Egyptian immigrants to Israel adapted quickly to their new country. Although
today they look back with nostalgia, many will not visit the land of their
youth.
"The Jewish community in Egypt during the 20th century was the most
modern of all the Mid-Eastern communities," says Prof. Nahem Ilan, an expert
on Jewish communities in the Middle East who is currently editing a book on
the history of Egyptian Jews in the modern era for the Ben Zvi Institute in
Jerusalem. "It is actually a diverse community made up of migrants. The
community grew from 7,000 in the 19th century to 80,000 - an increase caused
by migration."
The reconstructed Suez Canal, inaugurated in 1869, had a dramatic effect
on world trade. Thousands of migrants from European countries opted for
Egypt to improve their financial situation, and Jews also realized that
Egypt was a land of opportunity to earn a living. They came primarily from
Mediterranean basin countries such as Greece, Italy and Turkey. Iraqi and
Syrian Jews from Damascus and Aleppo found a home in Egypt. Yemenite Jews en
route to pre-state Israel remained in Egypt where they were stranded.
Jews found Egypt a haven from persecution in Russia. Jewish residents in
pre-state Israel were expelled by the ruling Turks during World War I. Many
went to Alexandria, including the Ambaches, parents of former first lady
Aura Herzog and her sister Suzy Eban.
Prof. Arie Schlosberg, who heads the Tel Aviv-based Center for the
Studies of Jewish Heritage from Egypt, was born in Alexandria where he lived
until he was 20. In 1910, his grandparents left Russia for Neveh Zedek where
his mother was born, but as Russian citizens they were expelled to
Alexandria by the Turks during Hanukka 1915.
By the 1940s, 35,000 Jews lived in Alexandria, comprising 10 percent of
the city's population.
Many Ashkenazim were among those expelled from pre-state Israel. "Being
an Ashkenazi in Alexandria wasn't an issue. Only after coming to Israel did
we become aware of this," says Schlossberg, a psychiatrist, noting that even
a thriving Yiddish theater existed in Cairo.
The Schlossbergs were connected to pre-state Israel and would visit twice
a year by train. "I was raised in a Hebrew-speaking home. My father, a
physician in General Allenby's army, spoke nine languages. Because
Alexandria is cosmopolitan, everyone knew by 'osmosis' at least three
languages."
About 95% of the Jewish population lived in Cairo and Alexandria, with
the rest scattered in Port Said and other towns. Most Jews were middle
class, with the wealthy wielding influence in the government and business
sectors. Egyptian cinema was created by a Jew, Jacob Sanua.
About 5,000-7,000 of Egyptian Jews were Karaites, who reject the rabbinic
interpretation of the Torah, as opposed to Rabbinic Jews. The Karaites have
their own code of laws. "Today there are nearly 30,000 Karaites in Israel,
with almost all descended from Egyptian Karaites," says Prof. Ilan.
"Although there have been attempts in Egypt to solve the prohibition of
intermarriage between both groups, notably that of Karaite Mourad Farag, it
was not successful."
In Israel, Karaites live in Ramle, Ashdod, Ofakim, Bat Yam, Beersheba,
Kiryat Gat and Jerusalem.
Two Egyptian Jews from these communities are buried near each other in
Jerusalem's Mt. Herzl cemetery: Shmuel Azar was Rabbinic, and Dr. Moshe
Marzouk was Karaite. Operatives for Israel in Egypt, they belonged to the
spy ring that triggered the Lavon Affair (that caused political upheaval in
Israel and forced Defense Minister Pinhas Lavon to resign), and were
executed by the Egyptians in 1954 for their espionage activities.
Ilan is saddened by the fact that while the Karaites were so occupied by
disputes with the Rabbinic Jews, they did not develop a cadre of researchers
about their heritage. "All the researchers of the Karaites are Rabbinic
Jews," he notes.
With industrialization, the Jews moved from villages to the cities. "The
Jews went through a process of modernization and secularization like in
Western Europe," explains Ilan. "Although modernization reached other
places, in Egypt the secularization process was quicker and more profound
than elsewhere. At the end of the 19th century, many Jewish children did not
know Hebrew."
In addition, from the 18th century onwards most of the rabbis serving the
Rabbinic community were not native Egyptians. "All the chief rabbis were
imported," says Ilan. "The local population failed to develop spiritual
leadership due to the weak structure of the community."
