The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 United States Wednesday, June 19, 2013
Tug-of-War Over Iraqi Jewish Trove of Books and Other Materials in United States Hands
Books and documents found by U.S. troops in a secret police building in Baghdad. A trove of Jewish books and other materials, rescued from a sewage-filled Baghdad basement during the 2003 invasion and now stored at the National Archives and Records Administration in College Park, Md. near Washington, is now caught up in a tug-of-war between the U.S. and Iraq. AP Photo/Maj. Corine Wegener.

By: Rebecca Santana, Associated Press

BAGHDAD (AP).- A trove of Jewish books and other materials, rescued from a sewage-filled Baghdad basement during the 2003 invasion, is now caught up in a tug-of-war between the U.S. and Iraq.

Ranging from a medieval religious book to children's Hebrew primers, from photos to Torah cases, the collection is testimony to a once vibrant Jewish community in Baghdad. Their present-day context is the relationship, fraught with distrust, between postwar Iraq and its Jewish diaspora.

Discovered in a basement used by Saddam Hussein's secret police, the collection was sent to the U.S. for safekeeping and restoration, and sat at the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) in Maryland until last year, when Iraqi officials started a campaign to get it back.

Initially contacts went well, but now the deputy culture minister, Taher Naser al-Hmood, says "The Americans are not serious" about setting a deadline for getting back the archive.

U.S. officials deny that they are delaying its return. They say they only recently got the roughly $3 million needed to clean up the materials — the whole point of bringing them to the U.S. — and they question the rush to return the collection now, when the goal is so close.

"It is not U.S. government material, and we have every intention of returning it," said Phil Frayne, a spokesman for the State Department's Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs.

"We understand the frustration over the delay but we're happy that this is going to finally move forward," he said.

But al-Hmood was skeptical, saying he had not been told about the money. "Let the American side prove its goodwill," he said. "We cannot trust the Americans. They have not fulfilled their previous promises."

The case is complicated by the knee-jerk suspicions that cloud everything related to Jewish history in the Arab world, Iraq's attempts to assert its sovereignty after years of U.S. domination, and a diaspora trying to recover its history.

There are claims of Jewish pressure to prevent the return of the collection, and questions about why the U.S. didn't prevent the looting of Arab and Islamic treasures during the invasion but was able to bring the Jewish collection to safety in America. Among those voicing indignation about the transfer of the archive to America is Liwa Smaysim, the minister of archaeology, who belongs to a fiercely anti-American party in the government coalition.

On the other hand, once returned to Baghdad, the archive would likely be beyond the reach of Jewish scholars, especially Israeli ones, given the absence of diplomatic ties with Israel, and the anti-Semitism that exists here. Iraqi officials have vowed to restore the materials and digitize them so they're available outside of Iraq as well.

Besides parchments and photos accumulated over the years, the collection includes books printed in Baghdad, Warsaw and Venice, one of them a Jewish religious book published in 1568, and 50 copies of a children's primer in Hebrew and Arabic.

They are the lost heritage of what was once one of the largest Jewish communities in the Middle East, which dated to the 6th century B.C. and ended with an exodus after the creation of Israel in 1948. Today fewer than 10 Jews are believed to be left here.

After the collection was found by a U.S. military team searching for weapons of mass destruction, the U.S.-headed agency temporarily governing Iraq signed an agreement with the Maryland archive to take its contents to the U.S.

It stipulated that the U.S. would restore and display the materials before returning them to Iraq, but that the Iraqi government could have them back any time it asked, regardless of whether the work was complete.

Iraqi Culture Ministry officials say they appreciate the U.S. efforts to save the materials, but are frustrated about getting them back.

They say that in meetings and conversations last year with the State Department and NARA, a decision was reached to return half the materials by the end of 2010, and the rest to be restored and displayed before also coming back to Iraq.

A NARA report, obtained through the Freedom of Information Act by The Associated Press, says Saad Eskander, the head of the Iraqi National Library and Archives, met with U.S. representatives on June 23, 2010 and they decided upon a plan, including the immediate return of half the archive. But for reasons no one can entirely agree upon, things began to fall apart.

Al-Hmood said that when the December deadline passed, the Iraqis decided to officially ask for the archive back, and repeated the request six months later. In response, he said, the U.S. sent messages discussing what he says are "technical issues" and which he considers procrastination.

