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Young Iraqis re-encounter their Jewish compatriots

After seven decades of alienation, Iraqi Jews use culture to build bridges with their non-Jewish countrymen and vice versa.

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A photograph shared on "The Wolf of Baghdad" Facebook page shows the Isaacs family in Baghdad, 1927. — Facebook/BaghdadiWolf

Through Baghdadi folk songs and lullabies, British-born musician Carol Isaacs sailed with dozens of Iraqis and Britons from London all the way to her motherland in Mesopotamia.

The Wolf of Baghdad,” held at the SOAS University Jewish Music Institute on Feb. 18, is the artist’s own audio-visual journey to revive Iraq’s vanishing Jewish community that formed one-third of Baghdad’s population in the 1940s.

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