Slat Abn Shaif Synagogue
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Slat Abn Shaif Synagogue | |
---|---|
Religion | |
Affiliation | Orthodox Judaism |
Rite | Sephardi |
Status | Destroyed |
Location | |
Location | Zliten, Libya |
Architecture | |
Type | Synagogue |
Completed | c. 1060 |
Demolished | 1980s |
The Slat Abn Shaif Synagogue (Hebrew: בית הכנסת צלאת בן שאיף) in Zliten, Libya was a historic synagogue and Lag Ba'omer pilgrimage site for Libyan Jews. It was built c. 1060.
During the Ottoman rule, the building was expanded and became a place of pilgrimage and study of the Zohar. The synagogue was burned in 1868 by disgruntled Muslims of his growing fame and rebuilt in 1870 by the Pasha of Tripoli by order of the Ottoman sultan. Another fire, this time accidentally, destroyed the synagogue in 1912, when Tripoli has recently been under Italian rule. It was rebuilt shortly afterwards. A synagogue in Benghazi was built on the same model.
After the mass exodus of Jews from Libya between 1949 and 1951, Libyan migrants in Israel built a replica of the synagogue in Zeitan, a city they founded near Lod.
The Zliten synagogue remained intact until the 1980s, when it was destroyed, possibly under the orders of Muammar Gaddafi, and replaced with an apartment complex.[1]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Roumani, Judith (August 2009). "From Zliten to Zetan: The Journey of a Libyan Jewish Community and a Tale of Lag B'Omer". Covenant. Archived from the original on 2020-02-24. Retrieved February 24, 2013.
External links
[edit]
- Religious buildings and structures completed in 1060
- 11th-century synagogues
- Orthodox Judaism in North Africa
- Orthodox synagogues
- Sephardi Jewish culture in North Africa
- Sephardi synagogues
- Destroyed synagogues
- Synagogues in Libya
- Zliten
- 1980s disestablishments in Libya
- Libyan building and structure stubs
- Synagogue stubs