There are only about 20 Jews left inBeirut, but that hasn’t stopped the Lebanese government from renovating the central synagogue of the ancient Jewish Quarter, which nearly turned to rubble during the country’s decade-long civil war. And although no Jews seem to be running back, the head of the tiny Jewish community sees the reconstruction as a good omen, as he dreams of a day when people will return.
We were waiting for him outside the upscale Tel Aviv accounting office where he would be meeting with wealthy expatriates for his current mission. I agreed to the terms of the interview — no photographs even in profile. It isn’t every day that I have an opportunity to hear firsthand about the conditions under which a handful of remaining Jews are living in the heart ofBeirut Lebanon.
Isaac Arazi the elderly soft-spoken self-declared head ofLebanon’s remaining Jewish community was in Eretz Yisrael in order to raise funds to complete the renovation of the bombed-out Magen Avraham synagogue inBeirut. The renovation project has ironically been partially sponsored by the Lebanese government itself even with the backing ofIsrael’s arch-enemy Hizbullah.
We enter the office suite scanning the faces of the men who are already convened; we wonder which of the three faces belongs to Arazi. But we soon learn that none of them is the man we were scheduled to meet. All three are Jews who formerly lived inLebanonand now reside inIsrael. Isaac Arazi who enteredIsraelon a visa throughCyprus has decided to cancel at the last minute — he’s reluctant to be exposed to unfamiliar eyes. Yet although he declines a direct interview he communicates through an intermediary sharing the surprising story of the Magen Avraham synagogue’s restoration right in the heart ofBeirut’s luxury district.
Face-Lift
Only about 20 Jews remain inBeirut Arazi relayed describing how the former Jewish Quarter is now surrounded by luxury apartment blocks and offices dotting the skyline as the city has become rehabilitated after decades of civil war and Syrian invasion.
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