However, the Iraqi government seems in two minds about the matter. Deputy Foreign Minister Labid Abawi, whose ministry is Kurdish-run and has close ties to the U.S. government, said it prefers the U.S. do the restoration, on the grounds that Iraq lacks the capability.

But Eskander and al-Hmood say the Iraqi Cabinet tasked their offices — not the Foreign Ministry — with recovering missing documents, and they're trying to do their job. A letter from the Coalition Provisional Authority, the U.S. agency that ran Iraq after the invasion, and obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, confirms the Ministry of Culture is charged with making decisions about the Jewish archive.

Eskander shepherded his library through the violence that followed the invasion and is getting a new five-story expansion project now being built. The rattle of gunfire has been replaced by the boom of construction, while staff repair other, similarly mold-infested documents — proof, Eskander says, that Iraq can and will do the needed restoration on the Jewish materials.

He himself is a Faihly, a member of a small Shiite-Kurdish minority persecuted under Saddam. He says it is vital that Iraqis know their history and that they be made aware that Jews were once part of this country.

He and al-Hmood also are pushing for the return of millions of sensitive security-related documents believed to be in CIA and Pentagon hands. These would be much more significant for the Iraqi people, but for now the Jewish archive has been the focus of activity.

Al-Hmood said "There are Jewish organizations that exert great pressure to prevent the return of the archive, claiming that there are no Jewish people in Iraq any longer."

The State Department says it has not succumbed to any pressure and is simply fulfilling its part of the agreement to restore the materials before returning them to Iraq.

Frayne said he understands the frustration over the delay but adds that with nearly $3 million in U.S. taxpayer money allocated, restoration can move ahead.

NARA will hire about 10 people to do the work, and part of the money will go toward bringing Iraqi archivists to the U.S. and training them in restoration, said Doris Hamburg, NARA's director of preservation programs.

Frayne said the U.S. has reached out repeatedly to the Iraqi side to appoint an archival team to help draft an addendum to the 2003 agreement, but has received no response.

Although Al-Hmood and Eskander said they had not been told about the $3 million, Al-Hmood said talks could resume if a firm timeline was set for the archive's return.

The role, if any, of outside Jewish groups in the dispute is unknown, but Andrew Baker of the American Jewish Committee questioned why Iraqi officials were in such a rush and wondered who in the Jewish community would be able to make use of the collection once it is taken to Iraq.

A member of the Iraqi Jewish diaspora who follows the talks closely said it initially was hoped the archive would serve as a line of communication with the Iraqi government on other issues such as protecting Jewish cemeteries and shrines in Iraq.

But the perceived involvement of American Jewish organizations led to suspicions they were trying to block the archive's return, and the archive became an impediment to further talks, he said. He requested anonymity, citing the sensitivity of the archive issue.

___

Online:

NARA's 2003 report on the Archive: http://bit.ly/qqn4VM

___

Associated Press writer Qassim Abdul-Zahra in Baghdad and investigative researcher Randy Herschaft in New York contributed to this report.


Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.



Last Week News

July 10, 2011

Exhibition of Work by Artist Louise Bourgeois on View for the First Time in Latin America

Indianapolis Museum of Art Presents Dynasty and Divinity: Ife Art in Ancient Nigeria

Alte Pinakothek's Celebrates Their 175th Anniversary with the Exhibition "Concealed/Revealed"

Russia to Celebrate 450th Anniversary of St. Basil's Cathedral After $14 Million Restoration

Indian Supreme Court Orders Security for Hindu Temple Treasure Worth Billions

The Largest Collection of Fabergé in the United States is On View at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts

Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles Presents George Herms: Xenophilia

University of Texas, Ryan O'Neal Spar Over Farrah Fawcett Portrait by Andy Warhol

Team Unearths First Roman-Era Basilica Erected in the Mediterranean Port City of Alexandria

American Modern: Abbott, Evans, Bourke-White on View at the Colby College Museum of Art

Norton Simon Museum Presents Vermeer's "Woman with a Lute," on Loan from the Metropolitan

Bruce Nauman's "For Beginners" Enters Los Angeles County Museum of Art's Collection

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art Spotlights Ceramics in Recent Art Practice

