SRB: Jewish Baghdad: A City Lost
Farewell Babylon: Coming of Age in Jewish Baghdad By
Naim Kattan
Souvenir Press, $50. Reviewed LEON BENBARUK
for the Scoop Review of
Books
Farewell Babylon is the
translation from the original French book Adieu
Babylone (1975) and tells of the writer’s journey
through identity.
It’s a story about loss (leaving
Baghdad) and discovery, about his Jewish friend Nessim in
Baghdad and British colonial rule which sheds some light on
today’s Iraq and the relationships between Arabs, Kurds,
Bedouins, Assyrians, Armenians and Jews
– and about
Muslim domination by Sunnis and Shi-ites on the rest of
society.
Naim and Nessim are young
intellectuals who meet in a Baghdad café where
they
discuss european literature and reflect on the difficulty of
‘creating’ a new post- independent modern Iraqi
literature.
One night in 1941 Bedouin marauders descended
on the city pillaging, raping,
stealing and leaving in
no doubt that Jews had to leave. But where do you go in 1941
with the onslaught of nazism? Naim left Baghdad by bus
for Beirut en route to France dreaming of Paris.
In Paris
he was educated at the Jewish school of the alliance
Israelite Universelle
(AIU) known simply as l’école
de alliance, prior to going to the Sorbonne on a scholarship
in 1947 to study French Humanities and literature.
The AIU made an enormous impact on those who attended. My
father and some of
his generation were educated in
Morocco in the 1930s by teachers from there and he
was
always talking about his experience and his Turkish mentor
Maitre Tajouri.
Whether in Casablanca or Baghdad these young “Turks” were not only the future leaders of the Jewish communities but made the leap from the Middle ages to modernity.
Like most ‘originaires’ (exiles) from Arab countries, naim stayed connected to the land of his birth. For him Arabic was still alive and, to this day, is close to his heart.
Farewell Babylon is not a work of
nostalgia nor one of resentment. It is a book
about
growing up in Baghdad.
Anyone born in the Mediterranean basin, from North Africa to West Asia, will identify with this book: the trials, hardships and tribulations of a traditional Jewish Iraqi community plus the economic hardships coupled with a once happy, creative community.
Although neither Sephardi nor Ashkenazi, Iraqi Jews, for reasons of statistics and surveys have always been lumped, in Israel, with Sephardic communities just like Yemenite Jews though neither have anything in common with Sfarad (Spain).
Jews lived in Iraq from the time of the first
Jewish exile 2500 years ago, brought
to Mesopotamia by
king Nebbuchanezzar after he destroyed Jerusalem.
Iraq,
or Babylon, became one of the main Jewish centres and Jews
were present
1200 years before the Muslims and 500 years
before indigenous Christians. yet, in the
eyes of Arabs,
Jews and Christians, no matter what they said or did, were
always
looked upon as foreigners. No one could convince
the arabs of the Marshes or
Kurdish Muslims that Jews
were there long before them. A little like a fifth
generation
New Zealand Chinese policemen on the beat in
Auckland would be simply looked upon
as Chinese.
Iraqi Jews were highly integrated and had even adopted
arabic first names such
as Ibrahim, Anwar and Naim.
However they rarely crossed the divide – socialising
and marriage were almost non-existent, interacting with
arabs happened only at work or when buying goods.
Jews
excelled in speaking the Arabic language pronouncing it with
rounded
vowels and were masters at speaking classical
literary arabic, the language of the
Koran. This is
important for two reasons. The way you spoke immediately
identified
you ethnically and religiously and, more
importantly, classical arabic was for philologists,
linguists, Arabists and Orientalists. It was the language of
orators and commanded respect and veneration – very
comparable to war time winston
Churchill.
To put it in modern parlance, you can take young naim out of Iraq but not the Iraq out of him.
I recommend this book as few such books are published in English.
Jews of Arab lands, although well integrated now in Israel and the west, retain a close connection to their countries of birth and their bonds with Arabs will always be strong.
OTHER REVIEWS
The above review first appeared in the New Zealand Jewish Chronicle
Leon Benbaruk is a Whanganui reviewer