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Old Yishuv Courtyard

Coordinates: 31°46′30.58″N 35°13′48.69″E / 31.7751611°N 35.2301917°E / 31.7751611; 35.2301917
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(Redirected from Ari Synagogue)
Interior of the Ari Synagogue

The Ari Synagogue (Hebrew: בית הכנסת הארי) is situated on Or HaHaim Street in the Jewish Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem. It is located on the ground floor of a building which also houses the Ohr ha-Chaim Synagogue and Old Yishuv Court Museum.[1] It is named after Rabbi Isaac Luria, (1534–1572), who was known as the Ari (Hebrew: אֲרִי; trans: The Lion), an acronym for haEloqi Rabbeinu Yitzhak (the divine, our teacher, Isaac). He was a great kabbalist who founded a new school in Kabbalistic thought, known as the "System of the Ari" or "Lurianic kabbalah".

Origins[edit]

According to tradition, it was in this building where Rabbi Isaac Luria was born and where he lived for 20 years. It is told that Eliyahu Ha-Navi was the sandek at his Brit milah. At some stage, the room of his traditional birthplace became a Sephardic synagogue. The Jews of the yishuv were forbidden by Ottoman Law to establish any new synagogues. This led to inconspicuous prayer houses which, like the Ari Synagogue, were located in residential homes. During the riots of 1936 the synagogue was looted and burned.

Old Yishuv Courtyard[edit]

The Old Yishuv Courtyard Museum documents the history of the Jewish community in Jerusalem from the mid-19th century to the Mandatory period. Located in one of the oldest and most well-known courtyards in the Jewish Quarter, it was home to the families of F"h and Rosental, early pupils of the Gra, for five generations after their arrival in the 19th century. During the Mandatory period, Rabbi A. Mordechai Vingeratan's family lived there until the fall of the Jewish Quarter to the Arab Legion in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. After Jerusalem's reunification, the Vingarten family returned.[2]

Rebuilt and adapted into a museum after the Six-Day War, the museum includes two old synagogues in their original chambers: the Ari Synagogue and Or HaChaim. The house is built in the typical style of past generations in the Jewish Quarter. The museum's collections depict daily life, customs, and typical works of the Old Yishuv, with many items collected from veteran Jerusalemite families or purchased from collectors and shops.[2]

Exhibits include two rooms displaying different hosting styles, Sephardic and Ashkenazi. In the bedroom, there is a birthing bed that was passed from house to house for women about to give birth. The kitchen features baking and cooking areas with many items, and the courtyards display water holes, a manual pump, gutters, ornamental plants, a laundry corner, and a warehouse. The craft room presents professions and trades from the past, such as a goldsmith, shoemaker, tailor, peddler, wool breaker, knife sharpener, and shoe shiner.[2]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Old Yishuv Court Museum - Jerusalem Old City Site". en.haatika.co.il. Retrieved 2022-10-05.
  2. ^ a b c ענבר, יהודית; שילר, אלי, eds. (1994). מוזיאונים בישראל (in Hebrew) (2nd ed.). הוצאת אריאל. pp. 53–54.

31°46′30.58″N 35°13′48.69″E / 31.7751611°N 35.2301917°E / 31.7751611; 35.2301917