Become a Member
News

Search for sister 'abducted' in 1950s

September 3, 2010 09:06
Still searching: Abraham Saadia (right) and Moshe Sadia

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

1 min read

Two brothers have re-launched a 60-year search for their lost sister, whom they believe to have been abducted from Israel in the 1950s.

Israeli-born Abraham Saadia, 52, and Moshe Sadia, 59, who now live in Prestwich, Manchester, advertised in the JC for their older sister, Shoshana.

They claim she was one of hundreds of Yemeni immigrant children stolen from refugee families during Israel's Operation Magic Carpet in the 1950s. Officials were accused of making money by selling refugee children for adoption by families abroad. The Israeli government repeatedly denied involvement during high-profile public inquiries in the 1990s, which concluded that the disappearances were a result of the chaotic refugee situation at the time, rather than anything sinister.

But the Saadia family think officials at an army hospital near Ramla, who said Shoshana had died, were responsible for her disappearance because they did not provide a body or death certificate. The brothers are also suspicious of a cover-up after army officers arrested their father for two days in 1967, to investigate a claim that Shoshana was in fact evading conscription.