Day 7 of #TurkeyJewishRoadtrip:

Ephesus, Priene, Milas.

Most people heard of Ashkenazi, Sefardi or Mizrahi Jews. Not many heard of Romaniote Jews: Image
Roughly translated as Jews of the Roman/Byzantine Empire - the Romaniote community preceded the Ashkenazim (est. 1250) and Sefardim (est. 1492).

Romaniote Jews lived, for thousands of years, in Asia minor - Anatolia - some Jews in Izmir and Istanbul are their descendents.
In day 4 of #TurkeyJewishRoadtrip we visited the #Sardis Romaniote synagogue, together with Imam @OsmanDe07800433



Today we went to see #Ephesus and Priene...
Jews have lived in Ephesus in antiquity. Although the synagogue has not be excavated (yet) - we know from Josephus that Jews were granted the rights to build a synagogue, to donate to the Jerusalem Temple, to keep the Shabbat and the Kosher dietary laws... Image
Apparently a Jew in Ephesus also experimented in olden day graffiti and etched in stone for eternity a Menorah on the steps of the great Celsus library... Image
If you have not been to #Ephesus yet, you should definitely put in on your touring/vacation schedule... The impressive ruins, the massive theater, the agora... Here are just some sample... ImageImageImageImage
Who's statue is this?! Image
An hour's drive from Ephesus and we arrived in #Priene... Priene was a deep water port at some point in history - until the Maeander/Menderes river silted up... Image
Impressive ruins - Chaim isn't much into archeology, especially at 43° centigrade - Eliezer however was full of suggestions on how to get these massive boulders one on top of each other... ImageImage
But #Priene's jewel for me is of course the synagogue... Built in the 4th century and served the Romaniote Jewish community for close to 500 years.
Some more pics of the Priene Synagogue... I think the last time anyone prayed Minha therewas last year on my visit with @EliChitrik... ImageImageImageImage
Another hour on road and we arrived in #Milas. This very ancient charming city was really fun to walk around in... ImageImageImageImage
We headed first to the Jewish cemetery. After a few wrong turns - we found the place! A big part of the cemetery is really looked after very nicely thanks to a wall built around most of the cemetery by the local authorities @muglabsb @MilasBelediyesi Image
At the cemetery we saw headstones dating 1710 (and some maybe earlier) up until 1987... ImageImageImage
Some headstones are very ornate, and some are just a slab of concrete... ImageImageImageImage
For the most part, this part of the cemetery is well kept.... ImageImageImage
Unfortunately beyond the walls of the cemetery there is construction in preparation of a new housing project and a new road - it was sad to see that some graves were violated and human bones were crushed... ImageImageImage
Eliezer and Chaim volunteered for the Mitzva and tried to bury the human bones that we found...

It would be great if the @muglabsb and the @MilasBelediyesi would take more caution in respecting the souls of the Jewish citizens of #Milas... Image
On the topic of cemeteries: I will, inşallah, dedicate a special thread for our visit to the holy Gürçeşme Cemetery of Izmir - that cemetery deserves a thread for itself (I know that still have to talk about Shabtai Tzvi, I will get to that as well ınşallah).
Jews believe that a grave is "bought" for eternity - and disturbing the dead, is taking from someone whom we cannot pay back to, (helal edemiyor ve etmiyor)... This is why I feel it is important to visit these holy sites when possible...
We went to look out for the synagogue... After some inquiries apparently the synagogue of Milas was torn down a few years ago, and an education center was built above it... Image
However, just around the corner we found this house... Image
It's current residents didn't appreciate us intruding... Image
However the previous owners left their mark right above the door! "Yosef De Abuahav of Milas 5640 (1880)" it says in Hebrew... Image
Eliezer and Chaim snuck in, after which I reluctantly did the same... and found thag the slanted nails marks for where a Mezuza was once placed are still there... Image
A worried neighbor came out and warned us of ghosts, spirits, scorpions and snakes that reside in the abandoned house... So we quickly got out (who wants to mess with any of these?!)... Image
"Jews were always here" tells us the 'Teyze' - "They were very good people, we love Jews very much" she said after telling us about her 93 year old neighbor and his children...

