Distinctive Mission for Muslims’ Conference: Remembering the Holocaust

Posted on New York Times By SAMUEL G. FREEDMAN Published: September 23, 2011 One afternoon this week, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran addressed the United Nations General Assembly, once again casting doubt that the Holocaust had occurred. Almost exactly 24 hours earlier, an otherwise obscure college student in Morocco named Elmehdi Boudra was convening a conference devoted not to denying the Holocaust but to remembering it. Mr. Ahmadinejad’s speech, not surprisingly, made major news around the world, as had his similar pronouncements in earlier years and his Tehran convention of Holocaust deniers. Mr. Boudra’s conference, meanwhile, attracted virtually no media attention of any kind. Yet it should have been trumpeted, all the more for its coincidental timing. While Holocaust denial or denigration in the Muslim world is a sadly familiar phenomenon, hardly news at all, the conference put together by Mr. Boudra and several dozen classmates, all of them Muslim, may well have been the first of its kind in an Arab or Muslim nation, and a sign of historical truth triumphing over conspiracy theories and anti-Semitic dogma. The conference — held at Al Akhawayn University in Ifrane, a town in the Atlas Mountains about two hours south of Rabat — brought together Holocaust scholars and survivors, leaders of Morocco’s Jewish community and American Jewish and Moroccan Muslim students. Its twin mandates were to teach about the extermination of European Jewry and to pay homage to the courage of Morocco’s wartime king, Mohammed V, in resisting the orders of the Vichy French occupation government to round up and turn over Jews for internment and probable death. Uncommonly among Arab and Muslim nations, Morocco has accepted the reality of the Holocaust, rather than either dismissing it outright or portraying it as a European crime for which those countries paid the price in the form of Israel’s creation. Partly, no doubt, because of Mohammed V’s stand against the Vichy regime, the current king, Mohammed VI, called in a 2009 proclamation for “an exhaustive and faithful reading of the history of this period” as part of “the duty of remembrance dictated by the Shoah.” Still, the recent conference would never have occurred without Mr. Boudra. Now 24 and majoring in political science, Mr. Boudra grew up after much of Morocco’s Jewish population had moved to France or Israel. But he heard from his grandmother about her childhood in the Jewish quarter of Casablanca, and a grandfather still had Jewish neighbors in his apartment house. Those few personal connections kindled a broader curiosity. That curiosity ultimately led Mr. Boudra to study with Simon Levy, a scholar who directs the Museum of Moroccan Judaism of Casablanca, and to read such classic Holocaust memoirs as “If This Is a Man” by Primo Levi and the diary of Anne Frank. “What upsets me about this subject,” Mr. Boudra wrote in an e-mail message last week, “is some people’s claims that the Holocaust never took place. It is simply absurd to hear such claims in the light of the historical evidence the world has today.” As a student at Al Akhawayn, an elite university with an international orientation, Mr. Boudra and several dozen friends formed a club around their shared interest in Morocco’s Jewish culture and heritage. They named it Mimouna, after the holiday that Moroccan Jews celebrate on the final day of Passover. Through Mimouna and Al Akhawayn, Mr. Boudra met another barrier-breaker named Peter Geffen. The descendant of a distinguished rabbinic family, Mr. Geffen had founded a Jewish day school in New York and an organization, Kivunim, that provided students and teachers with study and travel in Jewish communities around the world. Last December, Mr. Geffen took 60 Kivunim participants to Ifrane to meet with the Mimouna Club. As the session ended, Mr. Boudra pulled him aside to say that the club wanted to hold a Holocaust conference and to ask if Mr. Geffen could help. “The whole power of it is that it was their idea,” Mr. Geffen said in a recent interview, recalling the conversation. “This is before the Arab Spring, and here’s a group of Muslim students, 20, 21 years old, on an Arab campus in the Arab world. And to have an intuitive recognition that opening the discussion in the face of widespread Holocaust denial is a major human step forward.” In the intervening months, Mr. Geffen and Mr. Boudra worked both separately and together to assemble financial support, formal sponsorship and a schedule, which included scholarly presentations, panel discussions, first-person testimony, museum visits, a concert of Moroccan Jewish music and scrupulously kosher meals. So it was that on Sept. 21, the eminent Holocaust historian Michael Berenbaum spoke of the Jewish genocide in Europe, the tide that Mohammed V succeeded in holding back in his nation. An 80-year-old survivor, Elisabeth Citron, recounted her childhood in Romania and Hungary — wearing the yellow star, being deloused with gasoline in front of a laughing first-grade class, being deported to Birkenau, watching the daily selection of inmates for the gas chambers and ovens. “I don’t expect any of you to understand how today I’m here standing in front of you,” Ms. Citron said. “I have no clue why I am here.” By which, of course, she meant alive. For their part, the Moroccan students asked questions and got answers. Were there any German Jews powerful enough to intercede with the Nazis? Was propaganda the way the Nazis justified the Holocaust to non-Jews? Why hasn’t Mohammed V been listed among the righteous gentiles in the Holocaust museum of Yad Vashem? At one point, a Jewish adviser to the current king, Andre Azoulay, addressed Mr. Boudra and the Mimouna Club directly. Mr. Azoulay was born in 1941, during the Vichy occupation, which made him a half-century older than the students. To make sure all the visitors, too, would understand him, he switched from French into English. Read More....%d/%m/%Y لا تعليقات