Judge to Decide Ownership of 'Jackie Letter'

Transmutations and Metamorphosis, The Collages of Ann Irwin at the Michener Art Museum

Hearst Art Gallery Opens a Retrospective of the Late Plein Air Painter and Teacher Pam Glover: "A Life in Art"

The Morris Museum of Art Presents Civil War Redux: Pinhole Photographs by Willie Anne Wright

Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago Debuts Four Enormous Works by Mark Handforth

Greg Martin Auctions and Heritage Auctions Join Forces

Lawmakers Seek New Immigration Museum in District of Columbia

July 9, 2011

Ode to Madame Gres' Draped Fashion in First Retrospective at the Musée Bourdelle in Paris

In Ancient Metropolis in Southern Israel, Diggers Unearth the Bible's Bad Guys

Da Vinci Discovered: Painting Gains Attribution After Careful Scholarship and Conservation

Priceless Manuscript Stolen from Spanish Cathedral in Santiago de Compostela

San Diego Museum of Art Presents Great Spanish Masters from the Pérez Simón Collection

Black Seaman's 1861 Heroics Recalled in New Film by New York-Based Documentary Producers

After Serving as Acting Director, Eric C. Shiner Named Director of the Andy Warhol Museum

Rarely Seen Masterworks from the Dutch Golden Age on View at the Legion of Honor

Rare Porcelain Vases Purchased by Wynn Macau Limited for Record Amount at Auction

Bonhams Appoints Dr. Thomas Kamm as the Company's Senior Representative for Germany

The Andy Warhol Museum Presents The Word of God(ESS) by Artist Chitra Ganesh

The Tampa Museum of Art Presents Syntax: Drawn from the Hadley Martin Fisher Collection

Fossils of Earth's Oldest Trees Donated to New York State Museum in Albany

One of the Most Iconic Portraitists, Yousuf Karsh: Regarding Heroes at Kalamazoo Institute of Arts

Frye Art Museum Presents Gabriel von Max: Be-tailed Cousins and Phantasms of the Soul

Cheekwood Presents Exhibition of British & American Screen Prints

Out of the West: Art of Western Australia from the National Collection at the National Gallery of Australia

UC Berkeley Study Finds Gray Whales Likely Survived the Ice Ages by Changing Their Diets

John Lennon/Bob Dylan Owned and Played Gibson Guitar Expected to Bring $200,000+

Secret Service Probing New York Art Spy Camera Project

July 8, 2011

Archaeologists Find Two Pre-Hispanic Sculptures that Offer Insight into Maya Civilization

In Ancient Metropolis in Southern Israel, Diggers Unearth the Bible's Bad Guys

Da Vinci Discovered: Painting Gains Attribution After Careful Scholarship and Conservation

Priceless Manuscript Stolen from Spanish Cathedral in Santiago de Compostela

The Procuress: Fake or Mistake? Painting Featured in BBC One's Fake or Fortune

Peru Celebrates Machu Picchu's 100th Rediscovery Anniversary Amid Tourism Worries

Norman Rockwell's "The Problem We All Live With" to Be Exhibited at The White House

Pinakothek der Moderne Presents Curvatureromance by the American Artist John Chamberlain

Whitechapel Gallery's Summer Exhibition Presents Thomas Struth: Photographs 1978-2010

Kunst Haus Wien Devotes Four Month Exhibition to Friedensreich Hundertwasser

UC Berkeley Study Finds Gray Whales Likely Survived the Ice Ages by Changing Their Diets

John Lennon/Bob Dylan Owned and Played Gibson Guitar Expected to Bring $200,000+

Out of the West: Art of Western Australia from the National Collection at the National Gallery of Australia

Kahlo's "Self-Portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird" at the Ransom Center

London Street Photography Festival Launches Celebrating the Time-Honoured Genre

An Artist's Sense of Place: The World of Atta Kwami at Nicolas Krupp Gallery in Basel

George V Gold Freedom Casket Comes Home to Newport

Vancouver Art Gallery's Fourth Offsite Installation Features Artist Elspeth Pratt

A Rodin Marble Sold for €724,000 at Drouot-Montaigne, Paris

Photographer Richard Misrach Donates Photographs to OMCA and BAM/PFA

Daniel Blau Ltd. Presents Neal Fox's Latest Project 'Beware of the God'

