• Published 00:00 12.11.07
  • Latest update 00:00 12.11.07

Synagogue in Brazilian town Recife considered oldest in the Americas

Historians gradually unveil prominent role Jews had in history of Brazil, the world's largest Catholic nation.

By Reuters Tags: Jewish World

Flanked by bustling cafes in downtown Recife on Brazil's northeastern coast is a little-known treasure of Jewish history in the New World - the oldest synagogue in the Americas.

Sephardic Jews built the two-story Kahal Zur Israel Synagogue before 1641 - most likely in 1636 - when they enjoyed religious freedom under the Dutch, who ruled part of the northeast region from 1630 to 1654 to control sugar production.

The Mikve Israel Congregation in Curacao, a Dutch Antilles island in the Carribean, was considered by some to have been the first congregation in the Americas. But it was founded only in 1651, also by Sephardic Jews from Holland.

In the world's largest Catholic nation, whose best known icon is the Christ the Redeemer statue in Rio de Janeiro, the Recife synagogue became an important symbol of the Jewish heritage in Brazil.

Based on old maps, archeological excavations uncovered the remnants of the synagogue, including the original Mikvah - a bath for religious ceremonies - under six layers of floors. The restored synagogue reopened in December 2001.

Since then it has become one of the main stops on the city's tourist circuit and its archives attract scores of Brazilian and foreign historians.

Their studies are gradually unveiling the prominent role Jews had in early Brazilian society.

"It challenges the stereotypical view that Brazilian culture is based on a tripod of Portuguese, [native] Indians and Africans," said Tania Kaufman, head of the Jewish Historical Archive in Recife, the capital of Pernambuco state.

"We now know Jews were a fundamental part of Brazil's cultural melting pot."

Historical records in Brazil and Amsterdam show Jews helped build the sugar industry, roads, bridges, and a basic sewage system in the northeast. Many also made money by trading slaves.

At its height in 1645, the Jewish community in Recife counted 1,630 members, the same number as in the thriving Jewish community of Amsterdam, according to Dutch historian Franz Leonard Schalkwijk.

"The economic dominance of the Jews prompted various protests [from Catholics and Protestants]," wrote Schalkwijk in his book "Church and State in Dutch Brazil."

When Dutch rule ended in 1654, Jews were expelled, killed or forced to go into hiding under the Roman Catholic Inquisition. One group from Recife defied storms and pirates to reach what is today New York, where they founded the first Jewish congregation in North America, called Shearith Israel, "the remnants of Israel."

An exhibition entitled "Pernambuco, Brazil - a gateway to New York" stirred much interest at the U.S. Center for Jewish History in 2004-05, recalls Kaufman.

The restored synagogue and renewed interest in the legacy of their ancestors is reinforcing the identity of Recife's Jewish community, which has dwindled by more than half to 300 families from two decades ago as many left for bigger cities.

In 2005, Recife received from Israel its first permanent Rabbi since 1654.

There are four synagogues in Recife but many Jews choose to celebrate their weddings and Bar Mitzvahs in the Kahal zur Israel because of its symbolism.

"It's an enormous source of pride," said Ivan Kelner, president of the Israelite Federation of Pernambuco state.

The synagogue is also at the center of a broader cultural renaissance. In November of every year, a Jewish festival offering dance, cinema, and food, from Gefilte fish to fluden, attracts around 20,000 visitors.

"The synagogue is a symbol of the revival of Jewish culture, it has galvanized our community," said Denys Sznejder, a choreographer who heads a Jewish folkloric dance group in Recife.

