Jews of the
Middle East
Regardless of
where Jews have lived most recently, all Jews have roots in the Middle East.
By Loolwa Khazoom
Upon examining the history and heritage of the Jewish
people, we find that Judaism is deeply connected to the Middle East and North
Africa: Sarah and Abraham came from Mesopotamia, the land that is today
Iraq--the same land where the first yeshivas and the Babylonian Talmud were
developed. The festival Purim celebrates the liberation of ancient Iranian
(Persian) Jews, and Passover tells the story of ancient Egyptian Jews. Hebrew
developed alongside other Semitic languages in the Middle East and North Africa
and Jewish prayers and holiday cycles reflect the weather patterns of that
region. (It was not, for example, meant to snow in the Sukkah.)
Regardless of where Jews lived most recently, therefore, all
Jews have roots in the Middle East and North Africa. Some communities, of
course, have more recent ties to this region: Mizrahim and Sephardim,
two distinct communities that are often confused with one another.
The Beginnings of the Jewish People
Mizrahim are Jews who never left the Middle East and
North Africa since the beginnings of the Jewish people 4,000 years ago. In 586
B.C.E., the Babylonian Empire (ancient Iraq) conquered Yehudah (Judah),
the southern region of ancient Israel.
Babylonians occupied the Land of Israel and exiled the
Yehudim (Judeans, or Jews), as captives into Babylon. Some 50 years later, the
Persian Empire (ancient Iran) conquered the Babylonian Empire and allowed the
Jews to return home to the land of Israel. But, offered freedom under Persian
rule and daunted by the task of rebuilding a society that lay in ruins, most
Jews remained in Babylon. Over the next millennia, some Jews remained in
today's Iraq and Iran, and some migrated to neighboring lands in the region (including
today's Syria, Yemen, and Egypt), or emigrated to lands in Central and East
Asia (including India, China, and Afghanistan).
Sephardim are among the descendants of the line of Jews who
chose to return and rebuild Israel after the Persian Empire conquered the
Babylonian Empire. About half a millennium later, the Roman Empire conquered
ancient Israel for the second time, massacring most of the nation and taking
the bulk of the remainder as slaves to Rome. Once the Roman Empire crumbled,
descendants of these captives migrated throughout the European continent. Many
settled in Spain (Sepharad) and Portugal, where they thrived until the
Spanish Inquisition and Expulsion of 1492 and the Portuguese Inquisition and
Expulsion shortly thereafter.
During these periods, Jews living in Christian countries
faced discrimination and hardship. Some Jews who fled persecution in Europe
settled throughout the Mediterranean regions of the Ottoman (Turkish) Empire,
as well as Central and South America. Sephardim who fled to Ottoman-ruled
Middle Eastern and North African countries merged with the Mizrahim, whose
families had been living in the region for thousands of years.
In the early 20th century, severe violence against Jews
forced communities throughout the Middle Eastern region to flee once again,
arriving as refugees predominantly in Israel, France, the United Kingdom, and
the Americas. In Israel, Middle Eastern and North African Jews were the
majority of the Jewish population for decades, with numbers as high as 70
percent of the Jewish population, until the mass Russian immigration of the
1990s. Mizrahi Jews are now half of the Jewish population in Israel.
Mizrahi Jews Around the World
Throughout the rest of the world, Mizrahi Jews have a strong
presence in metropolitan areas--Paris, London, Montreal, Los Angeles, Brooklyn,
and Mexico City. Mizrahim and Sephardim share more than common history from the
past five centuries. Mizrahi and Sephardic religious leaders traditionally have
stressed hesed (compassion) over humra (severity, or strictness),
following a more lenient interpretation of Jewish law.
Despite such baseline commonalities, Middle Eastern and
North African Mizrahim and Sephardim do retain distinct cultural traditions.
Though Mizrahi and Sephardic prayer books are close in form and content, for
example, they are not identical. Mizrahi prayers are usually sung in quarter
tones, whereas Sephardic prayers have more of a Southern European feel.
Traditionally, moreover, Sephardic prayers are often accompanied by a
Western-style choir in the synagogue.
Mizrahim traditionally spoke Judeo-Arabic--a language
blending Hebrew and a local Arabic dialect. While a number of Sephardim in the
Middle East and North Africa learned and spoke this language, they also spoke
Ladino--a blend of Hebrew and Spanish. Having had no history in Spain or
Portugal, Mizrahim generally did not speak
Ladino.
In certain areas, where the Sephardic immigration was weak,
Sephardim
assimilated into the predominantly Mizrahi communities,
taking on all Mizrahi traditions and retaining just a hint of Sephardic
heritage--such as Spanish-sounding names. In countries such as Morocco,
however, Spanish and Portuguese Jews came in droves, and the Sephardic
community set up its own synagogues and schools, remaining separate from the Mizrahi
community.
Diversity Within the Communities
Even within the Mizrahi and Sephardi communities, there were
cultural differences from country to country. On Purim, Iraqi Jews had
strolling musicians going from house to house and entertaining families
(comparable to Christmas caroling), whereas Egyptian Jews closed off the Jewish
quarter for a full-day festival (comparable to Mardi Gras). On Shabbat,
Moroccan Jews prepared hamin (spicy meat stew), whereas Yemenite Jews
prepared showeah (spicy roasted meat), among other foods.
As Mizrahi and Sephardi Jews are a minority of Jews in North
America, their heritage remains foreign to many North American Jews of Central
and Eastern European heritage (known as Ashkenazim). Yet just as the world
begins to embrace multi-culturalism, so too has the Jewish community begun to
acknowledge and celebrate the wonderful cultural diversity that exists among
its own people.
Loolwa Khazzoom (http://www.loolwa.com)
is the director of the Jewish MultiCultural Project (http://www.jmcponline.org) and editor of The
Flying Camel: and Other Stories of Identity by Women of North African and
MiddleEastern Jewish Heritage (Seal Press, Fall 2003). She has published
Jewish multicultural articles in numerous periodicals, including The
Washington Post, Rolling Stone, Marie Claire, and Jewish Telegraph Agency.