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Iraq should learn true tolerance from the UAE

While the Emiratis have embraced co-existence, the Iraqis have spurned their Jewish history, writes David Meyerson

April 1, 2021 12:05
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JERUSALEM, ISRAEL - MARCH 2: (ISRAEL OUT) In this handout photo provided by the Israel Government Press Office (GPO), Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu meets with he first United Arab Emirates ambassador to Israel, Muhammad Mahmoud Al Khaja on March 2, 2021 in Jerusalem, Israel. (Photo by Kobi Gideon/GPO via Getty Images)
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Looking out onto the sea of religious head coverings — a panoply of zucchettos, kippas, and taqiyahs — the desire for coexistence and tolerance was unmistakable. It was early 2019, and Abu Dhabi was in the midst of its first-ever visit from the leader of the Catholic Church, His Holiness Pope Francis. The trip was historic in innumerable ways. Its timing was also incredibly apropos, taking place during what the Emirates had dubbed the Year of Tolerance.

At the heart of the ambitious Papal schedule was a desire to cultivate interfaith dialogue among the three Abrahamic religions — Muslims, Christians, and Jews. Global news coverage focused on the signature event, a Sunday Mass in the national football stadium attended by tens of thousands of Catholics. However, it was gatherings such as the intimate ceremony held the night before Mass, attended by leaders of all three Abrahamic faiths, which highlighted the desire of the Emiratis to be truly inclusive.

The same, it would appear, cannot be said for the Pope’s most recent trip to Iraq, at least as it pertains to the embrace of all Abrahamic faiths. The moving scene of Christians and Muslims coming together in a place where, just a few years earlier, war crimes and religious atrocities had taken place was incredibly powerful. And while the visit has been rightly heralded as inspiring, uplifting, and transformative for the country’s besieged Christian community it was a missed opportunity for religious pluralism.

While the full story of religious diversity thriving in the UAE has only recently come to light, Iraq had a remarkable history of religious tolerance and coexistence. There was a time when Baghdad was seen as one of the epicenters of the Jewish world. During the first half of the 20th century, Baghdad’s Jewish community was over 130,000, or 25 percent of the city’s population. Jewish life was so intertwined with Iraqi culture that in 1947 Renée Dangor — whose grandfather had been Chief Rabbi of Baghdad — was Miss Iraq .