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The Jewish Community of Herat, Afghanistan

Dedicated to the Memory of Werner Herberg

A Research Trip to Afghanistan

 Ulrike-Christiane Lintz

Introduction

     Little is known about Jews in Afghanistan although they are mentioned in Ancient Arabic and Persian writings beyond historical references and local legend. In various western, Arabic, and Chinese chronicles, we only rarely find evidence for the existence of a Judaeo-Persian speaking population in Afghanistan, located at this significant trade post, leading to the Mediterranean World, the Near East, China, and India.

Nevertheless, in Tabakāt-i Nāsirī the main source for the Ghūrids, the thirteenth-century historian al-Juzjani (al-Ğūzğānī) refers to a Jewish merchant, a Yahūd (Jew) from Ghūr. According to the source, this Jewish merchant had acquired great experience in the ‘ways of the world and he entertained a friendship with Amīr Banjī, one of the founders of the Ghūrid dynasty.[1] The friendship started with the incident that took place when Amīr Banjī was travelling to Baghdad to resolve a dispute with his enemy. He met the Jewish merchant and asked him for some advice, which, in the event, turned out to be quite valuable. Amīr Banjī felt grateful to the Jewish merchant and let a number of the “Children of Israel” (‘Banī-Isrā’īl’) settle in his territory. The chronicle gives us some insights into a rationale for the existence of the Jewish settlement in the region although there is no conclusive evidence that these Jewish merchants were related to the speakers of the JudaeoPersian dialects. Medieval sources refer to several Jewish centers in Afghanistan; from which the most important were located in the cities of Merv, Balkh, Kabul, Nishapur, Ghazni and Herat.

In his work, 'Siyásat-náma', the medieval Persian author and celebrated vizier of the Great Seljuq Empire, Niẓām al-Mulk, (also known as Abū ʿAlı̄ Ḥasan ibn ʿAlı̄: 1018-1092 CE), already noted Jewish service in Muslim royal courts.[2] Written in 1091-1092 CE, the work Niẓām comprises fifty sections treating nearly all of the royal duties, prerogatives, and administrative units during the early Seljuq period. According to the record, Niẓām al-Mulk himself emphatically rejected the employment of “dhimmī” referring to "Peoples of the Book", which included Jews, Christians, Sabaeans, and sometimes Zoroastrians and Hindus, in governmental service.[3] Thus, he complains bitterly

"…that Jews, Christians, Fire-worshippers (gabrs), and Carmathians are employed by the Government, and praises the greater stringency in this matter observed in Alp Arslán's[4] reign."[5]

At the same time, however, Niẓām al-Mulk maintained close associations with Jewish bankers and money experts, officeholders, and tax-farmers, who had been called upon to assist him. These non-Muslim minorities were deprived of social and political equality, which made them "second-class" citizens in general - but as dhimmīs, they also enjoyed complete freedom to participate in various economic opportunities. Various Muslim and Hebrew historical sources mention that Persian Jews engaged in many kinds of artisanship and handicraft, working as weavers, dyers, gold and silversmiths, merchants and shopkeepers, jewelers, and wine manufacturers as well as dealers in drugs, spices, and antiquities.[6]

Nizámí-i-'Arúdí,who was a poet, astronomer, and physician in Samarqand, mentioned a Jew named Ya'qúb ibn Isháq al-Kindí in his Chahár Maqála .[7]  Nizámí-i-'Arúdí was a champion of various scholastic achievements in the Ghūr empire, who was “attached to the service of the House of Ghūr or ‘Kings of the Mountains.”’[8] The Jew he mentioned in his book was known as "the philosopher of the Arabs" around 873 CE. [9]

"Ya'qúb ibn Isḥáq al-Kindí, though he was a Jew, was the philosopher of his age and the wisest man of his time, and stood high in the service of al-Ma'mún. One day he came in before al- Ma'mún, and sat down above one of the prelates of Islám. Said this man, "Thou art of a subject race; why then dost thou sit above the prelates of Islám?" "Because," said Ya'qúb, "I know what thou knowest, while thou knowest not what I know."[10]

The existence of a Jewish settlement in the remote Muslim region surrounding Djām,  the most important Ghūrid site in central Afghanistan, located 215 km to the east of Harāt some 6,234 feet (1,900 m) above sea level surrounded by mountains rising almost 11,483 feet (3,500 m), seems to be enigmatic.[11] The site was extensively studied by David Thomas and his organization, the Minaret of Jam Archaeological Project (MJAP), for the last fifteen years.[12] The city of Djām  was a vibrant center of sophisticated urban life under the Ghūrid overlord, Ghiyāth al-Dīn Muḥammad bin Sām (d. 1203 CE).[13] The city is well known for the Minaret of Djām with its elaborate qur’ānic inscriptions,[14] as well as for the discovery of the Jewish cemetery nearby at the Kūh-i Kushkak (Figs.2-4). The Jews  might have settled there due to the development of extensive trade networks in this region. The region of Djām, which was the home of the sultan’s summer capital, Fīrūzkūh, was a flourishing politico-economical center, which extended from Nishāpur in Eastern Iran in the west, to the Gulf of Bengal in the south, and Sind in Northern-India in the northeast. The abrupt decline of the Ghūrid Empire seems to have been caused by the death of Mu‘izz al-Dīn Muammad b. Sāms’ in 1206 CE, followed by the conquest of Khwārizm Shāh in ca.1215. Seven years later the Mongol invasion by Ögödei, put a complete end to the whole empire in ca.1222. This region is also well known historically for its flourishing commerce based on iron- and metal processing, and horse breeding as well as slave trading in the markets of Herat and Sistan.

 

Fig. 2 The architect, historian and consultant Werner Herberg during his studies on the Kūh-i Kushkak in 1970-1973 - Courtesy of Werner Herberg (www.museo-on.com)
Fig. 2 The architect, historian and consultant Werner Herberg during his studies on the Kūh-i Kushkak in 1970-1973 - Courtesy of Werner Herberg (www.museo-on.com)
Fig. 3 Inscription from the Kūh-i Kushkak dedicated to "Shadi, son of Shadan"  dating March 8th 1117 - Courtesy of Werner Herberg (www.museo-on.com)
Fig. 3 Inscription from the Kūh-i Kushkak dedicated to "Shadi, son of Shadan" dating March 8th 1117 - Courtesy of Werner Herberg (www.museo-on.com)
Fig. 4 Inscription from the Kūh-i Kushkak  dedicated to "Elisa ben Mose Joseph" dating Shabbat, Tischri 24th, 1510 (1198) - Courtesy of Werner Herberg (www.museo-on.com)
Fig. 4 Inscription from the Kūh-i Kushkak dedicated to "Elisa ben Mose Joseph" dating Shabbat, Tischri 24th, 1510 (1198) - Courtesy of Werner Herberg (www.museo-on.com)

