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The Last Jews in Baghdad; Remembering
a Lost Homeland Nissim Rejwan 6 x 9 in.268 pp. ISBN 0-292-70293-0 |
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"This book offers a rare look-detailed and vivid-into
a culture that is no longer extant. An autobiography of place, it is a
portrait of the making of a young intellectual and of Iraqi society in
the thirties and forties. It tells the story of the end of the once rooted
and vibrant Jewish community and serves as a wonderful resource for both
the scholarly historian and the casual reader."-Nancy E. Berg, Washington
University, author of Exile from Exile: Israeli Writers from Iraq
"The Last Jews in Baghdad is the real deal-it is a breath of pure spirit, oxygen, and reality in a realm of depictions and representations that rely on half-truths, false expertise, ideological axe-grinding, and a whole plethora of other ills. The book is crucial; there is nothing at all out there nearly like it."-Ammiel Alcalay, Queens College, CUNY Graduate Center, author of After Jews and Arabs: Remaking Levantine Culture |
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Once upon a time, Baghdad was home to a flourishing
Jewish community. More than a third of the city's people were Jews, and
Jewish customs and holidays helped set the pattern of Baghdad's cultural
and commercial life. On the city's streets and in the bazaars, Jews, Muslims,
and Christians-all native-born Iraqis-intermingled, speaking virtually the
same colloquial Arabic and sharing a common sense of national identity.
And then, almost overnight it seemed, the state of Israel was born, and
lines were drawn between Jews and Arabs. Over the next couple of years,
nearly the entire Jewish population of Baghdad fled their Iraqi homeland,
never to return. |
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