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{{Short description|Term for Jews originating from the Arab world}} | |||
{{Merge|Musta'arabi Jews|date=March 2008}} | |||
{{See also|Maghrebi Jews|Mizrahi Jews|Musta'arabi Jews}} | |||
{{pp-30-500|small=yes}} | |||
{{Jews and Judaism sidebar}} | |||
{{Arab culture}} | |||
'''Arab Jews''' ({{langx|ar|اليهود العرب}} ''{{transl|ar|DIN|al-Yahūd al-ʿArab}}''; {{langx|he|יהודים ערבים}} ''{{transl|he|Yehudim `Aravim}}'') is a term for ] living in or originating from the ]. Many ] Arab countries in the decades following the founding of ] in 1948, and took up residence in Israel, ], the ] and ]. The term is controversial and politically contested in Israel, where the term "]" was adopted by the early state instead. However, some ] of Arab origin actively elect to call themselves Arab Jews.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Schroeter |first1=Daniel J. |title="Islamic Anti-Semitism" in Historical Discourse |journal=The American Historical Review |volume=123 |issue=4 |page=1179 |url=https://academic.oup.com/ahr/article-abstract/123/4/1172/5114705 |quote="While a small group of anti-Zionist Mizrahi intellectuals and activists who defined themselves as “Arab Jews” reject the portrait of eternal anti-Semitism in the Islamic world, the idea that the flight of Middle Eastern and North African Jews from Islamic countries was primarily a consequence of the longer history of Muslim anti-Semitism has continued to shape discussions in the public sphere, and has influenced representations of Muslim anti-Semitism outside of Israel." |access-date=2021-09-21 |archive-date=2021-09-20 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210920231121/https://academic.oup.com/ahr/article-abstract/123/4/1172/5114705 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name=Tal2017>{{cite journal |last1=Tal |first1=David |title=Between Politics and Politics of Identity: The Case of the Arab Jews |journal=Journal of Levantine Studies |date=2017 |volume=7 |url=https://levantine-journal.org/product/politics-politics-identity-case-arab-jews/ |issue=1 |quote=proponents of the Arab Jew seek to separate the ethnic from the national, the Jew from the Zionist, and realign ethnic identities: Arabs, who include Jews and Muslims, vs. Ashkenazim/Zionists. They do so by creating an “imagined community,” by rejecting an ascriptive identity based on an ethnic/national juxtaposition, and by suggesting their own kind of identity, a self-ascriptive identity that separates the ethnos from the nation. They have failed in their mission, as the majority of Jews of Middle Eastern and North African origin reject the Arab Jew definer as representing their own identity." |access-date=2021-09-19 |archive-date=2021-09-20 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210920211952/https://levantine-journal.org/product/politics-politics-identity-case-arab-jews/ |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name=Shenhave2012>{{cite journal |last1=Shenhav |first1=Yehouda |last2=Hever |first2=Hannan |url=https://people.socsci.tau.ac.il/mu/yshenhav/files/2013/05/Shenhav-and-Hever-Arab-Jews-after-structuralism.pdf |title=Arab Jews' after structuralism: Zionist discourse and the (de) formation of an ethnic identity. |journal=Social Identities |date=2012 |volume=18 |issue=1 |pages=101–118 |doi=10.1080/13504630.2011.629517 |s2cid=144665311 |access-date=2021-09-20 |archive-date=2021-09-20 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210920213140/https://people.socsci.tau.ac.il/mu/yshenhav/files/2013/05/Shenhav-and-Hever-Arab-Jews-after-structuralism.pdf |url-status=live }} quote:"it is not surprising that very few Jews of Arab descent, in Israel, would label themselves ‘Arab Jews’. It has turned out to be the marker of a cultural and political avant-garde. Most of those who used it, did so in order to challenge the Zionist order of things (i.e., ‘methodological Zionism’; see Shenhav, 2006) and for political reasons (Levy, 2008)</ref><ref name=Tamari>{{Cite web |title=Ishaq al-Shami and the Predicament of the Arab Jew in Palestine |author=Salim Tamari |publisher=] |page=11 |access-date=2007-08-23 |url=http://www.jerusalemquarterly.org/pdfs/predicament.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928031156/http://www.jerusalemquarterly.org/pdfs/predicament.pdf |archive-date=2007-09-28}}</ref> | |||
Jews living in Arab-majority countries historically mostly used various ] as their primary community language, with ] used for ] and cultural purposes (literature, philosophy, poetry, etc.). Many aspects of their culture (music, clothes, food, architecture of synagogues and houses, etc.) have commonality with local non-Jewish Arab populations. They usually follow ], and are (counting their descendants) by far the largest portion of ]. | |||
{{See also|Mizrahi Jews|Arab|Antisemitism in the Arab world|Jewish exodus from Arab lands|Arabization}} | |||
Though ], in an interview as late as 1972 with ], explicitly referred to Jews from Arab countries as "Arab Jews",<ref>Yehouda A. Shenhav, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230121051824/https://books.google.com/books?id=k7FoMi-qY4kC&printsec=frontcover |date=2023-01-21 }} ], 2006 {{isbn|978-0-804-75296-1}} p.9</ref> the use of the term is controversial, as the vast majority of Jews with origins in Arab-majority countries do not identify as Arabs, and most Jews who lived amongst Arabs did not call themselves "Arab Jews" or view themselves as such.<ref name=Tal2017/><ref name=Shenhave2012/><ref name="Tunisia">{{cite web |title=The Jews in Islam – Tunisia |url=http://www.u.arizona.edu/~shaked/Tunisia/Jews.html |author=Edith Haddad Shaked |publisher=Presentation at the 19th International Congress of Historical Sciences, University of Oslo, Norway |access-date=8 December 2015 |archive-date=4 February 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120204201601/http://www.u.arizona.edu/~shaked/Tunisia/Jews.html |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=https://forward.com/opinion/12786/there-is-more-to-the-arab-jews-controversy-t-01372/ |title=There Is More to the 'Arab Jews' Controversy Than Just Identity |website=The Forward |date=28 February 2008 |access-date=21 November 2018 |archive-date=18 October 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191018151443/https://forward.com/opinion/12786/there-is-more-to-the-arab-jews-controversy-t-01372/ |url-status=live }}</ref> A closely related, but older term denoting Arabic-speaking Jews is ]. | |||
] | |||
In recent decades, some Jews have self-identified as ''Arab Jews'', such as ], who uses the term in contrast to the ] establishment's categorization of Jews as either ] or ]; the latter, she believes, have been oppressed as the Arabs have. Other Jews, such as ], say that Jews in Arab countries would have liked to be Arab Jews, but centuries of abuse by Arab Muslims prevented it, and now it's too late. The term is often used by ] and ]. | |||
'''Arab Jews''' ({{lang-ar|'''اليهود العرب'''}} {{lang|ar-Latn|''Al-Yahūd al-`Arab''}}, {{lang-he|'''יהודים ערבים'''}} {{lang|he-Latn|''Yehudim `Aravim''}}) is a term referring to ]s living in the ], or Jews descended from such persons.<ref name=Tamari>{{cite web|title=Ishaq al-Shami and the Predicament of the Arab Jew in Palestine|author=Salim Tamari|publisher=]|accessdate=2007-08-23|url=http://www.jerusalemquarterly.org/pdfs/predicament.pdf|format=PDF}}</ref> According to Salim Tamari, in most places in the world today, the term "Arab Jew" is considered an ].<ref name=Tamari/> | |||
The term can also sometimes refer to ] of Arab birth, such as ] or ], or people of mixed Jewish-Arab parentage, such as ].<ref>{{Cite news |title=Jewish-Arab Slam Poet a Hit in Person and on YouTube |language=en |work=Haaretz |url=https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/culture/2016-06-29/ty-article-magazine/.premium/jewish-arab-slam-poet-a-hit-in-person-and-on-youtube/0000017f-e3dc-d568-ad7f-f3ff81080000 |access-date=2022-10-18 |archive-date=2022-10-18 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221018174600/https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/culture/2016-06-29/ty-article-magazine/.premium/jewish-arab-slam-poet-a-hit-in-person-and-on-youtube/0000017f-e3dc-d568-ad7f-f3ff81080000 |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
