Posted: 27 Dec 2013 01:13 AM PST
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Mesopotamia (Iraq) (Credit: Keystone-Mast Collection, California Museum of
Photography at UCR ARTSblock, University of California, Riverside)
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The Jews of Iraq
The vast Keystone-Mast Collection at the California Museum of Photography contains many photographs of Jewish communities -- now extinct -- from across the Muslim world.
We believe most of the undated pictures in the University of California - Riverside Archives were taken between 1898 and 1930
Using pictures we found in the Library of Congress archives two years ago, Israel Daily Picture has already explored many of the Jewish communities in Iraq, Egypt, Tunisia, Syria, and Turkey. Click on the country to view earlier postings.
Today, we present the UCR's vintage pictures of the Jews of Iraq. Suffering from pogroms, persecution, and confiscation of property, most of the Jews of Iraq left the country by 1951. The "Jews of Iraq" is Part 1 of a series that will include vintage pictures of Jews of Egypt, Syria and Turkey.
Click on the pictures to enlarge. Click on the captions to view the original pictures.
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California Museum of Photography at UCR)
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Inside Ezekiel's Tomb (circa 1931, Library
feature on Ezekiel's Tomb
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Ezekiel's Tomb (Credit: Keystone-Mast Collection,
California Museum of Photography at UCR)
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"Principal Street, Baghdad, Where the Jews and
War II, 80,000 Jews lived in Baghdad.
(Credit: Keystone-Mast Collection, California Museum
of Photography at UCR)
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Shatt-el-Arab, (lower Euphrates. and Tigris). East over
lower Tigris to Shrine dear to Jews."
(Credit: Keystone-Mast Collection, California Museum
of Photography at UCR)
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Tigris River in North Baghdad, Mesopotamia."
Note the woman in the window and the boat, a
"kufas" row boat on the Tigris. (Credit: Keystone-Mast
Collection, California Museum of Photography at UCR)
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Baghdad, Mesopotamia." (Credit: Keystone-Mast
Collection, California Museum of Photography at UCR)
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how many people fit in a kufas.
(Credit: Keystone-Mast Collection, California Museum
of Photography at UCR)
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For more information on the Jews of Iraq and the Tomb of Ezra visit Point of No Return, Jewish Refugees from Arab Countries.
In 2003, a U.S. Defense Department analyst, Harold Rhode, uncovered a vast cache of ancient Jewish documents in the flooded basement of the Iraqi Intelligence Headquarters. He led an effort to save the historical documents and bring them to the United States for restoration. The restoration has been completed, but Iraqi Jews around the world are protesting the U.S. Government's plan to return the documents to the Iraq government.
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