Few cities can match the glory of Aleppo, Syria, a city that spans Jewish
history from the days of King David over 3,000 years ago. Aristocratic and
noble, Aleppo was the crown of Jewish splendor in the Sephardic world.
The Jewish presence in Syria dates back to Biblical times and is intertwined
with the history and politics of Jerusalem. According to the book of Samuel and
Psalm 60, Aram Soba, the Biblical name for Aleppo, was part of the extended
area of Israel. Throughout the millennia, great Talmudic sages record Aleppo’s
unbroken record of communal peace and spiritual productivity. Early Jewish
travelers to the area included Benjamin of Tudela in 1173, Sadai Gaon in 921,
and Rabbi Petachya of Germany in 1170-80.
"It is hoary Aleppo legend, both Jewish and Muslim, that the patriarch
Abraham had settled for a period in Aleppo
|
"I t is hoary Aleppo legend, both Jewish and Muslim, that the patriarch Abraham had settled for a period in Aleppo in his wanderings from his native Ur. He is believed to have milked his cows there. Halab , the Arabic name for Aleppo, is the Aramaic, Hebrew, and Arabic for 'milked.' " |
According to "the patriarchs Abraham and Isaac spent part of their lives
in what is now Syria. During and after the late Biblical period, and until the
late 19
th
Century, Syria and Eretz Israel were often territories of the same superpower
and were sometimes considered a single entity. The Talmudic Sages ruled that
some of the religious laws that pertain only to the land of Israel (chiefly in
the realm of agriculture) apply to Syria as well."
The foundation for the Great Synagogue in Aleppo is believed to have been
constructed by King David's General, Joab ben Seruya (circa 950 BCE), after his
conquest of the city (2 Sam 8:3-8); it is still sometimes referred to as Joab's
Synagogue. The architecture of the synagogue was heavily influenced by the
designs of Muslim mosques. For example, the ark of the synagogue is an exact
copy of a mosque’s
mihrab.
Walter Zenner dates the building of the Great Synagogue to the fifth Century of
the Common Era. The synagogue was destroyed during the rule of Tamerlane in
1400 and was rebuilt in 1418. In 1947 anti-Zionist groups burned the synagogue,
which was in an abandoned state by 1995.
The politics of the region depended on the rulers. With the adoption of
Christianity as the official religion of Rome, the Romans placed restrictions
on Jews. These were lifted with the Arab conquest in 636 CE, when Islamic
caliphates began ruling the region. From the seventh Century until the end of
Ottoman rule, the Jewish community was self-governed. Self-government entitled
the Jews to freedom of religion, a separate court system ruled by local rabbis
to handle internal disputes, and military protection. In return for political
and military protection, the Jews were given
dhimmi
status, meaning they had to adhere to certain rules and pay a poll tax, which
was based on the number of men in the community, and did not have to serve in
the military.
Dhimmi
status did not entitle Jews to the same or equal rights as Muslim citizens,
however. They, along with their Christian counterparts, were of a lower status
than Muslims and disputes between a Christian or Jew and a Muslim were settled
in the government court, which was ruled by Islamic law.
By the tenth Century, many Jews emigrated from Iraq to Syria, due to political
unrest. This brought about a boom in commerce, banking and crafts in Syria.
During the reign of the Islamic Fatimids, the Jew Ibrahim El Kazzazz ran the
Syrian administration and granted Jews positions in government. For many
years, the Jews lived comfortably under Muslim rule, secure in their place as
dhimmi
, a protected people. Living in a non-democratic state, both Jews and Muslims
remained apolitical.
"One aspect of this low profile was that new synagogues could not be
built. Furthermore, Jews had to justify the existence of older houses of
worship by stressing their antiquity, such as the Great Synagogue of Aleppo to
Joab the son of Seruya. Ceremonies such as blowing the
shofar
and celebrating Purim had to be conducted so as not to disturb their Muslim
neighbors."
The Jewish community that evolved in this setting developed a different kind of
politics to govern their people. The community was governed by the
hakham bashi
, or chief rabbi. Paying and collecting taxes and obtaining patronage were
forms of political participation. Yet the treatment of Jews was also based on
the current Muslim ruler and the economics of the time. If things got worse
economically, the treatment of Jews deteriorated. When times were good and the
economy was booming, Jews were treated well, so long as they stayed in their
place and did not upset the balance between the two religious groups.
Various historians confirm that "the situation for the Jews varied under
successive conquerors, as rulers imposed and removed restrictive laws. At
times, Jews reached great heights…"
Aleppo was the center of Jewish life for many centuries. Distinguished rabbis
studied there and it was a center of significant Torah learning. Among the
reasons for Aleppo’s importance in Jewish learning is a document known as the
Aleppo Codex. It is believed that a member of the famous Ben-Asher family wrote
the Aleppo Codex over 1000 years ago. The text shows the final vocalization and
punctuation of the Biblical text. Some believe it is the Biblical text, which
Rambam refers to in his
Hilchot Sefer Torah
.
