Israel’s parliament discusses bill that will
tie compensation for Jewish refugees from Arab countries to any
future peace negotiations.
Israeli lawmakers are seeking a law that will
make compensation for Jewish refugees expelled from Arab countries
after 1948 an integral part of any future peace negotiations.
Lawmakers put together a bill demanding
compensation for current Jewish Israeli citizens, who were expelled
from Arab countries after Israel was established in 1948, leaving
behind significant valuable property.
Originally submitted almost a year ago in the
Knesset, Israel’s parliament, the bill passed its first hearing two
weeks ago. Now various interest groups are pushing the bill with the
Knesset’s 120 members before it is subjected to a second and third
hearing next week.
The bill was sponsored by Member of Knesset (MK)
Nissim Ze’ev from the Shas party and follows a resolution passed in
the United States House of Representatives in 2008, calling for
refugee recognition to be extended to Jews and Christians similar to
that extended to Palestinians in the course of Middle East peace
talks.
“I think the term compensation is too limited a
term,” former Canadian Justice Minister Irwin Cotler told The Media
Line.
Cotler, a vocal advocate of the campaign, was one
of several international representatives at the Knesset conference
discussing the bill, organized by MK Nissim Ze’ev on Monday.
“We’re not just speaking about financial
compensation or indemnification,” Cotler said. “We’re talking about
justice for Jews from Arab countries. This speaks to the question
of, among other things, rectifying the justice and peace narrative
of the last 62 years where the question of Jews from Arab countries
has not been part of the narrative.”
“There have been more than 160 U.N. resolutions
on the matter of refugees,” he continued. “All 160 dealt with
Palestinian refugees only. I’m not saying they shouldn’t address
Palestinian refugees, but I’m saying there’s no justice and no truth
if it does not also address the plight of Jews seeking justice from
Arab countries.”
According to the international advocacy group,
Justice for Jews from Arab Countries (JJAC), some 850,000 Jews were
displaced from Arab countries after the State of Israel was
established. These include Jews from Syria, Trans-Jordan, Egypt,
Lebanon, Yemen, Iran, Iraq, Algeria, Tunisia and Morocco.
Speaker of the Knesset Rubi Rivlin (Likud Party)
said the issue was an important counterweight to Palestinian claims
for a right of return to homes from which they were expelled or had
to leave in 1948, and which are now part of Israel.
“The Arab peace initiative, based on the Saudi
initiative, has a clause that calls for a just solution to the
Palestinian refugee issue,” Rivlin said at the conference. “Israel
is opposed to the right of return… we have to make an appeal today,
to say that there is no room for bringing up the Palestinian right
of return without the Jewish refugee issue being resolved. This has
to be heard in the political discourse in Israel and in the
international community.”
Rep. Eliot Engel (D – NY), who supported the
congressional resolution and attended Monday’s conference, said
there was hypocrisy in the way the international community dealt
with the Palestinian refugee community.
“The Arabs today, as they have done for 50 years,
use the Palestinian refugee population as political pawns,” Engel
said. “They want them to live in misery. They want them to suffer
and then to blame the Jews. The fact of the matter is that the blame
lies right at the foot of the Arab states, be it Saudi Arabia or
Jordan or Egypt or any of those countries that have lots of petro-dollars
and they don’t even spend a shekel to help their refugees.”
Monday’s conference was marked by heated
arguments from members of the audience, which included Jews who were
expelled from Arab countries in the years following the
establishment of the state.
Gila Naftali, an Egyptian born Jew who was
expelled with her family in 1956 when she was eight years old, said
there has been a systematic marginalization of eastern Jews. She was
almost banished from the auditorium by security when she lashed out
at MK Danny Ayalon that “You don’t know what it’s like to be kicked
out of your country within 24 hours.”
Ayalon, a proponent of the bill whose father left
his belongings behind in Algeria to come to the fledgling country in
1948, shook Naftali’s hand on his way out, in a gesture of
reconciliation.
The government came under criticism from Jews
expelled from Arab states, who feel these initiatives are too little
and too late. Others have questioned how the compensation, if
acquired, will be allocated.
“I don’t just want compensation,” Naftali later
told The Media Line. “Everybody will get the compensation. I want
money for this building that was in our family for four
generations,” she said, brandishing a sepia photograph of her former
Cairo home.
Stanley Urman, executive director of JJAC said he
was aware of these sentiments.
“I feel for their plight and their pain,” he told
The Media Line. “We, the Jewish people and the State of Israel, must
take responsibility for not being successful enough in bringing this
to the world’s attention.”
The fact that the U.S. has already passed a
resolution to this effect could serve to impact any future
negotiations.
“They have sway,” Urman said, in reference to the
U.S. brokers. “Whether they bring this up in a forceful manner is
yet to be seen. The U.S. is a member of the Quartet and all seminal
Middle East issues are going through the Quartet, so the U.S.
certainly would be our voice at that table.”
The Israeli bill stipulates that “The state of
Israel will not sign, directly or by proxy, any agreement or treaty
with a country or authority dealing with a political settlement in
the Middle East without ensuring the rights of Jewish refugees from
Arab countries according to the U.N.’s refugee treaty.”
“In any discussion where the Palestinian refugee
issue is brought up in the framework of peace negotiations in the
Middle East,” it continues, “the Israeli government will bring up
the issue of compensation for loss of property and giving equal
status to Arab refugees who left their property after the state was
established and to Jewish refugees from Arab countries.”
Ze’ev stressed that Iran was also included in the
bill, even though it was not defined as an Arab country.
Levana Zamir, chairman of the international
organization of Egyptian Jews said she welcomed the initiative.
“Finally, after 62 years, the Knesset is
accepting a law that recognizes our rights,” she told The Media
Line. “I’m just sad that my father didn’t have the privilege of
seeing this. He fought for this and after he passed away I took the
matter into my hands. As Jews from Egypt we should be very happy
because there’s a peace agreement with Egypt, so once there’s a law,
we should start demanding money.”
Zvi Gabai, who represents Jews from Iraq, said it
was a shame this was not done sooner.
“In the meantime,” he said, “the Palestinians and
spin doctors have exploited the Palestinian refugee matter and
presented it as though the Palestinian refugees were the only issue
and that there were no Jewish refugees, without presenting two sides
of the coin – that there were not only the Palestinians who suffered
but also Jews from Arab countries who suffered and lost property,
without bringing this matter to a decision, there will be no
justice.”
The Palestinian Return Centre, a London-based
organization defending the rights of Palestinian refugees with the
aim of resettling them in their original homes, said it was not
farfetched to believe that Jews would get compensation, but stressed
that it was wrong to draw parallels between the two refugee
populations.
“The Jews who were kicked out of Arab countries
have found a place to live,” a spokesperson for the organization
told The Media. “They have found luxury, work, good housing and a
government. But the Palestinians have found nothing. They are not
allowed to work in 70 professions in Lebanon. They’re not allowed to
travel. They don’t have passports or basic freedoms and they’re
being bombed in Gaza’s camps.”
“There is no parallel in the suffering,” the
spokesperson continued. “The Palestinian suffered double what the
Jews in the Arab countries suffered…. The [Arabs] have enough money
and enough political will to solve the problem with Israel, but the
problem is with Israel. If Israel is willing to conduct peace on the
basis of giving rights to the Palestinians, I guess the Arabs would
compensate the Jews, if that happened.”