Mister1979
13-04-2006, 15:15
Canadian Jewish News Apr 12 2006Tehran Jews insist there’s Jewish future in IranWed Apr 12, 2006 14:33
Tehran Jews insist there’s Jewish future in Iran
By LEV KRICHEVSKY
JTA
Canadian Jewish News Apr 12 2006
http://www.cjnews.com/viewarticle.asp?id=9031
MOSCOW — Russian Jewish organizers of a trip earlier this month for 15 Iranian Jewish women in Russia said they hope it will lead to links between the two communities.
“We have not had any contacts with Iranian Jews,” said Adolph Shayevich, one of Russia’s two chief rabbis. “We have heard various rumours lately that there is no Jewish community in Iran, that things are bad for Jews there. We are happy to see it for ourselves that this isn’t the whole truth.”
The group is a 15-member women’s amateur folk dance group that came to Moscow this month to take part in the Light a Candle Jewish children’s arts festival.
The trip was a rare group visit abroad by Iranian Jews, who live in an Islamic country virulently opposed to the State of Israel – and they visited Russia, where Jews lived under tight restrictions until the fall of Communism.
The Iranians, aged 14 to 30, came to Russia thanks to diplomatic efforts by Arkady Gaidamak, a Russian Jewish leader and businessman, and with a special permit from Iranian authorities.
Russia is a major supplier of nuclear technology to Iran, which is under strong international pressure to halt its alleged nuclear weapons program.
In addition to general tourist sites, the delegation visited a synagogue and a Jewish day school in Moscow, as well as the Jewish community of Yaroslavl.
The women were expected to be joined by Harun Yeshayaie, the chairman of the Iranian Jewish community, but he had to cancel his visit at the last minute because of health reasons, according to members of the delegation.
All the members of the group live in the capital of Tehran, which is home to 15,000 Jews, the majority of the estimated 25,000 Jews who still live in the Islamic Republic.
This is only a fraction of the 100,000-strong community that lived in Iran before the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
But the Jewish women who visited Russia said the community has a future in Iran, despite the militant anti-Zionism of Tehran’s current political regime.
“After the revolution, problems began for the community,” said Elham Abaei, 30, the leader of the group that came to Russia.
Abaei, who runs the Iranian Jewish community’s website, http://www.iranjewish.com, said the community has adjusted to the political and social climate.
“We can now run cultural and religious, but not political, activities,” she said, referring to anything related to Israel.
Opposition to the Jewish state has been a cornerstone of the Islamic revolution. In 1999, 13 Jews were accused of spying for Israel. Ten eventually served jail terms, with the last being released in 2002.
Most recently, Iran’s president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, caused a wave of international condemnation when he suggested Israel should be wiped off the map and called the Holocaust a myth.
The statement about the Holocaust reportedly triggered a rare example of discontent from Iran’s Jewish leadership. Yeshayaie, the community’s chairman, wrote a letter to Ahmadinejad that said the remarks caused fear in the country’s Jewish community.
But on the issue of Israel, these Iranian Jews would not speak out against Tehran’s official policy.
“You can be Jewish and not associate yourself with Israel,” said Sarah Hay, a 21-year-old computer engineering student from Tehran.
Even far away from Iran, members of the group tried to distance themselves from any reference to Israel when visiting Russian Jewish institutions.
In Yaroslavl, a city in central Russia, the local community baked two cakes for the Iranians. But group members were visibly shocked when they saw the cakes were glazed with the design of the Israeli flag. Their hosts only served them cake without the flag design.
But a member of the delegation who asked not to be identified due to fear of repression back home said she had been to the Jewish state, visiting her family there. She added that she was not unique.
Some Jews use their foreign travels to meet with their Israeli relatives in a third country, usually Turkey or western Europe.
The members of the group said they were participants in the cultural activities of the Tehran Jewish community.
The communal activities range from day schools – half of Tehran’s Jewish children are said to attend Jewish day schools – to synagogues, youth clubs and summer camps, and even a Jewish hospital in Tehran.
One of the members of the group described her community as having “everything a Jewish community should have,” except for an Israeli connection.
Iranian Jews are an officially recognized minority and are generally free from discrimination – although all women in Iran, regardless of their faith, must cover their faces in public.
Privately, some women said it’s impossible for Jews to enter some sectors of the government, but they said they don’t want leave Iran.
“We are Iranians first. We share our country’s history,” Hay said.
Abaei said her parents are too old to leave, and generally those who stay in Iran after all these years feel comfortable there. “There are no ghettos. You can live your life,” she added.
She said some Jews “were slightly offended” by the Iranian president’s remarks about the Holocaust.
But years of state-run propaganda show themselves in the Jewish community members. Abaei said some Jews may disagree that the Holocaust was a myth, yet they are inclined to think the number of Jewish Nazi victims may be “an exaggeration.”
The main problem the community has, she said, was lack of rabbis and teachers of Judaism. There are no yeshivot in Iran, and only one ordained rabbi is serving a Tehran community that has 16 active synagogues.
A Moscow Jewish leader said the Russian community should take advantage of Moscow’s good relations with Tehran to benefit Iran’s Jews.