     Jews living under the Ghūrid Empire seem to have occupied high functions and positions. During the reign of Sultan Mahmud of Ghazna (997-1030 CE), a Jew living in Ghazni called ‘Isḥáq the Jew’ administered a lead mine in Balkh (Khurasan), having been sent there by the court-poet Nizámí-i-'Arúdí of Samarqand. This court-poet actually received this lead mine in Warsád (the ‘territory of Warshādah’) as the reward for his poems submitted to the local governor, ‘Amíd Safiyyu’d-Dín. Warsád is also mentioned as the residence of king ‘Quṭbu'd-Din Muhammad’ in Ghūr:[15]  

"Thereat the countenance of my lord the King brightened mightily, and a great cheerfulness showed itself in his gracious temperament, and he applauded me, saying, ‘I give thee the lead mine of Warsá from this Festival until the Festival of Sacrifice. Send thine agent thither.’ So I sent Isaac the Jew. It was then the middle of summer, and while they were working the mine they smelted so much ore that in the seventy days twelve thousand maunds of lead accrued to me, while the King's opinion of me was increased a thousand-fold. (…)"[16]

At the beginning of the tenth century, permanent multi-ethnic settlements of merchants existed in the region like the trading centers in Kabul and Ghazna during the Ghaznavid era.[17] The English historian and Orientalist Bosworth mentioned that stable Indian merchant colonies also existed even before the establishment of the ancient Ghūrid capital Firuzkuh in (d. 541 A.H./1146-7 CE).[18] The expatriate communities of merchants and their families from Khwarazm and Transoxania throughout Asia were also known to be operating as trading banks with an established system of letters of credit, which were honored in extensive regions from China to the Volga. The Central Asia cities along the Silk Road were serving as main trade posts throughout the region, connecting the west and east with Afghanistan at the mid-point of these extensive trade routes.

Fig. 5 A letter in Judeo-Persian dealing with financial and family matters, 1021 CE (Afghan Genizah collection at the National Library of Israel)
Fig. 5 A letter in Judeo-Persian dealing with financial and family matters, 1021 CE (Afghan Genizah collection at the National Library of Israel)
A collection of hundreds of fragmentary Jewish documents comprising manuscripts, in Hebrew, Aramaic, Judeo-Arabic, and Judeo-Persian were found in a cave in northwestern Afghanistan. The documents belonging to the "Afghan Genizah"  date to the 11th to the early 13th centuries CE (Fig. 5). As they are translated and published, they will contribute to an important insight into the Afghan Jewish life in the Middle Ages. 

What is the “Afghan Genizah”? A short guide to the collection of the Afghan Manuscripts

The “Afghan Genizah” is the designation for a textual corpus of several hundred leaves of paper datable from the 5th/11th to the early 7th/13th centuries. The leaves were discovered in central Afghanistan, although the precise place of discovery remains unknown. It is also not clear whether they are all from the same find. Owing to the fact that many of the texts were written in Hebrew script, the entire corpus was titled the “Afghan Genizah.” 
 
This article provides an overview of a rare collection of manuscripts that was purchased by the National Library of Israel in recent years. These manuscripts, which belong to a larger corpus of manuscripts known as the “Afghan Genizah,” appear to have originated in central Afghanistan, possibly in the Bamiyan area, and are datable to a period of two hundred years, namely, from the early 5th/11th century to the early 7th/13th century. The overview of these texts is accompanied by an edition and translation of two Islamic acknowledgment (iqrār) deeds in New Persian, dated to the beginning of the 5th/11th century.
 

 

The Cultural History of the Jews from Herat

     The Jews of Herat are culturally connected to the Jews of Iran. Many Jews once living in Herat were immigrants from Mashhad, generally considered to be the holiest city in Persia.[7] Mashhad’s Jewish community was founded during the reign of the Persian ruler Nadir Shah (r. 1736–47),[8] who was known for his tolerance toward Jews. Following his settlement policy the increasing presence of hundreds of Jewish families helped strengthen existing Jewish institutions and contributed to the flowering of Jewish life in Afghanistan.[9] 

In fact, in 1741 Nadir Shah allowed Jewish immigrants (approximately forty families) to settle in Mashhad. They coexisted peacefully with Muslims for decades in the Iranian city. Over time, however, the Jews began to suffer at the hands of zealous Shi’ites. The Shi’ites, as adherents of one of the two  major  branches of Islam (Sunnis and Shi'ites),  initially attacked them by making false accusations.[10] On March 26, 1839, a hostile Shi’ite mob, consisting of both city residents and Muslim pilgrims, launched an attack on the Jewish Quarter (known as the idgah or “place of celebrations”). This massive attack came to be known in Persian as Allahdad (lit. “God’s Justice).[11] Nearly 2,400 Mashhad Jews who did not flee were compelled to convert to Islam. Thus, the Allahdad against the once flowering important Jewish community put an end to the official and recognized existence of Mashhad’s Jewish community. This violent riot drove them into a dual religious life as forced converts or anusim.[12] 
Generally the word “anusim” points to a legal category of Jews in halakha who were forced to abandon Judaism against their will, typically while forcibly converted to another religion. The term “anusim” is most properly translated as the “coerced ” or the “forced .” The term anusim , however, became more frequently used after the forced conversion to Christianity of Ashkenazi Jews in Germany at the end of the 11th century. During later centuries, following the well known forced conversion of Sephardi Jews of the 15th and 16th centuries, this term became widely used by Spanish rabbis and their successors. "Anusim", a film and short historical explainer  by illustrator and director Sohini Tal, portraying a small scene of Sephardic Anusim practicing their Jewish life in secret, baking Matzot before Pesach, is an important contribution to this theme.  

"Anusim", a Film and Short Historical Explainer by Illustrator and Director Sohini Tal

      The term “Crypto-Jew” has now become the more politically correct term, and refers to all Jews forced to adopt a certain religion and political philosophy while maintaining Jewish practices in secret. Especially in modern times, outwardly Muslim Crypto-Jews are known to be in Afghanistan, Iran, and Turkey.

