Become a Member
Letters

The JC letters page, 8th December

Lyn Julius, Matthew de Lange, Jonathan Black, Barry Hyman, David Benson, David Finlay, Raymond Apple, and Brenda Inns (née Noble) share their views with JC readers

December 8, 2017 11:57
Photo: Getty Images
5 min read

Painful memory that must be honoured

After 70 years since the UN General Assembly voted on the Partition Plan, adopted by 33 votes to 13 with 10 abstentions, leading to the miraculous rebirth of Israel, it is rightly seen as one of the most momentous events in the history of the Jewish people.

Beginning on 30 November 1947, the day after the UN vote, vicious anti-Jewish riots broke out in Syria, Bahrain and Aden, where 87 Jews were killed. A mass exodus followed, mostly to Israel. To preserve the stories of these Jewish refugees, the Israeli Knesset passed a law in 2014 designating 30 November as Memorial Day for Jewish Refugees from Arab countries and Iran.

The Arab states were never made to honour the last few words of the Balfour Declaration: that nothing be done to prejudice “the rights and political status of Jews in any other country” — 850,000 Jews fled as a result of violence and state-sanctioned persecution. Only 4,000 remain.

My organisation, Harif, celebrates the refugees’ successful resettlement in Israel and the West, and their exodus as a liberation from tyranny, but it will also remember their painful uprooting.