The Central Synagogue in Aleppo,
Syria
There was a Jewish place of worship on the site of the
Aleppo Synagogue since late Antiquity, perhaps from as early as the 5th
century C.E. The oldest surviving inscription is from the year 834 C.E.
These early buildings were damaged after the Mongol occupation of Aleppo
during the 13th century and then turned into a mosque. The central synagogue
was rebuilt at some point in the early 15th century. It had later on undergone
a series of modifications until its destruction during the violent attacks
against Jews by the local population in December 1947.
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Interior of the Synagogue
- Model
Beth Hatefutsoth - Permanent Exhibit
Beth Hatefutsoth - Visual Documentation Center
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Courtyard of the Synagogue-
Model
Beth Hatefutsoth - Permanent Exhibit
Beth Hatefutsoth - Visual Documentation Center
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Apparently the Aleppo Synagogue included from the very
beginning an adjacent courtyard that was used as an open-air synagogue in
the summertime. Some hints in the Talmud suggest that it was customary for
a synagogue to have its roof removed during the summer (Baba Batra, 3, p.2)
and indeed in several places Jews preferred to pray in outdoors places,
like Rabbi Asi and Rabbi Ami who prayed “among the columns” in Tiberias
(Berachot, 8, pp1-2). Synagogues in Baghdad, Iraq, did not have a roof either,
except over the Holy Ark and the tevah (elevated platform).
The Aleppo Synagogue edifice was divided into three main
sections: a central courtyard that separated the western wing, where in
modern times the “mustarabi” community used to worship, from the eastern
section built at a later time during the 16th century and which served as
Beth Midrash and prayer hall of the “Francos”, i.e. Sephardi Jews that settled
in the town after the Spanish exile and other European Jews that happened
to sojourn in Aleppo. An additional enclosed small courtyard was bordering
the eastern wing farther to the east.
The western hall had three heichaloth (Holy Arks); there
were another three heichaloth on the southern wall (“the Zion Wall”) of
the courtyard, and a seventh Holy Ark, located in the eastern wing close
to the courtyard, also on the southern wall pointing to the direction of
Jerusalem that was named Heichal Eliyahu or Me’arat Eliyahu (“The Cave of
Eliyahu”) and in which the old Torah and Bible manuscripts - the Ketarim
(“Crowns”) also called the Taj by the Aleppo Jews were kept.
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Ruins of the Synagogue, Aleppo, 1979
Photo: Judith Feld, Canada.
The Dr. Ronald Feld Fund for Jews in Arab Lands of
the Beth Tzedek Congregation
Beth Hatefutsoth - Visual Documentation Center
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Ruins of the Synagogue,
Aleppo, 1979
Photo: Judith Feld, Canada
The Dr. Ronald Feld Fund for Jews in Arab Lands of the
Beth Tzedek Congregation
Beth Hatefutsoth - Visual Documentation Center
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The "Jewel” of the Crowns” is the Hebrew manuscript
of the Bible written by the scribe Shlomo Ben Buya'a during the first
half of the 10th century (or 896?) and then verified, vocalized and
pointed by Aaron Ben-Asher in Tiberias. It was taken to Egypt where it
was seen by Maimonides, who considered it to be the most perfect of all
versions and used it as an example and standard of the Bible text.
Sometime towards the end of the 14th century the manuscript was taken
into the custody of the Jewish community of Aleppo. Keter Aram Tzova
(The Aleppo Codex), the most authoritative manuscript of the Masoretic
text of the Bible, was kept in the Central Synagogue of Aleppo for some
500 years until 1947. Apparently it was damaged in the fire of the
synagogue in 1947, and thought to be lost until 1958, when it was
brought to Israel. Now most of its pages, 295 of the original 487, are
safeguarded in Jerusalem, Israel.
HFG
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