by AP and Israel Hayom Staff
The Jewish community on the Tunisian resort island of Djerba traces its roots back to the Babylonian exile of 586 B.C.E., and is one of the few communities of its kind to have survived the turmoil around the creation of Israel.
A girl walks home after
sunset at Hara Kbira, the main Jewish neighborhood on Djerba
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Photo credit: AP |
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Boys walk past closed shops
at the beginning of Shabbath at Hara Kbira, the main Jewish neighborhood
on Djerba
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Photo credit: AP
A man prepares meals for his
family on the eve of Shabbath at Hara Kbira, the main Jewish
neighborhood on Djerba
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Photo credit: AP |
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Boys walk inside a Talmudic
school at Hara Kbira, the main Jewish neighborhood on Djerba
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Photo credit: AP
Yona Sabbagh in his Brik
restaurant at Hara Kbira, the main Jewish neighborhood on Djerba
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Photo credit: AP
When school lets out, the streets around the
ancient synagogue on the Tunisian island of Djerba fill with
rambunctious boys wearing kippot and girls in long skirts, shouting to
each other in Hebrew, Arabic and French.
The Jewish community in the resort island
traces its roots all the way back to Babylonian exile of 586 B.C.E., and
is one of the few communities of its kind to have survived the turmoil
around the creation of Israel, when more than 800,000 Jews across the
Arab world either emigrated or were driven from their homes.
Here the faithful pray at the La Ghriba
synagogue -- widely believed to be Africa's oldest synagogue -- beneath
intricate tile walls bearing blue and yellow geometric shapes that would
not seem out of place at a mosque. The synagogue's name can be
translated as "strange" or "miraculous."
The surrounding streets include a kosher
butcher, a bakery that sells a traditional tuna-filled pastry known as
"brik," and schools that teach in Hebrew, French and Arabic. During the
annual Lag Ba'omer festival, the streets throng with Jewish pilgrims who
venerate Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai, a second-century mystic.
"We're almost 1,500 now across the country,
maybe fewer than residents of a building in New York," says Jacob
LaLoush, 55, the owner of Mamie Lily, a popular kosher restaurant in the
capital, Tunis. "But we have a perfect Jewish life: schools,
synagogues, and kosher shops. Even if they are not many."
Tunisia's Jewish population has dwindled from
100,000 in 1956, when the country won independence from France, to less
than 1,500, mainly as a result of emigration to France and Israel. But
unlike in much of the rest of the Arab world, Tunisian Jews have seen
little direct persecution and have only rarely been targeted by
extremists.
LaLoush says their situation is "completely
different from other Arab countries, where there were laws and policies
that forced the Jewish communities out." But he says there have been
times when they were "not pushed out of Tunis, but were shown the
doors."
A suicide truck bombing carried out by
al-Qaida outside the Djerba synagogue in 2002 killed 19 people, mainly
German tourists. To this day the neighborhood and the synagogue are
heavily guarded by police.
"We have coexisted with our Muslim friends for a long
time. We share food, music and tradition," said Ariel Houri, who works
in his father's furniture shop in Djerba. As to the occasional friction,
"it's mostly the hot-headed youth; they get affected by the news. But
the older ones are still sitting in cafes, sharing drinks every day."
AP and Israel Hayom Staff
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=29957
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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