Knesset gets first glimpse of Bahrain’s Jewish community

The Jewish Community Synagogue of Bahrain (AP/Reuters/Ronen Zvulun)

The 50 Jews in Bahrain arrived from Iraq, Yemen and Iran and have lived in Bahrain for more than 140 years.

By TPS

Following the signing of the Abraham Accords between Israel and Bahrain, members of Knesset’s Committee for Immigration, Absorption and Diaspora Affairs on Tuesday held a virtual meeting with leaders of Bahrain’s Jewish community.

The 50 Jews in Bahrain arrived from Iraq, Yemen and Iran and have lived in Bahrain for more than 140 years. The first Jews in Bahrain, who arrived from Iraq, were uneducated and poor. Jews have found success in the local garment industry.

In 1935, a synagogue was built in Bahrain, but it was destroyed following the UN vote on the Partition Plan in 1947. Today, the synagogue in the capital Manama operates mainly during the holidays. The local Jewish community also has its own cemetery.

The Jewish community in Bahrain is getting older, as many of the younger members leave to study abroad and often do not return to live in Bahrain.

The meeting was held with the participation of Ebrahim Daoud Nonoo, who in 2001 became the first Jew to be appointed to the Shura Council, Bahrain’s upper chamber of parliament, Nancy Khedouri, a Jewish Bahraini politician, businesswoman and writer who has been a member of the Bahraini National Assembly since 2010, and Houda Nonoo, a Jewish-Bahraini businesswoman and diplomat who served as Bahrain’s ambassador to the US in 2008-2013.

The members of the Bahraini Jewish community noted that they view themselves first as Bahrainis, and then as Jews. They said Jews that have left Bahrain all left willingly, and they were never persecuted by the authorities. Life there has always been conducted with tolerance. They have access to kosher food and they are not afraid to affix mezuzahs to their doorposts.

The Jewish community leaders said they expressed hope that Israelis will visit Bahrain following the signing of the Abraham Accords in September.

Minister of Diaspora Affairs Omer Yankelevitch promised that the ministry would expand the cooperation with the Jewish community in Bahrain.

She said lessons from the history of Jews in Bahrain should be learned and mentioned the local Jews’ good relations with the Bahraini People.

“The Abraham Accords allowed us to open relations with our brothers in Arab countries – in the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain,” she said. “The Jewish community in Bahrain has an opportunity to deepen its relations with Israel.”

Jewish Agency Chairman Isaac Herzog said the meeting was “historic.”

He noted that the director-general of the Jewish Agency is currently holding meetings in Abu Dabi with leaders of the Jewish community in the United Arab Emirates.

Acting Committee Chairperson MK Michal Wunsh invited the Jewish community in Bahrain to “send to us anything you can offer the country [Israel] or any request you may have.”

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