For example, Rabi Rafael Aharon Ben Shimon came from Jerusalem in the
late 19th century, after his father founded Jerusalem's Mugrabi
neighborhood.
Rabbi Rafael Della Pergola was an Italian rabbi in Alexandria. His
grandson is Prof. Sergio Della Pergola of The Hebrew University, a foremost
demographer of the Jewish people. In the late 1940s, Rabbi Ovadia Yosef came
from pre-state Israel to teach at the Ahava V'Achva yeshiva at the request
of Rabbi Aharon Choueka (see sidebar).
Sara Rossano, nee Goldring, the administrator for the Union de Juifs
D'Egypte (Organization of Egyptian Jews), is the youngest of six children
and the only one born in Egypt. Her siblings were born in Sudan where her
maternal grandfather was chief rabbi. Rossano's father fled to Egypt from
pogroms in Odessa. She matriculated in English. "We felt good as Jews in
Cairo. My family was well-off and lived in a neighborhood with non-Jews,
mainly Copts," she recalls.
Following the Sinai Campaign in 1956, British and French citizens were
expelled. Most of the Jews were expelled because they had no citizenship,
recounts Rossano. "Two policemen came to the house claiming we held
documents connected to Israel. The building's guard and the grocer were
shocked by this and wanted to sign that we had no such documents. We were
told to leave the following week. My sister managed to buy the last tickets
available to sail from Alexandria."
Everything was left behind. Parting from their neighbors and longtime
maid was difficult. The Goldrings were humiliated during searches for money
and gold. "My brother was a silversmith, so our coats were taken apart. They
even rummaged through my mother's medications," she recalls.
The family went by boat to Naples, and finally in Israel they were met by
a brother and sister who had made aliyah in the early 1950s.
Rossano has no inclination to visit Egypt. "Although it is an individual
decision, many choose not to visit," she says, "yet some former Egyptians do
organize tours to Egypt."
About half the Egyptians in Israel are over the age of 60. "It is
important for us to interest the next generation, too. We hold monthly
lectures about our heritages, as well as two annual events," says Rossano.
The organization published a cookbook, "Dishes of Egypt," and has
dedicated a corner of its headquarters in Tel Aviv to the memory of
Egyptian-born spy Eli Cohen.
"Pessah for Egyptian Jews in Israel is when we adapt to each other," says
Arie Ohanna, chairman of the Union de Juifs D'Egypte. "We are accustomed to
adapting ourselves to every framework. Our children are married to Jews from
all backgrounds, and our Seder reflects this."
Ohanna helps his grandchildren with school papers on their roots. "Just
like the Haggada tells the story of the Israelites and the Exodus, my
grandchildren hear my story of living in and leaving Egypt," he says.
Ohanna's father, Rabbi Bezalel Ohanna, was born in Tiberias. In 1923, he
was sent to Alexandria to serve as rabbi in the Anzarut synagogue. Ohanna
would often visit the Eliyahu HaNavi synagogue which had many Torah scrolls
and seated 1,000 people, where choirboys - called mizamrim - enhanced
festival services. "All Alexandria synagogues were connected to Eliyahu
HaNavi since it was the center of religious services," he says.
Ohanna recalls seeing King Farouk traveling on Fridays along the coast in
his Rolls Royce followed by an entourage of motorcycles. "He got along very
well with the Jews, although this was done in a clandestine way."
Jews came to Israel during the 20th century in waves, usually following
the wars between the two countries in 1948, 1956 and 1967. Previously,
Egyptian Jews came to pre-state Israel not necessarily as active Zionists,
but for a place to escape anti-Semitic sentiments. "The Zionist movement was
peripheral until World War II," notes Ilan. "Unlike their European brethren,
the Israeli-Palestinian conflict did not cause the Jews to become Zionists."
"Zionist awareness was next to nothing in those days," recalls Rossano.
"When things were going well for the Jews they didn't worry and were not
involved in Zionism."
The Jews felt so comfortable in the past century that until the 1930s
some even had dual loyalties - they were Zionists and also members of the
Egyptian National Movement. Many abandoned their dual loyalty in the 1930s
due to the rise of the Nazis and the Arab revolt in 1936.
The Center for the Studies of Jewish Heritage from Egypt headed by Prof.
