Syria strikes to return property to Syrian Jews who left : NPR


Syrian American cantor Henry Hamra at the Central Synagogue of Aleppo

Syrian-American cantor Henry Hamra on the Central Synagogue of Aleppo, as soon as the middle of a thriving Jewish neighborhood within the northern Syrian metropolis. The Syrian authorities transferred management of Jewish websites in December to Hamra’s Jewish heritage group.

Jane Arraf/NPR


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Jane Arraf/NPR

ALEPPO, Syria — Many years after virtually your complete Syrian Jewish neighborhood left the nation, Henry Hamra of Brooklyn, N.Y., stands on the steel door of a small synagogue on this historical Syrian metropolis, actually holding the keys to a doable return of Jewish residents.

Hamra was 15 years previous when his household left Damascus within the early Nineties after the Assad regime lifted a ban on journey. Lots of the Syrian Jews had been unable to promote their houses earlier than they left. Among the houses ended up occupied by different Syrians whereas the federal government took cost of the synagogues and faculties.

In December, simply days earlier than Hamra’s go to to Aleppo, the Syrian authorities licensed a Jewish heritage basis he leads, transferring management of Jewish non secular properties from the federal government to the group.

The group can even assist restore personal property appropriated when the Jewish neighborhood left to its Jewish homeowners.

Henry Hamra unlocks the door of a synagogue in Aleppo

Henry Hamra unlocks the door of a synagogue in Aleppo, Syria, deserted after virtually your complete remaining Jewish neighborhood left the nation within the early Nineties. Hamra and his father, the final rabbi to go away Syria, are working with the Syrian authorities to revive property to Jewish residents.

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“What we’re making an attempt to do is come see the properties, come see the synagogues and see what is the situation,” says Hamra, now 48. “I am calling on all of the individuals who have properties to return and we’ll assist them discover them and provides them again to them.”

A outstanding journey over the previous 12 months largely engineered by Syrian-American activist Mouaz Moustafa has led Hamra to at the present time, taking custody of the keys to Jewish properties by the newest in a sequence of caretakers over many years and envisioning a time when Syrian Jews would possibly return.

On Hamra’s first go to to Syria along with his father final 12 months, Syrian authorities officers pledged assist in restoring properties again to their Jewish homeowners.

In a wrinkle of historical past, the brand new Syrian president restoring Jewish rights, Ahmed al-Sharaa, is a onetime al-Qaida commander who renounced the militant Islamist group’s ideology.

Aleppo, in northern Syria, had one of many greatest Jewish communities on this various however largely Arab nation — relationship again no less than 2,000 years.  

Henry Hamra examines centuries-old tombstones of rabbis buried at Aleppo’s main synagogue while his son Joseph (l) says a prayer.

Henry Hamra examines centuries-old tombstones of rabbis buried at Aleppo’s most important synagogue whereas his son Joseph (left) says a prayer. For a whole lot of years, the synagogue held the oldest identified surviving manuscript of the Hebrew Bible.

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Earlier than the creation of Israel in 1948, there have been an estimated 30,000 Jews in Syria. Syrian Jews in trendy historical past had been in a position to follow their religion however confronted the identical repressive insurance policies below the closed regime as different residents. When President Hafez al-Assad, below U.S. strain, lifted journey restrictions particularly for Jewish residents starting in 1992, most of them left completely.

Hamra’s father, Yusuf Hamra, was the final rabbi to go away Syria. With out somebody to carry out ceremonies, Jewish non secular life right here died.

Now, solely six Syrian Jews — all aged — are identified to nonetheless reside within the nation, says Hamra. When Rabbi Hamra made his first journey to Damascus final 12 months since leaving three many years in the past, there weren’t sufficient Jews even along with his visiting delegation to have the ability to maintain prayers.

Henry Hamra examining religious texts in a small Jewish school in Aleppo, Syria.

Henry Hamra examines non secular texts in a small Jewish faculty in Aleppo, Syria.

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On this journey, Henry Hamra has introduced his 21-year-old son, Joseph, with him.

Hamra opens the door to a small synagogue with layers of mud coating the heavy burgundy velvet curtains. Subsequent to it’s a small faculty. Dim mild filtering by grime-coated home windows reveals stacks of desks piled up on scuffed picket tables.

The synagogue is in an Aleppo neighborhood closely broken in Syria’s 14-year-long civil battle. That battle ended when opposition fighters toppled authoritarian President Bashar al-Assad in December 2024.

