. The policeman fired two
shots and paused and then two more shots, until he saw the rioters move
away." 

There were also accounts of Muslims acting heroically to save their Jewish
neighbours. Steve Acre was nine at the time, living with his widowed mother
and eight siblings in their landlord's house. "Our landlord was a devout
Muslim called Hajji who wore a green turban, and when the mob came, he sat
in front of them and told them that there were orphans in his house and that
if they wanted to kill us, they would have to kill him first. So they moved
on across the street." 

Acre, who has been living in Montreal for over 50 years, sees Iraqi Nazism
as the direct cause of the Farhud, but also blames the British for not
having stopped it when it was within their power. "We always felt the
British would be there in case there was a need. But unfortunately the
British ambassador at the time did not want to send the forces into Baghdad.
He just wanted to let the Iraqi army vent their frustration [at being
defeated in battle] without them being involved, which was a difficult thing
to understand later - how come nobody came to our rescue?"

Tony Rocca, who researched and co-wrote Memories of Eden with a survivor of
the Farhud, Violette Shamash, agrees. "To Britain's shame, the army was
stood down while hundreds of Jews were killed in rioting that raged over two
days with damage estimated at £13 million by today's values. Archive
material points to one man who deliberately kept the troops out. Sir Kinahan
Cornwallis, Britain's ambassador in Baghdad, for reasons of his own, held
our forces at bay in direct contradiction to express orders from Prime
Minister Winston Churchill that they should take the city and secure its
safety."

The violence was stopped only when it appeared the rioters were getting
carried away and entering Muslim areas. A curfew was called, and Iraqi
troops began shooting looters. But the death toll of around 800 and
thousands more injured is a memory Acre can never forget. "When you hear
yelling and screaming of women and children, it stays with you forever."

  _____  

Source URL:
http://www.thejc.com/lifestyle/lifestyle-features/49485/when-iraq-had-its-kr
istallnacht

 



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