The term was occasionally used in the early 20th century, mainly by ], to describe the 1 million Jews living in the Arab world at the time. Most of this population has since left for ], ] and to a smaller degree the ] and ]. They spoke ], using one of the many ] (see also ]) as their primary community language, with ] reserved as a ]. They usually followed ], making them one of the largest groups among ]. | |||
==Terminology== | |||
In recent decades the term has come back into some usage by Jews who self-identify as Arab Jews, such as ], a Zionist who uses the term to claim his rights in the Middle East, and ], an anti-Zionist who uses the term in contrast to the Zionist establishment's categorization of Jews as either Ashkenazim or Mizrahim; the latter, she believes, have been oppressed as the Arabs have. Other public figures who refer to themselves as Arab Jews include David Shasha, Director of the Center for Sephardic Heritage, and Amiel Alcalay, a professor at ] in New York who began emphasizing the importance of his identity as an Arab Jew in the 1990s.<ref name=Vittorio>{{cite web|title=The Jews of the Arab World: A Community Unto Itself|author=Lynne Vittorio|publisher=Aramica|date=2002-10-16|accessdate=2007-08-22|url=http://www.bintjbeil.com/articles/en/021016_arabjews.html}}</ref> ], Jewish adviser to ] ], also defines himself as an Arab Jew,<ref></ref> as does ] in a recent memoir <ref>.</ref> | |||
The Arabic ''al-Yahūd al-ʿArab'' and Hebrew ''Yehudim `Aravim'' literally mean 'Arab Jews', a phrasing that in current usage is considered derogatory by Israelis of ] origin. It is to be distinguished from a similar term that circulated in Palestine in late ], when Arab Palestinians referred to their Jewish compatriots as 'Arab-born Jews' (''Yahud awlad ʿArab''), which can also be translated as 'Arab Jews'.<ref name="Klein2014" >Menachem Klein, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211110142128/https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2979/israelstudies.19.3.134 |date=2021-11-10 }} ], Vol. 19, No. 3 (Fall 2014), pp.134-153, pp.135-136:'Arab–Jew was a living reality in Palestine, a local identity of belonging to people and place beyond residence location. This identity survived the collapse of the Ottoman Empire but not the 1948 war. Until then, Arab Palestinians defined their compatriot Jews as natives (''Abna al-Balad'') and Arab-born Jews (''Yahud Awlad Arab'').'</ref> | |||
Historian Emily Benichou Gottreich has observed that the term 'Arab Jew' is largely an identity of exile and “was originally theorized from within frameworks of, and remains especially prominent in, specific academic fields, namely literary and cultural studies”.<ref name=Gottreich/> Gottreich has also noted that the term "implies a particular politics of knowledge vis-à-vis the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and larger Zionist narrative(s)" and post-Zionist discourse. However, she argues that the discourse about Arab Jews remains largely "limited to the semantic-epistemological level, resulting in a flattened identity that is both historically and geographically ambiguous".<ref name=Gottreich/> | |||
Prior to the creation of the ], between 700,000 and 850,000 Jews lived in the Middle East and North Africa, but by the end of the 20th century, ], according to Lital Levy, who has noted: "These were indigenous communities (in some cases present in the area for millennia) whose unique, syncretic cultures have since been expunged as a result of emigration." In Israel, these communities were subject to "deracination and ]", while in the West, the concept of Jews from the Arab World was, and remains, poorly understood.<ref name=Levy/> | |||
From a cultural perspective, the disappearance of the Jewish dialects of spoken Arabic, written Judeo-Arabic and the last generation of Jewish writers of literary Arabic "all silently sounded the death knell of a certain world", according to Levy,<ref name=Levy/> or what ] dubbed the "Jewish-Arab symbiosis" in his work ''Jews and Arabs'',<ref name="Goitein">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=X2D4bAiZIwkC |title=Jews and Arabs: A Concise History of Their Social and Cultural Relations |author=S.D. Goitein |author-link=Shelomo Dov Goitein |publisher=Courier Corporation |date=2012 |isbn=9780486121260 |edition=a reprint of the 1974 |access-date=2021-11-14 |archive-date=2023-01-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230121051831/https://books.google.com/books?id=X2D4bAiZIwkC |url-status=live }}</ref> and which ] sought to recapture in her 1993 work ''After Jews and Arabs''.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5749/j.cttttbh5|title=After Jews and Arabs: Remaking Levantine Culture|author=Ammiel Alcalay|author-link=Ammiel Alcalay|date=1993|publisher=University of Minnesota Press|jstor=10.5749/j.cttttbh5|isbn=978081668468-7|access-date=2021-09-21|archive-date=2021-09-21|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210921123728/https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5749/j.cttttbh5|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
According to Shenhav and Hever, the term Arab Jews was “widely used in the past to depict Jews living in Arab countries, but was extirpated from the political lexicon upon their arrival in Israel in the 1950s and 1960s.” The discourse then underwent a demise before its “political reawakening in the 1990s”.<ref name="Shenhav2013">{{Cite journal |url= https://people.socsci.tau.ac.il/mu/yshenhav/files/2013/05/Shenhav-and-Hever-Arab-Jews-after-structuralism.pdf |title= 'Arab Jews' after structuralism: Zionist discourse and the (de)formation of an ethnic identity |journal= Journal for the Study of Race, Nation and Culture |volume= 18 |issue= 1 |date= 2012 |doi= 10.1080/13504630.2011.629517 |last1= Shenhav |first1= Yehouda |last2= Hever |first2= Hannan |pages= 101–118 |s2cid= 144665311 |access-date= 2021-09-20 |archive-date= 2021-09-20 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20210920213140/https://people.socsci.tau.ac.il/mu/yshenhav/files/2013/05/Shenhav-and-Hever-Arab-Jews-after-structuralism.pdf |url-status= live }}</ref> Nevertheless, "very few Jews of Arab descent, in Israel, would label themselves 'Arab Jews'" due to it being a "marker of a cultural and political avant-garde."<ref name="Shenhav2013"/> | |||
Gottreich has labelled the recent work on the subject by ] as particularly pioneering, while also pointing to the significant contributions made by ], Gil Anidjar and ].<ref name=Gottreich/> Other notable writers on the subject include ] and ]. | |||
Until the middle of the 20th century, ] was commonly spoken. After arriving in Israel the Jews from Arab lands found that use of Judeo-Arabic was discouraged and its usage fell into disrepair. The population of Jews in Arab countries would decrease dramatically.<ref name="Brenzinger">{{cite book |author=Matthias Brenzinger |title=Language Diversity Endangered |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6p6b5GQ4Q4YC&q=judeo+arabic+20+century&pg=PA132 |publisher=Walter de Gruyter |date=2007 |page=132 |isbn=9783110170504 |access-date=2020-10-12 |archive-date=2023-01-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230121051819/https://books.google.com/books?id=6p6b5GQ4Q4YC&q=judeo+arabic+20+century&pg=PA132 |url-status=live }}</ref> Even those who remained in the Arab world tended to abandon Judeo-Arabic.<ref name="Languages">{{cite encyclopedia |last1=Brown |first1=Keith |last2=Ogilvie |first2=Sarah |chapter=Judeo-Arabic |encyclopedia=Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=F2SRqDzB50wC&pg=PA568 |publisher=Elsevier |date=2010 |page=568 |isbn=9780080877754 |title=Archived copy |access-date=2020-09-21 |archive-date=2023-01-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230121051820/https://books.google.com/books?id=F2SRqDzB50wC&pg=PA568 |url-status=live }}</ref> Amnon Raz-Krakotzkin argues that Jews from Arab lands were Arab in that they identified with ] even if they did not identity as Arab Jews or with Arab nationalism.<ref name="Levy">{{citation |author=Lital Levy |title=Historicizing the Concept of Arab Jews in the "Mashriq |publisher=The Jewish Quarterly Review |volume=98 |issue=4 |pages=452–469}}</ref>{{rp|458–459}} | |||
==Political history== | |||
The terminology of Arab Jewishness held notable prevalence in the 19th century, when Jews living in Arab countries identified with the Arab national movement that emerged in the lead up to the dismantlement of the ] – as early as the Ottoman administrative reforms of 1839 – owing to shared language and culture with their ] and ] compatriots in ], ], and ].<ref name=Tamari/> | |||