New York Times By SAMUEL G. FREEDMAN Published: September 23, 2011 One afternoon this week, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran addressed the United Nations General Assembly, once again casting doubt that the Holocaust had occurred. Almost exactly 24 hours earlier, an otherwise obscure college student in Morocco named Elmehdi Boudra was convening a conference devoted […]

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A Moroccan-Jewish child smuggled out to freedom

Posted on Santa Cruz Sentinel August 7th, 2011 By Simi Portal Stein I am a Middle-East refugee. I am celebrating my Jubilee year as it is now 50 years since I was smuggled out of Morocco with 500 other Jewish children. At that time Jews could not freely leave Morocco. We were second-class citizens even though our families had lived there for centuries. My family came to Morocco over 500 years ago from Spain. Jews had been expelled by King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella, the Spanish rulers who financed the voyages of Columbus. In an undercover operation run by the Israeli Mosad, 500 children were sent to a summer camp in Switzerland. Moroccan officials were told that we would be returning in a few weeks. In fact we went from the Swiss Alps to Israel where we were able to begin new lives. A couple of years later other members of my family joined us as Morocco eased travel restrictions. The Jewish population of Morocco has dwindled from over 250,000 to about 5,000 now. Jews from all Arab lands once numbered about 800,000. Most of us fled to Israel. We left our homes and businesses. Some were able to leave peacefully, others barely escaped with their lives. The route I took was dangerous, and those who arranged the operation could have been imprisoned or executed for helping us had they been caught. Prior to my rescue, a boat carrying Jewish children had sunk with many killed. Fortunately the king of Morocco made it easier for others that followed me. Jews of Iraq, Libya, Yemen and elsewhere had an even more difficult time and suffered severe persecution. We did not receive any help from the United Nations. There were no resolutions on our behalf. The government and people of Israel along with world Jewry provided us with a home. Many, like the Mosad agents in Morocco, risked their lives to help save us from a life where we would never be free. We were provided with housing and an education. We learned Hebrew and were assimilated into the country. Efforts were made to improve our lives. Today, Jews indigenous to the Middle East and North Africa can have a life where they can practice their religion and customs without fear of reprisal from their Arab neighbors or a hostile government. We did it ourselves without great fanfare. In some circles we are called the "Forgotten Refugees" because our story is rarely told. I don't mean to belittle the plight of Arab refugees who have lived in camps for years and have taken handouts from the United Nations, but the contrast is overwhelming. We were uprooted from our homes where we had been for hundreds of years and yet we have created productive new lives. The Arab refugee problem could have been solved decades ago had there been the will to do so instead of using it as a political lightning rod for Arab radicalism. Where Israeli leaders rescued us, the Arab leaders manipulated and exploited their people. Simy Portal Stein is a resident of Aptos and a member of JIMENA, Jews Indigenous to the Middle East and North Africa. Read More....%d/%m/%Y لا تعليقات

Santa Cruz Sentinel August 7th, 2011 By Simi Portal Stein I am a Middle-East refugee. I am celebrating my Jubilee year as it is now 50 years since I was smuggled out of Morocco with 500 other Jewish children. At that time Jews could not freely leave Morocco. We were second-class citizens even though our […]

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