ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 4月25日 10時21分


Sicily’s Jews were banished from Palermo in 1492, the victims of a Spanish edict that forced thousands to leave and others to convert to Roman Catholicism. More than 500 years later, a nascent Jewish community is planting fresh roots in the Sicilian capital, reclaiming a lost, often painful, history. Palermo’s archbishop, Corrado Lorefice, has granted the emerging community the use of an unused oratory, which will be transformed into Palermo’s first stable synagogue in 5 centuries. The effort also means reacquainting Palermo citizens with a history that many didn’t even know they had. For many years “history books skipped over the city’s Jewish presence, as if trying to cancel it,” said Maria Antonietta Ancona, a retired anesthetist who goes by her Jewish name, Miriam. She was raised as a Roman Catholic, but her father was Jewish. 30 years ago, she began recovering her roots as part of a “pressing necessity” to embrace her Jewish identity. @giannicipriano took this photo inside Palermo’s municipal archives, which recently exhibited the 1492 edict that barred Jews from the island, along with mementos of more recent affronts. Visit the link in our profile to read more.


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