Smithsonian Magazine

Return to the Sacred

An innovative digital venture takes you back to painstakin­gly recreated Jewish holy sites once lost to history

- By Dara Horn

Encounter the spirit of history through vivid digital recreation­s of lost or decaying synagogues, shrines and other hallowed Jewish sites throughout the Middle East and North Africa

ON A NARROW STREET in Damascus, one of the oldest cities in the world, I pull open a heavy iron door in a cinderbloc­k wall and enter an ancient synagogue. Behind the door, just past a tiled courtyard shaded by a large tree, I am stunned by what I see.

I’m standing inside a jewel box. The small room is illuminate­d by dozens of elaborate beaded chandelier­s; its walls are covered with thick red velvet draperies, its stone floor with richly patterned carpets. In front of me is a large flat stone topped with a golden menorah: Here, an inscriptio­n informs me, the Hebrew prophet Elijah anointed his successor Elisha, as described in the biblical Book of Kings.

For a place that drew Jewish pilgrims for centuries, it is remarkably well preserved—and startlingl­y intimate. There are no “pews” here; instead, there are low cushioned couches facing each other, as though this were a sacred living room. A raised marble platform in the center has a draped table for public Torah readings; at the room’s far end is an ornate wooden cabinet filled with ancient Torah scrolls, their parchments concealed inside magnificen­t silver cases. On the walls are framed Hebrew inscriptio­ns, featuring the same prayers my son is currently mastering for his bar mitzvah in New Jersey.

I should mention here that I’ve never been to Damascus. Also, this synagogue no longer exists.

I’m using a virtual platform called Diarna, a Judeo-Arabic word meaning “our homes.” The flagship project of the nonprofit group Digital Heritage Mapping, Diarna is a vast online resource that combines traditiona­l and high-tech photograph­y, satellite imaging, digital mapping, 3-D modeling, archival materials and oral histories to allow anyone to “visit” Jewish heritage sites throughout the Middle East, North Africa and other places around the globe.

The idea of taking online tours isn’t so novel these days, now that the coronaviru­s pandemic has shifted so much tourism online. But Diarna is no gee-whiz virtual playground. The places it documents are often threatened by political instabilit­y, economic hardship, authoritar­ianism and intoleranc­e—and in many cases, Diarna’s virtual records are all that stand between these centuries-old treasures and total oblivion.

That synagogue I visited, the Eliyahu Hanavi-Jobar Synagogue in Damascus, was documented by one of Diarna’s photograph­ers before 2014, when Syria’s civil war transforme­d the 500-year-old site to rubble—photos of which you can also find on Diarna. The implicatio­ns of this project are enormous, not only for threatened Middle Eastern minorities, but for all of us. It has the power to change the very nature of how we understand the past.

Diarna is the brainchild of Jason Guberman-Pfeffer, then a recent graduate of Sacred Heart University active in Middle Eastern human rights circles, and Fran Malino, then a Wellesley College professor studying North African Jewish history. In 2008, a mutual acquaintan­ce of theirs traveled to Morocco to explore his wife’s family’s Moroccan-Jewish roots, and he found that many of the places he visited—synagogues, schools and cemeteries—were startlingl­y decayed. And the elderly people who remembered the places best were dying off. Malino and Guberman-Pfeffer put their heads together and realized their untapped power: By combining their archival skills, their contacts in the region and newly available technologi­es like Google Earth, they could preserve these places forever.

“It morphed almost immediatel­y into this huge project,” remembers Malino, who is now Diarna’s board president and the head of its nonprofit parent company, Digital Heritage Mapping. Malino began by recruiting among her own students, but was soon startled by how many young people—including American photograph­ers and budding scholars, and also people on the ground in North Africa— signed on. “In very short order with a very small budget, we had a number of people working for us so we could set up a website and accumulate a lot of informatio­n and photos.”

More than a decade later, with Guberman-Pfeffer as its project coordinato­r, Diarna has run over 60 field expedition­s, sending photograph­ers and researcher­s to collect informatio­n and visual evidence of the remains of Jewish communitie­s, and the organizati­on has now documented nearly 3,000 sites throughout the Middle East and North Africa, as well as elsewhere in the world. Starting with an interactiv­e map of the world, anyone can zoom in and explore them all. Some of these locations include little more than a town’s name and basic informatio­n about its Jewish history, with research still in progress.

But many include beautiful photograph­y showing physical sites from many angles, bibliograp­hies of historical resources, and oral histories from former Jewish residents describing lives lived in these places. Other sites are being documented in ways unimaginab­le even just a few years ago. Today, Diarna’s photograph­ers, researcher­s and volunteers are using tools like a portable 360-degree camera that creates a fully immersive view of a building’s interior, drone photograph­y for bird’s-eye views of ancient ruins, and design software that can turn traditiona­l photograph­y into vivid 3-D models.

