Sarah Aronov Eliazar of Tabriz, Iran, 2018
Sarah Aronov Eliazar was born in Tabriz, Iran, in 1932 and immigrated to Israel in 1960.
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This testimony was produced as part of “Seeing the Voices” – the Israeli national project for the documentation of the heritage of Jews of Arab lands and Iran. The project was initiated by the Israeli Ministry for Social Equality, in cooperation with The Heritage Wing of the Israeli Ministry of Education, The Yad Ben Zvi Institute, and The Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot.
The Oster Visual Documentation Center, ANU - Museum of the Jewish People.
ARONOV
(Family Name)Surnames derive from one of many different origins. Sometimes there may be more than one explanation for the same name. This family name is a patronymic surname based on a male ancestor's personal name, in this case of biblical origin.
Aronov is derived from the biblical male personal name Aharon. The Russian suffix "-ov" means "son of". Aharon, son of Amram and Jochebed, of the tribe of Levi, was the elder brother of Moses, the first high priest of the Jews, and the ancestor of the Cohanim ("priests"). Numerous personal and family names are linked to Aharon, spokesman and aide of Moses, among them Aron, Aren, Oren, Horn, Goren, Oron and Baron.
Distinguished bearers of the Jewish family name Aronov include the 20th century American business executive Aaron M. Aronov.
Iran
(Place)Iran
ایران - Islamic Republic of Iran
A country in southwestern Asia. Until 1935, Iran was called Persia.
HISTORY
538 BCE Zarathushtra - Evil and Good
According to most historians, Jewish settlement in Persia began in 538 BCE, following the "Declaration of Cyrus". This declaration, which went out on behalf of Cyrus, King of Persia, allowed the Babylonian exiles to return to the Land of Israel and to build their Temple in Jerusalem. However, many of the Jews of Babylonia (today's Iraq) chose to stay where they were, whereas others wandered to its neighbor, Persia, which had turned into a great empire in the Ancient Middle East. From this nucleus, subsequently arose the Jewish community that was the center of the story of Book of Esther, which took place in Persia back then, apparently between the years 200 - 400 BCE.
In the years between the establishment of the Persian Empire and it's fall at the hand of the Arabs in 642 CE, there were several dynasties that had control. The last one was the Sasanian dynasty. The focus of Sasanian worship was the Zoroastrian religion, according to which the world was in eternal war between contrasts: good and evil, darkness and light, spirit and material. Since the Jews lived in the Persian Empire for many years, many researchers think that the Jewish religion assimilated several of the Persians' principles: the existence of a devil, the presence of angels and evil spirits, the Garden of Eden and Hell, the resurrection of the dead, the coming of Messiah, the war of Gog and Magog, and more. These elements are not found in the Bible, but they penetrated Judaism due to the influence of Zoroastrianism, and they shaped the Jews' religious outlook for generations.
642 The Messiah Hasn't Come
In the year 642 CE, the Islamic faith arrived, spreading around the world, including Persia. In one day, the huge crowds of Persians replaced their prophet Zoroaster with Muhammad, and Ahura Mazda (the god of goodness according to Zoroastrianism) with Allah. Historians disagree whether Islam was forced upon the Persians or whether they freely chose to adopt it. The truth is probably somewhere in between.
The Islamic historian Abu Nu`aym al-Isfahani, who lived in the Persian city of Isfahan, tells the story that when the Islamic conquerors entered the gates of the city, the Jews came singing and dancing, for they hoped the Muslims had news of the Messiah's expected arrival. It quickly became clear to them that the Muslim believers were indeed riding on donkeys, but there was no Messiah riding among them. The Muslims might not have been bringing redemption, but they treated the Jews with surprising decency: In compliance with the "Pact of Umar" that defined Muslim relationships with other religious minorities in the empire, the Jews were defined as a protected group ("dhimi"), and received rights of autonomy, family, and religion, in exchange for payment of a head tax ("jizya").
850 Literally
One of the denominations among the Jews of Iran in the middle of the 9th century were the Karaites. The Karaites believed only in the literal text of the Torah. According to them, the Oral Torah, essentially the Babylonian Talmud, was illegitimate, because it assumed the freedom to explain the word of God, which, to the Karaites, was a crude act of defiance against the absolute sovereignty of the Lord. For example, the command in Deuteronomy that prohibits cooking a kid in its mother's milk is explained by traditional scholars as the prohibition of eating meat and dairy together. The Karaites take it literally, not to cook a kid in its mother's milk. Another example, from Leviticus, is the legal principle of "an eye for an eye", which the Karaites also take literally: someone who removes the eye of a fellow man will have his eye removed. Traditional scholars, as is known, replace the physical punishment with a monetary fine. The central personalities in the Persian Karaites movement were Chivi l-Balkhi, Benjamin Ben Moses Nahawandi, and Daniel Ben Moses al-Qumisi. All of them lived and were active during the second half of the 9th century. These leaders came out against the tyranny and disorder that spread through the rabbinical institutions, and many in the Persian Jewish community were swept up in following them. The Karaite movement did not pass the test of history. The rigidity of communal leaders with regard to anything written in the Torah ended any discussion. From the stream that measured 40% of the Jews in the 9th and 10th centuries, today there is only a handful of less than one percent.