“Maybe we can invite a group of Iranian Jewish boys to study in a Moscow yeshiva,” said Pinchas Goldschmidt, Moscow’s chief rabbi.
Tehran Jews insist there’s Jewish future in Iran
By LEV KRICHEVSKY
JTA
Canadian Jewish News Apr 12 2006
http://www.cjnews.com/viewarticle.asp?id=9031
MOSCOW — Russian Jewish organizers of a trip earlier this month for 15 Iranian Jewish women in Russia said they hope it will lead to links between the two communities.
“We have not had any contacts with Iranian Jews,” said Adolph Shayevich, one of Russia’s two chief rabbis. “We have heard various rumours lately that there is no Jewish community in Iran, that things are bad for Jews there. We are happy to see it for ourselves that this isn’t the whole truth.”
The group is a 15-member women’s amateur folk dance group that came to Moscow this month to take part in the Light a Candle Jewish children’s arts festival.
The trip was a rare group visit abroad by Iranian Jews, who live in an Islamic country virulently opposed to the State of Israel – and they visited Russia, where Jews lived under tight restrictions until the fall of Communism.
The Iranians, aged 14 to 30, came to Russia thanks to diplomatic efforts by Arkady Gaidamak, a Russian Jewish leader and businessman, and with a special permit from Iranian authorities.
Russia is a major supplier of nuclear technology to Iran, which is under strong international pressure to halt its alleged nuclear weapons program.
In addition to general tourist sites, the delegation visited a synagogue and a Jewish day school in Moscow, as well as the Jewish community of Yaroslavl.
The women were expected to be joined by Harun Yeshayaie, the chairman of the Iranian Jewish community, but he had to cancel his visit at the last minute because of health reasons, according to members of the delegation.
All the members of the group live in the capital of Tehran, which is home to 15,000 Jews, the majority of the estimated 25,000 Jews who still live in the Islamic Republic.
This is only a fraction of the 100,000-strong community that lived in Iran before the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
But the Jewish women who visited Russia said the community has a future in Iran, despite the militant anti-Zionism of Tehran’s current political regime.
“After the revolution, problems began for the community,” said Elham Abaei, 30, the leader of the group that came to Russia.
Abaei, who runs the Iranian Jewish community’s website, http://www.iranjewish.com, said the community has adjusted to the political and social climate.
“We can now run cultural and religious, but not political, activities,” she said, referring to anything related to Israel.
Opposition to the Jewish state has been a cornerstone of the Islamic revolution. In 1999, 13 Jews were accused of spying for Israel. Ten eventually served jail terms, with the last being released in 2002.
Most recently, Iran’s president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, caused a wave of international condemnation when he suggested Israel should be wiped off the map and called the Holocaust a myth.
The statement about the Holocaust reportedly triggered a rare example of discontent from Iran’s Jewish leadership. Yeshayaie, the community’s chairman, wrote a letter to Ahmadinejad that said the remarks caused fear in the country’s Jewish community.
But on the issue of Israel, these Iranian Jews would not speak out against Tehran’s official policy.
“You can be Jewish and not associate yourself with Israel,” said Sarah Hay, a 21-year-old computer engineering student from Tehran.
Even far away from Iran, members of the group tried to distance themselves from any reference to Israel when visiting Russian Jewish institutions.
In Yaroslavl, a city in central Russia, the local community baked two cakes for the Iranians. But group members were visibly shocked when they saw the cakes were glazed with the design of the Israeli flag. Their hosts only served them cake without the flag design.
But a member of the delegation who asked not to be identified due to fear of repression back home said she had been to the Jewish state, visiting her family there. She added that she was not unique.
Some Jews use their foreign travels to meet with their Israeli relatives in a third country, usually Turkey or western Europe.
The members of the group said they were participants in the cultural activities of the Tehran Jewish community.
The communal activities range from day schools – half of Tehran’s Jewish children are said to attend Jewish day schools – to synagogues, youth clubs and summer camps, and even a Jewish hospital in Tehran.
One of the members of the group described her community as having “everything a Jewish community should have,” except for an Israeli connection.
Iranian Jews are an officially recognized minority and are generally free from discrimination – although all women in Iran, regardless of their faith, must cover their faces in public.
Privately, some women said it’s impossible for Jews to enter some sectors of the government, but they said they don’t want leave Iran.
“We are Iranians first. We share our country’s history,” Hay said.
Abaei said her parents are too old to leave, and generally those who stay in Iran after all these years feel comfortable there. “There are no ghettos. You can live your life,” she added.
She said some Jews “were slightly offended” by the Iranian president’s remarks about the Holocaust.
But years of state-run propaganda show themselves in the Jewish community members. Abaei said some Jews may disagree that the Holocaust was a myth, yet they are inclined to think the number of Jewish Nazi victims may be “an exaggeration.”
The main problem the community has, she said, was lack of rabbis and teachers of Judaism. There are no yeshivot in Iran, and only one ordained rabbi is serving a Tehran community that has 16 active synagogues.
A Moscow Jewish leader said the Russian community should take advantage of Moscow’s good relations with Tehran to benefit Iran’s Jews.
“Maybe we can invite a group of Iranian Jewish boys to study in a Moscow yeshiva,” said Pinchas Goldschmidt, Moscow’s chief rabbi.