Even though the forced converts  outwardly embraced Islam, the majority of the converted Jews or jadid-e Islam (“new to Islam”) secretly continued to practice Judaism for well over a century as “crypto-Jews” in secret underground synagogues. The forced converts, however, who refused to lead a double life fled to Herat. They intermingled with the large Jewish community there. Later, during the early decades of the twentieth century, Mashhad’s forced converts publicly returned to Judaism.[13] Further waves of hostility toward Jewish communities followed during and after the final takeover in October 1856 of Afghanistan’s provincial capital, Herat, by the troops of the Qajar Prince, Sultan Murad Mirza. The Jews living in the city of Herat—the majority of whom were Mashhadis who settled in Herat following the pogrom of March 1839—were threatened, beaten, robbed of their possessions, and finally expelled from Herat and sent to a camp near Mashhad, in modern-day Iran.The Persian authorities officially justified the ill treatment and expulsion of the Jews on the grounds that the Jews living in Herat had migrated from Mashhad in 1839 without any government permission. The resulting deportations began on the nineteenth day of Shevat 5617 in the Hebrew calendar (February 13, 1857) and lasted about thirty days. Many of the deportees, who numbered 3,000 through 5,000, perished due to hunger, sickness, violence, and the extreme cold. Upon their arrival in Mashhad, the Herat Jews were interned in a dilapidated fortress named "Baba Quadrat". This place was located on the city’s eastern outskirts. The deportees were subjected to extreme physical and economic hardship. After nearly two years of detention, Nasir al-Din Shah (r. 1848–96) permitted the Jews — both immigrants and deportees from Afghanistan and Iran who decades earlier had been forced to resettle in Herat and Mashhad — to return to Herat. Nasir al-Din Shah sealed their fate: unable to regain territory lost to Russia in the early nineteenth century, however, Nasir al-Din Shah sought compensation by seizing Herat in 1856.[14] During the conflict, more than 300 Jewish detainees died from starvation, inadequate clothing, and poor housing and sanitary conditions. Some of the exiles remained in Mashhad, but the majority returned to Afghanistan.[15]  This immane (inhumanely cruel) period ended in August, 1858 thanks to British pressure placed on the Persian government.  The Jews reached Herat on the thirteenth day of Shevat 5619 (January 18, 1859) and began to re-occupy their former homes.[16]

In 1856, the Austrian physician, ethnographer, and scholar, Jakob Eduard Polak (1818–89), described how the Jews were crammed together in a quarter of the city known as mahalla-e Yahud (“the Jewish Quarter”), enduring extremely harsh living conditions:[17]

"These people live in utmost hardship and poverty. Concentrated together in a quarter of the city known as mahalah-yi Yahud, namely the Jewish quarter, they are compelled to build the doors of their houses so low that only by bending is one able to pass through them. The reason for this is that in the event they are attacked suddenly, they will be able to barricade themselves behind the doors easily. Some of the governors and their subordinates use any kind of real or fictitious offence committed by a Jewish individual as an excuse for extorting money  from the entire community. Similar pretexts are exploited in order to increase the amount of the poll-tax (the jizyah) established by Muhammad*  to be paid by non-Muslim subjects. This continuous oppression and pressure has compelled many Jews to emigrate to Turkey and to other lands in the East, even though the government prevents this emigration in various ways; as a result one can emigrate from the country only by resorting to secret escape-routes."

 
By way of comparison, Polak noted that the position of the Jews of Afghanistan and Turkistan at the time was significantly better than for those living in Iran. In fact, the Jews were often the only people capable of establishing communications and trade relations between the various tribes and clans that were constantly at war with each other. 
Historical sources also attest to the fact that of these Jewish immigrants and deportees from Herat and Mashhad, many coexisted with the Muslim inhabitants, even serving as physicians to both Muslims and Jews. One of the court doctors—in fact, the personal physician of Nasir al-Din Shah’s mother — was a Jew named Hakim (i.e., physician) Yehezqel, known also as Hakim Haqnazar (d. 1873).
Fig. 6 Jewish physician Ḥakim Nur-Maḥṃud. One of Antoin (1840s-1933) historical Iran photographs between 1840 and 1933 - National Museum of Ethnology in Leiden, The Netherlands
Fig. 6 Jewish physician Ḥakim Nur-Maḥṃud. One of Antoin (1840s-1933) historical Iran photographs between 1840 and 1933 - National Museum of Ethnology in Leiden, The Netherlands
In the unstable atmosphere of the nineteenth century, we can observe, that  Jewish voluntary conversion to Islam -  for the most affluent families -  was stimulated by socio-economic or professional reasons. Prestigious positions such as private physician to the royal family-individuals held by well-kown Jews like Hakim Haq Nazar and Ḥakim Nur-Maḥṃud (Figs. 6-8), servicing the Qajars or even  instances of intermarriage between prominent members of the two communities often were the causes behind some conversions.

It is worth mentioning that he and his brothers were the only Jews who were permitted to own a stable and ride horses in Tehran (ca. 1870). Moreover, his coveted position and resulting wealth, which was exceptional in the Jewish community, allowed him to construct a synagogue and a clinic in the Tehran’s Jewish Quarter.

 
Fig. 7 Ḥakim Nur-Maḥṃud received patients at his home in 1880s - Courtesy Amnon Netzer, Padyavand III, 1999.
Fig. 7 Ḥakim Nur-Maḥṃud received patients at his home in 1880s - Courtesy Amnon Netzer, Padyavand III, 1999.

As for common people, the stigma of “impurity,” as well as mandatory observation of Jewish religious and legal restrictions built strong motives behind  their voluntary conversions to Islam.  During this period of instability, financial and social issues were serious causes for conversion to Islam. Among  the main  motivations for  these voluntary conversion to Islam were financial issues depriving Jews of legal and business rights for making transactions with Muslims. The Law of Apostasy, for instance, allowed Muslim members of the family be the sole recipients of the family inheritance. Among other incentives for conversion to Islam, we can find the danger of  exclusion from the larger Muslim community, obligation to wear certain attire and identification patches, and lack of protection by the authorities even towards prestigious positions, like private physicians serving the royalty or the public in case of malpractice.

A number of prosperous Jewish families converted to Islam and thus adopted Islamic identities, at least by pretense, mainly due to the restrictions imposed by laws of impurity. They connverted to Islam in order to avoid  segregation as Jewish individuals, and to be allowed to establish social ties with Muslim neighbors and business partners. Aside from the very few cases of capitulation - based on a treaty or mutual obligation, in which one party undertook certain obligations or made concessions to the other party - , nominal conversions of Jews to Islam were employed as a legal strategy to protect the economic interests of privileged families. This practice was tolerated by both: the Shi’a ‘ulama and the Jewish community. This practice could even strengthen their legal position without incurring the usual demands from converts to publicly observe Islamic edicts such as mosque attendance. Despite these alleged nominal, or covert conversions, such families, like that of the above mentioned  Jews  Hakim Haq Nazar and Ḥakim Nur-Maḥṃud, maintained their prominence in the Jewish community. 
 