Wordsworth Museum Presents Shelley's Ghost: Reshaping the Image of a Literary Family

Best of New Photography at the Photographers' Gallery's Annual Exhibition of Graduate Photography

Glamour of the Gods: Hollywood Portraits at the National Portrait Gallery in London

New Jersey Man Arrested in Stolen Picasso Drawing Worth a Quarter of a Million Dollars

Sotheby's to Offer Spectacular Works by Leading International Designers at Sudeley Castle

July 7, 2011

Sotheby's Achieves Second Highest Price for Any Old Master Painting at Auction in London

Glamour of the Gods: Hollywood Portraits at the National Portrait Gallery in London

San Francisco Police Make Arrest in Stolen Picasso Drawing from Weinstein Gallery

Sotheby's to Offer Spectacular Works by Leading International Designers at Sudeley Castle

The Procuress: Fake or Mistake? Painting Featured in the Third Episode of BBC One's Fake or Fortune

Peru Celebrates Inca Citadel of Machu Picchu's 100th Rediscovery Anniversary Amid Tourism Worries

Norman Rockwell's "The Problem We All Live With" To Be Exhibited at The White House

Pinakothek der Moderne Presents Curvatureromance by the American Artist John Chamberlain

The Whitechapel Gallery's Major Summer Exhibition Presents Thomas Struth: Photographs 1978 - 2010

Kunst Haus Wien Devotes Four Month Exhibition to Friedensreich Hundertwasser

Frida Kahlo's "Self-Portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird" at Ransom Center in Austin

London Street Photography Festival Launches Celebrating the Time-Honoured Genre

An Artist's Sense of Place: The World of Atta Kwami at Nicolas Krupp Gallery in Basel

Galeri Manâ: A New Contemporary Art Space in Istanbul Opens with Idea-Driven Show

"Set in Style: The Jewelry of Van Cleef & Arpels" Sets Attendance Record

Rome, Naples, Venice: Italian Masterworks from the BAM/PFA Collection

Lehmann Maupin Gallery, New York Presents On Shuffle

Duped: Big California Gold Nugget Sold at Auction is Actually Australian and Worth Less

Pennsylvania Family Fights United States Treasury Over Rare 1933 Gold Coins

Sotheby's London Sells a Lost Royal Masterpiece Setting a Record at Auction

Exhibition of Works that Use Everyday Domestic Objects Opens at David Zwirner

Royal Ontario Museum Displays World's Most Comprehensive Collection of Vesta Meteorites

Idea Generation Gallery Presents Duffy: A Visual Record of the Photographic Genius

Spanish Government Honours Irish Museum of Modern Art Director Enrique Juncosa

The Courtauld Institute of Art Expands into the Arts of Asia with New Research Posts

Artist Dick Bruna Loans Large Selection of His Work to the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam

'Star Spangled Banner' Fragments Bring $65,000+ to Lead Heritage Auctions Arms & Militaria Sale

New iPad App Lets Anyone Create Designs with Vintage Type and Art on a Virtual Hand-Driven Printing Press

Devotion by Design: Italian Altarpieces Before 1500 at the National Gallery in London

Fitzgerald Collection of Regional Americana Donated to Library of Congress

July 6, 2011

Cy Twombly, Known for His Large-Scale, Freely Scribbled, Calligraphic Style, Dies at 83

Devotion by Design: Italian Altarpieces Before 1500 at the National Gallery in London

Police on the Hunt for Picasso Drawing Stolen from San Francisco's Weinstein Gallery

Idea Generation Gallery Presents Duffy: A Visual Record of the Photographic Genius

Leading American and African Contemporary Artists Contribute to Sotheby's Art for Africa Sale

Exhibition of New York Times Magazine Photographs on View at Arles

Florence Griswold Museum Hosts Renowned Collection of American Landscapes

Spanish Government Honours Irish Museum of Modern Art Director Enrique Juncosa

The Courtauld Institute of Art Expands into the Arts of Asia with New Research Posts

Artist Dick Bruna Loans Large Selection of His Work to the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam

Anton Corbijn's Most Recent Photographic Project on View at FOAM in Amsterdam

Number Five: Cities of Gold and Mirrors on View at the Julia Stoschek Collection

Fine Art Asset Management Specialist Appointed President of Appraiser's Association of America