The terminology became politically important during the ], when Jews of Middle Eastern origin living in Western countries used the term to support their case that they were not Turks and should not be treated as enemy aliens.<ref>Collins, ''Pedigrees and Pioneers: The Sephardim of Manchester''.</ref> | |||
Today, there is widespread rejection of the term within the Jewish community, with many considering it an affront to their identity.<ref name="Philo">{{cite web |author=Philologos |title=Rejecting the 'Arab Jew' |date=31 January 2008 |url=http://forward.com/culture/12561/rejecting-the-arab-jew-01195/ |access-date=27 December 2015 |archive-date=7 January 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160107093056/http://forward.com/culture/12561/rejecting-the-arab-jew-01195/ |url-status=live }}</ref> In 2015, the question was posed as to the validity of the term versus alternatives, such as "Iraqi Israeli", in the context of Arab Jews from Iraq, or ].<ref name="Lee">{{cite news |author=Vered Lee |title=Conference Asks: Iraqi Israeli, Arab Jew or Mizrahi Jew? |newspaper=Haaretz |url=http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/features/conference-asks-iraqi-israeli-arab-jew-or-mizrahi-jew-1.246035 |access-date=27 December 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221018174032/https://www.haaretz.com/2008-05-18/ty-article/conference-asks-iraqi-israeli-arab-jew-or-mizrahi-jew/0000017f-e166-df7c-a5ff-e37eab570000 |archive-date=18 October 2022}}</ref> | |||
Today, various Israeli political activists identify themselves as Arab Jews, includinv ], ], ] and ]. | |||
==Overview== | |||
According to Salim Tamari, the term Arab-Jew generally referred to a period of history when some Eastern Jews (Sephardic and Mizrahi) identified with the Arab national movement that emerged in the lead up to the dismantlement of the ], as early as the Ottoman administrative reforms of 1839, owing to shared language and culture with their ] and ] compatriots in ], ], and ]. | |||
===In post-Zionism=== | |||
], a self-identified Arab Jew, extends that identification back even further, noting the long history of Arab Jews in the ] that remained in place after the dawn of ] in the 7th century until midway through the 20th century.<ref name=Rabeeya>{{cite book|title=The Journey of an Arab-Jew in European Israel|author=David Rabeeya|publisher=Xlibris Corporation|year=2000|isbn=0738843318|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=jGa1I5vl7o8C&dq=%22arab+jew%22&printsec=frontcover&source=web&ots=HzV7Ay2mcl&sig=2rMfzAiN-Cq72LrLaDg7P1RFwIg#PPA49,M1|pages=49–50}}</ref> He writes that Arab Jews, like ] and ]s, were culturally Arab with religious commitments to ].<ref name=Rabeeya/> He notes that Arab Jews named their progeny with Arabic names and "Like every Arab, Arab Jews were proud of their ] and its dialects, and held a deep emotional attachment to its beauty and richness."<ref name=Rabeeya/> | |||
The term Arab Jews has become part of the language of ].<ref name="Kaplan">{{cite book | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=UpQuBgAAQBAJ&q=post+zionism+arab+jews&pg=PA99 | title = Beyond Post-Zionism | author = Eran Kaplan | page = 99 | publisher = SUNY Press | year = 2015 | isbn = 9781438454351 | access-date = 2020-10-12 | archive-date = 2023-01-21 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230121051820/https://books.google.com/books?id=UpQuBgAAQBAJ&q=post+zionism+arab+jews&pg=PA99 | url-status = live }}</ref> The term was introduced by ].<ref name ="Tal">{{cite book| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=7V8dAAAAQBAJ&q=arab+jew+&pg=PT25| title = Israeli Identity: Between Orient and Occident| editor = David Tal| pages = 1–2| publisher = Routledge| year = 2013| isbn = 9781134107452| access-date = 2020-10-12| archive-date = 2023-01-21| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230121051825/https://books.google.com/books?id=7V8dAAAAQBAJ&q=arab+jew+&pg=PT25| url-status = live}}</ref> Ella Shohat argues Zionist historiography could not accept a hyphenated Arab-Jewish identity and embarked on a program to remove the Arabness and Orientalness of the Jews from the Arab world after they arrived in Israel. To insure homogeneity Zionist focused on religious commonality and a romanticized past.<ref name ="Shohat2006">{{cite book | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=hU14acGeJ-YC&q=arab+jew | title = Taboo Memories, Diasporic Voices | author = Ella Shohat | page = 344 | publisher = Duke University Press | year = 2006 | isbn = 0822337711 | access-date = 2020-10-12 | archive-date = 2023-01-21 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230121051823/https://books.google.com/books?id=hU14acGeJ-YC&q=arab+jew | url-status = live }}</ref> She argues that the use of the term Mizrahim is in some sense a Zionist achievement in that it created a single unitary identity separated from the Islamic world. Which replaced older multifaceted identities each linked to the Islamic world, including but not limited to identifying as Arab Jews.<ref name ="Shohat1999">{{cite journal |journal=Institute for Palestine Studies | title = The Invention of the Mizrahim| author = Ella Shohat | pages = 5, 14| year = 1999}}</ref> She argues that when Sephardi express hostility towards Arabs it is often due to self-hatred.<ref name ="Shohat1988">{{cite book |publisher=Duke University Press| title = Sephardim in Israel: Zionism from the Standpoint of Its Jewish Victims| author = Ella Shohat | page = 25| year = 1988}}</ref> Another argument that Shohat makes is that Israel is already demographically an Arab country.<ref name ="Tal"/> | |||
]'s works are also considered to be among the seminal works of post-Zionism.<ref name="Kaplan"/><ref name="Lederhendler">{{cite book| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=-zC7VEqM8tQC&q=Yehouda+Shenhav&pg=PA206| title = Ethnicity and Beyond: Theories and Dilemmas of Jewish Group Demarcation| author = Eli Lederhendler| page = 206| publisher = Oxford University Press| year = 2011| isbn = 9780199842353| access-date = 2020-10-12| archive-date = 2023-01-21| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230121051836/https://books.google.com/books?id=-zC7VEqM8tQC&q=Yehouda+Shenhav&pg=PA206| url-status = live}}</ref> Shenhav, an Israeli sociologist, traced the origins of the conceptualization of the Mizrahi Jews as Arab Jews. He interprets ] as an ideological practice with three simultaneous and symbiotic categories: "Nationality", "Religion" and "Ethnicity". In order to be included in the national collective they had to be "de-Arabized". According to Shenhav, Religion distinguished between Arabs and Arab Jews, thus marking nationality among the Arab Jews.<ref name= Shenhav > | |||
{{Cite book | {{Cite book | ||
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] argues that while the Zionist movement succeed in creating a Jewish state it did irreparable harm to Arab Jews and Palestinians.{{rp| 23–26}} He argues that Israel has already entered a post-Zionist era in which the influence of Zionist Ashkenazim has declined. With many Jews of European origin choosing to leave the country as Israel becomes less Western.<ref name= "Rabeeya">{{cite book|title=The Journey of an Arab-Jew in European Israel|author=David Rabeeya|publisher=Xlibris Corporation|year=2000|isbn=0-7388-4331-8|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fYeTueOdn6sC&q=%22Arab+Jew%22|access-date=2021-11-14|archive-date=2023-01-21|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230121051826/https://books.google.com/books?id=fYeTueOdn6sC&q=%22Arab+Jew%22|url-status=live}}</ref>{{rp| 113–114}} He also self-identified as an Arab Jew, extends that identification back even further, noting the long history of Arab Jews in the ] that remained in place after the dawn of ] in the 7th century until midway through the 20th century.<ref name= "Rabeeya"/>{{rp| 49–50}} He writes that Arab Jews, like ] and ]s, were culturally Arab with religious commitments to ].<ref name= "Rabeeya"/>{{rp| 49–50}} He notes that Arab Jews named their progeny with Arabic names and "Like every Arab, Arab Jews were proud of their ] and its dialects, and held a deep emotional attachment to its beauty and richness."<ref name= "Rabeeya"/>{{rp| 49–50}} | |||
==Terminology== | |||
] argues that Shohat and her students faced great resistance from Mizrahim with few choosing to identify as Arab Jews. He argues that Shohat in a sense tried to impose an identity in the same way in which she criticized the Ashkenazi for doing.<ref name="Tal"/> | |||
