NY Times    These are not the weapons of mass destruction that the American Mobile 
Exploitation Team Alpha was seeking in Iraq during the spring of 2003. 
But the books and manuscripts that the team found in a flooded basement 
of Saddam Hussein’s secret police headquarters — now on display for the 
first time at the National Archives here — look like victims of some 
form of ordnance.  
They are ragged, warped, torn, stained. And that is after extensive restoration. This new exhibition,
 “Discovery and Recovery: Preserving Iraqi Jewish Heritage,” presents 
just 24 artifacts (and some reproductions) selected from 2,700 volumes 
and tens of thousands of documents the American military found submerged
 in four feet of fetid water in the Mukhabarat, Iraq’s intelligence 
building. Those items, which had been collected by the Iraqi office 
investigating Israel and the Jews, span five centuries of Jewish life in
 Iraq. It took weeks for the American team to gather them, set them out 
to dry and ship them — in disarray and black with mold — to the National
 Archives. Much still awaits being restored and digitized at the archives’ laboratories in College Park, Md. 
Their condition, though, may be the least complicated thing about them. 
The flooding was caused by an unexploded coalition bomb — an accident of
 war. The mold was partly the result of the military rescuers’ inability
 to freeze the waterlogged material immediately, which would have halted
 decay. The costs of the restoration, overseen by the archives’ director
 of preservation, Doris Hamburg,
 have been mainly paid with $3 million from the State Department, which 
will return the materials to Iraq next year — as was agreed.
But that plan has touched a quivering nerve. Protests have been registered by Senator Charles E. Schumer of New York, a Democrat, and other members of Congress; Iraqi Jews, now in other countries, have also been pressing for alternatives
 to the collection’s return. Passions are high, too, because the 
collection’s state of ruin is an uncanny representation of what happened
 to the Iraqi Jewish population itself. It had been the oldest Jewish 
diaspora in the world, arriving before the sixth century B.C. In 1940, 
Jews accounted for a quarter of Baghdad’s population; there were more 
than 130,000 Jews in Iraq. Now there is scarcely a handful.         
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Unbelievable. Saddam stole all of these "artifacts" from Jews. And now they are going to be given to the Iraqi govt as a gift by people who recovered it from Saddam (and therefore do not own it themselves, it belongs to the Jewish people)? It's an outrage.
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