"The Aleppo Codex is the earliest known manuscript containing the entire
text of the Bible.
|
"T he Aleppo Codex is the earliest known manuscript containing the entire text of the Bible. Tradition states that Maimonides consulted the Aleppo Codex when he set down the exact rules for writing Torah scrolls. Recent research indicates that it is possible that Maimonides sanctified and codified everything he found in the Aleppo Codex. |
The Codex was copied by the scribe Shlomo Ben-Buya'a in the land of Israel over
1,000 years ago. It was deposited with the Aleppo community at the end of the 14
th
Century and kept in a small vault in the Cave of Elijah under the Joab Ben
Zeruiah Synagogue of Aleppo. The community talisman guarded it for over 600
years."
For the most part, conditions remained good for Jews in Syria under the
Fatimids and later under Ottoman rule. The Ottoman rulers favored the Jews,
understanding that the Jews would contribute to a good economy and that they
facilitated commerce.
There were two classes of Jews in Aleppo. The wealthier members of the
community were bankers or merchants, while lower class members included
brokers, grocers or peddlers. Aleppo-born Jewish author, Joseph Sutton, said,
"Most Jews were either lower middle-class or very poor. They were craftsman,
stall-keepers, cobblers, clerks, peddlers, porters, or others without skills."
Besides life cycle events, recreation activities favored "gambling,
particularly backgammon, dice, and cardplaying."
Walter Zenner describes how the social structure of the community was
controlled.
Aleppo is the second largest city in Syria. In the center of town there is an
ancient fortress, or citadel, and a bazaar. The city lies in a semi-desert
region in the northwest area of the country. When the Jews lived there, there
was a market for grains, fruit, as well as wool and hides. Silk and cotton
textiles were also manufactured in the town. Dried fruits and nuts, especially
pistachios, were widely sold and eaten. Aleppo was a flourishing trade center
during the 16
th
Century, but its popularity declined when sea routes to India became more
popular and efficient. The city was almost destroyed by earthquakes in 1822 and
in 1830.
The Jews in Spain Come to Syria
The Umayad Islamic General Tariq conquered Spain in 711, after which the Jews
began to grow in number. The Umayad kingdom in Spain soon became independent of
Baghdad and by the 10
th
Century had divided Spain into smaller caliphates (areas). Yet the Umayads
retained the Islamic culture, foods and styles of Syrian life, planting the
same trees, plants and food crops that their ancestors had in Syria, producing
a Syrianization of the Andalusian countryside. Under the Umayads, the
enjoyment of worldly goods was condoned and Jewish tastes mirrored those of
Muslims. During the period, luxury commerce thrived and the economy flourished
in Spain.
During the Golden Age of Spain (usually considered the 10
th
and 11
th
Centuries), such great Jewish minds as Maimonides, Rav Yehuda Halevi and
Nahmanides produced important works. During this early period, Hasdai Ibn
Shaprut (915-970), a Jew in the court of the Umayad dynasty emerged as the
officially recognized leader of the Jews. He was a patron of Jewish learning
and a statesman during his time. As the first of many statesmen for the Jews,
he led and defended the Spanish Jewish community in Islamic Spain.
The highest point of the Golden Age of Spain was during the 11
th
Century, when Talmudic scholarship, Jewish philosophy and Hebrew poetry
peaked. A Sephardic school on the Talmud began in Lucena by Rav Alfasi, the Rif
(1013-1103). His compendium, which attempts to arrive at a
psak Halacha
, appears at the end of each tome of the Talmud. Maimonides, a student of this
school, along with his teacher and father Rav Maimon, wrote the Code of Jewish
Law during the 12
th
Century. One of the most important commentaries on the
Chumash
by Rav Abraham ibn Ezra (1088-1167) was written during this time. This period
of Jewish scholarship and philosophy, during the Golden Age of Spain, was never
again equaled.
It is widely believed that the first persecution of Jews in Spain occurred
under the Christians. Rather the first persecution of Jews in Spain occurred
under the Visigoths in the 7
th
Century, not under Christian rule. The next persecution occurred in 1066,
under Muslim rule, when more than 1500 Jewish families were killed in Granada,
on the Iberian Peninsula. It was widely believed that Joseph ibn Nagrela, a Jew
who served the king of Granada, was crucified at the gates of Granada. He was
the builder of the Alhambra, and he based its architectural design on the
Second Temple.
The next persecutions occurred under the Christians. In 1391, many Jews were
forced to convert to Catholicism. The converted Jews remained in Spain and were
called
conversos
or
Marranos
, the Spanish word for pigs. These New Christians could not openly practice
Judaism without fear of persecution.
