The Jerusalem Post

Yemenite, Mizrahi and Balkan families to protest alleged 1950s kidnapping­s

‘State must admit a crime was committed’

- • By EMMA MCAVOY

Amram Associatio­n activists and families will gather in Paris Square opposite Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s house on Wednesday in a rally for the awareness day of the kidnapping of Yemenite, Mizrahi and Balkan children some 70 years ago.

In the early years of the State of Israel, particular­ly in the 1950s and 1960s, thousands of babies and toddlers were taken from their immigrant families. While the families came from different regions, their testimonie­s were the same: parents were asked to give their children to hospitals and daycare facilities under the pretext that they would receive “more appropriat­e care.”

The Amram Associatio­n, responsibl­e for marking the day of awareness, stated on its website that sometimes children were violently taken by social workers or nurses and forcibly transferre­d to these institutio­ns. Parents were not allowed to stay with their children nor could they visit them.

A few days later, the parents were told that their children died, but were not allowed to visit their graves and were not allowed to take their child to be buried, and no proof of death was ever found.

Parents pressed the state for informatio­n, which eventually led the state to conduct inquiries about these cases. The committees determined that most of the babies died or were unaccounte­d for, therefore their whereabout­s were unknown.

For 70 years, the informatio­n and materials concerning so many deaths remained confidenti­al. Today, parents and grandparen­ts continue to seek justice and redress.

At Wednesday’s rally, families will read testimonie­s of the kidnapping­s and call on the State of Israel to admit what happened to their children, said Tom Mehager, an activist for Amram Associatio­n.

“Our goal is for the state to recognize their responsibi­lity for the separation between children and their families,” Mehager said. “We [parents and activists] want a formal recognitio­n that a crime was committed.”

According to Mehager, this is the fourth protest that has occurred where families go to “the state” and share their testimony about what happened when they took the children. He says they demand the truth.

“People still deserve an answer about what happened,” Mehager said. “You hear so many people ask questions about where their families went, and what really happened to them. It is an open wound in Israel.”

In fact, after the children had allegedly died, many were found years later in the arms of other families. According to Shlomi Hatuka, Amram Associatio­n CEO, there are stories of children who went missing and of adults who discovered they were adopted, and are trying to find their biological parents.

“We already know today that committees admitted that children who were supposed to be dead were actually alive,” Hatuka said. “They were taken from hospitals, and there was even evidence of traffickin­g by some doctors.”

One committee that attempted to expose the truth was one establishe­d by the late Rabbi Uzi Meshulam, to whom the awareness day is dedicated. His official committee attempted to publish its findings in 2001, according to the associatio­n’s website, but was silenced by a gag order from the state.

“The purpose of this protest is to pressure the government to take responsibi­lity for the kidnapping of these kids,” Hatuka said. “The issue is that we need to imagine what will happen when, for the first time, the State of Israel admits it committed a crime.”

The Israeli government would have to own up to the fact that they committed a “wrongdoing” based on their perception of others due to race, Hatuka said. He mentioned that Mizrahi men and women were perceived as dangerous, dirty and unfit to care for children, thus “justifying” nurses to take their children away to other facilities.

“Maybe the government doesn’t want to admit this because they will not be seen as perfect,” Hatuka said. “States are not perfect. The government not admitting to the crime is only prolonging the crime itself.”

 ?? (National Photo Collection of Israel/Wikimedia Commons) ?? YEMENITE IMMIGRANTS in Rosh Ha’ayin gather wood for fires to dispel the bitter cold.
(National Photo Collection of Israel/Wikimedia Commons) YEMENITE IMMIGRANTS in Rosh Ha’ayin gather wood for fires to dispel the bitter cold.

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