The term "Arab Jews" was used during the ] by Jews of Middle Eastern origin living in western countries, to support their case that they were not Turks and should not be treated as enemy aliens.<ref>Collins, ''Pedigrees and Pioneers: The Sephardim of Manchester''.</ref> Today the term is sometimes used by newspapers and official bodies in some countries, to express the belief that ] is a matter of religion rather than ethnicity or nationality. Most Jews disagree with this, do not use the term and, where it appears to them to be calculated to deny the existence of a distinct Jewish identity in favour of reducing the Jewish diaspora to a religious entity, even consider it offensive. However, some Mizrahi activists, particularly those not born in Arab countries or who emigrated from them at a very young age, define themselves as Arab Jews. Notable proponents of such an identity include ], ], ] and ]. | |||
Lital Levy argues that post-Zionism did more than revive the concept of the Arab Jew. Instead it created something new in so far as it is questionable that a pristine Arab Jew identity which could be reclaimed ever existed.<ref name="Levy"/>{{rp|457}} Levy suggests that the contemporary intellectuals who declare themselves to be Arab Jews are similar to Jewish intellectuals who between the late 1920s and 1940s did likewise; in both cases these intellectuals were small in number and outside the mainstream of the Jewish community. Likewise in both cases the term was used for political purposes.<ref name="Levy"/>{{rp|462–463}} A view shared by Emily Benichou Gottreich who argues that the term was used to push back against both Zionism and Arab nationalism which tended to view the categories of Jews and Arabs as mutually exclusive and as a way to show solidarity with the Palestinians.<ref name="Gottreich">{{citation |author=Emily Benichou Gottreich |title=Historicizing the Concept of Arab Jews in the Maghrib |publisher=The Jewish Quarterly Review |volume=98 |issue=4 |pages=433–451}}</ref>{{rp|436}} | |||
Proponents of the term "Arab Jews" argue that "Arab" is a linguistic and cultural rather than an ethnic, racial or religious term; that the Jews in Arab countries fully participated in that culture; and that all ethnic minorities who did so are "Arabs". On this view, the correct distinction is between Jews, Muslims, Christians and other religious groups, rather than between groups such as Jews and "Arabs". Similarly the Christian population of countries such as ], ] or ] are often described as "Arabs", even though most are (like most of their corresponding Muslim counterparts) descended from the pre-Islamic pre-Arab-culture population of each individual country. However, the use of the term "Arab" to define Christian ] (Egypt), ] (Lebanon), or ] (Iraq) is controversial among those communities. Others may regard "Arab Jews" as simply shorthand for "Jews of Arab lands" or "Arabic-speaking Jews", and identify as "Arab Jews" while definitely not regarding themselves as "Arabs". | |||
== Criticism == | |||
The principal argument against the term "Arab Jews", particularly among Jewish communities descended from Arab lands, is that Jews constitute a diaspora and ethnic group, not simply a "religious" group, and that use of the term "Arab" suggests otherwise. A related argument is that Jewish communities in Arab lands never referred to themselves as "Arab Jews" and that it is only after the exit of most Jewish communities from such lands that the term has been proposed. Hence, in most North African and Near and Middle Eastern communities, people spoke of Arab Muslims and Arab Christians, but never of Arab Jews: the Jews were regarded and regarded themselves as an ethnic ''as well as'' a religious minority, similar to other ethnic minorities such as the ], ] or ] (although the latter two are not defined by religion either, as they may include Berber Muslims and Kurdish Muslims, Berber Christians and Kurdish Christians, and ] and ]), and none of these are today referred to or refer to themselves as "Arabs". Indeed, some of the communities referred to originated as early as the ] (6th century BCE), antedating the ] ] conquest by a millennium. (To underscore this point, ] on some occasions prefer to call themselves "Babylonian Jews"). Rather, "Arab Jews" as a term was created no earlier than the rise of secular ethnic nationalism in the early twentieth century, when many Jews sought integration into the new national identities (Iraqi, Tunisian etc.) as an escape from their previous minority status, in much the same way as some nineteenth century German Jews preferred to identify as "Germans of the Mosaic faith" rather than as "Jews" and, even then, identification in national terms (with respect to the country) was far more common among Jews of this intellectual stream than was affinity to a pan-Arab identity. | |||
A common criticism of the term "Arab Jews", particularly among Jewish communities originating from Arab lands, is that Jews constitute a ] and ], which the term muddies.<ref name="John A. Shoup III 133">{{cite book |author=John A. Shoup III |title=Ethnic Groups of Africa and the Middle East: An Encyclopedia: An Encyclopedia |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GN5yv3-U6goC&pg=PA133 |date=17 October 2011 |publisher=ABC-CLIO |isbn=978-1-59884-363-7 |page=133 |access-date=12 October 2020 |archive-date=21 January 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230121051824/https://books.google.com/books?id=GN5yv3-U6goC&pg=PA133 |url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
Dario Miccoli states that he does not use the term, seeing it as an anachronism.<ref name="Miccoli">{{cite book |author=Dario Miccoli |title=Histories of the Jews of Egypt: An Imagined Bourgeoisie, 1880s-1950s |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rM4qBwAAQBAJ&q=%22arab+jew%22+egypt&pg=PA186 |date=2015 |publisher=Routledge |page=186 |isbn=9781317624226 |access-date=2020-10-12 |archive-date=2023-01-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230121051822/https://www.google.com/books/edition/Histories_of_the_Jews_of_Egypt/rM4qBwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&bsq=%22arab+jew%22+egypt&pg=PA186&printsec=frontcover |url-status=live}}</ref> Jonathan Marc Gribetz cautions against the uncritical use of term in historiographical works, viewing it as non-typical.<ref name="Gribetz">{{cite book |author=Jonathan Marc Gribetz |title=Defining Neighbors: Religion, Race, and the Early Zionist-Arab Encounter |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XYSiAwAAQBAJ&q=arab+jew |date=2014 |publisher=Princeton University Press |pages=36–38 |isbn=9781400852659 |access-date=2020-10-12 |archive-date=2023-01-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230121051822/https://books.google.com/books?id=XYSiAwAAQBAJ&q=arab+jew |url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
Scholar Edith Haddad Shaked has criticized the concept of the Arab Jew, arguing that there are Arab Muslims and Arab Christians, but there was not such a thing as an Arab Jew or a Jewish Arab, when the Jews lived among the Arabs.<ref name="Tunisia" /> She has noted how Tunisia born historian, Professor ], stated that "these terms were never used in Tunisia, and they do not correspond/coincident to the religious and socio-historical context/reality of the Jews in Tunisia/the Arab world."<ref name="Tunisia" /> | |||
Proponents of the argument against "Arab Jews", including most Jews from Arab lands , do not seek to deny the strong Arabic cultural influence on Jews in those countries. In North Africa, some Jews spoke ] while others spoke French; and in some areas there are still Jews who dress quite like Arabs. Their argument is that “Arabness” referred to more than just a common shared culture. One could therefore legitimately speak of “Arabized” Jews, or "Jews of Arab countries", just as one can speak of "English Jews" or "British Jews" or "Polish Jews", whereas many Jews would object to terms such as "Saxon Jews", "Celtic Jews", or "Slavic Jews" as the latter refer to ethnic groups and therefore, implicitly, deny the existence of a distinct Jewish ethnic identity. The term "Arab Jews" is seen as more akin to the latter, both by those who oppose it and, on occasion, by those who affirm it as a manner in which to deny so-called "Arab Jews" a distinct ethnic or national identity. A better translation of the traditional term '']'' (Arabizers), used to distinguish the older Arabic-speaking communities of those countries from post-1492 Sephardim, would provide those who wish to refer to Jews from Arab lands with respect to linguistic and cultural markers, but do not wish to assert that there exists no Jewish diaspora or Jewish people. | |||