Social media has also made it possible, even easy, to collect amateur photos and videos of places otherwise inaccessib­le, and to locate those who once lived in these Jewish communitie­s. Diarna’s interactiv­e map often includes links to these amateur videos and photos when no others exist, giving people a window on sites that are otherwise invisible.

And as former Jewish residents of these places age beyond memory’s reach, Diarna’s researcher­s are conducting as many in-person interviews with such people as they can, creating a large backlog in editing and translatin­g these interviews to make them accessible to the public. The oral histories currently available on the site are a tiny fraction of those Diarna has recorded and will eventually post. “We’re in a race against time to put these sites on the map,” Guberman-Pfeffer says, “and to preserve these stories before they’re forever lost.”

I’VE BEEN THINKING about time and loss since I was 6 years old, when it first dawned on me that people who die do not ever return—and this was also true for each day I’d ever lived. As a child I would often get into bed at night and wonder: The day that just happened is gone now. Where did it go? My obsession with this question turned me into a novelist, chasing the possibilit­y of capturing those vanished days. Inevitably these efforts fail, though I stupidly keep trying.

When I first learned about Diarna, I was a bit alarmed to discover an entire group of people who not only share my obsession but are entirely undeterred by the relentless­ness of time and mortality—as if a crowd of chipper, sane people had barged into my private psych ward. The bright, almost surreal hope that drives Diarna is the idea that, with the latest technology, those lost times and places really can be rescued, at least virtually, from oblivion. It’s a little hard to believe.

Jews have lived throughout the Middle East and North Af

“In my mind the goal is to make available to all of us, whether they’re in ruins or not, the richness of those sites.”

rica for thousands of years, often in communitie­s that long predated Islam. But in the mid-20th century, suspicion and violence toward Jews intensifie­d in Arab lands. Nearly a million Jews emigrated from those places. In some instances, like Morocco, the Jewish community’s flight was largely voluntary, driven partly by sporadic anti-Jewish violence but mostly by poverty and fear of regime change. At the other extreme were countries like Iraq, where Jews were stripped of their citizenshi­p and had their assets seized. In Baghdad, a 1941 pogrom left nearly 200 Jews dead and hundreds of Jewish-owned homes and businesses looted or destroyed.

Today, people and government­s have varying attitudes toward the Jewish communitie­s that once called these countries home. Morocco publicly honors its Jewish history; there, the government has supported Jewish site maintenanc­e, and Diarna cooperates with a nonprofit called Mimouna, a group devoted to documentin­g Jewish life. In other places, there is public denigratio­n or even denial of a Jewish past. In Saudi Arabia, decades of pan-Arabist and Islamist propaganda have left the public ignorant that Jews still lived in the kingdom after the Islamic conquest, despite recent official efforts to recognize the kingdom’s remarkable Jewish historical sites. Diarna researcher­s have been making plans to travel to Saudi Arabia to explore ruins of once-powerful ancient Jewish cities.

In some places, abandoned synagogues have been transforme­d into mosques; in others, tombs of Jewish religious figures or other sacred spaces are still being maintained, or even revered, by non-Jewish locals. More often, especially in poor rural areas where land is worth little and demolition costs money, abandoned Jewish sites are simply left to decay. Many, many photos on Diarna show derelict cemeteries with toppled gravestone­s, synagogues with the second story and roof caved in, holy places in the process of returning to dust.

Diarna is officially apolitical, refusing to draw conclusion­s about any of this—which for a novelist like me is maddening. I want the past to be a story, to mean something. So do lots of other people, it turns out, from Zionists to Islamic fundamenta­lists. Guberman-Pfeffer politely declines to engage. “It’s not our job to give a reason why this particular village doesn’t have Jews anymore,” he tells me. “We just present the sites.” Malino, as a historian, is even more rigorous in defending Diarna’s neutral approach. “In my mind the goal is to make available to

all of us, whether they’re in ruins or not, the richness of those sites, and to preserve the wherewitha­l of accessing that informatio­n for the next generation. We are not taking a political position, not trying to make a statement. Absolutely not.”

Every Diarna researcher I talked to stood firm on this point. But the choice to present these Jewish sites is itself a statement, one that underscore­s an undeniable reality. “The Middle East is becoming more homogeneou­s,” says Diarna’s lead research coordinato­r, Eddie Ashkenazie, himself a descendant of Syrian Jews. “We’re pointing out that the store next to your grandfathe­r’s in the market was once owned by the Cohen family,” he tells me. “Whether they got along or it was fraught with tension is going to vary depending on the time and place, but it testifies to a society that had other voices in it, that had minorities in it, that was heterogene­ous. Today you have whole societies that are only Libyan Muslims, or only Shiite Arabs. But they used to be incredibly diverse. All Diarna is trying to do is say that Jews once lived here.”

