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Politics : Israel to U.S. : Now Deal with Syria and Iran -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: sea_urchin who wrote (14988)4/29/2007 10:44:37 AM
From: Crimson Ghost  Respond to of 22250
 
IRAN'S FIGHT IS WITH ISRAEL, NOT ITS OWN JEWS

SCOTT PETERSON, CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR - Enmity runs deep between
arch-foes Iran and Israel. And that confrontation complicates the lives
of Iranian Jews, who make up the largest community of Jews in the Middle
East outside the Jewish state. Iran's Jews are buffeted by inflammatory
rhetoric from President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad about "wiping Israel off the
map" and denying the Holocaust, and a politically charged environment
that often equates all Jews with Israel and routinely witnesses the
burning of the "enemy" flag.

But despite what appears to be a dwindling minority under constant
threat of persecution, Iranian Jews say they live in relative freedom in
the Islamic Republic, remain loyal to the land of their birth, and are
striving to separate politics from religion.
They caution against comparing Iran's official and visceral opposition
to the creation of Israel and Zionism with the regime's acceptance of
Jews and Judaism itself.

"If you think Judaism and Zionism are one, it is like thinking Islam and
the Taliban are the same, and they are not," says Ciamak Moresadegh,
chairman of the Tehran Jewish Committee. "We have common problems with
Iranian Muslims. If a war were to start, we would also be a target. When
a missile lands, it does not ask if you are a Muslim or a Jew. It
lands."

The continuous Jewish presence in Iran predates Islam by more than a
millennium. One wave came when Jews sought to escape Assyrian king
Nebuchadnezzar II around 680 BC; others were freed from slavery by Cyrus
the Great with the conquest of Babylon some 140 years later.

Historically, say Jewish leaders, anti-Semitism here is rare, a fact
they say is often lost on critics outside, especially in Israel, where
many Iranian Jews have relatives. Still, the Jewish community has
thinned by more than two-thirds since Iran's 1979 Islamic revolution, to
some 25,000; the largest exodus took place soon after the Islamic
Republic was formed, though a modest flow out continues. "Our problem is
that the Israel issue is not solved, and that affects us here," says one
Iranian Jew who asked not to be named.

But that does not affect every Iranian Jew. Surgeon Homayoun Mohaber
measures his nationalism in blood, and bits of metal ? the kind of
support that Iranian Jews say has defined their small community's ties
to Iran. During the Iran-Iraq War of the 1980s, as an Iranian military
surgeon, Dr. Mohaber conducted more than 900 frontline operations, was
himself wounded, and gave blood twice to save fellow Iranian soldiers.
Today, in his Tehran clinic, he keeps a jar full of bullets and shrapnel
fragments, extracted during the war from wounded soldiers.
"The relations between Jews and Muslims, between 70 million Muslims and
30,000 Jews, are very good," says Mohaber. "In Israel, the situation for
Iranian Jews is quite misunderstood."

csmonitor.com