The Farhud
On January 21, 2005, the Los Angeles Holocaust Memorial
Museums and California State University's Center for Excellence
on the Study of the Holocaust, Genocide, Human Rights,
and Tolerance simultaneously announced that they would
officially recognise and remember ''the Farhud'' as a
forgotten Holocaust pogrom. They urged all Holocaust museums
and educational courses worldwide to do likewise. Their
joint action was applauded by numerous Jewish communal,
Sephardic, and Holocaust organizations, as well as organizations
for the study of genocide and tolerance.
The Holocaust was perpetrated beyond the confines of
Europe and into the entire Arab world, where Jews had
lived in peace for some 3,000 years before the Hitler-Arab
Axis.
The principal actor In the Axis was the Grand Mufti of
Jerusalem, who had relocated to oil-rich Iraq from 1939-
1941, and Berlin for the rest of the War.
The entire Jewish world has heard of Kristallnacht, yet
few have heard of the Farhud, where Arabs trained by the
Nazis in Baghdad, killed, maimed and committed numerals
atrocities against the Jewish population on the two days
on the Jewish holiday of Shavuot in 1941. The Farhud was
the beginning of the end of 2,600 years of Jewish life
in Iraq. This event commenced with a rampage of mass murder,
mutilation, rape, burning and looting. The carnage would
be forever seared upon the collective Iraqi Jewish consciousness.
Until now, the term ''Farhud'' and the riots and subsequent
persecution of the Iraqi Jews during holocaust and has
been completely omitted from virtually all Holocaust study
and memorials. This turning point event, the Farhud, was
recently resurrected, during the fall of 2004, by a series
of Iraqi community seminars, an award-winning bestselling
book by author Edwin Black, as well as recent lectures
and articles on the subject.
Taken from the website www.farhud.org