1219 Not Bears, Not Crusaders
During the 13th century, Mongolian forces came out of the heart of Asia and established the largest empire that ever existed since the dawn of human history. This empire stretched from south eastern Asia until Europe, about 22% of the world. The news of Muslim countries falling, one after another, before the feet of the Mongolian leader Genghis Khan also reached Christian Europe. The news planted hope in the hearts of bishops and priests that now would come the redeemer of Christianity and the conqueror of Islam. But it quickly became clear that to Genghis Khan it made no difference if you were holding a copy of the Koran or believed in the New Testament. As someone who saw himself as the holder of God's rod of anger against the sinners of mankind, the Mongolian leader left behind rivers of blood, orphans and widows, and turned blossoming cities into ashen ruins.
The huge and destructive dimensions of the Mongolian invasion in Persia (1219 - 1223) turned it into a genuine holocaust. Historical sources report that the Mongols did not overlook the Jews: complete communities were destroyed, and a population that numbered in the hundreds of thousands before the invasion, according to traveler Benjamin of Tudela, was left with only a few tens of thousands.
The terrible blow of the Mongolian invasion against the Jews was slightly softened following the relative blossoming of Persia during the Mongolian-Ilkhanate period (1227-1335) and the religious tolerance shown to the Jews. Evidence of this is the appointment of a Jewish doctor from the city of Abhar, Sa'ad al-Daula, to the head of the viziers during the time of the rule of Arghun Khan, at the end of the 13th century.
1359 - Wisdom Among The Nations, Believe!
Shāhin-i Shirāzi, who lived in Persia in the 14th century, is considered one of the great Jewish poets of Persia. Shirazi was influenced by a longstanding tradition of Persian epic poetry that delivered fruits such as the well-known Persian epic Shahnameh, which he assimilated into his creation. In doing so, Shirazi joined a long line of Jewish artists who were influenced by the culture of their time and surroundings, among them Maimonides, whose work The Guide for the Perplexed draws from Aristotelian metaphysics, and the author of the Zohar, who assimilates in his writing agnostic and neo-Platonic teachings, and the poets of the Golden Age in Spain, who "converted" Muslim poetic elements. And there are many examples.
In the epic work of Shirazi, stories of the creation of the world from the Bible are blended with descriptions of the return to Zion during the time of Cyrus the Great (who, according to Shirazi, converted), and, understandably, the story of Esther. All of this is done in rhyming works that extend over 9,000 verses. Among researchers, general agreement prevails that Shirazi's epic is unique in its type and scope in Jewish-Persian literature (which was written in the Persian language using Hebrew characters), and perhaps in all of Jewish literature. Shirazi was a pioneer of the Jewish-Persian tradition of epic poetry. The poet Amrani, born in 1454, continued the path of Shirazi, writing impressive epics based on biblical stories.
1730 Crypto-Muslims
More than 800 years passed since the death of Husayn ibn Ali, the grandson of Muhammad, on the outskirts of Karbala, an event that symbolized the beginning of the conflict between the Shia and the Sunni, that rages until today, and until a redheaded boy named Ismael subdued, in 1499, the Mongolian- Ilkhanate dynasty and turned Shiite Islam into the official religion of Persia. The Safavid-Shiite dynasty that rose to power with the victory of Ismael ruled almost 300 years, and led a fanatical religious climate that had no tolerance for Jews. Two historical documents from the period shed light on the situation of the Jews in Persia. The first document, Ketāb-e anūsī (“The Book of a Forced Convert”) written in verses by Baba'i ben Lotf, describes the difficult persecutions the Jews of Iran suffered from 1613 to 1662. The poet tells of many Jews martyred after being forced to convert to Islam, and others forced to live as crypto-Jews for generations. The second document, also written in verse, written by Babai ben Farhad, describes the persecution of Jews during the years 1729-1730. From the document it emerges that even if Jews were not forced to convert to Islam, they were subject to discriminatory laws. They had to wear identification badges on their lapels, or were prohibited from gathering in public wearing finer clothing. They could not raise their voices when talking to a Muslim. They had to surrender any inheritance, giving it to a family that had converted to Islam. This last law encouraged Jews to convert to Islam and bankrupted the community.
In the two documents, we find that many crypto-Jews later returned to their origins, but the physical and spiritual harm to the community caused damage to the Jews of Persia that was difficult to recover from for many generations.