More Jewish World news and features

Brazilian rabbis standing over the exposed foundations of the historic Kahal Zur Israel Synagogue as they are being excavated by archeologists in the Brazilian city of Recife in 2000. (Reuters)

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  • 12. 0 0
    visit to Recife
    • Patricia Vile
    • 01.08.09
    • 19:33

    A freind and I will be visitng Recife on October 28 and 29th. Can someone please help us get a guide to see the synagogue, and introduce us to members of the Jewish Community, etc? Please get back to me Thank you, Patti Vile 312-520-4100

  • 11. 0 0
    How can I reach synagogue in Receife?
    • Marcyanne
    • 31.08.08
    • 05:06

  • 10. 0 0
    Brazilians
    • Manny
    • 30.03.08
    • 00:08

    Interesting article. Historians know for a fact that millions of Brazilians have Jewish roots, whether they know it or not.

  • 9. 0 0
    to boris
    • Harry
    • 03.12.07
    • 11:31

    Thanks Boris, the few non-convertos who left Recife when the portugese came back fled north, maybe to Surinam and the to New York, then New Amsterdam. Probably they also stayed in the Dutch West Indies as Curacao who holds an olsd synagoge. So it was the dutch who rescued the early jewish life in the americas.

  • 8. 0 0
    Oldest Synagogue in the Americas
    • B Lionarons
    • 13.11.07
    • 21:38

    A link in this fascinating story is missing: Surinam. From Recife, on their way to various destinations jews arrived in Suriname. Jews have been there as early as 1652. Remnants of the Beracha ve-Shalom synagogue in Joden Savanne, inaugurated in 1685, still exist. In any case, long live Kahal zur Israel.

  • 7. 0 0
    to paulo of lisbon - who destroyed the synagogue ?
    • mb
    • 12.11.07
    • 16:11

    the answer is easy. Portugal, and was hidden till very little time ago.... That is an exemple of portuguese tolerance and culture.

  • 6. 0 0
    Jews come to brazil, many years before.
    • boris
    • 12.11.07
    • 16:09

    The news is incomplete, there is a lack of information in Israel. As paulo de lisboa knows, The discovered land by 1500 havent gold, and the portuguese king hadnt money to develop the new colony. All jews in portugual were baptimised by the king, know that day new christians. It was one, Fernando de lorona, then known fernando de noronha, the man who could develop the new land.They did business with the wood of jews, known Pau Brazil, where the country get its name. 1/4 of portugal population were jews, born or who came from spain.And they were afraid to stay in sefarad, and rather to came to new places, like 'brazil'. Portugal allowd jews in new place but denied them to public show their faith. A curious book, written by a american rabi, shows how important were the jews to develop the interior of the country, The bandeirantes. Thats another story. I guess there was 5 engenhos - sugar industry, in the beging, 2 and the best managed belong to jews.

  • 5. 0 0
    Am Israel Hai is not just a song !
    • Akram Zekaria
    • 12.11.07
    • 13:58

    "Synagogue in Brazilian town Recife considered oldest in Americas" Ed. Jews must have their religion in their gens. It can't be otherwise. For a Jew anything connected with religion brings something spiritual to his heart no matter of what country,background he or she came from. Am Israel Hai is not just a song !

  • 4. 0 0
    congregation shearith israel
    • realism
    • 12.11.07
    • 06:45

    This congregation has been in continuous operation since its founding here in NYC, and is now located in a very prestigious location facing Central Park.

  • 3. 0 0
    To No 1, Jews came to the New World runing away from the Church
    • Jorge
    • 12.11.07
    • 06:24

    Jews in America were not doing the Churches work, they were running for their lives from the Inquisition, that was an instrument of the church

  • 2. 0 0
    Jews left for "bigger cities"
    • Simon
    • 12.11.07
    • 06:19

    This sentence is fishy: the Recife metropolitan area is the fifth largest in Brazil, with an estimated population of about 3.6 million people. There aren't too many bigger cities to move to...

  • 1. 0 0
    There are many Jews throughout the western Catholic world
    • Roman Catholic
    • 12.11.07
    • 03:21

    From Brazil and Argentina to Paris, Spain and Mexico, from Chicago to Los Angeles. :) ...and ofcourse, there are many Catholics in Israel and Palestine. When the Church sent a lot of expeditions throughout the new world many sephardic jews joined the call to explore for the church.