06/01/2026
The Farhud tried to break a civilization. It failed.
In these days of remembering the Farhud, we also remember what the Farhud could not destroy.
Rabbi Yitzhak Nissim was born in Baghdad, into one of the oldest and most profound Jewish communities in the world.
Long before the Farhud erupted in 1941, Iraqi Jews had carried generations of Torah, halacha, poetry, commerce, language, memory, and family life.
The Farhud was not just an attack on people. It was an attack on a civilization.
But that civilization did not disappear.
It lived on in the families who rebuilt.
It lived on in the Hachamim who carried Torah forward.
It lived on in the voices, melodies, customs, and memories of Iraqi Jews around the world.
Rabbi Yitzhak Nissim, who later became Sephardic Chief Rabbi of Israel, reminds us that the story of Baghdad Jewry is not only a story of loss.
It is a story of survival.
A story of dignity.
A story of Torah carried from Baghdad to Jerusalem.
As we commemorate the Farhud, we honor the victims — and we honor the world they came from.
May their memory be a blessing.
What memory, custom, or story from Iraqi Jewish life should more people know?
Photo credits: Images sourced from the National Library of Israel, Gov.il, World Jewish Congress, and the Rabbi Nissim Memorial.