Iraqi Jews expulsion highlighted at UK Limmud

Around 2,500 people gathered in the English West Midlands for British Jewry’s best-attended cultural event, the annual Limmud Festival.

Among the most popular of the 1,000 sessions on offer at Birmingham’s Metropole Hilton hotel during the five-day event was the screening of a newly-released documentary about the first known purchase in decades of a home in Iraq by a Jew — Londoner Edwin Shuker, who was born in Baghdad.

The “Remember Baghdad” documentary featuring Edwin Shuker, a member of the executive committees of the Board of Deputies of British Jews and the European Jewish Congress, who fled Iraq with his family in 1971, includes footage shot while Shuker visited Iraq in 2015, risking his life to visit his childhood home, which was then in territory run by a Shia militia.

Shuker eventually bought a home in Erbil in the country’s Kurdish-controlled north, after judging his native city too dangerous for a Jew. It now has about five Jewish residents, following the forced exile from 1948 onward of about 140,000 Jews.

About 200 people attended the screening of “Remember Baghdad,” which was one of the first showings in the United Kingdom and follows the story of Shuker’s family and that of businessman David Dangoor and other families, filling the room to capacity with some standing and others sitting on the floor.

“We’re breaking the silence of our parents, who did not really speak about their forced exile amid violence, and we’re doing this with urgency because in 20-30 years, we won’t be around to tell it,” Shuker, 62, told JTA.

The film, which also explores how Dangoor’s mother became Miss Iraq and a later a symbol for coexistence in the country before the rise of extreme Islam there, is slated to show at the Miami Jewish Film Festival on January 16.

Other sessions included an analysis of the antisemitism problem of Britain’s Labour Party by David Hirsh, a prominent sociologist at the University of London who earlier this year published a book on the phenomenon titled “Contemporary Left Antisemitism.”

Another groundbreaking publication featured at the main event was the Nehalel Siddur – a Jewish prayer book containing a set order of daily prayers that contains images that complement and are relevant to the prayers. Published in 2016, its publisher, Michael Haruni, says it is the first siddur of its kind.

The Limmud Festival used to be called Limmud Conference before a re-branding decision undertaken this year. The Limmud model began in Britain in 1980 for and by Jewish educators and has since been adapted by Jewish communities from Australia to California. Limmud UK remains the largest, with 2,500 participants this year.

In 2017, there were 72 Limmud events worldwide run by 4,000 volunteers with 40,000 participants.

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