Ibn Danan
Synagogue, Fez, Morocco
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The Ibn Danan Synagogue, Fez, Morocco.
Model from the Beth Hatefutsoth Permanent Exhibit
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The Aron Kodesh of the Ibn Danan
Synagogue, Fez. Model from the Beth Hatefutsoth Permanent Exhibit
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One of the oldest and most important synagogues in North
Africa. Originally built and owned by a prominent Moroccan Jewish family in
the mid-seventeenth century and renovated in its present form at the end of
the nineteenth century. The structure, located in the hearth of the
mellah (Jewish quarter) is a rare survivor of a pivotal time in Moroccan
Jewish history.
The synagogue, still privately owned, contains perhaps
the only complete set of Moroccan synagogue fittings in existence, including
the reader's wooden and wrought iron canopy platform - the tevah, on
the west side, the twin wooden-carved Arks for the Torah - the hechal,
built-in on the east side ornamented tiled wall. The wooden benches and
chairs including Elija’s Chair (for the circumcision ceremony), the oil
lamps and embroidered hangings.
Entrance to the synagogue is through an unobtrusive door
to a small vestibule leading to a two-nave prayer hall divided by three
octagonal piers. The floor is tiled in green and white glazed brick in a
herringbone pattern. There were once numerous electric and oil-burning
lamps, including memorial lamps, but these have somehow disappeared.
For many years, the building was increasingly falling
into decline and required immediate conservation. The Jewish communities of
Fez and Casablanca struggled to preserve the building as an essential part
of the Jewish and Moroccan heritage and as an important cultural and
historical legacy.
The synagogue was also included in the list of 100
endangered monuments of the program of preservation funding initiated by
World Monuments Watch (WMW).
Finally, the renovation was carried out with the kind
assistance of private and public bodies including the Moroccan government
and descendants of the Ibn Danan family.
Its inauguration was celebrated during the month of
May 1999. It has been listed as an historical monument in Fez, due to
the lack of Jews in the area.
A model of the Ibn Danan synagogue is exhibited in the
"Faith" section of the
Permanent Exhibit
at Beth Hatefutsoth. Related Articles
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