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Tunisia
history
The Jewish community of Tunisia originated
as home to scholars exiled from
Palestine, from Talmudic sages of the 2nd
to the 4th centuries to
todays Torah scribes. During the Byzantine
period, Emperor Justinian excluded Jews from
public life, prohibited their practice and
ordering synagogues to become churches. Many
Tunisian Jews fled into the mountains and the
desert, joining secluded Berber communities there,
and most remained there even after the Arabs
conquered Tunisia in the 7th century, allowing
Jews to practice again. Jews lived openly in
Tunisia, albeit as second-class citizens, until
the Spanish invasions of 1535-1574 chased Jews
inland once again. The Jewish community returned
to the coast under Ottoman and thrived under
French rule until 1940, when Vichy subjected them
to anti-Semitic laws. In 1942 Germans overran
Tunisia, deported much of the Jewish population
to labor camps and seized their property. The
Tunisian Jewish community rebuilt itself through
a decade of Allied rule until the country
achieved independence in 1956. The new Muslim
government eliminated the Jewish Rabbinical
tribunal and Jewish community councils,
destroying the Jewish quarter of Tunis. After the
Six-Day War in 1967, Muslims laid waste to the
Great Synagogue of Tunis; much of the Jewish
population fled to Israel throughout the 1970s
and 80s, leaving a dedicated
community of about 2000 Jews, primarily in Tunis
and on the island of Djerba in the towns of Hara
Keriba and Hara Sghira, where Jews have been
worshipping at the El Ghirba Synagogue for almost
1900 years.
Today the Tunisian
government watches the Jewish community closely
but does not restrict Jewish practices. The
government does appoint a committee which heads
the community and manages most of its non-religious
functions. There are five rabbis in Tunisia;
there are even several kosher restaurants in
Tunis and on Djerba, which has been an active,
practicing Jewish community for over two
millennia, where most of the community members
observe Jewish dietary laws (kashrut).
tunisia
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