• Published 18:48 09.03.10
  • Latest update 18:49 09.03.10

Egypt to finance renovation of synagogues, Jewish sites

Culture Minister Farouk Hosny: Jewish sites are as much a part of Egypt's culture as Muslim mosques.

By The Associated Press Tags: Israel Egypt Egypt Jewish World Israel news

Egypt will shoulder the costs of restoring the country's Jewish houses of worship said the culture minister Tuesday, two days after a historic synagogue in Cairo's ancient Jewish quarter was rededicated in a private ceremony.

Farouk Hosny said in a statement that his ministry views Jewish sites as much a part of Egypt's culture as Muslim mosques or Coptic churches and the restorations would not require any foreign funding.

On Sunday, the Ben Maimon synagogue, named after the 12th century rabbi and intellectual Maimonides, was rededicated in a ceremony including half a dozen Egyptian Jewish families that long ago fled the country.

Hosny committed his ministry to restoring all 11 synagogues across Egypt, three of which have already been renovated. The best-known synagogue that of Ben Ezra, is located in Cairo's Christian quarter near a number of old churches and was restored years ago.

The ceremony at the Ben Maimon synagogue was closed to media but attendees said it was an emotional event, especially for the Egyptian-Jewish families invited, many of whom now live in Europe.

"There were some lectures on the Jewish sites in Egypt and the temple. It was nice, emotional and nostalgic," said Raymond Stock, an American close to the Jewish community in Cairo who attended the three-day event.

A group of about 11 Hassidic Chabad-Lubavitch rabbis also came to Cairo from the United States and Israel sang at the event.

Egypt's Jewish community, which dates back millennia and at its peak in the 1940s numbered around 80,000, is down to several dozen, almost all of them elderly. The rest were driven out decades ago by mob violence and persecution tied in large part to the Israeli-Arab conflict.

Egypt and Israel fought a war every decade from the 1940s to the 1970s until the 1979 peace treaty was signed.

Despite that treaty, Egyptian sentiment remains deeply unfriendly to Israel, and anti-Semitic stereotypes still occasionally appear in the Egyptian media.

Last September, Hosny blamed a conspiracy cooked up in New York by the world's Jews when he lost a bid from becoming the next head of the U.N.'s agency for culture and education.

At the time, Hosny's candidacy raised an outcry because of a threat he made in the Egyptian parliament in 2008 to personally burn any Israeli book he found in the Alexandria Library.

While he later apologized and Israel said it had withdrawn its opposition to his candidacy, several prominent Jewish activists spoke out against him in the run-up to the vote.

  • Print Page
  • Send to a friend
  • Comments
  • Share
  • Text Size +|-
TalkBacks

Why Facebook Connect?

Comment on Haaretz.com articles with your Facebook login, and share your thoughts on your own wall.

Add a comment

Add your reply

  • 8. 0 0
    Egypt, Must I forgive you?
    • michelle
    • 10.03.10
    • 01:25

    You know, your animosity toward Israel I could accept, if you had to do it to prove your manhood to the Arab League, as it were. But it's the way you treat our sweet Beduin cousins in Sinai that boils my blood and makes it impossible for me to forgive you, as you're STILL doing wrong and oppressing those different from you. Showing tolerance of religion, and even some sense of obligation toward the synagogues Jews built in Egypt while Jews were good citizens there (and entirely undeserving of the imminent forced exodus from their homes)...restoring these synagogues? that's a sign of good faith from you. please do something to show regard for the human rights of Sinai Beduins, because you have made me want to forgive you...and I feel for them - that perhaps Israel should not have abandoned them to your mercy. Israeli Beduins are far happier. You have the opportunity now to turn things around and increase your stature internationally. Give Beduins full rights and teach Turkey a trick

  • 7. 0 0
    Why? There are no Jews really left
    • kwozi
    • 09.03.10
    • 23:54

    in Egypt, and the money could certainly be better used to feed, clothe and educate the street children forced to beg to survive. And I don't think the locals and other world tourists really want a bunch of arrogant rude Israeli's holidaying around Cairo... we certainly don't go to Egypt to see synagogues thats for sure!

  • 6. 0 0
    Egyptian hertiage site?
    • Ben
    • 09.03.10
    • 21:14

    When the Israelis declared the Jewish holy places in the West Bank as Israeli heritage site, the Arab/Muslim world freaked out. But, if the Egyptians declare Cairo synagogues as cultural heritage sites, there's no outcry.

  • 5. 0 0
    IF USED PROPERLY
    • TOBIA
    • 09.03.10
    • 20:54

    It can be used as an educational tool if used properly

  • 4. 0 0
    Just out of curiosity
    • Jackie
    • 09.03.10
    • 20:53

    How many Jews are now living in the areas once served by these synagogues? Are they being refurbished to serve the Jews or as memorials to those forced out after 1948. I had cousins whose families lived in Cairo for centuries and who are now either in Israel or the US. How many other Jews were forced to leave with nothing but the clothes on their backs?

  • 3. 0 0
    All for the money
    • judith
    • 09.03.10
    • 20:39

    So obvious they are doing it to bring in Jewish tourist dollars. Any sound Jew shouldn't fall for it.

  • 2. 0 0
    Dean: My bet about you
    • Mandelarab
    • 09.03.10
    • 19:48

    A Christian freak who reads the Bible as daily news. It seems even authoritarian Egyptians have more respect to Historical facts (not biblical). Wake up "dude": The World ain't flat and the Bible is of now historical worth whatsoever... And to prove this, all I can say is: Noah's ark...

  • 1. 0 0
    Memorials to a Dead Race; Potempkin Village
    • Dean Blake
    • 09.03.10
    • 19:29

    This 'reconstruction' is a 'Potempkin Village' of Jewish life in Egypt. It is a worthless and empty gesture as Judiasm is about living people, not memorials. It does not place pressure on the Palestinians to permit likewise visa a vie Jewish holy sites East of the 1967 borders and to do so is to leave Jewish sacred lands in gentile hands, reconstructed or otherwise. It is a gesture that supports a Two State Solution that will 'disolve' Judiasm and abnegate its religious rights.