Artist Creates Towering 20-Foot Sculpture Suspended from NOMA's Century-Old Ceiling

Martin Schoeller's Portraits of International Celebrities at The Kennedys in Berlin

Plymouth City Museum and Art Gallery Acquires 17th Century Painting with Local Connections

Frankenstein and Werewolf of London Top July Vintage Movie Poster Sale at Heritage Auctions

Creative Collaboration Takes a New Look at Ulster Museum's Historic Treasures

Magnificent Porcelain Snuff Box Sold for New World Record of £860,000 at Bonhams

Marsden Hartley Loans Augment Scope of American Art at Cantor Arts Center

George Stubbs Horse Painting Fetches $36 Million at Christie's Old Master Sale in London

Vatican Opens Archives for Unprecedented Exhibit

Smithsonian's Archives of American Art Presents "Little Pictures Big Lives"

Travel Channel and Gaiam Release "Mysteries at the Museum Season 1"

July 5, 2011

Cy Twombly, Known for His Large-Scale, Freely Scribbled, Calligraphic Style, Dies at 83

North Carolina's Great Dismal Swamp Holds Clues about Pre-War Runaway Slaves

Egypt's Antiquities Authority Says 5,200 Year-Old Ancient Drawing Unearthed South of Aswan

New York State Museum Biologists Map Strategy to Save Adirondack Spruce Grouse

Florida Divers Find New Treasure from Famed Nuestra Senora de Atocha Shipwreck

University of Sydney Exhibition Offers Clues on Mysterious Pre-Roman Civilisation

Exhibition of Photographs from the Legendary Mexican Suitcase at Les Rencontres d'Arles

Martin Schoeller's Portraits of International Celebrities at The Kennedys in Berlin

Plymouth City Museum and Art Gallery Acquires 17th Century Painting with Local Connections

Frankenstein, Dracula and Werewolf of London Top July Vintage Movie Poster Offerings at Heritage Auctions

Anton Corbijn's Most Recent Photographic Project on View at FOAM in Amsterdam

Number Five: Cities of Gold and Mirrors on View at the Julia Stoschek Collection

Fine Art Asset Management Specialist Appointed President of the Appraiser's Association of America

A Garden Within a Garden is this Year's Serpentine Gallery Pavilion by Peter Zumthor

KAdE Commissions Design Firm for Three-Dimensional Setting to Show Porcelain

Oakville Galleries Surveys Ontario's Sobey Art Award 2011 Longlisted Artists

Exhibition Features Four Chicago-Based Multidisciplinary Art and Design Groups

Arts Commission Debuts Podcast Experiencing the "Sights and Sounds of Central Market"

London Fields Gallery Launches with Hackney Hoard Exhibition

Tate Extends Its Focus to African Art through New Partnership with Guaranty Trust Bank

Pittsburgh Bike 'Hoarder' Opening Museum

Sotheby's to Offer Possibly the Most Seductive Image in British Art at Old Masters Sale

Exhibition by Scotland's Most Accomplished Living Artist Dame Elizabeth Blackadder Opens

Rare Blue Diamond by Bulgari Offered by Bonhams

Exhibition Explores the Customs and Traditions Surrounding Life and Death of the Pharaohs

Texas Contemporary Art Fair Announces Preliminary Galleries, Partners, Host Committee and Sponsors

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Investigators analyse ashes taken from the house of one of the suspects as Dutch heist paintings feared burnt

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- A team of twelve restorers inspect the "Isenheim Altarpiece" at the Unterlinden museum

4.- Russian scientists make rare find of 'blood' in carcass of female woolly mammoth

5.- Taliban criticise Kabul's pink balloon art project by 31-year-old artist from New York

6.- Gagosian Gallery in London presents a group of four tapestries by Gerhard Richter

7.- Archaeologists find Colonial and Pre-hispanic vestiges thought to be 500-1,000 years-old

8.- RM stuns market as Villa Erba sale realises more than $35 million; Ferrari sells for $12,812,800

9.- Indianapolis Museum of Art receives major painting by William-Adolphe Bouguereau

10.- Newly discovered prisoner journal donated to Auschwitz by widow of US lieutenant Clifford Hensel



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site