The Bakersfield Californian

Gulf opens door to public Jewish life amid Israel ties

- BY ILAN BEN ZION

JERUSALEM — Half a year after the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain establishe­d diplomatic relations with Israel, discreet Jewish communitie­s in the Gulf Arab states that once lived in the shadow of the Arab-Israeli conflict are adopting a more public profile.

Kosher food is now available. Jewish holidays are celebrated openly. There is even a fledgling religious court to sort out issues such as marriages and divorces.

“Slowly, slowly, it’s improving,” said Ebrahim Nonoo, leader of Bahrain’s Jewish community, which recently hosted an online celebratio­n of the Purim holiday for Jews in the Gulf Arab region.

Nonoo is among the founders of the Associatio­n of Gulf Jewish Communitie­s, a new umbrella group for the tiny Jewish population­s in the six Arab monarchies of the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council. Their goal is to win greater acceptance of Jewish life in the region.

“It’s just going to take a bit of time to seep through before we see a Jewish restaurant or a kosher restaurant spring up from somewhere,” said Nonoo, a former member of Bahrain’s parliament.

Even a modest online gathering like the Purim celebratio­n would have been unthinkabl­e a few years ago, when relations with Israel were taboo and Jews kept their identities out of public view for fear of offending their Muslim hosts.

That changed with last year’s accords between Israel and the UAE and Bahrain that brought thousands of Israeli tourists and business people to the region and led to a fledgling industry of Jewish weddings and other celebratio­ns aimed at Israeli visitors. Emirati and Bahraini authoritie­s have launched a public relations blitz to cultivate their image as Muslim havens of inclusion and tolerance for Jews, in stark contrast to regional rivals Saudi Arabia and Iran.

“A door has been opened,” said Elie Abadie, the new senior rabbi of the Jewish Council of the Emirates. “I think there is more openness and more welcome and enthusiasm for the presence of a Jewish community or Jewish individual­s or Jewish tradition and culture.”

The Lebanon-born Abadie, a member of the Associatio­n of Gulf Jewish Communitie­s, said he is certain the shift is taking place across the Gulf, not only in the UAE.

The associatio­n aims to provide support and services for the small Jewish population­s in Kuwait, Oman, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the UAE. These might include kosher certificat­ions for hotels, restaurant­s and food products, a rabbinic court and pastoral guidance for religious events like bar mitzvahs, circumcisi­ons and burials.

Their tiny Jewish population­s are almost all comprised of foreign nationals who have come to the region for business. Only Bahrain has a rooted Jewish community. Its 80 or so members are descendant­s of Iraqi Jews who arrived in the late 19th century, seeking opportunit­y in trade.

The Jewish community in the UAE is the largest, with an estimated 1,000 members. It is also one of the newest, and Abadie said he has to “start things from scratch.”

Only about 200 are active members of the community. The rest, like most Jews in Gulf Arab states, keep a low profile. Given the growing enthusiasm about Jewish life in the UAE, Abadie said he expects that “more of them will kind of come out to the light.”

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