In North Africa, she has argued, "Jews were always considered members of a socio-religious community minority, different and distinct from the Arab population, because of their Jewish cultural tradition, their common past, and the Judeo-arabic language—all of them separated them from the Arabs. And the Arabs saw the Jews, even the ones who spoke only Judeo-Arabic, as members of a socio-linguistic religious cultural community, different from theirs.<ref name="Tunisia" /> | |||
Finally, a third view is that the term "Arab Jew" has a certain legitimacy, but should only describe the Jewish communities of Arabia itself, such as the ] of the time of ] and, possibly, the ]: see ]. This view is typically put forward as stemming from the view of Arab identity as a geographical rather than ethno-linguistic or cultural but, because it refers to a far more restricted understanding of "Arab" geography as referring to the ], comes into conflict with the modern pan-Arabism exemplified by the ]. | |||
In 1975, ] wrote: "The term "Arab Jews" is obviously not a good one. I have adopted it for convenience. I simply wish to underline that as natives of those countries called Arab and indigenous to those lands well before the arrival of the Arabs, we shared with them, to a great extent, languages, traditions and cultures ... We would have liked to be Arab Jews. If we abandoned the idea, it is because over the centuries the Moslem Arabs systematically prevented its realization by their contempt and cruelty. It is now too late for us to become Arab Jews."<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130728180653/http://www.sullivan-county.com/x/aj1.htm |date=2013-07-28}} by ALBERT MEMMI</ref><ref>{{Cite book |title=Forgotten Millions: The Modern Jewish Exodus from Arab Lands |editor=Malka Hillel Shulewitz |page=xii}}</ref> | |||
== Jews of Arabia before Islam == | |||
''Main article ]'' | |||
Proponents of the argument against "Arab Jews" include most Jews from Arab lands.<ref name="Lee" /> | |||
Jewish populations have existed in the ] since before Islam; in the north where they were connected to the Jewish populations of the Levant and Iraq, in the ] coastal plains, and in the south, i.e. in ]. | |||
==Arab Jews in Israel/Palestine== | |||
While Jewish populations around the world as far as ] and ] have always claimed descent from the toratic twelve tribes, it is unclear whether all or some of the Jewish populations of Arabia did have such an ancestry, or were locals who have adopted Judaism as a faith, or mixtures of both cases. | |||
Prior to the modern Zionist movement, Jewish communities existed in the southern Levant that are now known as the ]. The Old Yishuv was composed of three clusters: Ladino-speaking Sephardi Iberian emigrants to the late ] and early ] following the Spanish Inquisition; Eastern European Hasidic Jews who emigrated to Ottoman Palestine during the 18th and 19th centuries; and ]-speaking ] who had been living in Palestine since the destruction of the ] and who had become culturally and linguistically Arabized. In the 20th century, as the society got polarised and the conflict intensified, the Musta'arabim were forced to choose sides, with some embracing the nascent Zionist movement and others embracing the Arab nationalist or Palestinian nationalist causes. Other Arab Jews left the Ottoman Empire entirely, joining Syrian-Jewish/Palestinian-Jewish emigrants to the United States.<ref name="Jews in Brooklyn">{{cite book |last1=Abramovitch |first1=Ilana |last2=Galvin |first2=Seán |last3=Galvin |first3=Seǹ |title=Jews of Brooklyn |date=2002 |publisher=UPNE |ref=6}}</ref>{{page needed|date=September 2021}} The descendants of the Palestinian Musta'arabim live in Israel, but have largely assimilated into the Sephardi community over time. | |||
== Arab-Jewish diaspora == | |||
==Other facts bearing on the controversy== | |||
===Argentina=== | |||
{{Trivia|date=June 2010}} | |||
Arab Jews were part of the Arab migration to ] and played a part as a link between the ] and Jewish communities of Argentina. Many of the Arab Jews in Argentina were from ] and ]. According to Ignacio Klich, an Argentine scholar of Arab and Jewish immigration, "Arabic-speaking Jews felt themselves to have a lot in common with those sharing the same place of birth and culture, not less than what bound them to the Yiddish-speakers praying to the same deity."<ref>{{cite web |url=https://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1470&context=theses&httpsredir=1&referer= |title=Jews and Arabs in Argentina: A Study of the Integration, Interactions and Ethnic Identification of Argentina's Migrant Groups |publisher=] |access-date=2020-08-23 |archive-date=2023-01-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230121051731/https://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1470&context=theses&httpsredir=1&referer= |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
* According to the Jewish Encyclopedia, all Jews are of Semitic origin, in Aramaic Mesopotamia.{{Citation needed|date=July 2010}} | |||
* The prevalence of the 'Y-DNA Haplogoup' may demonstrate the genetic homogeneity of all Semitic-speaking peoples.<ref>http://www.khazaria.com/genetics/abstracts-jews.html</ref> Specifically, "Jewish communities, Mizrahim, Sephardim and Ashkenazim are more closely related to each other and to other Middle Eastern Semitic populations -- Palestinians, Syrians, and Druze -- than to their neighboring non-Jewish populations in the Diaspora."<ref>http://www.aish.com/societywork/sciencenature/Jewish_Genes.asp</ref> | |||
* Some Jews falling within boundaries of distinct non-Arab ethno-linguistic communities which are themselves inside boundaries of countries today considered Arab, identified as that ethno-linguistic community (along with Muslims and any other religious groups within that non-Arab ethnic identity) rather than as Arabs. Such is the case in ] with the ] together with Berber Muslims and the tiny Berber Christian minority identifying as ], or in ] with the ] together with Kurdish Muslims, and Kurdish ], Kurdish ], and Kurdish Christian minorities identifying as ]. | |||
* There is considerable opposition because of political rivalry and different opinions regarding ] and issues concerning the ].Overwhelming majority of ] reject the term, since it is not conforming with more popular in Israel] ethos. | |||
* The term is mostly used by politically left-wing or ] activists in Israel and so is perceived as a politicization of identity which is opposed by right-wing, centrist and moderate left ] in Israel. | |||
* On-going inter-marriage among Jews of different background means that ethnic groupings based on origin are increasingly irrelevant except among very orthodox Jews. | |||
== |
===France=== | ||
France is home to a large population of Arab Jews, predominantly with roots in ].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://rlp.hds.harvard.edu/faq/judaism-france |title=Judaism in France |publisher=] |access-date=2020-08-22 |archive-date=2020-03-23 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200323192236/https://rlp.hds.harvard.edu/faq/judaism-france |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
===United Kingdom=== | |||
According to the ], 0.25% of ] in England and Wales and 0.05% of Arabs in Scotland identified their religion as Judaism.<ref name=religion>{{cite web |url=http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/about-ons/business-transparency/freedom-of-information/what-can-i-request/previous-foi-requests/population/ethnicity-and-religion-by-age/dc2201ew---ethnic-group-and-religion.xls |title=DC2201EW - Ethnic group and religion |format=Spreadsheet |publisher=ONS |date=15 September 2015 |access-date=22 August 2020 |archive-date=23 January 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160123221517/http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/about-ons/business-transparency/freedom-of-information/what-can-i-request/previous-foi-requests/population/ethnicity-and-religion-by-age/dc2201ew---ethnic-group-and-religion.xls |url-status=live }} Size: 21Kb.</ref><ref name=scotland>{{cite journal|title=Table DC2201SC - Ethnic group by religion|journal=Scotland's Census 2011|publisher=National Records of Scotland|type=Spreadsheet}}</ref> | |||
