Today was dedicated to spending time (and some money) in the
Roman Ghetto. Such a fascinating
place. There are parts that are quite
ancient and the history of the place is remarkable, poignant, terrifying. When one remembers that the deportation of
the Jews out of this ghetto and to concentration camps happened only 80 years
ago…. That level of inhumanity is so very recent. What humanity is capable of both in terms of
wretchedness and courage. I don’t
know.
In order to see the synagogue, you have to sign up for the
guided tour. The area surrounding the
synagogue is policed 24 hours a day, every day.
So these are just snippets of what I remember from our guide. It is the home of Europe’s oldest Jewish
community, the first Jews coming here from the diaspora in the 2nd
century. The Roman Ghetto was
established via a Papal Bull by Pope Paul IV entitled Cum nimis absurdum (and I looked this up) which translates as “Since
it is absurd and utterly inconvenient that the Jews, who through their own
fault were condemned by God to eternal slavery….” (what a schmuck) What Pope Paul IV decreed was that Jews were
to be subjected to various degradations, restrictions on owning property and practicing
medicine (among Christians), the wearing of yellow hats and scarves to identify
themselves, only being allowed to do unskilled jobs (pawnbrokers included) and
they had to live within a walled section of the city, next to the Tiber which
flooded constantly. Thousands stuck in a
few square miles of icky real estate. AND
there was to be a wall built around this slum that the Jews had to pay
for.
The word ghetto most likely comes from the Italian word gettare, which means ‘to pour’ and was a
verb used in foundries. The earliest usage
of this word for a segregated area comes from 16th century Venice,
the home of another chapter of Jewish history in Europe. The word evolved to mean, ‘slum’ or a place
that is apart.
As you walk through this extraordinary place, you just
ponder many things:
I had lunch at a kosher restaurant Ba'Ghetto, which was a real joy, a fabulous and delicious moment.
The synagogue is splendid, so beautiful and every single part of it has meaning:After the tour of the synagogue I visited a tiny museum dedicated to the deportation of the Jews during the 40's. Sobering.
Wow. I had no idea about the Roman Ghetto.
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