1) Djerba, an island off the coast of #Tunisia, is home to one of the oldest Jewish communities in the world, and the 2nd largest in the Arab world
Jews have lived on this island for over 2,500 years
2) Jews found refuge in Dejrba following the destruction of the First Temple in #Jerusalem
The high priest Tzadok (Kings I 2:35) along with his fellow Kohanim escaped to this distant Island and settled there. They carried stones from the altar as a memoir of the destruction
3) As such, this community is mostly made up of Kohanim. Genetic tests show the vast majority of the community share a common ancestor with Cohens from other communities across the world, both in MENA and Europe
Djerba is popularly know as "The Island of the Kohanim"
4) Following the Spanish Inquistion, Jews from the Iberian Peninsula again found refuge on this beautiful island
Throughout this time, the Jewish community always preserved their unique dress, personal names, and accents
5) The community had warm ties with their Muslim neighbors
Here is a picture of #Tunisian president Habib Bourguiba الحبيب بورقيبة visiting the Al Ghariba Synagogue in Djerba in 1966
6) The community established schools, synagogues, yeshivas, Kosher restaurants, and much more
You can still see the Hebrew Kosher signs to this day in multiple locations on the island
7) The most famous of sites is the ancient El Ghriba الغريبة Synagogue, a UNESCO World Heritage Site
This beautiful synagogue was built in 500 BCE! and has been preserved and embellished ever since
8) Remember the altar stone I mentioned before, which the Kohanim brought from the First Temple in #Jerusalem to Djerba?
It's in the El Ghriba Synagogue, right under the Torah ark. There is a long standing tradition to pray near it's location
9) Legend has it that a woman named El Ghriba lived alone on the land where the synagogue now stands. One day her house caught fire and she perished, but her body did not burn or rot. The Jews saw this as a miracle and built the synagogue there in her honor
10) Every year, thousands of Jews make a special pilgrimage to this site on Lag BaOmer. Lag BaOmer is a mystical holiday celebrated 33 days after Passover by lighting bonfires
Jews from all over the globe make this pilgrimage, with local Muslims joining the festivities
11) Given their unique ancestry, Djerban Jews have special Hebrew pronounciation and tunes, different from the rest of North African Jewry and even from that of mainland #Tunisia's Jews
Here is a reading of Megilath Esther
12) The community's unique pronounciation and tradition can be heard during public reading of the Torah
13) In #Israel the Djerban community established the town of Berechia בֶּרֶכְיָה in 1950 (appropriately named after the Kohanim dynasty at the time of the Prophet Nechemiah)
It's a challenge to visit friends in this town, as literally every family's surname is Cohen!
14) The Chief Rabbi of Dejrba, Rabbi Rahamim Hawita HaCohen, established several yeshivas in #Israel under the name Kiseh Rahamim כסא רחמים
The Chazon Ish, leader of the Ultra-Orthdox Ashkenazi community met him and concluded he was the sharpest Talmudic scholar he ever met!
15) Djerban Jews contributed significantly with philosophical and religious texts, music, and art
Popular #Israeli pop band Teapacks טיפקס was formed by Jews of Djerban ancestry and fuses their musical traditions and language
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🧵 1) The Mufti of #Jerusalem, Amin al-Husseini, was the founder of Palestinian Nationalism and a Nazi collaborator
In his early writings, he identified as a South Syrian
However, as more Jews arrived and bought land in #Israel, he shifted to a new form of local nationalism
2) In 1936 he established himself in Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany by making propagandistic radio broadcasts and by helping the Nazis recruit Muslims from Bosnia and the Caucauses to the Waffen SS
3) His master plan was to establish Nazi death camps in the Dotan Valley in North Samaria and to slaughter all the Jews of the Middle East
He even visited concentration camps in Europe in order to learn first hand about their systems and techniques
🧵 1) Amazing how the staff at al-Shifa, the largest hospital in #Gaza was complicit with hostages and rape victims from #Israel being dragged into their property by #Hamas terrorists on October 7th
🧵1) The Houthis recently made the news with attempted rocket attacks on #Israel but they have been wreaking havoc in #Yemen for over a decade
Like #Hamas, The Houthis are funded by #Iran. They killed over 500,000 Yemenis and ethnically cleansed Yemen's entire Jewish community
2) Ever heard of Taiz? It's #Yemen's 3rd largest city, which has been under complete blockade by the Houthis since 2015!
Despite pleas from human rights organizations, the Houthis continued shelling civilians, starving the population, and not allowing any humanitarian aid
3) The Houthis have also destroyed ancient heritage sites in #Yemen, like the 3,000 year old Al-Qahira castle and the16th-century mosque of Sufi Sheikh Abdulhadi al-Sudi
Our revered Sage Rabbi Shalom Shabazi's tomb is in Taiz, and there are rumors they damaged it as well
🧵1) Margalit Zinati is not Sephardic, Ashkenazi, or Yemeni
Her family has lived in the Galilee continuously for over 2,000 years. She comes from a family of Cohanim who left #Jerusalem upon the destruction of the 2nd Temple and found safe haven in the town of Peki'in
2) Peki'in was a #Jewish village since the time of the Temple and is mentioned extensively throughout the Mishna and Talmud.
It is recorded that the influential Sage Rabbi Yehoshua and his many disciples set up their Yeshiva in Peki'in
3) The #Jewish population of Peki'in saw a significant drop during the Crusader and Mamluk period. During the early Mamluk period documents show the growing presence of #Druze in the village. But #Jews continued living in the village throughout, the majority of which were Kohanim
🧵The #Cairo Geniza is a collection of 400,000 #Jewish manuscript fragments which were stored in the Ben Ezra Synagogue in Fostat #Egypt 🇪🇬
Spanning 6th-19th Centuries, the Geniza comprises the largest and most diverse collection of medieval manuscripts in the world
2) The Torah forbids throwing away writings containing the name of God. It was common to open personal letter with an invocation of God so this rule is not limited to religious materials
All such documents must be stored in a separate archive, and the buried in a cemetery
3) In practice, these archives contained any writing in Hebrew, Aramaic, and Judeo-Arabic, even if it had no religious significance
As such, the Geniza gives us a unique peek into the past
Over the past decade, applying #AI techniques led to discovery of important lost works