In the late 15
th
Century King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella wed, uniting the kingdoms of
Castille and Aragon. It wasn’t long before they took back the last remaining
Moorish Kingdom of Granada in the south. Devout Christians, the King and Queen
could not tolerate non-believers in their kingdom. It was in the Alhambra that
their edict expelling the Jews from Christian Spain in 1492 was signed. Jews
had to convert to Christianity or leave the country.
Jews who left Spain fled mainly to the Islamic countries that bordered the
Mediterranean Sea. They went to Italy, North Africa, Palestine and to the area
we now know as Syria, which was controlled by the Ottoman Empire and whose
rulers welcomed the Jews with open arms. Some went to Portugal, but were later
expelled.
The Convergence of Two Communities
As Jews left Spain for the Mediterranean countries, many found themselves in
areas of the Ottoman Empire that welcomed them. At the time, the Ottoman Empire
included Palestine and what is now known as Syria, including Aleppo, Damascus
and Beirut. The Ottomans believed that the Jews would inspire trade and
encourage economic growth in the region.
The Ottoman Empire was particularly interested in efficient governance. A
census was taken of its territories to determine ethnic composition and dispute
claims concerning ethnic populations in the Ottoman territories. The empire
was divided geographically into administrative units called
vilayets
, or provinces.
Vilayets
were further divided into
sanjaks
, or sub-provinces, which in turn were divided into
kazas
, or cities. A
kaza
might also include small villages that surround it. The chief town of a sanjak
was called the
merkez kasasi
, or central
kasa
. Aleppo was a
vilayet, and encompassed a vast area that included what is now Beirut, as well as
numerous outlying villages.
Many Jewish families settled in Aleppo, as it was an established center for
great rabbinical learning. During the initial settlement period, the Spanish
Jews who had emigrated from Spain, remained separate and apart from the
indigenous Aleppan Jews. The Spanish Jews spoke Ladino, a mixture of Hebrew and
Spanish that was not understood in Aleppo, where the population spoke Arabic
and read Hebrew with an Arabic accent. Added to the mixture of native Syrians
and Spanish Jews from Sepharad, were Italian Jews, who were commonly referred
to as "Francos."
Spanish grandee Señor Shlomo Kassin, who arrived in Aleppo in 1540, led
the immigration to Aleppo. Señor Shlomo, who was wealthy, was an
administrative genius and was soon appointed head of the community.
|
Spanish grandee Señor Shlomo Kassin, who arrived in Aleppo in 1540, led the immigration to Aleppo. Señor Shlomo, who was wealthy, was an administrative genius and was soon appointed head of the community. Señor Shlomo's grandson, Rabbi Yom Tov Kassin, was the first Kassin family member to become a Chief Rabbi in Aleppo. Rabbi Yom Tov's son, Rabbi Yehuda Kassin (1708 - 1784), followed his lead and became a rabbi. He was buried in the courtyard of the Great Synagogue of Aleppo. |
It took several centuries, but eventually the two communities – the new Spanish
Jews and the Jews indigenous to Aleppo, converged into one and the Ladino
language of the Spanish Jews died out by the middle of the 18
th
Century. Yet the surnames of the families - like Kassin and Labaton - lived on
into the 21
st
Century.
Aleppo in the 19
th
and 20
th
Centuries
Until the end of the 19
th
Century, cotton and silk were the primary exports from the Middle East to Asia
and Europe as caravans traveled from East to West. The first signs of serious
economic hardship came with the start of the Industrial Revolution, which
caused a reversal in the flow of trade, compounded with the opening of the Suez
Canal in 1867. The combination dealt a bitter blow and ultimately destroyed
trading along the caravan routes, which included Aleppo and Damascus. Economic
times became bad, then worse.
Culturally, little changed among the Syrian Jews in Aleppo, except their
rulers. People became poorer or richer. Boys had a
kittab
school education until their bar mitzvah, after which time they worked. Women
in this society were widely protected. Marriages were primarily arranged based
on social and economic class.
In religious life, gender segregation provided women with an opportunity for
social time and for leisure activities, such as card playing. It was unusual
for girls to receive any formal education until well into the 20
th
Century, although a limited number of girls attended Alliance Israelite
Universelle schools. Marriages were generally arranged after a girl had her
first cycle, often as young as 13 or 14. Teenage girls and marriage women
adorned their arms with gold bangle bracelets, a tradition that carried forward
to the present time.
Before a wedding took place, the groom’s mother would send gifts to the bride,
including money to go to the
mikvah
(ritual bath) where she would prepare herself for her wedding night, and a
white handkerchief. The handkerchief was used to clean the bride after her
first union with the groom. Girls were prepared for their lives as wives and
mothers, learning sewing, meal preparation and how to manage a household.
Cooking was a religious effort in order to uphold the laws of
kashrut
and convey the Syrian culture to their children through food and annual
traditions.
