"Synagogue-Church", Nazareth, courtesy Expedia |
Today,
Nazareth is a largely peaceful Arab town in the Lower Galilee, two
thirds of whom are Muslim and one third Christian. Historically associated with
the life of Christ, a Jew born in the Jewish city of Bethlehem, until the 7th
century, Nazareth was a wholly or largely Jewish town.
According
to some medieval Jewish scholars, the area was settled by Jews during the time
of the prophet Jeremiah who wrote of the watchmen (netzarim) of Ephraim whence
the town may have gotten its name. Centuries later, it became the boyhood home
of Jesus Christ. According to the New Testament account, when Jesus tried to preach to the people of the town, he was
attacked and almost thrown off a cliff, identified by tradition as the nearby Jebel Qafza. After the end of the Bar Kochba revolt in 135, Nazareth became the home
of, and ruled by, the Hafitzatz family of Cohanim, descendants from the House
of Levi son of Jacob. They remained the priestly rulers of Nazareth for the
next few centuries.
During
the early Byzantine period, many massacres and expulsions of Jews took place throughout the Land of Israel, including Nazareth. Forced conversion attempts
were commonplace. In the 4th century, Epiphanius, an anti-Jewish
Jewish convert to Christianity, was given permission by the authorities to
build a church in Nazareth in an attempt to convert the Jews. According to
tradition, it was built on the site of the synagogue where Jesus worshipped and
thus became known as the “synagogue church”. This conversion attempt was
unsuccessful but a small body of Jewish Christians grew up around it. The
“church” exists to this day and is one of many focal points for Christian
pilgrims. By the 6th century, another church was built, apparently
converted from a synagogue.
In reaction to centuries of ceaseless persecutions under the Christians, Jews would
actively support anyone who came to relieve their plight. The answer came in
614 when the Persians invaded the Land of Israel aided by some 20,000 Jews who served
in the Persian army. Those in and around Nazareth, especially the mountain
areas, also actively aided the Persians and contributed much to the Persian
takeover, massacring many Christians in the process. The Jews finally got their
revenge but this victory however, was short-lived. By 630, the Byzantines
finally expelled the Persians. All Jews were expelled from Nazareth which was,
then, settled by Christians from throughout the Empire. Nazareth became a Christian
town. So much so that the Hebrew word for Christian, “Notzri”, derives from the
name Nazareth. Much later, a small number of Jews did return and remained there
for centuries. After the Arab conquest in 636, Arab Muslims also began to
settle there. The “synagogue church” was later purchased by the Franciscans in
1741. Today, the site belongs to the Melkite Greek Catholic Church.
Christian prejudice against Jews had never ceased during the centuries of Christian and Muslim rule. In
1849 upon the visit to Nazareth of British philanthropist Sir Moses Montefiore,
someone had accused him of killing a child and using his blood for making
Passover Matza – an old anti-Semitic trope from Europe, centuries in the
making. Fortunately, the ruling Ottoman Turks found the accusation
baseless and Montefiore was then able to go on his way.
After the British conquest of the
Land of Israel in World War I and the subsequent increase in Jewish immigration
spurred on by the Zionist movement, representatives of Nazareth who opposed Zionism,
sent a delegation to the First Palestine Arab Congress and issued a letter of protest in 1920 that condemned the
movement while also proclaiming solidarity with the Jews of Palestine
as one of many religions in the country. In 1922, Nazareth had a
remaining Jewish population of 53 that had survived over the centuries. They
were ethnically cleansed from there, as were other places in the Land of Israel
during the bloody Arab riots in the ‘20s and ‘30s.
In the 1936–1939 Arab Revolt, Nazareth played a minor role, contributing two rebel commanders to the Arab militias –
the Christian Fu'ad Nassar and Tawfiq al-Ibrahim. The leaders of the
revolt sought to use Nazareth as a staging ground to protest the British proposal to include the Galilee into a future Jewish state. To give expression to that opposition, on September 26, 1937, the
British district commissioner of the Galilee, Lewis Yelland Andrews, was assassinated in Nazareth
by local rebels.
Nazareth was in the territory
allotted to the Arab state under the 1947 UN Partition Plan. In the months leading up to
the 1948 War of Independence, the town became a refuge for Arabs fleeing the urban
centers of Tiberias, Haifa and Baysan before and during the Haganah's capture of those cities in April and May.
During the War, Nazareth was
conquered by Arab forces under the direction of the Nazi-trained Fawzi al
Kaukji from Syria but was taken by Israeli forces in July. The town surrendered
and after the War, was incorporated into the State of Israel.
In 1957, the adjacent Jewish town
of Nazrat Illit (Upper Nazareth) was established. It became populated by native
born Israelis and European immigrants and in 1974, it achieved city status.
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