Become a Member
Community

City of London service is a tearful reminder of Iraqi massacre

Bevis Marks commemorates 50th anniversary of killing of Baghdad Jews

February 22, 2019 12:46
Bevis Marks

By

Simon Rocker,

simon rocker

1 min read

As a spectacle in barbarity, it was hard to match, even by modern Middle East standards. On January 27 1969, hundreds of thousands of Iraqis poured into Baghdad’s main square to gawp at the bodies of nine Jews strung up on scaffolds erected at the command of Saddam Hussein’s regime.

It was the “beginning of the end of the last chapter” of Iraqi Jewry, said Sabah Zubaida, president of the S & P Sephardi Community, at a ceremony at Bevis Marks Synagogue in London on Tuesday to mark the 50th anniversary of the killings.

The candle he lit was not only in memory of the first of the nine, but also for his father, Dadoud Sassoon Zubaida, one of several other Jews who died in Saddam’s prisons during that “sad and terrifying time”.

Recalling the images in the square, he said: “Believe it or not, they even had picnics underneath the bodies.”