Schlosberg works together with the Department of Middle Eastern Studies in
Tel Aviv University. Its purpose is to perpetuate the heritage and culture
of Egyptian Jews from ancient times by teaching in academic frameworks and
schools, and by granting scholarships. "We give scholarships to high-school
students and university students learning for all academic degrees," says
Schlossberg.
Currently, the center is trying to reconstruct historical documents left
behind in Egypt by interviewing former Egyptians. To date the center has
documented the life histories of 48 individuals. "As with other communities,
the second generation is not so interested, but the third generation is
showing an interest in their heritage," says Schlossberg.
About Egyptian Jews' absorption into Israeli society, Ilan says: "Their
attitude was realistic and modern. They looked forward to integrating into
Israeli society. They didn't play the ethnic card. The identity of these
immigrants as Egyptians is not as strong as other communities towards their
native country."
An artist's Haggadah rooted in EgyptArtist Ya'akov Boussidan was
born in Port Said, at the northeastern tip of Egypt near the Suez Canal. A
cradle of various cultures and a medley of tongues, the city bustled with
monks and nuns, Arabs and muezzins, Christians and Europeans. Jews had to
find their niche and were often denounced by the non-Jewish society.
Because it was a popular harbor city, Port Said's small Jewish community
was made up of Europeans, native-born Egyptians and Jews from Aden (near
Yemen).
Boussidan's maternal grandmother left Aleppo for Egypt where his mother
Nazli (Mazal) was born. His biological father was European and active in the
underground bringing Jews to pre-state Israel, but died when Boussidan was
only two years old. Mazal married a second time, to Alexandria-born Moshe
Boussidan. "I didn't have a mother-tongue," recalls Ya'akov Boussidan. "We
spoke English, French, Arabic and Hebrew. In addition I picked up Italian
from the merchants who came to the port."
As a child, he learned in a heder in the Great Synagogue located in the
Jewish Quarter. Boussidan recalls that the Port Said Jewish community had
its share of poor people as well as successful businesspeople, among them
the owners of the city's large stores. "Although we were poor, my mother
helped other poor people. She was a seamstress for wealthy people and would
ask them to help the poor. In exchange, they helped me learn Hebrew."
In her later years in Israel, Mazal Boussidan eventually became a
sculptress.
In the 1940s, the Jewish community was blamed for spreading cholera among
the city's population. The Jews were spared this disease because of their
hygiene and kashrut regulations. Young Boussidan was witness to the
slaughter of a cow in the synagogue, as thanksgiving to God for saving the
Jews from the cholera plague.
Moshe Boussidan was caught as he attempted to smuggle kosher meat from
Alexandria to local Jews, and the family had to flee Egypt within 24 hours.
They left for Israel in 1949, a few years before the majority of Egyptian
Jews fled in the wake of the 1956 Sinai campaign. His sisters Rina and
Yehudit were born in Israel.
Ya'akov Boussidan, who never returned to Egypt, maintains that King
Farouk was a puppet figure controlled by other government officials. "There
were both similarities and differences between the situation of the
Israelites and our situation as the Jews of Egypt. We compared the ruling
government to Pharaoh. Our dream of freedom was to go to Jerusalem."
He now lives with his wife Ruth in Kiryat Ono, where he has a studio. He
also has a workshop in London, where he created a unique hand-printed
Haggadah in the 1970s. "The beginning of this Haggadah design stems from a
childhood memory, the origin of which is rooted in my community and my
family in Egypt."
The entire work, including the Hebrew calligraphy and English
translation, is etched and hand-printed on Buckram-Green from plates
prepared in the artist's workshop in London.
Boussidan worked on the Haggadah for seven years, along with 30 students
who worked in shifts around the clock. His Haggadah received international
acclaim and it is featured in the Encyclopedia Judaica. It has been
exhibited worldwide in places such as at the New York Public Library, and
most recently at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art and the Jewish Museum of London.
An artistic masterpiece, the Haggadah includes various strands of
philosophical thought. It starts with the Six Days of Creation and the
Covenant between God and Abraham (Brit Bein Ha-B'tarim), and ends with a
luminous painting of Jerusalem in warm orange hues.
Jews conclude the Haggadah with "Next Year in Jerusalem," and the impact
of Jerusalem is emphasized in Boussidan's multi-technique work which
includes calligraphy and digitalized paintings, in addition to painting with
oil, ceramics and photography.