Few women worked and they rarely shopped. In the Middle East it was customary
for the husband to arrange for a stock of staple items and to market since it
was assumed that he was the better negotiator. Women were highly respected and
honored because their work as mothers and homemakers was important. They kept
their heads covered, and if they went out in public, their faces.
Jews were observant as rabbis and community leaders governed the community. The
Ottoman government did not keep birth records for the Jewish communities,
although individual rabbis kept records of
brit milahs,
marriages and deaths.
According to Zenner, from the mid-19
th
Century on, "the Ottoman government appointed a chief rabbi (
hakham bashi
). This individual represented the Jewish community before government agencies
and could be a powerful individual in the community in his own right. Rabbis
often came from families, which had a long tradition for providing the
community with
hakhamim
," as did the Kassins and the Labatons.
The
hakham
was distinguished by the size and color of his turban and the long-wide
sleeves of his outer garments. While it was customary for everyone to wear an
ankle-length robe with a sash around the waist, the
hakham bashi
was a government official and wore a finer robe with ceremonial orders and
medals, and gold and silver embroidery. The
hakham bashi
had two government-appointed bodyguards who carried his Staff of Office and
cleared the way for him.
Aleppan rabbis were learned in
Kabbalah
and Talmudic legal tradition. The rabbis dealt with cases of Jewish law ranging
from spiritual to civil cases including marriage, inheritance, business
contracts, torts, building regulations and Jewish rituals. Aleppan Jews had a
well known reputation for respecting rabbinic authority.
Worldwide politics began having an influence on Syria in the early 19
th
Century when European powers sought equal treatment for Christians and Jews.
Jewish contractual positions with the government disappeared, but civil service
positions were created. Heads of the religious communities such as the chief
rabbi, were appointed positions. The
jizha
tax was a substitution for military service and was eliminated. In 1908 the
Young Turks, who succeeded the Ottomans in certain areas, began conscripting
Jews into their Army, spurring a mass emigration of Jews to the Americas.
Then, just prior to World War I, the Ottomans lost control of their empire. For
the first time, Jewish men were being sought to serve in the army to fight in
the Balkan Wars. Overnight, Jewish men were secretly being sent away to avoid
military service. The first wave of Syrian Jews who went to America escaped
military service in a conflict with which they did not agree. Syrian Jews
arrived in Mexico City, Mexico, Buenos Aires, Argentina, New York, Chicago and
other American cities, although most came to New York.
Emigration from Syria halted during World War I and many families were
separated. After World War I, the French took control over Aleppo and it, along
with Damascus, became a French Mandate. Travel required a French passport or
travel paper. Jews who had passports from European countries were exempt from
local taxation, which was a drain on the finances of the local Jewish
community. Massive emigration from Syria occurred again during the period
after World War I and continued until the mid-1920s, when the Great Depression
began. The emigrés from the early 20th Century migration populate what
is known today as the Syrian Jewish communities of Brooklyn and New Jersey.
The Ottoman Empire, which encompassed what is today Turkey, Israel, Jordan,
Lebanon, Syria and other territories, fell early in the 20
th
Century. The region was divided into areas controlled by France and Great
Britain. Palestine was under British Mandate. Syria was under French control.
The Republic of Turkey was established in 1923. Syria gained its independence
from France in 1946. Attacks against Jews, who remained in the Syria after
World War I, increased. Pogroms in 1947 left Jewish shops and synagogues
destroyed. Thousands of Jews left the country for America and Palestine.
The pogroms and destruction also placed the cherished Aleppo Codex in great
jeopardy.
"When the synagogue was torched in 1947 during a pogrom, the Codex was
saved and hidden. In 1957, it was smuggled out of Aleppo to Israel, where it
was presented in 1958 to President Yitzhak Ben-Zvi.
|
"W hen the synagogue was torched in 1947 during a pogrom, the Codex was saved and hidden. In 1957, it was smuggled out of Aleppo to Israel, where it was presented in 1958 to President Yitzhak Ben-Zvi. It is housed in the Ben-Zvi Institute. Of the original 487 leaves, only 295 leaves remain. The Aleppo Codex is believed to be the most authoritative, accurate and sacred source document, both for the Biblical text and for the vocalization and cantillation. It has greater religious and scholarly import than any other manuscript of the Bible." |
After the birth of the State of Israel in 1948, persecution of Jews remaining
in Syria was common. The Jews were no longer permitted to own property, travel
or practice their occupation. Jews who tried to leave the country were
persecuted. The Muslim
dhimmi
laws were strictly enforced. Those Jews who were permitted to travel for
business purposes could not travel with family members because the Syrian
government feared that they would flee. The Syrian government feared that
Jewish men would join forces with Israel and fight against them in the Israeli
Army.