Fig. 8 Hakim Nasir family from Kermanshah and his son Mo‘azed al-Molk years after conversion into Islam - Courtesy of Nina Harouni Springer
Fig. 8 Hakim Nasir family from Kermanshah and his son Mo‘azed al-Molk years after conversion into Islam - Courtesy of Nina Harouni Springer
 
In other cases, however, publicly known conversions were mandatory. One such case occurred in the western city of Kermanshah in the late nineteenth century. The daughter of a Muslim cleric fell in love with Isma‘il, the son of a prominent Jewish physician, named Hakim Nassir. In order to save the family’s honor, the young man was obliged to marry the daughter of the cleric, and even more,  seventy of his family members were bound to publicly convert to Islam. Later, in the post-constitution era, the newly converted groom, who was given the title of Mo‘azed al-Molk, (deputy administration) became the vice president of National Assembly in Tehran, and eventually the deputy Finance Minister in the national cabinet. However, many descendants of the family, following the will of Hakim Nassir, returned to Judaism once the political conditions changed or when they migrated abroad.[18]
 
 
Fig. 9 Ḥakim Nur-Maḥṃud in his home, with members of his family, his patients, students, and servants. Photograph by Antoin Sevruguin. Tehran, c. 1880. Courtesy of the Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery Archives, Smithsonian Institution, Myron Bement Smith Collection.
Fig. 9 Ḥakim Nur-Maḥṃud in his home, with members of his family, his patients, students, and servants. Photograph by Antoin Sevruguin. Tehran, c. 1880. Courtesy of the Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery Archives, Smithsonian Institution, Myron Bement Smith Collection.
Referring to the Islamic law of nations (siyar) and rules designed to govern all relations between Muslims and dhimmis (non-Muslim citizens of an Islamic state) dhimmis were forbidden to imitate Muslims in their dress, their way of riding horses, and their appearance.  Nor were dhimmis allowed to build new synagogues or churches in a Muslim city; instead, they were only permitted to repair those already in existence.[19] This persecution persisted as late as the second half of the nineteenth century, impacting on Jewish communities physically and economically. 
The Afghan ruler, Emir Dost Mohammad Khan (r. 1826–63; 1842–63), who created a united Afghan kingdom in 1834 and occupied Herat at that time, sanctioned the looting of Jewish communities during the last year of his reign in 1863. Throughout the nineteenth century, the Jews of Afghanistan continued to suffer great losses in terms of lives and property. 
It was not until the beginning of the twentieth century that the general environment for Jews began to improve in terms of their physical and economic quality of life. The Jewish communities of Afghanistan were concentrated mainly in Herat with smaller communities in Balkh and Kabul and they remained largely unchanged from the late nineteenth into the early twentieth century. After World War I, Afghanistan’s Jews were involved at all levels of national and international trade via India or Mashhad with cities such as London, Leipzig, and New York. In fact, the 1930s can be viewed as a turning point in the history of Herat’s Jewish community in terms of the strengthening of its relationships with Eretz Yisrael (the “Land of Israel”) and Europe. The Afghan Jews also enjoyed a brief period of prosperity and security under the reign of Mohammad Nadir Shah, who was King of Afghanistan from October 1929 until his assassination in November 1933. During his reign of four short years, he accorded the Jews equal rights as citizens, forged commercial links with them, and abolished most of King Amanullah Khan’s (r. 1919–29) anti-Jewish decrees.
Subsequent Afghani rulers, however, did not view the Jews’ key position in international trade with the same tolerance. After Mohammed Nadir Shah’s assassination in 1933, a Mohmand Pashtun known as Mohammad Gul Khan, who served as a sort of envoy representing Afghan Turkestan (the northern provinces), required Balkh Province to be cleansed of its Jews and non-Pashtun inhabitants— taking his inspiration from what was taking place in pre-World War II Europe for Jews and other non-Aryans. Thus, after 1933, the Jews were banished from most Afghan cities and were only permitted to live in Herat, Balkh, and Kabul.
 
 
 
Fig. 10 Afghan Immigrants, Mashiach Gul and Daniel Gul president of Afghan Jewish community in Palestine, 1917
Fig. 10 Afghan Immigrants, Mashiach Gul and Daniel Gul president of Afghan Jewish community in Palestine, 1917

There are various estimates regarding the extent of the Jewish population on the territory of Afghanistan at the beginning of the 20th century. To the figures, once reported by the leaders of the Jewish communities in Afghanistan in the late 1940's, a few thousand must be added who by then either had emigrated to Israel or settled in other regions of the world, mainly  in Central Asia and India.  The total number of Afghan Jews at the middle of the 20th century could raise about 10,000 individuals.  A similar controvery refers to the number of Jewish communities once living in Afghanistan. The two main Jewish communities of Afghanistan were located in the cities of Kabul and Herat, each of them numbering about 2,000 Jews during their peak days in the 1930's. The city of Balkh, for example was home of  the third largest Jewish community. The community was made up of many Jewish immigrants originating from Central Asia. Smaller Jewish communities once lived in the towns of Gazni and Kandahar.

Until the middle of the 20th century, the Jews of Afghanistan didn't get in contact with modernity, as they are living in a country that never had been colonized by foreign powers. In the 16th century the Moghul Dynasty of India (1526-1857), adopted Shi'a Islam, whereas Central Asia and Afghanistan retained their allegiance to Sunni Islam. Thus, the traditional links that existed between the Jews of Persia, Central Asia and Afghanistan were severed and their cultural ties were limited to the neighbouring Jewish communities settled in Iran, Central Asia, and India. From the middle of the 18th century, the Afghan Kingdom was ruled by the Durrani Dynasty (1747-1842). This dynasty tried to prevent Western and especially British influence on the Afghan society, and lately let to  the relative isolation of the local Jewish community. Although many Jews left Afghanistan during the first half of the 20th century - some of them immigrated to Israel - it was only in 1950 that the Jews were officially allowed to leave Afghanistan. Furthermore, Zionist activity was completely forbidden within Afghanistan. Immigration to Israel was only permitted since the end of 1951.  The number of Afghan Jews who had immigrated to Israel reached about 4,000 individuals by 1967. 
 

 

Each of the three main Jewish communities still living in Afghanistan after the 1950's - i.e. the Jewish communities in Kabul, Herat and Balkh - had a  community council (Hevrah). The community council took care of the needs, organized burials, represented the community in matters connected to the authorities and responsible for paymet of taxes. From 1952 Jews were excempt from military service. Instead they had to pay a special tax (har bieah).

In 1990, for example, there lived only 15 up to 20 Jewsh families in the city of Kabul. However, they soon left for Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and India. As of 2001 at least two Jews were known to live in Kabul and about six Jewish families are believed to live in Herat. In January 2005, Itzhak Levi,  the caretaker of the Kabul snagogue passed away. He was brought to be buried on the Mount of Olives in Jerusalem on February 2, 2005.
With their emigration to Isarael, the UK, and the United States during the 20th century, the Jewish population dropped rapidely. This  emigration started after the  wave of anti-Jewish violence in the 1870s, followed by the Russian revolution in 1917, the World War II and the establishment of the State of Israel.  Lately the Soviet invasion in 1979 set the reason for the decline of  this once flourishing Afghan Jewish community, that culturally had close ties with their fellow Judeo-Persian speakers in Iran, especially with the Jews of Mashhad -  about whom I reported before -  who fled to Afghanistan in 1839, as well as the Bukhari Jews of Central Asia - today Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Kazakhstan.
 
