Lies. Most were not Zionists. Israel was hardly founded and they were being forced to flee Iraq and other places long before 1948.
Jews did not stay in those areas since before the Babylonian invasion to all of a sudden decide to "leave".
They were all forced to leave those lands with nothing in their backs, in order to try to destroy Israel with the sheer number of them.
You need to get honest. They weren't leaving before 1948. They lived in Morocco and Tunisia and Iraq.. all over... They were prosperous...
They left because they were taken:
Their citizenship
Their jobs
Their businesses
Their schools
Their money in the banks
Most were left with nothing and no reason to stay by the Nazi Arabs in Iraq and all other places they were forced to leave.
They were not attacking the governments, the Arabs, the Muslims. They were just JEWS.
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A number of small-scale Jewish migrations began in many Middle Eastern countries early in the 20th century with the only substantial aliyah (immigration to the area today known as Israel) coming from Yemen and Syria.[2] Few Jews from Muslim countries immigrated during the period of Mandatory Palestine.[3] Prior to the creation of Israel in 1948, approximately 800,000 Jews were living in lands that now make up the Arab world. Of these, just under two-thirds lived in French- and Italian-controlled North Africa, 15–20% in the Kingdom of Iraq, approximately 10% in the Kingdom of Egypt and approximately 7% in the Kingdom of Yemen. A further 200,000 lived in Pahlavi Iran and the Republic of Turkey.
The first large-scale exoduses took place in the late 1940s and early 1950s, primarily from Iraq, Yemen and Libya. In these cases over 90% of the Jewish population left, despite the necessity of leaving their property behind.[4] Between 1948 and 1951, 260,000 Jews immigrated to Israel from Arab countries.[5] The Israeli government's policy to accommodate 600,000 immigrants over four years, doubling the existing Jewish population,[6] encountered mixed reactions in the Knesset; there were those within the Jewish Agency and government who opposed promoting a large-scale emigration movement among Jews whose lives were not in danger.[6]
Later waves peaked at different times in different regions over the subsequent decades. The peak of the exodus from Egypt occurred in 1956 following the Suez Crisis. The emigrations from the other North African Arab countries peaked in the 1960s. Lebanon was the only Arab country to see a temporary increase in its Jewish population during this period, due to an influx of Jews from other Arab countries, although by the mid-1970s the Jewish community of Lebanon had also dwindled. Six hundred thousand Jews from Arab and Muslim countries had reached Israel by 1972,[7][8][9][10] while 300,000 migrated to France and the United States. In Israel, the descendants of the Jewish immigrants from the region, known locally as Mizrahi Jews ("Oriental," literally: "Eastern Jews") and Sephardic Jews ("Spanish Jews"), constitute more than half of the total population of Israel,[11]partially as a result of their higher fertility rate.[12] In 2009, only 26,000 Jews remained in Arab countries and Iran,[13] as well as 26,000 in Turkey.[14] By 2019, the total number of Jews in Arab countries and Iran had declined to 12,700,[15] and in Turkey to 14,800.[16]
The reasons for the exoduses are manifold, including pull factors, such as the desire to fulfill Zionistyearnings or find a better economic status and a secure home in Europe or the Americas and, in Israel, a policy change in favour of mass immigration focused on Jews from Arab and Muslim countries,[17] together with push factors, such as persecution / antisemitism, political instability,[18]poverty[18] and expulsion. The history of the exodus has been politicized, given its proposed relevance to the historical narrative of the Arab–Israeli conflict.[19][20] When presenting the history, those who view the Jewish exodus as analogous to the 1948 Palestinian exodus generally emphasize the push factors and consider those who left as refugees, while those who do not, emphasize the pull factors and consider them willing immigrants.[21]
Jewish exodus from the Muslim world - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Citizenship? There were prosperous Jews living in Tripoli Libya in 1970. Israeli actions like the Lavon Affair, the Suez Crisis, constant raids on Syria and Lebanon and the Six Day War made life impossible for the Arab Jews .