Posted: March 19th, 2011 | By Jackie May | Posted in General | Tagged as , , , , ,

Pscyhologist, peformer and Libyan exile Dr David Gerbi is calling for the international community to do something about the situation in Libya.
I spoke to him last week. Now, today, leaders are in Paris discussing Libya. Last night the north Afican country called a ceasefire. Today a fighter plane blew up in the sky above Benghazi. There is much rumour and speculation about the cause of the explosion, but it has led to a sense of urgency and the Paris meeting might end with a decision to intervene and for the international community to take military action. This could happen within hours of the end of the meeting.

On Tuesday Gerbi said that “He was upset with the international community for not taking a stand. What is happening is a crime against the Libyan people. It’s insanity.”

About Gadaffi he says:

“He is ill, insane. He doesn’t allow other people to speak. He is in love with his power. His love of power is stronger than his love for his people. He has got worse over the years. There is also psychotic infection going on around him. He is infecting good people around him.”

Gerbi aunt was the last jew in Libya:

His family, along with 5000 Jews, left Libya in 1967. They were told to leave. “You are not safe here anymore,” King Idris said.
Gerbi’s family split. Gerbi, his mother and sister left to live in Rome, and his father and other siblings went to Israel where they planned to stay forever. His mother on the other was hoping to return to Libya once it was safe to do so. But in 1969 when Gadaffi came into power he declared that Jews couldn’t come back and he confiscated all the possessions left behind by the exiled families.
But, one Jew hadn’t left in 1967. Many years later Gerbi, applying for a new passport for his mother, had to contact Libyan officials for her birth certificate. He was asked if he new somebody by the name Debach Rina.
Debach Rina was his aunt, and had been living alone in Tripoli in her family house since 1967. It was only when she became old and sick, and was sent to a hospice that her identity was discovered.
The aunt, it turned out, wouldn’t leave Tripoli because she was protecting the family’s wealth. It was stored in the cellars of the house. Piles, and piles of accumulated gold and silver, says Gerbi.

Libyan security officials when she refused to stay in the hospice and became anxious about her house (there is something I need to guard, she apparently said), searched her home, found the money, and of course confiscated it.

Gerbi applied for a visa to visit Libya, and was the first Jew to get one and to visit Libya since the 1967 exile. He went to fetch the last Jew living there, brought her back to his home in Rome where she died in 2003.

He has since been back to try and restore the synagogue in Tripoli. wit

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