The  photo below shows a plaque at the Haji Adoniyah Synagogue in Jerusalem, which was created by Jadīd al-Islām from Mashhad in 1902. The plaque reads: “The synagogue of Haji Adoniayahu son of Aharon Hacohen of the Crypto-Jews of Mashhad, dedicated by the Cohen Aharon family in 1902.” 
Fig. 11 "The synagogue of Haji Adoniayahu son of Aharon Hacohen of the Crypto-Jews of Mashhad, dedicated by the Cohen Aharon family in 1902.” Photo Source: Wikimedia Commons, Tamarah
Fig. 11 "The synagogue of Haji Adoniayahu son of Aharon Hacohen of the Crypto-Jews of Mashhad, dedicated by the Cohen Aharon family in 1902.” Photo Source: Wikimedia Commons, Tamarah

The Jewish Quarter of Herat

        Like many Jewish communities in Muslim countries, the Jews of Herat—the largest and most influential Jewish community in Afghanistan during the nineteenth century—inhabited their own separate streets and districts in the southwestern Momandha and northwestern Bar Durrani districts of Herat’s Old City. The Jewish quarter was sometimes referred to as mahallay-e Yahud, a common expression denoting the reduced social status of a religious minority—namely a ghetto.[19] Residents of a mahallay-e Yahud typically lived on the city’s outskirts in extremely harsh conditions. The Jewish quarter of nineteenth-century Tehran (Fig. 12), for example, was known as Sar-e cal (“on the top of the pit”), due to the garbage pit located in its midst.[20]
Fig. 12 Tehran’s Jewish quarter known as Sar-e cal (meaning “on top of the pit”, due to the garbage pit located in its midst) (photo by Antoin Sevruguin, Tehran, ca. 1880–1900)
Fig. 12 Tehran’s Jewish quarter known as Sar-e cal (meaning “on top of the pit”, due to the garbage pit located in its midst) (photo by Antoin Sevruguin, Tehran, ca. 1880–1900)
The residents of the mahalla-e Yahud in Herat were subjected to a variety of social and economic limitations, such as clothing restrictions, a ban on the mingling of Jews with Christians and Muslims, and the imposition of special taxes. As a result, the Jewish Quarter of Herat—like other Jewish areas in Afghanistan and Iran—tended to be a self-sufficient environment with its own administrative requirements, sacred traditions, and social customs. Despite the imposed segregation, most Jewish immigrants and deportees from Herat and Mashhad continued, at least for some time, to operate within a transnational trade and communications framework.[21]
Fig. 13 Shoshani family, Hamadan, Iran, 1910s The Oster Visual Documentation Center, Beit Hatfutsot, courtesy of Eli Levi, Israel
Fig. 13 Shoshani family, Hamadan, Iran, 1910s The Oster Visual Documentation Center, Beit Hatfutsot, courtesy of Eli Levi, Israel
Indeed, the Jewish community of Herat coexisted amicably with the majority of the Muslim population, perhaps because of their mutual economic and intercultural interests. Nonetheless, as evidenced in Herat, the presence of Jews in the Muslim world attests to the ever-present tensions surrounding segregation, integration, intercultural relations, unobtrusiveness, and modernization that have characterized Jewish existence in the Diaspora.[22] 
Fig. 14 Antoin Sevruguin, a Persian family, late 19th century, Postcard 138 mm x 88 mm - The Nelson Collection of Qajar Photography
Fig. 14 Antoin Sevruguin, a Persian family, late 19th century, Postcard 138 mm x 88 mm - The Nelson Collection of Qajar Photography
Fig. 15 Antoin Sevruguin, Two Jewish women sharing food, late 19th Century, Gelatin silver print 162mm x 114 mm - The Nelson Collection of Qajar Photography
Fig. 15 Antoin Sevruguin, Two Jewish women sharing food, late 19th Century, Gelatin silver print 162mm x 114 mm - The Nelson Collection of Qajar Photography

 

The Jewish Quarter of Herat was located within the walled section of the Old City and extended through the smaller streets on both sides of the main thoroughfare of the Bazaar-e Iraq, which leads directly to the Chahar Suq.[23]The economic heart of Herat’s Jewish Quarter was located on the main thoroughfare through the Bazaar-e Iraq among the coppersmiths, ironsmiths, grocers, and hardware stores. It was near the western Iraq Gate, not far from the bazaars at the end of the northwestern thoroughfares that served the caravans traveling between the western provinces of Afghanistan and Iraq.[24]

Fig. 16 The bazaar in Herat, Afghanistan - photo by National Geographic photojournalist Maynard Owen Williams, 1931
Fig. 16 The bazaar in Herat, Afghanistan - photo by National Geographic photojournalist Maynard Owen Williams, 1931

Jewish Clothing

  The Israel Museum's collection of Jewish clothing titled  "When Jews Wore Burkas: Exhibition Showcases 19th Century Jewish Fashion 19th Century Jewish Fashion" representing styles worn by Jewish women in North Africa, Yemen and Asia, was showcased in NYC in 2017. 

Curator Assaf-Shapira said the sheer variety of the materials, colors and designs challenge the notion that "Jews preserved their identity by rejecting outside influences." In most cases, she said, “Jews around the world mainly wore whatever their surrounding societies wore.”
 
Fig. 17 Portrait of a young woman in elaborate costume shortly after her wedding, ca. 1875 Sevruguin, Antoin, 1870s-1928, b&w ; 16.7 cm. x 22.5 cm - Myron Bement Smith Collection, National Museum of Asian Art
Fig. 17 Portrait of a young woman in elaborate costume shortly after her wedding, ca. 1875 Sevruguin, Antoin, 1870s-1928, b&w ; 16.7 cm. x 22.5 cm - Myron Bement Smith Collection, National Museum of Asian Art

 

Jewish women in Herat, Afghanistan  were dressed in the style of the surrounding society. They wore a large or small rectangular headscarve, commonly called čādar (chador), with or without small hats similar to the men’s kolāh, that were worn under turbans. The chador was made of soft cotton, often but by no means always in a solid color.

In Mashhad, Iran, Jewish women wore the chador along with a veil. They were dressed   just like their Muslim neighbors. After they fled persecution and forced conversion in the 19th century and resettled in Herat, Afghanistan, the Jews originating from Mashhad, however, preserved their Iranian-style shawl. Thus they  avoided  to  adopt the local burka like their Jewish contemporaries in nearby Kabul. Many Jewish women continued to wear the chador until their  immigration to Israel, as late as the 1970s.

The basic costume for men, women, and children is made from lightweight cotton and consists of loose-fitting, long-sleeved shirts worn outside wide trousers (Pers. tanbān, ezār, Pashto partōg); the trousers are gathered on a drawstring (ezārband). The  length of the typically collarless men’s shirt (perān, korta) is buttoned at one shoulder. The shirt  varies from region to region, from knee to mid-calf or even lower. The finely embroidered Qandahāri shirt fronts (gaṛa, ganḍa) are renowned.

