When will the remaining Jews of Yemen get out?

The Times of Israel May 27, 2012 By Lyn Julius Earlier this week, Aaron Joseph Zindani lost his life. He was stabbed 12 times in the neck and stomach by a Yemeni Muslim shouting, “you have put a spell on me” at Saawan market near the US embassy in northeast Sana’a, while Zindani was shopping with his children. He died later in hospital. Zindani had emigrated from Yemen to Israel in the 1990s. For some reason – some say he had trouble adjusting to his new country – he moved back to Yemen. But Zindani’s murder was not a clear-cut case of an innocent snuffed out by Islamic radicalism for being a Jew. Only last week, Chief Rabbi Yahya Yousef Moussa condemned Zindani for swindling the community in Sana’a out of desperately-needed funds. He and another Jew, the rabbi alleged, had falsified papers allowing them to access benefits reserved for Jews in Yemen. They were planning to return to Israel with their ill-gotten gains. The sense that Zindani was a rogue embroiled in shady deals probably explains why the few dozen Jews living in the capital still apparently “do not feel they are in danger.” Even if there is no love lost between Zindani and the 70-odd Jews in the capital, their protestations that they feel safe in a country where life is cheap sound increasingly hollow. Zindani’s murder would have brought back memories of another murder in December 2008, the reason for the Jews’ relocation to Sana’a in the first place. A 30-year-old father of nine, Moshe Al-Nahari, was shot by a man shouting, “convert or die!” Al-Nahari, too, had spent time in Israel, and was planning to return there. But his father apparently dissuaded him at the last minute. Following Al-Nahari’s murder the Jews were increasingly harassed in their home town of Raida, 50 miles north of Sana’a, where a low-level civil war was raging. President Saleh offered them sanctuary in the capital in two cramped blocks. But they are virtual prisoners in their compound, cannot support themselves, and have been living on meager government handouts. Although some of Al-Nahari’s children left for Israel, the rest of his family swore they would not leave until they had secured the death penalty for his murderer. At first, the courts ruled that the murderer was mentally unstable and only had to pay blood money. On appeal the courts sentenced the killer to death. That was not the end of the story. Al-Nahari’s son was kidnapped by the murderer’s tribe in order to thwart the death sentence. A year ago, the killer bribed his prison guards and escaped from jail. Following the murder of Aharon Zindani, the question on everyone’s lips is “why do the Jews stay there?” Earlier this week, Aaron Joseph Zindani lost his life. He was stabbed 12 times in the neck and stomach by a Yemeni Muslim shouting, “you have put a spell on me” at Saawan market near the US embassy in northeast Sana’a, while Zindani was shopping with his children. He died later in hospital. Zindani had emigrated from Yemen to Israel in the 1990s. For some reason – some say he had trouble adjusting to his new country – he moved back to Yemen. But Zindani’s murder was not a clear-cut case of an innocent snuffed out by Islamic radicalism for being a Jew. Only last week, Chief Rabbi Yahya Yousef Moussa condemned Zindani for swindling the community in Sana’a out of desperately-needed funds. He and another Jew, the rabbi alleged, had falsified papers allowing them to access benefits reserved for Jews in Yemen. They were planning to return to Israel with their ill-gotten gains. The sense that Zindani was a rogue embroiled in shady deals probably explains why the few dozen Jews living in the capital still apparently “do not feel they are in danger.” Even if there is no love lost between Zindani and the 70-odd Jews in the capital, their protestations that they feel safe in a country where life is cheap sound increasingly hollow. Zindani’s murder would have brought back memories of another murder in December 2008, the reason for the Jews’ relocation to Sana’a in the first place. A 30-year-old father of nine, Moshe Al-Nahari, was shot by a man shouting, “convert or die!” Al-Nahari, too, had spent time in Israel, and was planning to return there. But his father apparently dissuaded him at the last minute. Following Al-Nahari’s murder the Jews were increasingly harassed in their home town of Raida, 50 miles north of Sana’a, where a low-level civil war was raging. President Saleh offered them sanctuary in the capital in two cramped blocks. But they are virtual prisoners in their compound, cannot support themselves, and have been living on meager government handouts. Although some of Al-Nahari’s children left for Israel, the rest of his family swore they would not leave until they had secured the death penalty for his murderer. At first, the courts ruled that the murderer was mentally unstable and only had to pay blood money. On appeal the courts sentenced the killer to death. That was not the end of the story. Al-Nahari’s son was kidnapped by the murderer’s tribe in order to thwart the death sentence. A year ago, the killer bribed his prison guards and escaped from jail. Following the murder of Aharon Zindani, the question on everyone’s lips is “why do the Jews stay there?” Read More...May 27, 2012Posted on No Comments

The Times of Israel
May 27, 2012
By Lyn Julius

Earlier this week, Aaron Joseph Zindani lost his life. He was stabbed 12 times in the neck and stomach by a Yemeni Muslim shouting, “you have put a spell on me” at Saawan market near the US embassy in northeast Sana’a, while Zindani was shopping with his children. He died later in hospital.