During a 10-year period in the 1980s, a collection of Jewish Holy objects was
smuggled out of Syria through the efforts of then-Chief Rabbi Avraham Hamra.
The collection included nine ancient Bible manuscripts, known as the
Ketarim
, each between 700 and 900 years old. In addition, there were 40
Torah
scrolls and 32 decorative boxes in which the Sephardic
Torah
scrolls were held. The collection was taken via Turkey, in stages to the
Jewish National and University Library of the Hebrew University in Israel. The
smuggling was necessary since official requests for permission to take them out
of Syria were denied.
Never forgetting their Syrian brethren, community members from Brooklyn, New
York often bribed Syrian government officials to help get those relatives still
in Syria out of the country. Negotiations between America’s President George H.
Bush, with heavy lobbying from Jewish Americans of Syrian birth, and Syria’s
President Assad, resulted in Syrian Jews being granted exit visas to America as
tourists in the early 1990s. Ironically, Assad’s demand that they not leave the
country as emigrés gave the Syrian Jews whom entered America yet another
ten years of persecution. In the United States as tourists, they could not
practice their chosen profession, obtain licenses, and apply for public
assistance or travel outside the United States.
In the year 2000, Brooklyn’s Syrian community, led by the Sephardic Voter’s
League and the Council for the Rescue of Syrian Jews, was able to gain passage
of federal legislation to change the immigration status of the immigrants.
Their new legal status allows them to work legally in the United States, obtain
working documents (green cards) and apply for citizenship.
Brooklyn’s Syrian Jewish Community
As the Middle East suffered economic depression, these Middle Eastern Jews
began looking for a better life for their families. Syrian Jewish
émigrés began arriving in New York City and the Americas in the
early 20
th
Century, about 1908. While many settled in Manchester, England, Mexico and
South America, specifically Argentina, the majority settled in New York City,
especially in the borough of Brooklyn, creating the largest Sephardic
population outside of
Eretz
Israel
.
The Jews of Aleppo and Damascus migrated to the United States in the early
twentieth Century for three basic reasons. First, an economic decline in Syria
crippled their ability to earn a living. Second, the Young Turks, a rebel
group responsible for the overthrow of the Ottoman sultan, were conscripting
Jews into the Army. Third, the rise of Zionism led to increase anti-Semitism in
the Middle East region.
The Syrian Jewish community in New York originally consisted of two groups,
Jews from Aleppo and Jews from Damascus, Syria. At first the convergence of the
two groups was not easy. The Aleppan Jews thought of themselves as more
knowledgeable, largely due to their history in Syria as a center of Jewish
learning. The Aleppans, or
Halabis
, followed the traditions of
Aram Soba
. The Damascene Jews or
shammies
, prayed in a different house of worship, although in Brooklyn the two groups
lived side by side and socialized.
As the Syrian Jewish community in Brooklyn grew, it established its own clearly
defined infrastructure, including a cemetery, synagogues, religious schools,
ritual baths, and a community center. At the same time, the Syrian Jews became
assimilated into society, through dress, language and basic education. However,
they continued to nurture and preserve their heritage, values and culture, as
they knew them in Syria. While members of the community learned and did
business with the secular world, they clearly established parameters under
which they operated. Parents, concerned that their culture and religion not be
compromised by secular influences, controlled social liaisons and marriages,
although arranged marriages were no longer forced. Intermarriage with non-Jews
was banned.
Moral values, including religious observance of
kashrut
and the Sabbath, as well as
tzedekah
,
chesid
and other
mitzvot
, were expected. Until the late 1950s, most Syrian children attended public
school and boys received their Hebrew education from a
Talmud Torah
(a place for Jewish learning),
at the
k’nees
or shul.
When the Syrian Jews came to America, they were limited in what they could do
to support their families. Most men had no more than an eighth grade education
and they did not know Yiddish or English so factory jobs were not desirable.
Many became peddlers, an occupation that allowed them to observe the Sabbath,
or small shopkeepers. They sold household items, linens, doilies, curtains and
tablecloths. Both commercial and kin ties bound the immigrants from Aleppo with
those who remained in Syria. Most had liquid assets.
In those early years, the New York-based Hebrew Immigration Aid Society helped
to settle the newly arrived Jews. The Syrian arrivals were often placed in
apartments on the Lower East Side with Ashkenazic families. Linguistic
differences made it difficult for the two different types of Jews to co-mingle.
The Ashkenazim did not understand the Syrians Arabic language and Hebrew
accent. The Syrians were unaccustomed to the bland foods served by Ashkenazic
Jews. The patrician Spanish Portuguese Synagogue on the Upper East Side did not
welcome the immigrant Syrians, whom they considered low class.
