Orphans' Decree
The Orphans' Decree was a law in the
This law, like all laws applying to dhimmi, was applied more or less ruthlessly depending upon the inclination local and royal officials.
Although
Before Ottoman rule
There are only some fragmentary and isolated accounts about the enforcing of the decree before Ottoman rule. It was not enforced equally in every part of Yemen. There were places where Jews were able to hide orphaned children and protect them from being forcibly converted to Islam.[2] Still there are several accounts about the enforcement of the decree.[2]
Shalom Shabazi, a Jewish poet who lived in 17th century Yemen, wrote in one of his poems about "stealing orphans". A translation of the poem runs thus: "Thousands of orphaned souls, both boys and girls, were wrested from the arms of their parents, grandfather and grandmother, by force by the nations all the days of the many kings of Yemen."[2]
Rabbi Hayyim Habshush writes that by the end of Al-Mansur Ali I's rule in 1809 the Imam built palaces for his sons "and when he settled his sons in those palaces he ordered that the orphaned Jewish children be seized and converted and made servants and scribes in the palaces." In the same account Habshush testifies that there were some "who concealed the children in their homes until they were fully grown."[2]
One more account is dated to 1850. Jewish scholar Amram Qorah recalls a story about his orphaned father, who was hidden by a Jewish family in their home and thereby escaped a forced conversion.[2]
After the end of Ottoman rule
Once again the decree was not implemented equally in every part of Yemen. In some places the authorities turned "a blind eye" to escaped and hidden children, but, in the places the Decree was implemented, troops were sent to search for escaped children, and the leaders of Jewish communities that were suspected of hiding the children were "imprisoned and tortured".[5][2]
In 1923 the Jewish community of
A witness account from
After getting out of the orphanage, converted Jewish boys were often enlisted as soldiers. The girls made a valuable asset as brides because there were no relatives who needed to be paid a bride price in order to marry them.[5]
Jewish communities responded by acting quickly when children were orphaned, sometimes taking children and placing them with Jewish families living in dense Jewish settlements, especially
An orphaned boy or boy or girl could also be very quickly married, since married people had the legal status of adults and could not be taken for forcible conversion.[2]
Modern day expression
The Orphans' Decree has left its imprint in Modern Israel, where playwright, Shlomo Dori, in his play A New Life (1927), raises the concern of being imprisoned for hiding two Jewish orphans, and where actor and composer, Sa'adia Dhamari, in the musical The Bearer [of Good Tidings] (1957), makes his chief protagonists Jewish orphans who had converted to Islam.[7]
See also
Further reading
- Giat, Paltiel (2012). "The Orphans' Decree of Yemen – the Story of Rabbi Shalom Levi Mahazri." Tehudah 28, pp. 98–119 (in Hebrew)
- Eraqi-Klorman, Bat-Zion (February 2001). "The Forced Conversion of Jewish Orphans in Yemen". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 33 (1): 23–47. JSTOR 259478.
References
- JSTOR 259478.
- ^ ISBN 978-3-7186-5041-5.
- ^ Simon, Reeva Spector; Laskier, Michael Menachem & Reguer, Sara, eds. (2003) The Jews of the Middle East and North Africa in Modern Times. New York: Columbia University Press; p. 392
- JSTOR 259478.
- ^ ISBN 978-0-312-22228-4.
- ^ Yehiel Hibshush, Shənei Ha-me'oroth (שני המאורות), Tel-Aviv, 1987, pp. 10–11 (Hebrew)
- ISBN 978-965-7121-33-7; S. Dori, New Life [play], pub. in: From Yemen to Zion, Tel Aviv 1938, pp. 286–295