===United States=== | |||
Many Arab-Jewish immigrants have settled in New York City and formed a Sephardi community. The community is centered in ] and is primarily composed of ]. Other Arab Jews in New York City hail from Egypt, Israel, Lebanon, and Morocco.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.jewishideas.org/article/syrian-jewish-community-then-and-now |title=The Syrian Jewish Community, Then and Now |publisher=Institute for Jewish Ideas and Ideals |access-date=2020-08-23 |archive-date=2020-09-23 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200923102638/https://www.jewishideas.org/article/syrian-jewish-community-then-and-now |url-status=live }}</ref> Arab Jews first began arriving in New York City in large numbers between 1880 and ]. Most Arab immigrants during these years were Christian, while Arab Jews were a minority and Arab Muslims largely began migrating during the mid-1960s.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.voanews.com/archive/exhibit-spotlights-being-arab-american-new-york-city-2002-03-28 |title=Exhibit Spotlights Being Arab-American in New York City - 2002-03-28 |publisher=] |accessdate=2021-05-15 |archive-date=2021-05-15 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210515230419/https://www.voanews.com/archive/exhibit-spotlights-being-arab-american-new-york-city-2002-03-28 |url-status=dead }}</ref> When Syrian Jews first began to arrive in New York City during the late 1800s and early 1900s, ] ] on the Lower East Side sometimes disdained their Syrian co-coreligionists as ''Arabische Yidden'', ] for "Arab Jews". Some Ashkenazim doubted whether ]/] from the Middle East were Jewish at all. In response, some Syrian Jews who were deeply proud of their ancient Jewish heritage, derogatorily dubbed Ashkenazi Jews as "J-Dubs", a reference to the first and third letters of the English word "Jew".<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/14/magazine/14syrians-t.html |title=The Sy Empire |work=The New York Times |date=14 October 2007 |accessdate=2021-05-15 |last1=Chafets |first1=Zev |archive-date=2021-01-26 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210126101815/http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/14/magazine/14syrians-t.html |url-status=live }}</ref> In the 1990 United States Census, there were 11,610 Arab Jews in New York City, comprising 23 percent of the total Arab population of the city.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.ajis.org/index.php/ajiss/article/download/1669/934/2599 |title=A Community of Many Worlds: Arab Americans in New York City |publisher=American Journal of Islam and Society |accessdate=2021-05-15 |archive-date=2021-05-15 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210515190911/https://www.ajis.org/index.php/ajiss/article/download/1669/934/2599 |url-status=live }}</ref> Arab Jews in the city sometimes still face ]. After the ], some Arab Jews in New York City were subjected to arrest and detention because they were suspected to be Islamist terrorists.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://jaamr.com/resources/key-terms-and-concepts-for-understanding-us-islamophobia/ |title=KEY TERMS AND CONCEPTS FOR UNDERSTANDING U.S. ISLAMOPHOBIA |publisher=Jews Against Anti-Muslim Racism |accessdate=2021-05-15 |archive-date=2023-01-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230121051733/https://jaamr.com/resources/key-terms-and-concepts-for-understanding-us-islamophobia/ |url-status=live }}</ref> | |||
== Notable Arab Jews == | |||
*], American fashion designer and actor | |||
*], an author, art curator, filmmaker, and theorist of photography and visual culture. | |||
* ], who ] and uses the term in contrast to the ] establishment's categorization of Jews as either ] or ]; Arab Jews, she believes, have been oppressed as the non-Jewish Arabs have.<ref>Ella Shohat, "Dislocated Identities: Reflection of an Arab Jew," ''Movement Research: Performance Journal'' #5 (Fall-Winter, 1992), p.8</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Shohat |first=Ella |date=2003 |title=Rupture and Return |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/01642472-21-2_75-49 |journal=Social Text |volume=21 |issue=2 |pages=49–74 |doi=10.1215/01642472-21-2_75-49 |s2cid=143908777 |issn=0164-2472 |access-date=2022-10-18 |archive-date=2023-01-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230121051738/https://read.dukeupress.edu/social-text/article-abstract/21/2%20(75)/49/32638/Rupture-and-ReturnZIONIST-DISCOURSE-AND-THE-STUDY?redirectedFrom=fulltext |url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
* ], American billionaire businessman of Syrian descent, co-founder of ] | |||
* ], professor at Tel Aviv University, in a recent memoir.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190729123451/https://www.lrb.co.uk/v30/n21/adam-shatz/leaving-paradise |date=2019-07-29}}.</ref> | |||
* ], adviser to ] ].<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.haaretz.com/1.5051633|title=Yoav Stern, 'Morocco king's Jewish aide urges Israel to adopt Saudi peace plan,' Haaretz 29/10/2008|newspaper=Haaretz|access-date=2021-09-21|archive-date=2021-09-21|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210921110002/https://www.haaretz.com/1.5051633|url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
* ], ]-] ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=The forgotten history of Arab Jews {{!}} Avi Shlaim {{!}} The Big Picture S2EP5 {{!}} | website=] |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lfDhaWlqXf8}}</ref> | |||
* Jordan Elgrably, director of the ].<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111227102949/http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2011/02/2011225144939129529.html |date=2011-12-27}}, 28 February 2011, Jordan Elgrably, Al-Jazeera</ref> | |||
* ], a professor at ] in New York who began emphasizing the importance of his identity as an Arab Jew in the 1990s.<ref name=Vittorio>{{cite web|title=The Jews of the Arab World: A Community Unto Itself|author=Lynne Vittorio|publisher=Aramica|date=2002-10-16|access-date=2007-08-22|url=http://www.bintjbeil.com/articles/en/021016_arabjews.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070807223131/http://www.bintjbeil.com/articles/en/021016_arabjews.html |archive-date=7 August 2007 |url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
* ], described himself as "100% Jewish and 100% Arab."<ref>Marina da Silva, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141222233551/http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2005/07/DA_SILVA/12716 |date=2014-12-22}}, ''Le Monde Diplomatique''.</ref> | |||
* ], journalist and author who has criticized the stigmatization of Arab-Jewish culture in Israel.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://gulfnews.com/entertainment/books/the-loss-of-inheritance-1.563049 |title=The loss of inheritance |work=] |access-date=2019-10-11 |archive-date=2019-10-12 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191012003107/https://gulfnews.com/entertainment/books/the-loss-of-inheritance-1.563049 |url-status=live}}</ref> | |||
== See also == | |||
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== References == | |||
{{Arab diaspora}} | |||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist}} | {{Reflist}} | ||
==External links== | == External links == | ||
{{Commons category}} | |||
* – On being Mizrahi (pro-Zionist view) by Albert Memmi. | |||
* Reuvin Snir | |||
* – On being Mizrahi (pro-Arab identity) by Ella Habiba Shohat. | |||
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{{Mizrahi Jews topics}} | {{Mizrahi Jews topics}} | ||
{{Jews and Judaism}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 06:04, 22 October 2024
Term for Jews originating from the Arab world See also: Maghrebi Jews, Mizrahi Jews, and Musta'arabi Jews
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Arab Jews (Arabic: اليهود العرب al-Yahūd al-ʿArab; Hebrew: יהודים ערבים Yehudim `Aravim) is a term for Jews living in or originating from the Arab world. Many left or were expelled from Arab countries in the decades following the founding of Israel in 1948, and took up residence in Israel, Western Europe, the United States and Latin America. The term is controversial and politically contested in Israel, where the term "Mizrahi Jews" was adopted by the early state instead. However, some anti-Zionist Jews of Arab origin actively elect to call themselves Arab Jews.