 
 
 
The most diagnostic item of Afghan clothing is headgear. The ubiquitous turban (Pers. langōtā, dastār, Pashto paṭkay, pagṛi)., which can vary in length from 3 to 6 m, takes on distinguishing characteristics.  White cotton is the most common turban cloth. The difference, however, depending on the arrangement of folds, that can vary in length from 3 to 6 m, takes on distinguishing characteristics. Certain Pashtun groups prefer black and prestigious silk turbans, woven in muted grays, browns, and pinks. Whatever the material, cotton or silk, the longer the turban, the more fashionable the man.  A young boy, for example, signals the coming of manhood by ceremoniously donning a turban. 
Further distinctive indicators are the easily recognizable shapes and decorative designs of the caps (Pers. kolāh, Pashto ḵōlay), that were worn under turbans.

   

Fig. 19 The little boy Eliyahu Bezalel wearing a  turban made of white cotton  Herat, Afghanistan ca. 1910 - Collection of Eliyahu Bezalel, Holon - The Israel Museum, Jerusalem
Fig. 19 The little boy Eliyahu Bezalel wearing a turban made of white cotton Herat, Afghanistan ca. 1910 - Collection of Eliyahu Bezalel, Holon - The Israel Museum, Jerusalem
The modified cylindrical hat made from Persian lamb (qarakolī), had distinguished all educated urban men since the beginning of the 20th century. Head coverings for all women are prescribed in Islam. Most women in traditional Afghan communities,  wear variations of large or small rectangular headscarves, commonly called čādar . In contrast to the čādar, the čādarī, however, is composed of a close-fitting cap from which finely pleated colored silk or rayon falls. The čādarī completely envelopes the figure, with only an openwork embroidered or crocheted grid over the eyes. Another style is called bōqrā ( burkha;  borqoʿ, Herat) and paranjī (Kondūz). This style shows a separate see-through face veil.  All čādarīs are primarily urban garments. Although the shapes of these tall (up to 45 cm) headdresses (Pers. qaṣabā) differ from group to group, they all mark major stages in the lives of their owners. Same do the silk wrappings, silver studs, and festooned ornaments that decorate them. A variety of stout leather sandal (čaplī, Pashto čaplay), often soled with rubber cut from old tires, are  worn in many areas.
 
Jewelry, mostly of silver, is an important item in every woman’s wardrobe.  Generous sprin­klings of silver beads, disks, coins, fastenings, and amulets (taʿwīḏ) are sewn onto clothing.  The exuberant creations worn by brides are replaced by more modest versions once they become mothers. After menopause the silver ornaments are set aside entirely. Individual creativity is also expressed in the decoration of baby bonnets, as they are decorated with a profusion of pompoms, feathers, baubles, and beads. 
 
Fig. 20 Wedding celebration in Mashhad, Iran, ca.1935. Association of Mashhad Jews, Photo Collection of Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot.
Fig. 20 Wedding celebration in Mashhad, Iran, ca.1935. Association of Mashhad Jews, Photo Collection of Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot.
In the cities, especially among the educated middle and upper classes, Western styles have predominated since they were introduced early in the 20th century. They follow   as part of government efforts to modernize. Through the years, fashions have closely followed European models. Especially  for women, Western dress came to symbolize emancipation. After the leftist revolution of 1357/1978 and during the subsequent years of Soviet occupation Western dress continued in vogue in Kabul. 
Efrat Assaf-Shapria, Associate Curator of the Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Wing for Jewish Art and Life at the Israel Museum, Jerusalem, offers some insights into the role of veils for women. She said the sheer variety of the materials, colors and designs "challenge the notion that Jews preserved their identity by rejecting outside influences." In most cases, she said, “Jews around the world mainly wore whatever their surrounding societies wore.”
Fig. 21 Portrait of Young Jewish Woman in Elaborate Costume Sevruguin, Antoin, 1870s-1928, b&w ; 17.1 cm. x 22.3 cm - Myron Bement Smith Collection, National Museum of Asian Art
Fig. 21 Portrait of Young Jewish Woman in Elaborate Costume Sevruguin, Antoin, 1870s-1928, b&w ; 17.1 cm. x 22.3 cm - Myron Bement Smith Collection, National Museum of Asian Art

“There is shared core of the religion and the ceremonies,”Assaf-Shapira said of these Jewish communities. “But surrounding this shared core, there is a whole area of traditions which were shared with Muslims and Christians.”

The chador, worn by many Iranian women when outside the house, is a full-body cloak. It is often accompanied by a smaller headscarf underneath.
In some cases, Jews even contributed to popular fashion, for example a  Bukharan woman’s coat lined with colorful ikat weaving at which local Jews were skilled.
 
According to Assaf-Shapira, with the beginning of their immigration to Israel, however, the  Jews already started  to trade their traditional clothing for Western-style garb. This was especially true in case of men's clothing.
 
 

 

Traditional clothing reflects geographic and residential variations. It also serves to express individual and group identity, social and economic status, and stages of the life-cycle. Changing sociopolitical trends ultimately lead to new styles, as well as to exchanges of clothing types. The terminology for all items of Afghan clothing varies widely. However, the central role of dress in Afghan culture is clear from the fact that new garments are essential for family, religious, and seasonal celebrations.

Fig. 23 Portrait of Persian Woman Sevruguin, Antoin, 1870s-1928, b&w ; 16.4 cm. x 22.2 cm - Myron Bement Smith Collection, National Museum of Asian Art
Fig. 23 Portrait of Persian Woman Sevruguin, Antoin, 1870s-1928, b&w ; 16.4 cm. x 22.2 cm - Myron Bement Smith Collection, National Museum of Asian Art
The traditional Jewish costume  was similar to that of the Muslim population with the exception of the black turban worn by all Jewish men, which according to one tradition, was considered a sign of mourning for the destruction of the Temple of Jerusalem and to the other, believing the Jews were forced to wear black turbans as a mark to distinguish them from the Muslim population. Many Afghan Jews, which were  actively involved   in the cotton and silk trade  were  specialized in the dyeing process. The dye – which was produced from the dried bodies of the female cochineal insect and indigo – rendered the craftsmen’s hands blue. This set the cause for  many to falsely believe that this was a characteristic of the Jews of Afghanistan.
Fig. 24 Antoin Sevruguin, merchants in the bazaar, late 19th century, Albumen print 230 mm x 160 mm - The Nelson Collection of Qajar Photography
Fig. 24 Antoin Sevruguin, merchants in the bazaar, late 19th century, Albumen print 230 mm x 160 mm - The Nelson Collection of Qajar Photography

"Veiled Meanings: Fashioning Jewish Dress, from the Collection of The Israel Museum, Jerusalem

Daily Prayers And Unique Customs Connected With The Life Cycle

     Jewish communities were regulated by daily prayers and the unique customs  connected with the life cycle (circumcision ceremonies, bar mitzvahs, and weddings) and the major festivals (the Sabbath, the Day of Atonement, Tabernacles (Simhat Torah), and Hannukkah).[25]

The  ritual bath (mikvah)[26] served as a focus for community life, as exemplified by a Jewish bathhouse built of mud bricks, known as the Hammam-e Yahudiha (or the Haji Muhammad Akbar Bath), which was located close to the four synagogues.[27] As evidence of its subsequent adaption and cultural transition, this particular bath complex later served the Muslim males of the Momandha Quarter.[28]  
Fig. 25 Afghan Jewish couple, Herat, 1948
Fig. 25 Afghan Jewish couple, Herat, 1948

