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Syrian Jews hope for revival of ancient heritage

Damascus (AFP) – Syria's tiny Jewish community and Syrian Jews abroad are trying to build bridges after Bashar al-Assad's ouster in the hope of reviving their ancient heritage before the community dies out.

This week, a small number of Jews living in Damascus, along with others from abroad, held a group prayer for the first time in more than three decades, in the Faranj synagogue in Damascus's Old City.

"There were nine of us Jews (in Syria). Two died recently," community leader Bakhour Chamntoub told AFP in his home in the Old City's Jewish quarter.

"I'm the youngest. The rest are elderly people who stay in their homes," the tailor in his sixties added in a thick Damascus accent.

After Islamist-led rebels finally toppled Assad in December last year after nearly 14 years of conflict, the country's dwindling community has recently welcomed back several Syrian Jews who had emigrated.

Syria's millennia-old Jewish community was permitted to practise their faith under Assad's father, Hafez, and had friendly relations with their fellow countrymen.

But the strongman restricted their movement and prevented them from travelling abroad until 1992. After that, their numbers plummeted from around 5,000 to just a handful of individuals, headed by Chamntoub, who oversees their affairs.

AFP correspondents met with Chamntoub, known to neighbours and friends as "Eid", after he returned from burying an elderly Jewish woman.

"Now there are seven of us," he said, adding that a Palestinian neighbour had looked after the woman during her final days.

'Tree uprooted'

The 1967 Arab-Israeli war cast a heavy cloud over the Jewish communities in several Arab countries.

Syria lost most of the strategic Golan Heights to Israel, which later annexed them in a move never recognised by the international community as a whole.

Chamntoub said the community did not experience any "harassment" under Bashar al-Assad's rule.

He said an official from the new Islamist-led administration had visited him and assured him the community and its properties would not be harmed.

Chamntoub expressed hope of expanding ties between the remaining Jews in Syria and the thousands living abroad to revive their shared heritage and restore places of worship and other properties.

On his Facebook page, he publishes news about the community -- usually death notices -- as well as images of the Jewish quarter and synagogues in Damascus.

He says nostalgic Syrian Jews abroad often make comments, recalling the district and its surroundings.

At the Faranj synagogue, Syrian-American Rabbi Yusuf Hamra, 77, led what he said was the first group prayer in decades.

"I was the last rabbi to leave Syria," he said, adding that he had lived in the United States for more than 30 years.

"We love this country," said Hamra, who arrived days earlier on his first visit since emigrating.

"The day I left Syria with my family, I felt I was a tree that had been uprooted," he said.

'Family ties' abroad

His son Henry, travelling with him, said he was happy to be in the synagogue.

"This synagogue was the home for all Jews -- it was the first stop for Jews abroad when they would visit Syria," the 47-year-old said.

When war erupted in Syria in 2011 with Assad's brutal suppression of anti-government protests, synagogues shuttered and the number of Jews visiting plummeted.

In the now devastated Damascus suburb of Jobar, a historic synagogue that once drew pilgrims from around the world was ransacked and looted, with a Torah scroll believed to be one of the world's oldest among the items stolen.

Chamntoub said his joy at publicly worshipping in the Faranj synagogue again was "indescribable".

He expressed hope that "Jews will return to their neighbourhood and their people" in Syria, saying: "I need Jews with me in the neighbourhood."

Hamra said that like many emigrants, he was hesitant about returning permanently.

"My freedom is one thing, my family ties are another," he said, noting that many in the 100,000-strong diaspora were long established in the West and reluctant to give up their lives and lifestyles there.

Chamntoub said many Jews had told him they regretted leaving Syria but that he doesn't expect "a full return".

"Maybe they will come for trips or to do business" but not to stay, he said.

He expressed hope of establishing a museum in Syria to commemorate its Jewish community.

"If they don't return or get married and have children here, we will end soon," he said.

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