Jews living in Arab-majority countries historically mostly used various Judeo-Arabic dialects as their primary community language, with Hebrew used for liturgical and cultural purposes (literature, philosophy, poetry, etc.). Many aspects of their culture (music, clothes, food, architecture of synagogues and houses, etc.) have commonality with local non-Jewish Arab populations. They usually follow Sephardi Jewish liturgy, and are (counting their descendants) by far the largest portion of Mizrahi Jews.
Though Golda Meir, in an interview as late as 1972 with Oriana Fallaci, explicitly referred to Jews from Arab countries as "Arab Jews", the use of the term is controversial, as the vast majority of Jews with origins in Arab-majority countries do not identify as Arabs, and most Jews who lived amongst Arabs did not call themselves "Arab Jews" or view themselves as such. A closely related, but older term denoting Arabic-speaking Jews is Musta'arabi Jews.
In recent decades, some Jews have self-identified as Arab Jews, such as Ella Shohat, who uses the term in contrast to the Zionist establishment's categorization of Jews as either Ashkenazim or Mizrahim; the latter, she believes, have been oppressed as the Arabs have. Other Jews, such as Albert Memmi, say that Jews in Arab countries would have liked to be Arab Jews, but centuries of abuse by Arab Muslims prevented it, and now it's too late. The term is often used by post-Zionists and Arab nationalists.
The term can also sometimes refer to Jewish converts of Arab birth, such as Baruch Mizrahi or Nasrin Kadri, or people of mixed Jewish-Arab parentage, such as Lucy Ayoub.
Terminology
The Arabic al-Yahūd al-ʿArab and Hebrew Yehudim `Aravim literally mean 'Arab Jews', a phrasing that in current usage is considered derogatory by Israelis of Mizrachi origin. It is to be distinguished from a similar term that circulated in Palestine in late Ottoman times, when Arab Palestinians referred to their Jewish compatriots as 'Arab-born Jews' (Yahud awlad ʿArab), which can also be translated as 'Arab Jews'.
Historian Emily Benichou Gottreich has observed that the term 'Arab Jew' is largely an identity of exile and “was originally theorized from within frameworks of, and remains especially prominent in, specific academic fields, namely literary and cultural studies”. Gottreich has also noted that the term "implies a particular politics of knowledge vis-à-vis the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and larger Zionist narrative(s)" and post-Zionist discourse. However, she argues that the discourse about Arab Jews remains largely "limited to the semantic-epistemological level, resulting in a flattened identity that is both historically and geographically ambiguous".
Prior to the creation of the State of Israel, between 700,000 and 850,000 Jews lived in the Middle East and North Africa, but by the end of the 20th century, all of these communities had faced "dislocation and dispersal" and largely vanished, according to Lital Levy, who has noted: "These were indigenous communities (in some cases present in the area for millennia) whose unique, syncretic cultures have since been expunged as a result of emigration." In Israel, these communities were subject to "deracination and resocialization", while in the West, the concept of Jews from the Arab World was, and remains, poorly understood.
From a cultural perspective, the disappearance of the Jewish dialects of spoken Arabic, written Judeo-Arabic and the last generation of Jewish writers of literary Arabic "all silently sounded the death knell of a certain world", according to Levy, or what Shelomo Dov Goitein dubbed the "Jewish-Arab symbiosis" in his work Jews and Arabs, and which Ammiel Alcalay sought to recapture in her 1993 work After Jews and Arabs.
According to Shenhav and Hever, the term Arab Jews was “widely used in the past to depict Jews living in Arab countries, but was extirpated from the political lexicon upon their arrival in Israel in the 1950s and 1960s.” The discourse then underwent a demise before its “political reawakening in the 1990s”. Nevertheless, "very few Jews of Arab descent, in Israel, would label themselves 'Arab Jews'" due to it being a "marker of a cultural and political avant-garde."
Gottreich has labelled the recent work on the subject by Ella Habiba Shohat as particularly pioneering, while also pointing to the significant contributions made by Gil Hochberg, Gil Anidjar and Sami Shalom Chetrit. Other notable writers on the subject include Naeim Giladi and David Rabeeya.
Until the middle of the 20th century, Judeo-Arabic was commonly spoken. After arriving in Israel the Jews from Arab lands found that use of Judeo-Arabic was discouraged and its usage fell into disrepair. The population of Jews in Arab countries would decrease dramatically. Even those who remained in the Arab world tended to abandon Judeo-Arabic. Amnon Raz-Krakotzkin argues that Jews from Arab lands were Arab in that they identified with Arab culture even if they did not identity as Arab Jews or with Arab nationalism.
Political history
The terminology of Arab Jewishness held notable prevalence in the 19th century, when Jews living in Arab countries identified with the Arab national movement that emerged in the lead up to the dismantlement of the Ottoman empire – as early as the Ottoman administrative reforms of 1839 – owing to shared language and culture with their Muslim and Christian compatriots in Ottoman Syria, Iraq, and Egypt.
The terminology became politically important during the First World War, when Jews of Middle Eastern origin living in Western countries used the term to support their case that they were not Turks and should not be treated as enemy aliens.
Today, there is widespread rejection of the term within the Jewish community, with many considering it an affront to their identity. In 2015, the question was posed as to the validity of the term versus alternatives, such as "Iraqi Israeli", in the context of Arab Jews from Iraq, or Mizrahi Jew.
Today, various Israeli political activists identify themselves as Arab Jews, includinv Naeim Giladi, Ella Habiba Shohat, Sami Shalom Chetrit and David Rabeeya.
In post-Zionism
The term Arab Jews has become part of the language of post-Zionism. The term was introduced by Ella Shohat. Ella Shohat argues Zionist historiography could not accept a hyphenated Arab-Jewish identity and embarked on a program to remove the Arabness and Orientalness of the Jews from the Arab world after they arrived in Israel. To insure homogeneity Zionist focused on religious commonality and a romanticized past. She argues that the use of the term Mizrahim is in some sense a Zionist achievement in that it created a single unitary identity separated from the Islamic world. Which replaced older multifaceted identities each linked to the Islamic world, including but not limited to identifying as Arab Jews. She argues that when Sephardi express hostility towards Arabs it is often due to self-hatred. Another argument that Shohat makes is that Israel is already demographically an Arab country.
Yehouda Shenhav's works are also considered to be among the seminal works of post-Zionism. Shenhav, an Israeli sociologist, traced the origins of the conceptualization of the Mizrahi Jews as Arab Jews. He interprets Zionism as an ideological practice with three simultaneous and symbiotic categories: "Nationality", "Religion" and "Ethnicity". In order to be included in the national collective they had to be "de-Arabized". According to Shenhav, Religion distinguished between Arabs and Arab Jews, thus marking nationality among the Arab Jews.
