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A SMALL COMMUNITY WITH AN IMPORTANT ROLE

Written by: Jasenka LESKUR-STANIČIĆ 

From: Welcome to Split, Magazine for Tourism and Culture No.10, Winter 2007/8 – pages 22-27 Publisher: Tourist Board of Split

The Jewish community of Split has around one hundred members, making it easy to calculate how many attend Friday evening Sabbath. They have no rabbi, and the community is more traditional than religious. This small community never had more than three hundred members in its history, but it had a strong influence disproportionate to its size. Street names testify to this – the Jewish Passage leads to the synagogue which is, alongside the one in Dubrovnik and Prague, one of the oldest European houses of prayers that survived turbulent events in Jewish history. The Jews in Split explain this phenomenon through the kindness of the locals who offered shelter when it could not be found elsewhere.

Archaeological findings from Salona, today displayed in the Archaeological Museum in Split, witnesses the presence of Jews in this area since the Roman Empire. A more adventurous tourist might try to find a dozen menorahs carved into stone walls in the eastern part of the Diocletian Palace’s subterranean vaults. These are thought to have belonged to the first synagogue in Split, which was destroyed in the great fire of 1506.

The present-day synagogue was established during the benevolent time of powerful Venetian rule in Dalmatia when the cities of the Venetian Republic were hit by waves of Sephardic Jewish refugees from Spain and Portugal. They chose Split as a shelter thanks to its significant strategic position between Venice in the West and the Ottoman Empire in the East Mediterranean. Daniel Rodriga, the Jewish consul in Venice, took notice of this strategic position and designed projects to reorganize a port of Split, and secured funds from the Republic for its realization. A part of the waterfront bears the name Obala Lazareta to this day, a name which it took after the project. Even more so, the street where most of the Jews lived inside the Palace bears Rodriga’s name. Near it is the synagogue, from the outside a modest building that hardly resembles a place of worship. This was done for security reasons, and because Jews were not allowed to own property, which significantly influenced the nature of their livelihood.

Interestingly, the whole section of the city wedged inside the Palace is today called Get, which is reminiscent of the Venetian word ghetto for the part of town where the Jewish community lived in isolation. Both Christians and Jews found it easier to live separately, and to be divided by a door at night in case of a religious outbreak. Jewish families in Split lived inside the Palace walls, on both sides of today’s Rodrigova and Bajamontijeva streets, in houses which were empty due to plague. Christians and Jews both occupied the surrounding streets and lived in harmony. The ghetto was closed with several doors around 1777 and remained that way until the arrival of Napoleon’s army some thirty years later.

Holes visible in stone doorposts in Bajamontijeva and Rodrigina street which served to preserve mezuzahs are reminders of the Jewish presence in the city. The tower in the north-western corner of the Palace was known as the Jewish Tower or the Jewish Position, as this was the place where the Jews of Split guarded the city against the Ottoman invasion.

The otherwise tolerant cohabitation of Jews and the locals had only one incident in 1942 during Italian occupation when a group of fascist pillaged the synagogue, stealing the silver and burning the scriptures on the town square. They also pillaged the neighboring bookstore owned by Vid Morpurgo. This bookstore stands in exactly the same place today as it did in 1860, looking the same and bearing the same name.

The Jewish cemetery on the eastern slope of Marjan Hill, dating back to 1573, is one of the oldest preserved such cemeteries in the world. It has around 700 tombstones, mostly dating from the 18th and 19th centuries. Beautiful Sephardic scripture is still visible on some of the tombstones, which illustrates the continuation of Jewish tradition in Split.