When Syrian Jews first came to New York, men often came alone until they could
afford to bring their families. The Arabic speaking Jews were uncomfortable
with their Eastern European brethren and found solace and comfort in the
kitchen of Rose Cohen Misrie of Beirut. Rose and her Aleppan husband, Israel
Misrie, opened the Egyptian Rose, a Lower East Side restaurant that was a haven
to Syrian Jews arriving from the Near East.
In addition to eating, there was talking, bargaining, trading, card games and
toleh
(Arabic for backgammon). Rose spun her tales and her storytelling made the
restaurant feel like home. A different menu of Middle Eastern cuisine was
prepared each day and everyone ate what was prepared. The Egyptian Rose was the
place to be, especially for men who came to New York without their families.
It was common for Aleppan men with rabbinic training to work as merchants,
rather than as judges or full-time scholars, since they considered it
preferable to earn a living through secular means. Unlike East European Jews,
trade rather than secular education was the road to economic mobility.
Eli Hedaya, a Syrian Jew, came to the United States in 1905 at age 12 and
immediately became a peddler, or door to door salesman. "I used to buy supplies
from Natan Labi, who was then on Washington Street, although Jewish. I would
buy a dozen or dozen and a half 'pieces' at a time, which I sold as a
peddler.... working at age twelve or so was common in Halab. At that age a boy
went to work to support, help feed the family, [sic] among the poor."
Syrian Jews owned a number of retail ventures. Some opened stores at beach
resorts in Rhode Island, Virginia and along the New Jersey shore, where they
sold souvenirs, jewelry, sweatshirts and T-shirts. Many merchants sold linens,
doilies, handkerchiefs and tablecloths. Others tried their luck in different
cities around the country such as Buffalo and Nashville, but returned to New
York City, when life as a Jew became difficult.
Atlantic City, New Jersey became a summer resort where many Syrian Jews had
summer stores. Hedaya said "The Boardwalk at Atlantic City had a number of busy
linen stores, some operated by Jews, some by Christian Syrians; Madeira Lace
Shop was Jewish." Another Syrian Jew, Basil David Cohen recalled "I worked in
the South for three years, and when I returned to New York, I brought back
$3,000 or $4,000. I took out a peddling license..."
Before long, the Syrian Jews began praying in their own separate areas. In
1911, a dozen or so Syrian Jews united under the name
Kehillat Shaare Sedek
and built a synagogue on the Lower East Side. A
Talmud Torah
for the children opened from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. daily and on Sunday mornings.
Members of the community, most of them businessmen, taught the classes. There
was no rabbinical leadership until the arrival in 1910 of Rabbi Yitzhak Shalom
zt’l, who helped and supported thousands of Aleppan immigrants as they
established themselves in the New World.
Over time, the Syrian Jews opened more and more retail establishments, selling
merchandise similar to what they had offered when they peddled door-to-door.
The businesses were family operated and the merchants favored employing other
members of the community. Some Syrians banded together and formed wholesale
establishments or began to manufacture clothing. Importing children's clothing
from the Far East became a tremendous source of income, particularly after
World War II. Evidence of this is found today as the owners of manufacturing
companies such as Catton Bros. (children's clothing), Baby Togs, the Children’s
Place, Lollitogs, Jet Set and Jordache jeans all bear Syrian surnames.
After World War II, Syrians expanded from the garment business into the
electronics business and opened chains of stores like Nobody Beats the Wiz or
wholesale outlets like Soundesign. Republic National Bank was owned by
Aleppans, as well as chain stores like Duane Reade, Rainbow Shops and others.
Syrian importers still sell to K-Mart, Wal-Mart, and J.C. Penney stores.
After living on the Lower East Side in the 1920s, the Syrian Jews began moving
to Bensonhurst, a Brooklyn neighborhood, where they established a cemetery (in
Staten Island), two synagogues, a
Talmud Torah
and a ritual bath on 67th Street near 20th Avenue. The Damascene Jews prayed
at Ahi Ezer Synagogue on 71
st
Street, led by Rabbi Murad Maslaton, while the Aleppan Jews prayed at Magen
David Synagogue, built in 1921, on 67
th
Street.
A
souk
or shopping area that specialized in Middle East imports
,
developed in Bensonhurst with all the stores the Syrians needed, carrying an
array of items similar to those in Syria. The
souk
had food shops, grocery stores and kosher butchers operated by community
members. Here women could purchase imported spices, such as
kamoon
(cumin),
parhat
(allspice),
habtlebedegeh
(a black
seed
)
, as well as grains such as
smead (semolina)
, that were needed for their cooking. They also purchased dried tamarind, a
fruit used to make
oot
, a paste made from the tamarind fruit that is used to flavor
lahamajene
,
meshe
(stuffed zucchini) and other Syrian specialties.
Meyer’s Ice Cream Store on Bay Parkway and 69
th
Street was a common hangout for Syrian teenagers and young adults. Summers
were spent with long days on the beach in Coney Island, then a popular summer
resort.