Zindani had emigrated from Yemen to Israel in the 1990s. For some reason – some say he had trouble adjusting to his new country – he moved back to Yemen.

But Zindani’s murder was not a clear-cut case of an innocent snuffed out by Islamic radicalism for being a Jew. Only last week, Chief Rabbi Yahya Yousef Moussa condemned Zindani for swindling the community in Sana’a out of desperately-needed funds. He and another Jew, the rabbi alleged, had falsified papers allowing them to access benefits reserved for Jews in Yemen. They were planning to return to Israel with their ill-gotten gains.

The sense that Zindani was a rogue embroiled in shady deals probably explains why the few dozen Jews living in the capital still apparently “do not feel they are in danger.”

Even if there is no love lost between Zindani and the 70-odd Jews in the capital, their protestations that they feel safe in a country where life is cheap sound increasingly hollow. Zindani’s murder would have brought back memories of another murder in December 2008, the reason for the Jews’ relocation to Sana’a in the first place.

A 30-year-old father of nine, Moshe Al-Nahari, was shot by a man shouting, “convert or die!” Al-Nahari, too, had spent time in Israel, and was planning to return there. But his father apparently dissuaded him at the last minute.

Following Al-Nahari’s murder the Jews were increasingly harassed in their home town of Raida, 50 miles north of Sana’a, where a low-level civil war was raging. President Saleh offered them sanctuary in the capital in two cramped blocks. But they are virtual prisoners in their compound, cannot support themselves, and have been living on meager government handouts.

Although some of Al-Nahari’s children left for Israel, the rest of his family swore they would not leave until they had secured the death penalty for his murderer. At first, the courts ruled that the murderer was mentally unstable and only had to pay blood money. On appeal the courts sentenced the killer to death.

That was not the end of the story. Al-Nahari’s son was kidnapped by the murderer’s tribe in order to thwart the death sentence. A year ago, the killer bribed his prison guards and escaped from jail.

Following the murder of Aharon Zindani, the question on everyone’s lips is “why do the Jews stay there?”

Earlier this week, Aaron Joseph Zindani lost his life. He was stabbed 12 times in the neck and stomach by a Yemeni Muslim shouting, “you have put a spell on me” at Saawan market near the US embassy in northeast Sana’a, while Zindani was shopping with his children. He died later in hospital.

Zindani had emigrated from Yemen to Israel in the 1990s. For some reason – some say he had trouble adjusting to his new country – he moved back to Yemen.

But Zindani’s murder was not a clear-cut case of an innocent snuffed out by Islamic radicalism for being a Jew. Only last week, Chief Rabbi Yahya Yousef Moussa condemned Zindani for swindling the community in Sana’a out of desperately-needed funds. He and another Jew, the rabbi alleged, had falsified papers allowing them to access benefits reserved for Jews in Yemen. They were planning to return to Israel with their ill-gotten gains.

The sense that Zindani was a rogue embroiled in shady deals probably explains why the few dozen Jews living in the capital still apparently “do not feel they are in danger.”

Even if there is no love lost between Zindani and the 70-odd Jews in the capital, their protestations that they feel safe in a country where life is cheap sound increasingly hollow. Zindani’s murder would have brought back memories of another murder in December 2008, the reason for the Jews’ relocation to Sana’a in the first place.

A 30-year-old father of nine, Moshe Al-Nahari, was shot by a man shouting, “convert or die!” Al-Nahari, too, had spent time in Israel, and was planning to return there. But his father apparently dissuaded him at the last minute.

Following Al-Nahari’s murder the Jews were increasingly harassed in their home town of Raida, 50 miles north of Sana’a, where a low-level civil war was raging. President Saleh offered them sanctuary in the capital in two cramped blocks. But they are virtual prisoners in their compound, cannot support themselves, and have been living on meager government handouts.

Although some of Al-Nahari’s children left for Israel, the rest of his family swore they would not leave until they had secured the death penalty for his murderer. At first, the courts ruled that the murderer was mentally unstable and only had to pay blood money. On appeal the courts sentenced the killer to death.

That was not the end of the story. Al-Nahari’s son was kidnapped by the murderer’s tribe in order to thwart the death sentence. A year ago, the killer bribed his prison guards and escaped from jail.

Following the murder of Aharon Zindani, the question on everyone’s lips is “why do the Jews stay there?”

Read More…