In his  article "Henna in Herat (and Beyond): Jewish Henna Traditions of Afghanistan"  the historian Noam Sienna from the  Department of History at the  University of Minnesota gives a vivid picture about Jewish life, especially the  henna ceremony before a wedding, known as  ḥanabandon ceremony  and the Jewish henna traditions of Afghanistan. In his article  he also cited the anthropologist Erich Brauer, who published important ethnographies of Yemenite and Kurdish Jews. Initially Brauer interviewed immigrants in Jerusalem and lately travelled to Afghanistan himself, in order to get an exact impression about the Afghans unique customs connected with the life cycle. In a short description written by Brauer one can follow the henna ceremony that takes place on the evening before the wedding, in the bride's house, but in seperate rooms:

 
“the bride sits in the women’s room without her veil and clad in her wedding gown with silver amulets around her upper arm. A dish of fruits and sweets is set before the groom, and a youth, balancing the bowl of henna on his head, dances in front of him” (Brauer 1942, p. 129). 
 
Brauer reports, that the  groom’s henna is applied by the ḥakham, the local rabbi. This custom is also practiced by the Jews in Yemen. The groom is then escorted home by his shushbinim (like the “best men”) and the bride is taken out into the main room and hennaed there (See Brauer, p. 130).
 
According to some more information collected from later sources, including Afghani-Israeli scholars, i.e. Zevulun Kort (1971) and Yisrael Mishael (1980) followed by an exhibition at the Israel Museim curated by Noam Bar'am-Ben-Yosef (1997), we get an exact impression of the ḥanabandon ceremony. The scholar Kort describes the ceremony as follows (See Kort, p. 18): 
 
 
 
Fig. 26 Henna cloth, Herat, 1950s
Fig. 26 Henna cloth, Herat, 1950s
Fig. 27 Mashade's "palette", Herat, early 20th century
Fig. 27 Mashade's "palette", Herat, early 20th century
 
The groom is welcomed into the room with songs and sparklers - described as ziquqin di-nur, which literally means 'fireworks,' but corrected by Sienna as "little hand-held ones". Then followed by a festive meal including a pilaf with mutton (see Mishael, p. 171), the khanche-ye ḥana, the ‘henna tray’ or ‘henna table' on which the henna is placed in a large brass bowl (tashtak) with candles and decorated iris leaves (zambak),  has been brought. This henna table also serves sweets, drinks, and a large sugar cone decorated with colourful ribbons. Then  everyone applauds  and shouts "besiman tov!" (‘Congratulations!’) meaning:  the chief rabbi, or the bride's father, is given the honour of hennaing the groom first. After the groom leaves. Then  the bride's hands and  feet are hennaed.  Thus  carefully wrapped in special triangles of cloth called ḥanaband (‘henna wrappers’) and tied with ribbons (saghpich), a large embroidered silk cloth called pishandaz-e ḥana (‘henna napkin’) is spread over their laps while they are being hennaed.
Following to a custom like in other Jewish communities, women, who  who also served the rest of time as midwives, hairdressers, doctors, tailors, and artisans, were in charge of the bride's adornment, including her make-up, hair, henna, and jewelry, as well as general guidance and emotional support. This women in charge of the bride's adornment, was known by various names - mashade (from Arabic mashiṭa, ‘hairdresser’), abruchin (in the northern cities of Balkh and Mazar-e Sharif), and dimvardari (largely in Herat).
 
 
Fig. 28 Groom's cotton-thread embroided robe with Tree-of-life motif, Herat, 1950s
Fig. 28 Groom's cotton-thread embroided robe with Tree-of-life motif, Herat, 1950s
Fig. 29 Close-up of Afghan ketubba [wedding certificate], Herat, 1812
Fig. 29 Close-up of Afghan ketubba [wedding certificate], Herat, 1812
According to this whole henna custom, that  appears to be unique to the Jews of Afghanistan, although it may have been practiced in parts of Iran as well, the next day the henna will be removed and the bride is taken to the mikvah and  the mashade,  dys  the bride's eyebrows with indigo (vasma). Lately this woman in charge  of the bride’s adornment, including her make-up, hair, henna, and jewelry, adds  and lines on her forehead (and sometimes cheeks and chin) with a black soot ink called khetat (from Arabic kheṭuṭ). he bride's eyes will be kohled, and her hennaed palms will be decorated with floral designs in the same black ink. 

Additionally, the bride's forehead will be decorated with sequins, thus  carefully glued to her forehead in particular patterns. According to this unique custom the bride's whole forehead will be  covered. There was a slightly different pattern for women who were in their first year of marriage.

One can follow this custom in vivid reconstructions (Fig. 30), that were done for the Israel Museum in the late 1970s by Malka Yezidi, Yokheved Merkhavi (each of whom had been a mashade in Herat), Rivqa Kohen (granddaughter of a Herati mashade), and Esther Betzalel.

Fig. 31 Couple at henna table (note the decorated sugar cone behind the champagne bottle), Herat, 1963
Fig. 31 Couple at henna table (note the decorated sugar cone behind the champagne bottle), Herat, 1963
A decorated sugar cone, i.e. a special bowl with a large cone of hardened sugar, surrounded by smaller ones -   as visible in the background of  the photo above (Fig. 31) - is presented to the groom  during the betrothal ceremony's festive meal, at which a couple's intention to wed is proclaimed publicly. As a sign of her consent to the engagement,  the  bride's mother  presents the sugar cone  to the groom. During this custom the couple symbolically is blessed with a life of fertility, purity, and sweetness. These decorated sugar cones are a central element as well  in Jewish as in Muslim wedding ceremonies throughout Central Asia and Iran.

