Project planned to restore Bahrain’s Jewish cemetery
TDT | Manama
The Daily Tribune – www.newsofbahrain.com
The Association of Gulf Jewish Communities (AGJC) has launched a project to restore and maintain the Jewish cemetery in the Kingdom.
The initiative will kick off with the Jewish holiday of Tu B’Shevat, starting the evening of January 16, AGJC said in a statement issued yesterday.
“Modern Jewish life in Bahrain began in the 1880s, when Jews from Iraq, were looking for better economic and living prospects and emigrated to Bahrain.
Since then, Jewish life in the Kingdom has flourished and in the 1930s, the community established a synagogue and Jewish cemetery. The synagogue is the oldest in the GCC and the only operational one,” the statement pointed out.
“The more than 100-year-old cemetery is the only operational one in the GCC. The project aims to create a perpetual fund to maintain the cemetery.” “As we celebrate Tu B’Shevat, in the Jewish Tradition, as the Arboreal New Year, we are planting trees in the Jewish cemetery of Bahrain which is akin to bringing life back to those that have lived in the beautiful community in Bahrain for centuries and made their resting place in Bahrain for eternity,” said AGJC Rabbi Dr Elie Abadie.
“As our ancestors planted in their generation for the benefit of our generation, so too we plant in this generation for the benefit of future generations.”
“For more than 100 years, our family members have been buried in the Jewish cemetery in Bahrain and one component of our community planning is ensuring that our cemetery is properly maintained for generations to come,” said AGJC President Ebrahim Dawood Nonoo. “We are very thankful that the AGJC chose this for its Tu B’Shevat project.”
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