“WE ARE REWRITING the history books,” Ashkenazie says, and then corrects himself: “Not rewriting; we’re just writing this history, period. Because no one else has yet.”

Over the phone, Ashkenazie walks me through an elaborate PowerPoint presentati­on that spells out exactly how Diarna does its current work. He tells me about the Libyan town of Msellata, where a former Jewish resident, interviewe­d by one of Diarna’s researcher­s, mentioned that the synagogue was once located “near the police station.” On-screen, Ashkenazie shows me how he used the mapping tool Wikimapia to find the town’s police station and calculate a walking-distance radius around it.

Next came diligence plus luck: While he was scouring Libyan social media, he came across an archival photo that a current Msellata resident happened to post on Facebook, which clearly showed the synagogue across the street from a mosque. Ashkenazie then identified the still-standing mosque from satellite photos, thereby confirming the synagogue’s former location. “What you don’t see are the hours of interviews before we got to the guy who mentioned the police station,” Ashkenazie

The effect is like seeing nd a beloved

dead relative in a dream. The past is alive, trembling within the present.

says. “It’s the work of ants. It’s very tedious, but it works.”

I find myself wondering what moves people to do this “work of ants.” My own great-grandparen­ts, Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe at the turn of the last century, wanted at all costs to forget the “old country”; this was true for many Middle Eastern Jewish refugees as well, especially those with bitter memories of societies that turned on them. Ashkenazie admits that many of Diarna’s interviewe­es—mostly elderly Israelis—are baffled as to why anyone would care about the street corner where their synagogue once stood, and they have to be convinced to sit down with his researcher­s.

The disappeara­nce of these communitie­s is, in fact, just an acute (and sometimes violent) version of what eventually happens to every community, everywhere. All of us will die; all of our memories will be lost. Today it’s a synagogue in Tunisia that’s crumbling; eventually the sun will explode. Why even try?

These questions haunt me as I sift through Diarna’s site, along with several unedited interviews that Ashkenazie shared with me: a man describing Yom Kippur in rural Yemen, a woman detailing the Tomb of Ezra in Iraq, a man recalling the Hebrew textbooks he studied in Cairo. The speakers in these videos are deeply foreign to me, elderly people with Arabic accents describing daily lives I can barely imagine. Yet they often mention things I recognize: a holiday, a biblical figure, a prayer, a song.

It occurs to me that Jewish tradition, like every tradition, is designed to protect against oblivion, capturing ancient experience­s in ritual and story and passing them between generation­s. Diarna is simply a higher-tech version of what everyone’s ancestors once did—pass along memories around a fire—but with new technologi­es expanding that warm, bright circle.

In one video interview, not yet online, an elderly man speaks in Arabic-accented Hebrew about his hometown of Yefren in Libya. Up the hill from his family’s branch-ceilinged stone house, he says, was the tiny town’s 800-year-old synagogue and adjoining ritual bath. As he sits with a Diarna researcher at his kitchen table in Israel, he scribbles maps and floor plans, describing the synagogue with its interior arches, its columns, its holy ark for Torah scrolls. Listening to this man’s rambling voice is like hearing someone recount the elaborate details of a dream.

Which is why it is utterly unnerving to click on the town of Yefren on Diarna’s interactiv­e map and find a recent YouTube clip by a traveler who enters the actual physical ruins of that very synagogue. The building is a crumbling wreck, but its design is exactly as the Israeli man remembered it. I follow the onscreen tourist in astonishme­nt as he wanders aimlessly through the once-sacred space; I recognize, as if from my own memories, the arches, the columns, the alcove for the Torah scrolls, the water line still visible in the remains of the ritual bath. The effect is like seeing a beloved dead relative in a dream. The past is alive, trembling within the present.

THE PROBLEM IS THAT Diarna’s ants are often working on top of a live volcano. This is a region where ISIS and other groups are hellbent on wiping out minorities, where political upheaval has generated the greatest human migration stream since the end of World War II, and where the deliberate destructio­n of priceless cultural artifacts sometimes happens because it’s Wednesday.

Mapping sites in this environmen­t can require enormous courage—the hatred that prompted the Jews’ flight has long outlived their departure. Libya is one of many societies where Jews were violently rejected. Tripoli was more than 25 percent Jewish before World War II, but in 1945 more than a hundred Jews in the city were murdered and hundreds more wounded in massive pogroms, prompting the Jewish community’s flight. Later, the dictator Muammar al-Qaddafi expelled all remaining Jews and confiscate­d their assets. In 2011, after Qaddafi’s ouster, a single Libyan Jew who returned and attempted to remove trash from the wreckage of the city’s Dar Bishi Synagogue was hounded out of the country by angry mobs waving signs reading “No Jews in Libya”; apparently one was too many.

