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Iraqi Jewish Archive

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Iraqi Jewish Archive, also known as the Iraqi Mukharabat Archive, is a collection of 2,700 books and tens of thousands of historical documents from Iraq's Jewish community found by the United States Army in the basement of Saddam Hussein's intelligence headquarters during the US invasion of Iraq in 2003.[1]

The collection includes a wide variety of books and rare documents, ranging from 500-year-old commentaries on the Talmud to personal letters sent during the 1950s. These materials were abandoned during Operation Ezra and Nehemiah, when almost all Iraqi Jews made aliyah to Israel on the condition (imposed by the Iraqi government) that they leave their property behind. The Intelligence Agency of the Iraqi regime subsequently gathered these books and documents from synagogues and Jewish community institutions, eventually storing them in the basement where they would be found by the US Army.

The archive has been in temporary US custody since 2003, and is scheduled to be transferred permanently to Iraq. This plan is controversial: some Middle-East scholars and Jewish organizations have opined that because the materials were abandoned under duress, and because almost no Jews live in Iraq today, the archive should instead be housed in Israel or the United States.

Discovery and preservation

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The archive was found by the United States Army in 2003 in a flooded basement once housing the Iraqi intelligence headquarters. It was rescued due to a book freezing process on special trucks. With the consent of the provisional Iraqi government, the archive was transferred to the National Archives of the United States in Washington, DC. At a cost of $3 million, the archive was digitized and is fully available online.[2] The documents are written in Hebrew, Arabic, Judeo-Arabic, and English. Certain irreparably damaged kosher scrolls (such as Torah scrolls and scrolls containing the Book of Esther) were ritually buried in accordance with Jewish law.[3]

Debate over return to Iraq

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The US National Archives' custody of the Iraqi Jewish Archive is temporary, and the United States is contractually obligated to return the collection to Iraq. This has engendered some opposition on the grounds that the collection rightfully belongs to Iraqi Jews, almost none of whom currently reside in Iraq.[2] Harold Rhode, a Middle East specialist formerly at the Pentagon who was present when the collection was found, has suggested that it should be placed permanently in Israel.[2]

In February 2014 the United States Senate unanimously passed a resolution calling on President Barack Obama to reopen new negotiations over the agreement on the archive return to Iraq. In May of the same year, the governments of the United States and Iraq had reached an agreement that most of the items of the archive would remain in the United States until September 2018.[2][4] In September 2017, the State Department said it would not seek to further extend the agreement,[4] but in July 2018 reversed course and announced that it would work with the Iraqi government to delay the return of the archive.[5]

References

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  1. ^ Sandi Fox (29 Apr 2014). "Who owns the Jewish treasures that were hidden in Saddam Hussein's basement?". PBS. PBS Newshour.
  2. ^ a b c d Tenorio, Rich (6 Jan 2016). "Who should keep Iraqi Jewry's archives, saved from Saddam, now on tour in US?". The Times of Israel.
  3. ^ "Ritual Burial of Parchment Fragments". U.S. National Archives and Records Administration.
  4. ^ a b Dolsten, Josefin (Sep 8, 2017). "Despite protests, State Department says it will return trove of Jewish artifacts to Iraq". Jewish Telegraphic Agency.
  5. ^ Dolsten, Josefin (July 19, 2018). "State Department says it is working to extend Iraqi Jewish Archive's stay in US". Jewish Telegraphic Agency.
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