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Some 300 rare and
valuable books confiscated from Iraq's Jewish community by Saddam
Hussein's regime have been secretly smuggled into Israel, an Israeli
newspaper reported on Friday.
The books include a 1487 commentary on the biblical Book of Job and
another volume of biblical prophets printed in Venice in 1617, the
Haaretz daily said.
The volumes are part of a massive collection of books confiscated by the
secret police of the executed Iraqi dictator and stored in security
installations in the Iraqi capital until the U.S.-led invasion of 2003.
Many volumes were damaged during the bombing of government buildings in
the opening weeks of the war, and after the fall of Baghdad most of the
books were sent off to be temporarily stored at the Library of Congress
in Washington.
Others however ended up in the hands of private dealers.
"We bought them from thieves," Knesset member Mordechai Ben-Porat, an
Iraqi-born Jew and the founder of Jerusalem's Babylonian Jewry Heritage
centre told the newspaper, adding that the foundation paid some 25,000
dollars (16,000 euros).
In the beginning, Ben-Porat sent an representative to Baghdad who
shipped the books directly to Israel, but once the Americans caught wind
of his activities they forbade further shipments, forcing him to smuggle
the rest, he said.
Iraq once hosted a thriving 2,600 year-old Jewish community that
numbered some 130,000 people at the time Israel was created in 1948.
By 1952 more than 123,000 had left Iraq for Israel, and 20 years later
there were no more than 500 left in Iraq.
Many more left the country following the 1991 Gulf War and today, after
the chaos unleashed by the U.S.-led invasion and the overthrow of
Saddam, only some two dozen are believed to remain.
Source: OCCUPIED
JERUSALEM (AFP)
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