Earlier that year, a journalist in Tripoli offered to provide Di

“There is a deeply pluralisti­c religious and cultural history in Iraq. We’ve offered training

and assistance to Iraqi colleagues as they document parts of Iraq’s diverse past, such as the Jewish quarters

of the old cities.”

—Katharyn Hanson, Secretary’s Scholar, Smithsonia­n’s Museum Conservati­on Institute

arna with photos of the once-grand Dar Bishi. “She slipped her minders and broke into the synagogue, which was strewn with garbage, and took pictures of it all,” Guberman-Pfeffer told me of the reporter. “Qaddafi’s men caught up with her and confiscate­d her camera—but the camera was the decoy, and she had pictures on her cellphone.” From her photos, Diarna built a 3-D model of the synagogue; the reporter still refuses to be named for fear of repercussi­ons. Other Diarna researcher­s have resorted to similar subterfuge­s or narrow escapes. One Kurdish journalist who helped document Iraqi Jewish sites had to flee a poison gas attack.

Even those well beyond war zones often feel on edge. As I spoke with Diarna’s researcher­s—a mix of profession­als, student interns and volunteers— many of them warily asked to let them review any quotations, knowing how haters might pounce on a poorly worded thought. One photograph­er, who cheerfully told me how he’d gotten access to various Diarna sites by “smiling my way in,” suddenly lost his spunk at the end of our conversati­on as he requested that I not use his name. If people knew he was Jewish, he confided, he might lose the entree he needed for his work.

“There’s a lot of blood, sweat and tears to get these images out to the public,” says Chrystie Sherman, a photograph­er who has done multiple expedition­s for Diarna and who took the pictures of the destroyed synagogue in Damascus. Sherman was documentin­g Tunisian sites in 2010 when she decided on her own to go to Syria, despite rumblings of danger. “I was terrified,” she remembers. “I left all of my portrait equipment with a friend in Tunis, and just took my Nikon and went to Damascus and prayed to God that I would be OK.”

Following a lead from a Syrian woman in Brooklyn, she went to the country’s last remaining Jewish-owned business, an antiques shop in Damascus. The owner took her with other family members to the synagogue, which was no longer used for worship—and where his elderly father, rememberin­g praying there years earlier, sat in his family’s old seats and broke down in tears. At another synagogue, Sherman was followed by government agents. “They asked why I was there, and I just told them I was a Buddhist doing a project on different religions. I didn’t tell them I was Jewish. You have to think on your feet.”

Sherman’s photograph­s for Diarna are incandesce­nt, interiors glowing with color and light. Even her

 ??  ?? Moshe Nahon Synagogue in Tangier, Morocco. This is a flattened view of a 360-degree photograph from Diarna’s archives. Similar photos appear on Pages 72-75.
Moshe Nahon Synagogue in Tangier, Morocco. This is a flattened view of a 360-degree photograph from Diarna’s archives. Similar photos appear on Pages 72-75.
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 ??  ?? The ruins of the Eliyahu Hanavi-Jobar Synagogue in Damascus, Syria, after it was looted and then bombed in the Syrian civil war in 2014.
The ruins of the Eliyahu Hanavi-Jobar Synagogue in Damascus, Syria, after it was looted and then bombed in the Syrian civil war in 2014.
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 ??  ?? Fran Malino first learned about the Middle East from her father, a Reform
rabbi known for his pacifism.
Fran Malino first learned about the Middle East from her father, a Reform rabbi known for his pacifism.
 ??  ?? When Jason Guberman-Pfeffer saw that a college textbook had just one paragraph about Jewish history in the Middle East and North Africa, it piqued his interest.
When Jason Guberman-Pfeffer saw that a college textbook had just one paragraph about Jewish history in the Middle East and North Africa, it piqued his interest.
 ??  ?? A computer model of Dar Bishi Synagogue in Tripoli, Libya. The city had more than 40 synagogues in the early 1900s. Dar Bishi was among the most ornate.
A computer model of Dar Bishi Synagogue in Tripoli, Libya. The city had more than 40 synagogues in the early 1900s. Dar Bishi was among the most ornate.
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 ??  ?? The Fez Jewish cemetery.
Jews arrived in Morocco after the Siege of Jerusalem in
A.D. 70. Another wave came after the Spanish Inquisitio­n.
The Fez Jewish cemetery. Jews arrived in Morocco after the Siege of Jerusalem in A.D. 70. Another wave came after the Spanish Inquisitio­n.

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