What happened to relics of Syria's Jewish history? Assad's collapse spurs efforts to assess the damage. [View all]
The fall of Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad has opened up a sea of uncertainty about Syrias future and about the treasures of its past, including the remnants of its Jewish history.
A 13-year civil war has cost the country more than 600,000 lives and saw some 100,000 people forcibly disappeared into prisons by the Assad regime. The war has also wreaked havoc on Syrias most important cultural sites from ancient monuments, castles and mosques to the vestiges of a rich Jewish culture.
Well before the war, Syrias historical synagogues and other Jewish sites languished in neglect after Jews left the country en masse surrounding Israels establishment. Now, archaeologists are beginning to assess how much more was lost to bombardment and wartime looting.
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About 100,000 Jews lived in Syria at the start of the 20th century, dropping to 15,000 in 1947. An anti-Jewish riot that year, followed by the creation of Israel in 1948, spurred many of the remaining Jews to leave though they were not legally permitted to do so in most cases despite facing persecution in Syria. The Aleppo Codex, a landmark 10th-century copy of the Hebrew Bible, was damaged and secreted out of the country to Israel around that time.
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With the start of the 21st century, there was only a small, largely elderly community left in Syria. Jews were still officially banned from politics and government employment and did not have military service obligations. Jews were also the only minority to have their religion mentioned on their passports and identification cards. Though they were occasionally subjected to violence by Palestinian protesters, the Syrian government took measures to protect them. There was a Jewish primary school for religious studies, and Hebrew was allowed to be taught in some schools. Every two or three months, a rabbi from Istanbul visited the community to oversee the preparation of kosher meat, which residents froze and used until his next visit.[56]
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In October 2015, with the threat of ISIS nearby, nearly all of the remaining Jews in Aleppo were rescued in a covert operation and moved to Israel, where they were resettled in Ashkelon.[77] In August 2019, BBC Arabic visited some of the last remaining Jews living in Damascus.[78] In April 2020 there were only a handful of elderly Jews remaining in the country, all in Damascus.[79][80] As of 2022, only four Jews are reported to remain in Syria,[1] including two elderly Jewish women in the town of Qamishli.[81] As of 2024 the total of living Jews in Syria number 3.[2][failed verification]
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