1860 Our Child
One of the important projects of the Alliance Israelite Universelle was the establishment of a network of modern elementary schools in Jewish communities in Islamic countries, including Persia. This network of Alliance schools, which advocated for combining the values of the enlightenment with Jewish learning, supported more than anything the introduction of modern values into Persia, especially in the cities of Tehran, Isfahan, Hamedan, and Shiraz.
1917 "If You Want"
The Balfour Declaration, which was issued in 1917, awakened strong nationalistic emotions among the Jews of Persia, exactly as it did to other Jewish communities around the world. These emotions spurred many members of the community to make aliyah to the Land of Israel, specifically to Safed. Two years after the declaration, the Zionist Agency of Persia was founded, which was composed of the religious leaders of Tehran. The Agency published a weekly bulletin called Hageulah ("The Redemption"), which was written in the Persian-Hebrew language, and served to strengthen the study of the Hebrew language as well as closer ties to the large Zionist centers in Eastern Europe. These activities led to a relatively large increase in the number of Persian Jews making aliyah to Israel. Prior to 1925, about 7,000 of the 80,000 Jews in Persia made aliyah to Israel.
One of the important achievements of the Agency was the closer ties between Jewish communities in Persia itself. Before the establishment of the Agency, the Jews in Persia lived primarily in the cities of the frontier, far away and cut off from each other. The Agency's center in Tehran joined together these isolated communities, whose members were mostly poor and impoverished, putting them under a common roof and harnessing them to Zionist activities with broad scope.
1925 Don't Look at the Container
A model nation-state merited much success during the period between the two World Wars. Young nations rose up routinely, and united around a strong army, a modern economy, and a secular way of life. Even land with a dominant religious character, like Turkey and Iran, shed their ethical finery and adopted a clearly secular way of life.
The person who stood in the center of this national revolution in Persia was an officer who rose to the throne in December, 1925, thanks to his abilities, his political maneuvering, and to the situation at that time, including support from the British. His name was Razah Shah (1878-1944), and he was the first secular leader of Persia, during whose reign the name of the country was changed to Iran. Razah Shah conducted all-out wars against the religious establishment in Iran, and implemented far-reaching reforms that hastened the processes of secularization and modernization in Iranian society.
The Jews reacted positively to the reforms of Razah Shah. They demonstrated a desire to join the current of Iranian nationalism. They loved Persian poetry and literature. They celebrated the national Iranian holidays and changed their names to Persian names, and boasted about the pre-Islamic days of Iran. Following the cancellation of regulations, they were allowed to serve in the army and to study in government elementary schools. The most significant change was the permission they received to leave the ghetto. This permission made it possible for many Jews to establish stores in central business areas and improve their economic situation.
However, there are those who will say that the improvement in the situation of the Jews was only superficial. In contrast to the other minorities in Iran, like the Armenians or members of the Zoroastrian religion, who were closer to the Iranians based on language, culture, ethnicity and history, the Jews preserved their relationship to their foreign origins. This fact awakened tensions between them and the general Iranian community. These tensions came to be expressed most clearly during World War II, when Razah Shah refused to join the Allies.
1941 Children of Tehran
The invasion of the Nazi army into the Soviet Union, and it's advance toward the northern border of Iran, ignited the excitement of Fascist groups and mobs in Iran, who were thirsty to get their hands on Jewish property. Further reinforcement of the pro-Nazi atmosphere came from the political domain: the shaky relationship between Iran and Russia and Britain brought Razah Shah to choose the Nazis as the masters of the political treaty. Business relationships between Iran and Germany were continuing to get closer, and many technicians and engineers were flowing to Iran from Germany. These changes in Iranian society, besides the belief in the common Aryan origins of both the Persian and German people, accompanied by an anti-Semitic campaign in newspapers and on the radio, burned the ground under the feet of Jews in Iran.
With great luck, in the fall of 1941, Allied forces entered Iran and turned history on a more optimistic path. The period of occupation by the Allied (1941-1946) is considered one of the most dynamic in the history of Iran. More than 20 political parties were founded, from all ends of the political rainbow. Tens of free newspapers and weeklies were published in Tehran and in the provinces. Zionist activity was revived in full strength, and even the Jewish Agency opened an office in Tehran. The activity of the agency focused on saving "the children of Tehran", Jewish orphans who had been smuggled from occupied Poland toward the end of World War II and wandered the streets of the Soviet Union, together with the army of the Polish General Andreas, until they reached Tehran. From there, they were brought, with the help of the Agency, directly to Israel. Among the children of Tehran is the known television personality and member of the World Olympic Committee, Alex Gilady, the General Avigdor Ben-Gal, and the learned scholar from Biala, Rabbi Ben Zion Rabinowitz.