He recently published "Jerusalem - Names in Praise," based on extensive
research and depicting 391 names for Jerusalem and the Temple through
calligraphy and artwork, with explanations in both Hebrew and English.
Spiritual sustenance in Cairo
The unique Ahava V'Achva study center in Cairo was so beloved that its
former students founded congregations in Israel and the Diaspora named for
it. Founded in 1929 by Rabbi or Chacham Aharon Choueka (pronounced Shweka)
to thwart assimilation, it closed down in 1956 due to the flight of Jews
from Egypt during the Sinai Campaign.
"It is hard to describe Ahava V'Achva in a word," says Prof. Ya'acov
Choueka, the son of the founder. "It was a combination of a yeshiva,
synagogue, school and a community center. My father established Ahava
V'Achva with the purpose of creating a Jewish spiritual center for both
school-age students and working people who wanted to study Torah in the
evenings after a day's work."
Chacham Choueka was born in Aleppo, Syria and came to Cairo as a child in
1910. His father, Rabbi Menachem Choueka, left Aleppo at the beginning of
the 20th century for financial reasons. Cairo's Jewish population was more
homogenous than the cosmopolitan Alexandria, made up of Egyptian and Aleppo
Jews, with a smattering of Ashkenazis and Karaites.
Egyptian Jews integrated well in local society. Influenced by Western
culture, they were in danger of abandoning their tradition and the ensuing
assimilation. Chacham Choueka realized that the only way to stem the tide of
assimilation was to found a learning center to attract Jews from all walks
of life.
Author Rabbi Chaim Sabato, grandson of Chacham Choueka, describes in
Aleppo Tales a figure based on his grandfather who was a revered scholar.
Ahava V'Achva was open nearly around the clock. In the morning it
functioned as a synagogue with a few minyans. During school vacations, young
students flocked to the center also in the morning hours. The rest of the
year they came after school from 4 pm to 7 pm. Adults came in the evening
hours and burned the midnight oil. Services were held on Shabbat with
classes throughout the day.
Rabbis were hired after intensive testing for their Torah erudition.
Following a request for a teacher from Eretz Yisrael, Chacham Choueka
interviewed and hired a young scholar with an extensive range of knowledge -
Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, who taught in Ahava V'Achva from 1947 to 1950. "Other
scholars who taught me during my 15 years there were Rabbis Chaim Douek,
Saadia Munir and Yosef Pinto," recalls Prof. Choueka. "The curriculum was
planned according to levels. The beginner level learned to read Hebrew. Then
we learned about prayers and the weekly Torah portion. Advanced students
learned Talmud."
Most of the teachers volunteered, and students attended without payment.
Prof. Choueka was active in Ahava V'Achva as head of the education
community. In the library he bound books and created catalogues. Perhaps
this was a precursor to his profession of creating the methods for indexing
and digitalizing information. In the late 1960s he joined Prof. Aviezri
Fraenkel, founder of Bar Ilan's Responsa Project (the world's largest
database of ancient and modern Jewish texts in Hebrew), and headed the
project from 1974 until 1986. The project will receive the Israel Prize on
Independence Day.
In the 1950s, the Egyptian secret service, the Muhabarat, suspected the
Chouekas of Zionist activity after the Egyptians intercepted correspondence
to a son studying at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. Finally, in 1954,
Chacham Choueka received word that he would be arrested as head of Ahava
V'Achva. "The authorities didn't differentiate between teaching Judaism and
Zionist activity. In reality though, part of teaching Torah is about
Israel," says Prof. Choueka.
He recalls the night his father fled on a nearly unattainable flight to
New York. Two hours after he left, the police came to arrest him. Chacham
Choueka spent a couple of years in New York, and after an extensive tour of
South America joined his family in Israel in 1960.
Ahava V'Achva synagogues founded by Egyptian immigrants in the 1960s are
located in Bat Yam, Ashdod, Ramat Gan, Holon and elsewhere. Other
congregations exist in New York and Mexico City. Today they function mainly
as synagogues that are attended by other communities, as well as the elderly
Egyptian founders and some of their descendants. "The founders hoped to
import the same idea of a spiritual center like Ahava V'Achva in Cairo. But
in Israel the religious learn in their school systems, and the secular are
not attracted to such places," concludes Prof. Ya'acov Choueka.
© The Jerusalem Post, 30/March/2007