In 1932, Brooklyn community leaders invited Rabbi Jacob S. Kassin of Jerusalem,
to come to the New York as the chief rabbi of its growing community. Rabbi
Jacob had established a reputation in the
Bet Din
, and as a
Kabbalist
, teacher and
Gaon (great leader)
. He was also the son of esteemed Rabbi Shaul Kassin, a Syrian rabbi from a
long rabbinic dynasty. Rabbi Jacob agreed to become chief rabbi and moved to
Bensonhurst with his family in 1933. His leadership and guidance was paramount
to the shaping of the Syrian and Sephardic community in Brooklyn.
During these times, weddings and bar mitzvahs were simple, generally with the
ceremony held in the synagogue and the reception held in the family home with
food cooked by the women. Guests squeezed in and out like sardines, dancing to
Arabic music and stuffed their faces with homemade Syrian delights, all the
while enjoying the homelike atmosphere of being among family and friends. One
photo of the bride and groom recorded the event for posterity. Those who could
afford it held wedding and bar mitzvah receptions in Ahi Ezer Congregation on 71
st
Street in Bensonhurst, and hired professional musicians and a photographer.
Many Syrian Jewish families who hosted receptions in their homes, purchased
foods from Esther and Selim Salem, son of Rabbi Abraham Salem. In the 1940s,
the couple built a commercial kitchen in the backyard garage of their home on 63
rd
Street just off 21
st
Avenue. The family’s seven children and Rabbi Abraham Salem lived in the
house. The basement was converted into a storage area for gallons of pickles
and imported Syrian spices. There were huge ovens, trays and freezers to store
the food.
Theirs was the first kosher Syrian catering available in New York. The Salems
catered weddings, bar mitzvahs, a
sebit
(Saturday lunch meal
)
after Saturday morning services, and numerous parties throughout the growing
Syrian Sephardic Jewish community in Bensonhurst. Members of the Sephardic
community would trek up the narrow side alley to the Salem’s backyard kitchen,
especially in preparation for holidays and special events, to purchase her
goodies. The smells would emanate from the kitchen and greet you like a breath
of fresh air.
Summer vacations in Bradley Beach, along the New Jersey shore, became
commonplace, as hundreds of families rented or purchased summer homes there.
This started a popular social season where young boys and girls could meet and
find a suitable spouse.
The Syrian Jews made their next move in the 1940s. The wealthiest members of
the community moved to the Ocean Parkway section of Brooklyn where they
purchased private homes. In just a few years the entire community became
clustered around Ocean Parkway, which was later dubbed by author Joe Sutton,
"Aleppo in Flatbush."
By the mid-1950s, there was widespread community feeling that the
Talmud Torah
education offered was not sufficient to satisfy the need for religious
education of the children.
Sutton says: "A few hours each day in the afternoon
Talmud Torah
were perceived as inadequate, insufficient to foster the development of young
men and women who would perpetuate the Syrian community's accustomed pattern.
A Syrian day school was a revolutionary innovation; none had ever been remotely
conceived of in Aleppo and Damascus."
Chief Rabbi Jacob S. Kassin, whose own children attended public school, called
for the opening of a Jewish day school or elementary yeshiva. In response, the
Syrian community built two yeshivas -
Magen David Yeshiva
, which was primarily Aleppan, and Ahi Ezer Yeshiva, which primarily served the
Damascene Syrian community, although the separation between Damascene and
Aleppans dissipated in later years.
In the first and second generations, most parents did not consider a college
education necessary or desirable for their children. Most sons went into
family businesses, thus the argument for higher education as an economic
necessity was weak. Parents did not want their children to be exposed to
secular influences, as this might promote too much assimilation. But over time
this trend was reversed and today most young people from the community attend
schools of higher education. The community boasts artists, dentists,
psychiatrists, physicians, attorneys, writers, decorators, real estate
professionals, photographers, social workers and even a Harvard physics
professor.
Many of these professionals remain in the community with their client base. The
insular nature of the community was clearly preserved by Rabbi Jacob Kassin
during and after his lifetime. He was able to encourage intramarriage among
Syrian Jews through approved social occasions that encouraged young people to
meet.
The Syrian Jews continued in Brooklyn as a cohesive group. Their religiousness
and devotion to Judaism is evidenced by the infrastructure of synagogues,
yeshivas, high schools,
mikvehs
(ritual baths), a community center and several community subsidized senior
citizen apartment buildings.
In the late 1950s, the community opened Shaare Zion Congregation, a large
synagogue with a magnificent domed sanctuary and social hall on Ocean Parkway
between Avenues T and U. Rabbi Jacob, his son Rabbi Shaul, his assistant Rabbi
Abraham Hecht and his son-in-law Rabbi Baruch Ben Haim, married thousands of
couples there. The community also used the 67
th
Street synagogue for funerals and Sabbath services.
