Remember Iraq's Saturday People

Until a few days ago, not many people in the West had heard of the Yazidis -- 50,000 were stranded without food and water on Mount Sinjar in northern Iraq to escape the genocidal intentions of the Islamic State's (IS) army.
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Until a few days ago, not many people in the West had heard of the Yazidis -- 50,000 were stranded without food and water on Mount Sinjar in northern Iraq to escape the genocidal intentions of the Islamic State's (IS) army.

Now that the international community has bestirred itself to relieve their dramatic plight with US and British airdrops of desperately-needed supplies and their evacuation to safety, the under-reported tragedy of Iraq's pre-Islamic religious minorities -- not just Yazidis but Assyrian and Chaldean Christians -- is finally capturing the headlines.

The gruesome details are trickling out, of IS's barbarous treatment of the local population as they advance into Kurdish areas: mass executions, crucifixions and beheadings, men massacred and women and children forced into slavery.

Church leaders, among them Canon Andrew White, the 'Vicar of Baghdad', lament:

"We are witnessing today an act of religious and ethnic cleansing toward Christians as well as many other communities such as Sufis, Shabaks, Mandaeans, Yazidis, Turkmen, let alone Shi'is and Sunnis, as extremists drive people out of the lands that have been their home for thousands of years."

Missing from the list of persecuted groups is the oldest of Iraq's religious minorities: the Jews. Canon White, who has taken on the mantle of protecting Baghdad's remaining five Jews, knows better than most that Iraq's 150,000 -- member Jewish community has been driven to extinction. First the Saturday people, then the Sunday people. But there are so few left in Iraq that Jews -- once Baghdad's biggest single ethnic minority -- do not merit a mention.

There is no doubt, however, that had there still been Jews in the area which has fallen under its control, IS would have massacred them all. Mercifully, the 18,000 Jews of the Kurdish region fled in 1950.

For IS, the next best thing to ethnic cleansing is to eradicate all memory of Jewish history in Iraq. Already it has blown up the tomb of Jonah, who is revered not just by Jews but Christians, and Muslims who do not subscribe to IS's nihilism. The jihadists have also blown up the tomb of Seth. (There is also a claim that they destroyed the tomb of Daniel in Mosul, one of several supposed burial sites.)

Now IS is threatening the tomb of another Biblical prophet. The terrorists of IS are but five miles from the shrine of Nahum, who lived during the Assyrian period and is buried with his sister Sarah in the Christian town of El-Qosh. The positive news, however, is that 500 young armed residents have stayed behind to make a stand against IS, while their families have been evacuated to Duhok in Iraqi Kurdistan.

Before they fled to Israel, almost the entire Jewish populations of Mosul and surrounding villages would arrive at the shrine of Nahum to celebrate the festival of Shavuot. The highlight of their elaborate pilgrimage, known as "Ezyara," was a dramatic staging of the giving of the Ten Commandments at a local stand-in for Mount Sinai, and a play supposed to pre-figure the battle of Gog and Magog. This was an event that, according to a popular saying, was unrivalled in the happiness it conferred upon participants.

The Shavuot pilgrimage last occurred in 1951. In the words of a popular Kurdish Jewish saying: "He who has not witnessed the celebration of pilgrimage to Nahum's Tomb has not seen real joy."

Despite the destruction of their heritage, the only sentiment one can feel nowadays is boundless joy that the Jews of Kurdistan, and of Iraq, found a safe haven in Israel. Unlike the Christians and Yazidis, the Jewish minority of the Middle East, now concentrated on the eastern shores of the Mediterranean, have the luxury of a sovereign state of their own. Yes, the Jews of Israel are faced with a genocidal campaign by IS's ideological cousins, Hamas -- but at least they have the means to defend themselves.

First published in the Times of Israel.

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