|   History of the
    Jewish Community of GallipoliGallipoli, seaport
    town in European Turkey, at
    the northwest end of the Dardanelles and about 135 miles from Istanbul. Benjamin of Tudela, the 12th
    century traveler, found 200 Jews in Gallipoli; they are also mentioned
    during the reign of Michael VIII Palaeologus in 1261. The Ottoman Turks, who acquired Gallipoli in
    1365, protected the community, according to their custom. Mahmed the second transferred, after 1453,
    many Jews from Gallipoli to Istanbul. They founded a separate congregation,
    one of the congregations in Istanbul. But in the 16th century
    there were only three or four members in this congregation and at the
    beginning of the 17th century it ceased to exist. Jews are
    registered in the census of 1488/1489 of Gallipoli. Jews in Gallipoli
    served as bankers, and in the 15th century they paid for the
    privilege of license to work as a group in this profession. There were also
    Jews in Gallipoli who owned real estate. It seems that a group of Romaniots
    returned to Gallipoli before 1492, but they remained with a status of
    "Surgun" and paid their taxes in Istanbul.   The number of Jews
    increased at the end of the 15th century, when the Romaniot Jews
    were joined by refugees from Spain and Portugal. In 1492 a great number of Spanish exiles
    found refuge in Gallipoli, and several families bearing the name of
    "Saragoss" still celebrate a "Purim of Saragossa" in
    the month of Heshwan. The Ben Habib family of Portugal is said to have
    furnished Gallipoli with eighteen chief rabbis, the most prominent of them
    being Jacob ibn Habib, the author of the "'En Ya'acob." In 1853
    Hadji Hasdai Varon represented France, Italy, Austria, Portugal, Denmark,
    and the United States as consular agent.   In the census of
    the year 1519, 15 Jewish families and two bachelors were registered along
    with three merchants Jews from Istanbul who were staying in the city. In
    1520-35, 23 Jewish families lived in the city, representing 0.3% of the
    general population. There were 5,001 Muslim and 3,901 Christian
    inhabitants. Between the years 1547 and 1557 a first firman for the
    Sephardim and Romaniots was enacted. It exempted the Romaniots from part of
    the Ottoman taxes and community taxes. The Sephardim were considered
    wealthy. At the same time new orders were issued which related to the
    economic rivalry between the Sephardim and Ashkenazim in the community. But
    in 1577 the Sephardim complained about economic hardship and their
    inability to pay the Ottoman taxes. New community regulations from the
    middle of the 16th century tried to prevent the transfer of
    Jewish real estate to the Gentiles and the entry of Gentiles into the
    Jewish quarter. In that century Rabbis Judah Ibn Sanghi and Ishai Moreno
    were active in the Community. In 1600-01, 30 Jewish families lived in the
    city (1.72% of the population), all in the Jewish quarter. Local Jews were
    the tax farmers in the city during the 17th century, but in 1648
    the "emin" of the city threw the Jews out of this position.   The emissaries
    Rabbi Moshe ha-Levi and Joseph ha-Cohen visited the community between 1668
    and 1684, and the emissary Hayyim Ya'acov visited it in 1670. The traveler
    Samuel ben-David visited in 1641-42 and wrote that there were two
    synagogues in the city, but it seems that the community was united under
    the leadership of one rabbi. In 1656 the local Jews ransomed an Ashkenazi
    woman from Eastern Europe. In 1666 the pseudo-messiah Shabbetai Zevi was
    confined to the fortress of Abydos (called by the Jews MIGDAL OZ,
    "Tower of Strength") in the vicinity of Gallipoli; his prison
    became a center of Shabbateanism. Abraham Cardozo visited the community in
    1682 and was boycotted by the local Jews. The majority of
    the Jews in Gallipoli were peddlers and merchants, but there were also wine
    manufacturers who sent their products to Istanbul. Jews from Gallipoli
    traveled for their businesses especially to Egypt, Istanbul, Bursa, Edirne,
    Salonica and Rhodes. Jews from Gallipoli founded the community of
    Canakkale. The famous rabbi
    of the community was Meir di Boton (born in Salonica, 1575), who wrote a
    book of responsa. He served the community many years and died in Gallipoli in
    1649. The rabbis of the city during the 17th century were Shimon
    Ibn Habib (died 1712), Ishai Almoni, served as the community rabbi
    1665-1690, and Rafael Ibn Habib. Other Rabbis and scholars in the 17th
    century were Eliezer ha-Cohen, Joseph Sasson (b. 1570), and Nathan Gota.
    The AV BET DIN of the community in the middle of the 19th
    century before his departure to Istanbul was Rafael Jacob ha-Levi.   During the 19th
    century the Jewish community prospered. Among the Jews were merchants,
    artisans, and civil servants. The rabbi of the city was Rafael Haim
    Benjamin Peretz, who was earlier a DAYYAN in Istanbul and came to Gallipoli
    after 1878. He wrote that the community of Gallipoli was small and had to
    adopt the religious regulations of the Istanbul community in those special
    cases in which the wealthy leaders of Gallipoli did not know how to decide.