By the 60s, the community had grown more affluent. Bar mitzvahs and weddings
were celebrated with fancier parties and receptions. Shaare Zion acquired a
dedicated kosher caterer for its magnificent social hall, where receptions were
commonly held.
With the increased affluence, homes were refurbished or rebuilt with the finest
materials. Women dressed in the latest designer fashions. More affluent members
of the community were spending their summers in Deal, New Jersey, an area much
more prosperous than Bradley Beach. Before long, the entire community abandoned
Bradley Beach as a summer retreat and began their summer vacations in and
around Deal, in Long Branch, West Long Branch and Oakhurst.
The influence of the Kassin rabbinical leadership led Brooklyn's Syrian
community to shed secular education in favor of more Jewish and Torah learning
in a controlled yeshiva environment.
Talmud Torah
education, or after-school Jewish study programs, were virtually eliminated
from the community by the late 1960s. Most children attended one of the two
community yeshivas or Yeshiva of Flatbush, an Ashkenazic school with an
excellent reputation. As the community grew, other yeshivas opened to meet the
demands of different religious and educational philosophies as well as economic
circumstances. Today there are over a dozen
yeshivot
, as well as high schools.
Leading the movement towards yeshiva education was the Kassin family. Rabbi
Saul Kassin, eldest son of Rabbi Jacob, taught for over 32 years as a teacher
at the
Magen David Talmud Torah
and then the Yeshiva. The children and grandchildren of Rabbi Saul Kassin
attended
Magen David Yeshiva
, as did the children and grandchildren of his sisters and brothers.
At the beginning of the 21
st
Century, marriages are rarely arranged, and marriage to non-Jews is uncommon.
Most Jews in this community maintain their Orthodoxy with full knowledge
received from their yeshiva education of the reasons for their customs and
traditions and a full understanding of Jewish law. Secondary education is much
more common and widely accepted than it was 30 years ago.
Some traditions have grown depending on a family’s means. For example, the
tradition of sending money to a bride so she can prepare for her wedding night
by visiting the
mikvah
, has grown into
swanee
. The
swanee
maintains the same tradition of sending gifts to the bride, such as a
nightgown or
peignoir
set, perfumes, an evening purse and jewelry. But over time the gifts have
become more and more elaborate and today it is widely accepted that gifts are
also bought for the groom by the bride’s parents. The
swanee
, or collection is sent to the home of the bride where it is put on display for
friends and relatives and is an occasion for celebration. The celebration can
be a tea, held during the daytime, where coffee and desserts are served, or in
an evening. Generally,
shob el boz
(made from cornstarch and sugar) or el
mazee
, a white drink made from almond juice is served. In addition, two desserts,
knafe
and
baklava
, are a must.
Knafe
is a dessert made from shredded phyllo dough and ricotta cheese.
Baklava is
a dessert made from pistachio nuts flavored with sugar and rose water and
wrapped in phyllo dough.
Today’s weddings have come to meet a certain set of standards, generally a
formal reception held in a social hall. Women shop for dresses, each trying to
outdo the next one with up-to-date styles. They take great care with personal
grooming. While a band may have been acceptable entertainment for a wedding in
the 70s, today it is common to see multiple types of music, including violins
and harps during the ceremony, a disc jockey for the reception and Arabic music
in a separate area for more senior guests. The events are recorded with both
still and video photography.
Interestingly, the opposite has happened in the celebration of
bar mitzvahs
. A
bar
mitzvah
, which occurs just prior to the boys 13
th
Hebrew birthday, is a rite of passage. The
bar mitzvah
reads his
Torah
or
Haftorah
passage in
shul
and can then be counted as a man for purposes of a
minyan
, which requires 10 Jewish men for the saying of certain prayers.
There are far fewer formal
bar mitzvah
celebrations with elaborate receptions than before. Since most children attend
yeshiva
, nearly every synagogue has a youth
minyan
, where young boys are expected to attend and pray, providing them with a
routine that evolves into a lifelong practice of praying and religious
observance. By the time the
bar mitzvah
occurs, the boy is usually so skilled at reading the
Torah
in synagogue that the rite of passage is a formality. For others, the
bar mitzvah
has the same significance it always did, but is celebrated differently.
Celebrating the event with a trip to Israel where the bar mitzvah boy can read
his passage at the
kotel
in Jerusalem is preferred. Many believe that the experience of a
bar mitzvah
in the Holy Land combined with traveling in Israel will solidify the
foundation of Jewish learning in preparation for lifelong observance of Judaism.
Today, Rabbi Shaul J. Kassin, eldest son of Rabbi Jacob S. Kassin, is the
Syrian community’s chief rabbi. The community has built an admirable
infrastructure of Jewish life in Brooklyn, New York, with linkages that spread
all over the world.
Sarina Roffé
Brooklyn, New York, USA