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Syrian-American Jews visit Damascus synagogue

The Jewish community in Syria has shrunk to just a handful of people nowadays
AFP

A group of Syrian-American Jews prayed in a synagogue in Damascus on Tuesday, an AFP photographer reported, the latest such visit following the fall of longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad.

The trip comes after local community leader Bakhour Chamntoub said unknown assailants broke into and desecrated the tomb of a 17th-century rabbi in Damascus last week.

Visiting Rabbi Henry Hamra led prayers at the Faranj synagogue in Damascus’s Old City.

His father Yusuf Hamra was reportedly the last rabbi to leave Syria, one of thousands of members of the Jewish community to depart in the 1990s.

They had both visited from the United States in February.

Victor Kamil, a Syrian Jew from New York, said the latest trip sought to “prepare the synagogues, to prepare the community here for people at least to start visiting”, expressing hope that an improvement in the situation in Syria would encourage returns.

“We are very proud Syrian Jews — our kids know we are very proud and they will definitely love this heritage and this history,” he added.

Syria’s centuries-old Jewish community was able to practise their religion under former president Hafez al-Assad, but the strongman prevented them from leaving the country until 1992.

After that, their numbers plummeted from around 5,000 at the time to just a handful now.

On Monday, the group prayed at the Damascus tomb of 17th-century Rabbi Chaim Vital, Kamil said.

Community leader Chamntoub said Friday that unidentified individuals “dug up the ground next to the grave in search of antiquities”, adding that local authorities had inspected the site and vowed to find those responsible.

The Alliance of Rabbis in Islamic States said over the weekend it was “deeply shocked and saddened” by the desecration.

“We urgently call on the Syrian government to immediately secure Jewish holy sites, synagogues and cemeteries and ensure their safety” and security, the statement added.

Kamil said that “we are trying to figure out if… the bones of the rabbi were touched or moved”, adding that the incident would not affect the importance of the site.

After Islamist-led forces overthrew Assad in December, the new authorities have sought to reassure minorities that they will be protected.

But last month saw sectarian massacres on the Alawite coast, and tensions were high on Tuesday after deadly sectarian clashes in a Damascus suburb.

On a recent visit to New York, Syrian Foreign Minister Asaad al-Shaibani met with members of the Syrian Jewish community, discussing “the importance of strengthening bridges of communication and understanding”, Syrian state news agency SANA said.

via April 29th 2025