Palestinians
not the only Middle East Refugees
PRESIDENT
BUSH RECOGNIZES
JEWISH REFUGEES FROM ARAB COUNTRIES
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January
17, 2008 - (New York, NY) Justice for Jews from Arab Countries
(JJAC) is pleased that President George Bush raised the issue
of Jews from Arab countries while on his official visit to Israel
in early January. In an article headlined, "Bush
aware of Jewish Refugee' Plight," The Jerusalem
Post said the U.S. President was "very conscious"
that Jewish refugees fled to Israel from Arab lands after the
1947-49 war, and that one of the points that came up in Bush's
discussion was the number of Jewish refugees that were created
in the period after 1948.
This
report of President Bush's interest in the plight of Jews from
Arab countries, comes after the December visit to the White
House by Maurice Shohet, a long time member of JJAC's International
Steering Committee. Joining Mr. Shohet at the White House were
Professor Judea Pearl and Ruth Pearl, parents of slain Wall
Street Journal correspondent Daniel Pearl, all of whom spoke
to President Bush on the plight of Jewish refugees from Arab
counties. This followed the recent Annapolis Peace Conference,
where JJAC issued a declaration which stated, inter alia: "The
exclusion and denial of rights and redress to Jewish refugees
from Arab and Muslim countries will prejudice authentic negotiations
between the parties and undermine the justice and legitimacy
of any agreement." In preparation for Annapolis, JJAC sent
a letter to President Bush asking that the issue of Jews from
Arab countries be discussed in the context of Middle East refugees.
Stanley
A. Urman, Executive Director of Justice for Jews from Arab Countries
welcomed the news of Bush's remarks, "We are grateful
that the President is cognizant of this important narrative
- the violations of rights, and the displacement, of up to one
million Jews from Arab countries. President's Bush's words come
at the opening of the 2008 Congressional session, at which consideration
will be given to two bi-partisanship resolutions which call
attention to the fact that Jews living in Arab countries suffered
human rights violations, were uprooted from their homes, and
were made refugees."
The
Resolutions,
Senate Res. 85 and House Res. 185, would signify
that "it would be inappropriate and unjust for the United
States to recognize rights for Palestinian refugees without
recognizing equal rights for former Jewish, Christian, and other
refugees from Arab countries." Far-reaching and comprehensive,
these Resolutions instruct the President to ensure that in all
international forums, when the issue of 'Middle East refugees'is
discussed, representatives of the United States must ensure
that any explicit reference to Palestinian refugees is matched
by a similar explicit reference to Jewish and other refugees,
as a matter of law and equity.
Over
the next several months, JJAC will be working with Jews Indigenous
to the Middle East and North Africa (JIMENA) on promoting the
Resolutions. JJAC is a coalition of Jewish communal organizations
operating under the auspices of the Conference of Presidents
of Major American Jewish Organizations and the American Sephardi
Federation in partnership with the American Jewish Committee,
the American Jewish Congress, Anti-Defamation League, B'nai
Brith International, the Jewish Public Council for Public Affairs
and the World Sephardic Congress.
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