Subsequent door, the proprietor of a tiny neighboring plumbing provide store says he’s pleased that Syria helps Jewish residents return.

The view from the womens’ section at Aleppo’s central synagogue, also known as the al Bandara synagogue, after the neighborhood. The iron grates on the second floor allowed women to attend prayers without being seen by male worshippers.

The view from the ladies’s part at Aleppo’s Central Synagogue, also referred to as al-Bandara Synagogue. The iron grates on the second ground allowed ladies to attend prayers with out being seen by male worshippers.

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“They had been our mates,” says Abu Alaa al-Muhandis, 75. “We hope they’ll come again, they’ll carry life again to town.”

Whereas Israel, which has seized extra Syrian territory and launched common airstrikes, is controversial in Syria, Syrian American Jews are considered for essentially the most half merely as Syrian.

“All the time in Syria you recognize we had church buildings, synagogues and mosques collectively in the identical space as a result of individuals used to reside collectively, as neighbors,” says Maissa Kabbani, the founding father of a Syrian justice group. She factors out a broken mosque near the synagogue.

Throughout city, Hamra is proven for the primary time the jewel of Aleppo’s once-thriving Jewish neighborhood — the Central Synagogue, also referred to as the al-Bandara Synagogue, named after the neighborhood it is situated in.

The dimensions of the 1,500-year-old synagogue speaks to a as soon as giant and vibrant Jewish neighborhood in a metropolis that for many centuries was a thriving commerce middle.

Inside, stone arches high Roman columns overlooking courtyard after courtyard. There are marble-tile flooring and an ornate ladies’s part on the second ground, the place ladies and ladies may take part in prayers behind ornamental iron screens with out being seen.

In New York, Hamra’s household is within the menswear enterprise. In non secular life he’s a cantor — a clergy member who leads the congregation in prayers and track.

Hamra wanders by the open areas of the synagogue, stepping up onto an elevated marble platform the place cantors have stood over the centuries.

“Wow,” he says repeatedly, seemingly at a lack of phrases over his environment.

The central synagogue was additionally for a whole lot of years the house to a Hebrew manuscript often called the Aleppo Codex. The 1,000-year-old manuscript is the oldest identified surviving copy of the Hebrew Bible. The codex was smuggled to Israel within the Fifties though solely partially intact.

Syrian President Sharaa has been eager to reassure the West that minorities will likely be protected within the new Syria. The Syrian authorities, in saying that it was handing over Jewish non secular properties, stated it was an indication that every one minorities had been welcome.

The varsity and adjoining synagogue had been deserted in spite of everything Aleppo Jews emigrated within the early Nineties.

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In Washington, D.C., the Syrian Jewish neighborhood represented by the Hamras, working with Mouaz Moustafa’s Syrian Emergency Job Power, have proved efficient advocates for lifting U.S. sanctions towards Syria. The U.S. eliminated the final of the devastating commerce sanctions in December.

Mouaz Moustafa, the executive director of the Syrian Emergency Task Force, speaks during an exclusive interview in Washington, United States on December 19, 2024. (Photo by Celal Gunes/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Mouaz Moustafa, the chief director of the Syrian Emergency Job Power, speaks throughout an interview in Washington, D.C., on Dec. 19, 2024.

Celal Gunes/Anadolu through Getty Photos


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That advocacy has generated controversy amongst some Syrian-American Jews who imagine that Sharaa and his authorities can’t be trusted to guard Jews or different Syrian minorities.

“It’ll take a variety of time for Syria to return again,” says Hamra, citing an absence of electrical energy, operating water and in locations like Aleppo, safety.

In Damascus and Aleppo, the small delegation is accompanied by younger Syrian authorities fighters with rifles. Some ask to pose for selfies with Hamra.

Hamra grew up talking Arabic at residence. He refers to Syria as “the previous nation.”

He says whereas it’s a stretch now to check Syrian Jews shifting right here, he says many would cherish the chance to go to.

“There’s a variety of issues we used to do over right here we do not do within the U.S. — just like the interplay with individuals,” he says. “Syrian persons are very loving individuals they usually’re very welcoming.”

His son Joseph says he cannot cease smiling.

“You see my face?” he asks. “I’ve by no means had this face in my life. It is loopy.”

Joseph Hamra says, for his half, he can envision youthful Syrian Jews coming to reside.

“I am planning on making a visit with all my mates quickly to see all their roots, like the place their dad and mom and grandparents grew up, the place a few of their grandparents are buried,” he says. “They’d 100% suppose at the back of their heads, ‘Wow think about constructing one thing right here.'”

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