See, #coexistance of Jews and Muslims isn't just a slogan for conferences, it is and was reality.

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More from @mchitrik

4 Aug
Day 10 of #TurkeyJewishRoadtrip:

Gelibolu and Thrace

Driving through the Gallipoli Peninsula - I am thinking about the words that allegedly Atatürk said in 1934: Image
"Those heroes that shed their blood and lost their lives ... You are now lying in the soil of a friendly country. Therefore rest in peace. There is no difference between the Johnnies and the Mehmets to us where they lie side by side here in this country of ours ..."
Although some dispute the authenticity of this quote - never the less, after driving through the trenches, the cemeteries, seeing memorials for all those who fiercely fought here on both sides - one must only concur with the underlying message... ImageImage
Read 9 tweets
3 Aug
Day 9 of #TurkeyJewishRoadtrip:

Ayvalık/Troy/Çanakkale/Dardanelles Strait

Waking tp to the view of the Agean sea and #Cunda was quite amazing - not to say pretty relaxing... We are going to Çanakkale! Image
Last night me and Chaim were walking in Ayvalık - a coffee shop owner noticing the Kipah on Chaim's head walks over:

- "Are you guys Jewish by any chance?" - "Of course!" we say.
- "Let's have coffee, its on me. Last year I got stuck in Israel for 8 months during the pandemic."
He was excited to see Jews walking on the streets of his hometown, and is planning on opening an identical coffee shop in Tel Aviv...

Leave a comment if you prefer the Sunset over Sunrise...

Back to Çanakkale... Image
Read 18 tweets
2 Aug
Day 8 of #TurkeyJewishRoadtrip:

Bergama (Pergamon)

Guess who rebuilt this beautiful synagogue of #Bergama? Image
This is of course the beautiful synagogue of Bergama... Just a few years ago it was used as a barn, after most Jews have left the city.

While my friend Selim Ozturk was arranging the synagogue to open, @ChaimChitrik and I went up the acropolis to see the ruins of #Pergamon Image
The ruins of this once major city are still quite impressive now! But we were waiting for the keys of the synagogue to arrive... Image
Read 10 tweets
27 Jul
Day 2 of #TurkeyJewishRoadtrip:

On the road from Bursa to Çeşme

While on road lets talk😊

Did you know that #Turkey is an important source of #Kosher food? Hundreds of manufacturers all over the country produce anything from raw material to ready to eat products.
By the way: Kosher food does not mean food that is blessed by a rabbi!

Rather it is food that has been prepared according to Jewish law - there are no mixtures of meat/milk, it is insect free, meat or chicken have to be prepared properly according to Jewish law and more...
The Turkish Jewish community @tyahuditoplumu through @DenetGida which certifies hundreds of plants, as well as the @OrthodoxUnion and @OKKosher have their field representatives inspect plants to assure they are fit for the kosher consumer.
Read 14 tweets
26 Jul
Day 1 of #TurkeyJewishRoadtrip:

Bursa!

"Every day one should work so that Judaism should thrive - and it will" says in a mixture of #Ladino and Turkish Mr. Leon Elnekave - the head of the 60 strong Jewish community of #Bursa...
Leon bey looks over the Geruş or Expulsion synagogue - named after the various Jews expelled to Bursa - first by the byzantines and later by the Sefardi Jews who arrived from Spain in 1492... Image
There are two "Bimas" at the beautiful #synagogue - one closer to the women section as Leon explains "so that they should hear" - I totally agree: "of course, the Torah is not only for the men!"
Read 18 tweets
26 Jul
Turkey Road Trip 2021:

Join me here for the next three weeks for a daily thread of #Jewish Heritage sites in #Turkey as we, inşallah, explore and discuss #History, customs, ancestry, origins and Jewish life in Turkey! #coexistance

#TurkeyJewishRoadtrip Image
We will also visit #Kosher food manufacturers on behalf of @DenetGida for the @tyahuditoplumu and the @OrthodoxUnion - we will visit ancient #synagogues and archeological sites

Follow me here for regular updates and recommend others too 😊

@TCKulturTurizm #diversity Image
Read 4 tweets

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