David Rabeeya argues that while the Zionist movement succeed in creating a Jewish state it did irreparable harm to Arab Jews and Palestinians. He argues that Israel has already entered a post-Zionist era in which the influence of Zionist Ashkenazim has declined. With many Jews of European origin choosing to leave the country as Israel becomes less Western. He also self-identified as an Arab Jew, extends that identification back even further, noting the long history of Arab Jews in the Arab world that remained in place after the dawn of Islam in the 7th century until midway through the 20th century. He writes that Arab Jews, like Arab Muslims and Arab Christians, were culturally Arab with religious commitments to Judaism. He notes that Arab Jews named their progeny with Arabic names and "Like every Arab, Arab Jews were proud of their Arabic language and its dialects, and held a deep emotional attachment to its beauty and richness."
David Tal argues that Shohat and her students faced great resistance from Mizrahim with few choosing to identify as Arab Jews. He argues that Shohat in a sense tried to impose an identity in the same way in which she criticized the Ashkenazi for doing.
Lital Levy argues that post-Zionism did more than revive the concept of the Arab Jew. Instead it created something new in so far as it is questionable that a pristine Arab Jew identity which could be reclaimed ever existed. Levy suggests that the contemporary intellectuals who declare themselves to be Arab Jews are similar to Jewish intellectuals who between the late 1920s and 1940s did likewise; in both cases these intellectuals were small in number and outside the mainstream of the Jewish community. Likewise in both cases the term was used for political purposes. A view shared by Emily Benichou Gottreich who argues that the term was used to push back against both Zionism and Arab nationalism which tended to view the categories of Jews and Arabs as mutually exclusive and as a way to show solidarity with the Palestinians.
Criticism
A common criticism of the term "Arab Jews", particularly among Jewish communities originating from Arab lands, is that Jews constitute a diaspora and ethnic group, which the term muddies. Dario Miccoli states that he does not use the term, seeing it as an anachronism. Jonathan Marc Gribetz cautions against the uncritical use of term in historiographical works, viewing it as non-typical.
Scholar Edith Haddad Shaked has criticized the concept of the Arab Jew, arguing that there are Arab Muslims and Arab Christians, but there was not such a thing as an Arab Jew or a Jewish Arab, when the Jews lived among the Arabs. She has noted how Tunisia born historian, Professor Paul Sebag, stated that "these terms were never used in Tunisia, and they do not correspond/coincident to the religious and socio-historical context/reality of the Jews in Tunisia/the Arab world."
In North Africa, she has argued, "Jews were always considered members of a socio-religious community minority, different and distinct from the Arab population, because of their Jewish cultural tradition, their common past, and the Judeo-arabic language—all of them separated them from the Arabs. And the Arabs saw the Jews, even the ones who spoke only Judeo-Arabic, as members of a socio-linguistic religious cultural community, different from theirs.
In 1975, Albert Memmi wrote: "The term "Arab Jews" is obviously not a good one. I have adopted it for convenience. I simply wish to underline that as natives of those countries called Arab and indigenous to those lands well before the arrival of the Arabs, we shared with them, to a great extent, languages, traditions and cultures ... We would have liked to be Arab Jews. If we abandoned the idea, it is because over the centuries the Moslem Arabs systematically prevented its realization by their contempt and cruelty. It is now too late for us to become Arab Jews."
Proponents of the argument against "Arab Jews" include most Jews from Arab lands.
Arab Jews in Israel/Palestine
Prior to the modern Zionist movement, Jewish communities existed in the southern Levant that are now known as the Old Yishuv. The Old Yishuv was composed of three clusters: Ladino-speaking Sephardi Iberian emigrants to the late Mamluk Sultanate and early Ottoman Empire following the Spanish Inquisition; Eastern European Hasidic Jews who emigrated to Ottoman Palestine during the 18th and 19th centuries; and Judeo-Arabic-speaking Musta'arabi Jews who had been living in Palestine since the destruction of the Second Temple and who had become culturally and linguistically Arabized. In the 20th century, as the society got polarised and the conflict intensified, the Musta'arabim were forced to choose sides, with some embracing the nascent Zionist movement and others embracing the Arab nationalist or Palestinian nationalist causes. Other Arab Jews left the Ottoman Empire entirely, joining Syrian-Jewish/Palestinian-Jewish emigrants to the United States. The descendants of the Palestinian Musta'arabim live in Israel, but have largely assimilated into the Sephardi community over time.
Arab-Jewish diaspora
Argentina
Arab Jews were part of the Arab migration to Argentina and played a part as a link between the Arab and Jewish communities of Argentina. Many of the Arab Jews in Argentina were from Syria and Lebanon. According to Ignacio Klich, an Argentine scholar of Arab and Jewish immigration, "Arabic-speaking Jews felt themselves to have a lot in common with those sharing the same place of birth and culture, not less than what bound them to the Yiddish-speakers praying to the same deity."
France
France is home to a large population of Arab Jews, predominantly with roots in Algeria.
United Kingdom
According to the 2011 United Kingdom census, 0.25% of Arabs in England and Wales and 0.05% of Arabs in Scotland identified their religion as Judaism.
United States
Many Arab-Jewish immigrants have settled in New York City and formed a Sephardi community. The community is centered in Brooklyn and is primarily composed of Syrian Jews. Other Arab Jews in New York City hail from Egypt, Israel, Lebanon, and Morocco. Arab Jews first began arriving in New York City in large numbers between 1880 and 1924. Most Arab immigrants during these years were Christian, while Arab Jews were a minority and Arab Muslims largely began migrating during the mid-1960s. When Syrian Jews first began to arrive in New York City during the late 1800s and early 1900s, Eastern European Ashkenazi Jews on the Lower East Side sometimes disdained their Syrian co-coreligionists as Arabische Yidden, Yiddish for "Arab Jews". Some Ashkenazim doubted whether Sephardi/Mizrahi Jews from the Middle East were Jewish at all. In response, some Syrian Jews who were deeply proud of their ancient Jewish heritage, derogatorily dubbed Ashkenazi Jews as "J-Dubs", a reference to the first and third letters of the English word "Jew". In the 1990 United States Census, there were 11,610 Arab Jews in New York City, comprising 23 percent of the total Arab population of the city. Arab Jews in the city sometimes still face anti-Arab racism. After the September 11 attacks, some Arab Jews in New York City were subjected to arrest and detention because they were suspected to be Islamist terrorists.
Notable Arab Jews
- Isaac Mizrahi, American fashion designer and actor
- Ariella Azoulay, an author, art curator, filmmaker, and theorist of photography and visual culture.
- Ella Shohat, who criticizes aspects of Zionism and uses the term in contrast to the Zionist establishment's categorization of Jews as either Ashkenazim or Mizrahim; Arab Jews, she believes, have been oppressed as the non-Jewish Arabs have.
- Joseph Nakash, American billionaire businessman of Syrian descent, co-founder of Jordach
- Sasson Somekh, professor at Tel Aviv University, in a recent memoir.
- André Azoulay, adviser to Moroccan King Mohammed VI.
- Avi Shlaim, Israeli-British historian.
- Jordan Elgrably, director of the Levantine Cultural Center.
- Ammiel Alcalay, a professor at Queens College in New York who began emphasizing the importance of his identity as an Arab Jew in the 1990s.
- Ilan Halevi, described himself as "100% Jewish and 100% Arab."
- Rachel Shabi, journalist and author who has criticized the stigmatization of Arab-Jewish culture in Israel.
See also
- Arabization
- Canaanism
- History of the Jews under Muslim rule
- Jewish diaspora
- Jewish ethnic divisions
- Jewish tribes of Arabia
- Judeo-Arabic
- Mizrahi Jews
- Mozarabs
- Musta'arabi Jews
- Syrian Jews
- Palestinian Jews
- Yemenite Jews
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