The Jews of Lebanon

By Mitchell Bard


1948 Jewish population: 20,000
2008: Fewer than 1001

When Christian Arabs ruled Lebanon, Jews enjoyed relative toleration. In the mid-50’s, approximately 7,000 Jews lived in Beirut. As Jews in an Arab country, however, their position was never secure, and the majority left in 1967.

Fighting in the 1975-76 Muslim-Christian civil war swirled around the Jewish Quarter in Beirut, damaging many Jewish homes, businesses and synagogues. Most of the remaining 1,800 Lebanese Jews emigrated in 1976, fearing the growing Syrian presence in Lebanon would curtail their freedom. Most Jews went to Europe (particularly France), the United States and Canada.

In the mid-1980s, Hizballah kidnapped several prominent Jews from Beirut — most were leaders of what remained of the country’s tiny Jewish community. Four of the Jews were later found murdered.

Nearly all of the remaining Jews are in Beirut, where there is a committee that represents the community.2 Because of the current political situation, Jews are unable to openly practice Judaism. In 2004, only 1 out of 5,000 Lebanese Jewish citizens registered to vote participated in the municipal elections. Virtually all of those registered have died or fled the country. The lone Jewish voter said that most of the community consists of old women.3

The Jewish cemetery in Beirut is decrepit and cared for by an elderly Shiite woman. The gravestones, written in Hebrew and French, are a testament to the Lebanese Jewish community that is now only a shadow of its former self.4

The Arab-Israeli conflict, and Israel’s long military presence in Lebano, provoked strong anti-Israel sentiment. All travel from Lebanon to Israel is strictly prohibited. Meanwhile, Hizballah uses southern Lebanon as a base for terrorist attacks against Israel.

Isaac Arazi is the leader of Lebanon’s Jewish Community Council and he plans to rebuild the Maghen Abraham synagogue in Beirut. It was opened in 1926 but has since been neglected. Additional plans are underway to restore Beirut’s Jewish cemetery which is home to some 4,500 graves.5

Notes

1David Singer and Lawrence Grossman, Eds. American Jewish Year Book 2003. NY: American Jewish Committee, 2003.
2Maariv, (June 21, 1991); Jewish Telegraphic Agency, (July 22, 1993); Jewish Communities of the World.
3Majdoline Hatoum, “Of 5,000 Jewish Lebanese, only 1 voted,” The Daily Star (May 10, 2004).
4Stephen Talbot, “Syria/Lebanon: The Occupier and the Occupied,” PBS Frontline (2004).
5“Lebanon Jews to rebuild Beirut’s Maghen Abraham Synagogue,” Ya Libnan (September 18, 2008).