1961 By Their Lives and By Their Deaths
In 1941, the control of Iran passed from Razah Shah to his son, Mohammed Razah Shah Pahlavi (1919-1980), who ruled the country until the Islamic Revolution of 1979, and who, in 1961, compared the relations between Israel and Iran to "the relations between lovers except for marriage". Today, with the difficult relationships between the two countries, the statement seems quite imaginary.
But in reality, until the "Ayatollah revolution", Israel and Iran maintained close and warm relationships. The young State of Israel had an embassy in Tehran and maintained a variety of business, political and cultural relationships with secular Iran.
From 1951 to 1954, approximately 70,000 Jews made aliyah from Iran to Israel, most of them urban dwellers of lower status. They established tens of settlements throughout Israel. Not only that, but the Jews who remained in Iran after the establishment of the State of Israel enjoyed the politics of the Shah. The "White Revolution" that he led in 1963, with the purpose of turning Iran into a strong, regional economic power, benefited the Jews in all areas. In the course of one generation, they attained impressive achievements. Despite their small proportion of the population (until 1979 there were about 80,000 Jews in Iran, less than a quarter of a percent of the general population), their economic, professional, and cultural influence was powerful. Approximately 10% of the Jews in Iran were extremely wealthy, and the rest were based in the middle class. The proportion of academics or physicians was much higher than the proportion among the general population. Despite the incitement of Muslim extremists that essentially increased after the Six Day War, the Iranian police treated them with great sympathy.
2000 Left, Right, Left
In 1979, the Iranian Revolution erupted. The background for the eruption was an absurd agreement between Muslim religious figures, who opposed the secular government's secular and social reforms, and an extreme left-wing group with communist tendencies, who called for a rebellion against "wicked American imperialism", and who saw Razah Shah as a representative.
The religious extremists, with their exiled leader of the revolution, Ayatollah Khomeini (1902 - 1989), came out on top: Iran turned into a country run according to Muslim-Shiite law, and the religious institution ruled with coercion. In a complete contrast to Shah, the Ayatollah Khomeini and his government defined the State of Israel as an enemy of humanity, and Zionism as an abomination. Nevertheless, despite occasional expressions of anti-Semitism, the Iranian government was careful to separate their relationships with the State of Israel from their relationships with the Jews living in Iran. The efforts of the latter group to declare their loyalty to the government and to express criticism of the Zionist project also contributed to this separation. Even so, beginning in 1979 and until 1987, fifty thousand Jews left Iran. Approximately 25 thousand of them went to the west coast of the United States, and 20 thousand of them went to Israel.
As of early 21st century, the relationship between Iran and the State of Israel is a largely hostile one. Iran's leaders constantly use violent rhetoric with regard to Israel. The relationship between the countries has been aggravated following Iran's efforts to develop nuclear weapons, efforts that have caused the Israeli governments to engage in a broad diplomatic war against them.
At the beginning of the new millennium, there were 8,750 Jews living in Iran.
Tabriz
(Place)Tabriz
In Persian: تبریز
A city and the capital of East Azerbaijan Province, Iran.
A Jewish community existed in Tabriz in the Middle Ages. Samau'al b. Yachya Al-Maghribi, 12th-century author of Ifcham Al-Yahud, mentions Tabriz, together with Salmas (Shahpur) and Khoi, as a place where the followers of the pseudo-messiah David Alroy continued to adhere to his movement. From the time of Hulagu Khan, Tabriz became the capital of the realm of the Il-Khan dynasty. There the Jewish physician Sa'd Al-Dawla was appointed vizier of the Il-Khan ruler Arghun, exercising considerable power until his assassination in 1291; and the vizier, historian, and physician Rashid-Al-Dawla served three rulers until his tragic death in 1318.
As attested by Hebrew manuscripts written by scholars in Tabriz and the vicinity, the Jewish community consisted of both Karaites and Rabbanites. The Karaite physician Nafis b. Daud At-Tabrizi moved in 1354 from Tabriz to Cairo, where he was converted to Islam. In the 16th century the Yemenite traveler Zechariah Al-Dahiri visited Tabriz and described in his Sefer Ha-Musar the deteriorating conditions of Jewish life there. The wave of persecutions which swept over the whole of Persia under the Safavid rulers Abbas I and Abbas II severely affected the Jews of Tabriz also, as indicated by the Armenian historian Arkel and the Judeo-Persian chroniclers Babai Ibn Lutf and Babai Ibn Farchad. However, the Jewish community survived these persecutions, since between 1711 and 1713 Judah b. Amram Diwan, an emissary from Hebron, included Tabriz among his visits to Jewish communities in Persia. When David d'Beth Hillel visited Persia in 1828, the Jewish community in Tabriz had already ceased to exist.