    Another rabbi of the community was Jacob Ibn Habib (d. 1863). At the end of
    the 19th century Rabbi David Pardo served there seven years. The
    Jews of Gallipoli had many commercial and economic ties with the local
    Gentiles. The majority spoke and wrote Ladino.   The Alliance
    Israelite Universelle (AIU) founded a local committee in Gallipoli. The AIU
    archives for the city include members lists and letters sent to the Central
    Committee in Paris:   
    
     
      | Abenhabib
      Hasdai E. Abenhabib
      Joseph Abenhabib
      Levi Abenhabib Moise Abenhabib Nissim R. Abenhabib Solomon Abenhabib Solomon H. Abenezra Abraham L. Abenezra Joseph Abidor Haim Aboulafia Abraham Hadji Aboulafia Cemaria Aboulafia Isaac Aboulafia Lia | Aboulafia Chemaria Aboulafia Obadia Abraham Israel Achrich
      Moise Akrich
      Moise Aldorotti
      Behor M. Aldorotti Solomon Arditti Juda Benbachat Abraham Benbachat Isaac Benbachat Joseph Candiotti Behor Haim Candiotti Jacob S. | Chebi Simeon Levi Isaac Mizistrano Nissim Molina Isaac Molina Juda Saragoussi Behor J. Saragoussi Issac Saragoussi Preciado Varon Hasdai Varon Moise M. Yohay Ascher Yohay Josue Yohay Nissim |    The earthquake of
    August 9th 1912 was reported in the Bulletin de la Grande Loge.
    There were no casualties but the Jewish quarter was completely destroyed
    with the two synagogues which had been active from the 19th
    century onwards. At that time, there were about 13,000 inhabitants in
    Gallipoli, of which 2,560 were Jews, composed of 400 poor Jewish families
    living in 285 houses. There were about 100 Jewish stores, of which were 15
    agents, 20 grocers, 7 shoe stores, 6 shoemakers, 7 hardware stores, 8
    bankers, a few money exchangers, 3 carpentry stores, 2 grain dealers, 4 upholstery
    shops, 7 fabric shops, 3 glass merchants, 3 candy stores and 4 painters. A local relief
    committee was created with some members of the local Jewish community, the
    school committee and gabaim from the synagogues, whose surnames can be
    found in the AIU members list of 1884: Semaiah Aboulafia, Jacob Hasday,
    Ovadia Habib, Hasday Habib, Haim Samarel, Abraham Eskenazi, Nessim Akrish,
    Behor Hahamoglou, Yedidya Ben-Altabev, David Mizitrano, Preciado Yohay,
    Gabriel Yohay, Mr. Yohay During the Balkan Wars
    (1912-1913) refugees, including Jews, streamed into Gallipoli. The
    "rescue committee" (Va'ad ha-hatzalah), founded then, aided the
    refugees, as well as Jewish soldiers from Syria and Iraq. In 1915 the Zion
    Mule Corps, as part of the British Army, fought the Turks on the Gallipoli
    peninsula. Until1920 there lived in the city 600 Jewish families with three
    synagogues.   In June and July 1934, in the Thrace region of
    Turkey, occurred a series of violent attacks against Jewish citizens of
    Turkey. These affairs are known as The 1934 Thrace pogroms. The pogroms occurred in Tekirdağ, Edirne,
    Kırklareli, and Ēanakkale, and were motivated by anti-Semitism. Some
    have argued the acts were initiated by the articles produced by the
    Pan-Turkic leader Cevat Rıfat Atilhan in Millī inkılāp
    (National Revolution) magazine and Nihal Atsız in Orhun
    magazine. Atsız was known to be a sympathizer of the Nazi racist
    doctrine. The government of Mustafa Kemal failed to stop the pogrom but was
    strongly against the violence. It was followed by vandalizing of Jewish
    houses and shops. The tensions started on 5 June 1934 and spread to few
    other villages in Eastern Thrace region and to some small cities in Western
    Aegean region. At the height of violent events, it was rumored that a rabbi
    was stripped naked and was dragged through the streets shamefully while his
    daughter was raped. Over 15,000 Jews had to flee from the region. Other
    racist incidents had already taken place in Turkey before and would
    happened after wards, but this was apparently the first pogrom during the
    Republican period. As a consequence of the 1934 Tharace affairs, many
    families from Gallipoli decided to sell out their properties and to move
    either to Istanbul or out of the country, many emigrated to Israel, others
    to Rhodes.     From 1934 all
    religious and administrative affairs of the Gallipoli community were
    subordinated to the district rabbinate of Canakkale. As a result of
    emigration to Istanbul and the United States between the two world wars and
    subsequently to Israel, the number of Jews in Gallipoli decreased. Two of
    the three synagogues of the community were burned down during the World War
    II. In 1948 there were about 400 Jews in Gallipoli, and in 1951 about 200.
    By 1970 the few remaining families in Gallipoli were mainly engaged in
    commerce. In 1977 the Jews of the city numbered only 22 persons, of whom
    four were youngsters. The last family to leave Gallipoli was the family of
    Solomon and Roza Sivag'i (Pasi) who live now in Ashdod, Israel. The only
    Jew still living in Gallipoli is Rami Sivag'i, the son of Solomon and Roza.   The Jewish
    cemetery of Gallipoli contains 835 tombs, of which the oldest is from 1540
    and the latest is from 1986. *parts of the above
    materials taken from "The Jewish Encyclopedia" and from
    "Etsi-Sephardi Genealogical and Historical Review #33 June 2006  
    
     
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The Ruins of the last
      Synagogue of Gallipoli | 
The home of Benbeniste family
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    by Ilan GuyUpdated:
    January, 2014
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