The Synagogues of Herat

     The city of Herat once contained four synagogues, located in the Old City’s northwestern and southwestern areas close to Darb-i-Iraq Street, one of the main thoroughfares directly leading to the Chahar Suq, physically and symbolically linking the synagogues to the Masjid-i Jami and the Eidghah, both mosques being located in the northeastern Qutbe Chaq Quarter.  In 1978 following archeological excavations these synagogues were discovered in the sections of the old city, an area previously known as mahalla-yi musahiya ("the neighbourhood of the Jews"). At the time of their closure in the 1950s following the mass emigration of Herat’s Jewish community to Israel, three of the synagogues bore the name of the rabbis who presided over them at that time. These were the Mullah Garji, or Mullah Ashur Synagogue Fig. 32); the Mullah Samuel, or Shamawel Synagogue; and the Mullah Yoav, or Mullah Ya Aw Synagogue (alternative name: Kanisa Yoha; Fig. 33). All three were located in the southwestern residential area of the Old City, known as the Momandha Quarter, a name that may be derived from that of the Pashtun tribe of Momand. The Momandha Quarter contains twenty-three mosques, four shrines, twenty-two caravanserais, several covered bazaars, six typical houses, two cisterns, three bathhouses, and three synagogues.[29] The fourth synagogue, known as the Gol or Gulaki Synagogue  (Fig. 34) in the local Judeo-Persian language, was named for the wealthy family who owned it.[30] The building is located in the Bar Durrani Quarter, the northwestern district of the Old City. As documented above, this quarter is characterized above all by the settlement of wealthier families—including the homes of influential political officials—and is dominated by the Royal Center with the Ikhtiyar al-Din Fortress and Citadel. This quarter, which retains portions of the old city wall in its northwestern and southeastern corners, contains twenty-six mosques, thirteen shrines, twenty caravanserais, three houses, four cisterns, five bathhouses, and one synagogue.
Fig. 32 The Mullah Garji, or Mullah Ashur Synagogue, in 1973 (now mostly in ruins); interior view showing the richly painted west wall with the aron ha-qodesh (ark) against the western wall - Courtesy of Werner Herberg, 1973 (www.museo-on.com)
Fig. 32 The Mullah Garji, or Mullah Ashur Synagogue, in 1973 (now mostly in ruins); interior view showing the richly painted west wall with the aron ha-qodesh (ark) against the western wall - Courtesy of Werner Herberg, 1973 (www.museo-on.com)
Fig. 33 The Mullah Yoav Synagogue used as a living room in 1973 - Courtesy of Werner Herberg, 1973 (www.museo-on.com)
Fig. 33 The Mullah Yoav Synagogue used as a living room in 1973 - Courtesy of Werner Herberg, 1973 (www.museo-on.com)
The hybrid architectural composition of the four Herat synagogues, characterized by variations    in Jewish tradition, provides exceptional archaeological evidence not only of their intrinsic ties    to Judaism but also their place in the Afghan landscape. The once outstanding Mullah Garji  Synagogue, also known as the Mullah Ashur Synagogue, was named for Mullah Mattityah Garji, the   presiding rabbi of the Jewish community of Herat. The building now lies in ruins, totally collapsed,  due to disuse and neglect since the late 1970s when Herat’s remaining Jews departed.
Fig. 34 The Gol Synagogue or Gulaki Synagogue converted into the Hazrat Belal Mosque with the mihrab (prayer niche) as the most sacred part of the qibla (direction facing Mecca), 2015 (photo by Sarajudin Saraj) - Courtesy of www.museo-on. com
Fig. 34 The Gol Synagogue or Gulaki Synagogue converted into the Hazrat Belal Mosque with the mihrab (prayer niche) as the most sacred part of the qibla (direction facing Mecca), 2015 (photo by Sarajudin Saraj) - Courtesy of www.museo-on. com

Indeed, many other sacred buildings with beautiful interiors no longer exist due to a lack of maintenance. Fortunately, the Mullah Samuel or Shamawel Synagogue (ca. 1845–50), located directly opposite the market, was restored in 2009 during the Aga Khan Historic Cities Programme (AKHCP),  supported by the Aga Khan Trust for Culture.[31] Following the principles of utilitarian “architectural  repurposing” after its restoration in 2009, the building complex is used to house the Hariva School,  a maktab (primary school)[32] for Muslim boys since 1978.[33] The Gol or Gulaki Synagogue was constructed in the late nineteenth century (specific dates  unknown) as the private property of the wealthy upper-class Gol family. As such, the Gol Synagogue  reflects the family’s exceptional status, patronage, and power. Restored in 2009 by the AKHCP,  it has been converted into the Hazrat Belal Mosque, although it was probably used as a  mosque as soon as the Jewish community left Herat in the late 1970s. The synagogue’s exceptional  location in the Bar Durrani Quarter near the Royal Center with the Ikhtiyar al-Din Fortress and  Citadel—coupled with its architecture and interior design—attest to different channels of communication and reciprocal influences between Herat’s Jewish community (especially its wealthier scions)  and the Muslim majority. The Mullah Yoav Synagogue, built from 1788 through1808, was also  abandoned in the late 1970s, but was already in disrepair by the time fighting broke out in  the western quarter of the Old City after the 1978 uprising.[34] The restored Mullah Yoav Synagogue  is now used as an educational center for children from the surrounding neighborhood, reflecting both  the building’s adaptive use and the change the Jewish Quarter has undergone since its abandonment  in the late 1970s.

While the dates when the four synagogues were constructed are known for certain (between the late eighteenth and early twentieth century), there is no documentation to show whether they were entirely new buildings for their time or were built over the ruins of older structures. Certainly, the Mullah Samuel Synagogue shows evidence of an earlier existence. If indeed these synagogues rose from pre-existing foundations, it is difficult to determine the form of the original building and the nature of the intermediate stages of construction.

The Jewish cemetery outside Herat's Old City

Herat's Old City

     Herat—like other Islamic cities such as Aleppo, Cairo, Fez, Isfahan, Jeddah, and Sana’a—is the embodiment of a living city with traditional Islamic influences. Its architectural design was, for the most part, predetermined by Herat’s geometric urban concept and system, which was designed to meet the Islamic requirement to face toward Mecca (qibla). The city’s historic and vernacular architecture, and its exceptional surviving architectural heritage of both Muslim and non-Muslim origins, illustrate the complex processes of a global cultural transition. Herat, which is located in western Afghanistan and contains the most complete medieval vestiges surviving in the region, grew from a small fort founded in the 6th century BCE into a lively and dynamic city. The advent of Islam provided a new impetus for growth and importance in the walled city of Herat, which subsequently left an indelible mark on its physical form and structure. After its destruction at the hands of the Mongols, the city’s fortunes started to revive under the Kart dynasty (1245–1389 CE). As one of the most ancient cosmopolitan cities of central Asia—and an important stop along the Silk Road—it soon became the heart of the Timurid Empire (1405–1506 CE).[35] The Old City of Herat (or Harat), also referred to as the shar-i kuhna (“old town”), resembles a typical extended Afghan fortified town (qal’a).[36] Old Herat is defined by its unique culture and typical architecture reflecting a long tradition of building fortress houses or villages known as gala (Fig.1).[37]

The  layout of the city has been documented and discussed in detail by the Afghan architect Abdul W. Najimi, in part based on historical- geographical illustrations by a Russian envoy to Herat and the map developed much later by Major General Oskar von Niedermayer (1885–1948).[38] The Old City forms a square with four main roads leading along the cardinal points dividing it into four identical quadrants. As such, Herat features a perfectly organized system based on orthogonal symmetry.[39] The old walled city (ca. 200 hectares)[40] and the surviving fabric of the residential and commercial quarters focused around three main points, the Commercial Center, known as Chahar Suq at the center of Herat; the Royal Center comprising the Fortress and Citadel (Qal'a-i Ikhtiyar al-Din); and the Religious Center containing the Masjid-i Jami (Friday Mosque). Herat’s geometrical urban organization, which will be analyzed through its Timurid architecture, probably originated in the eleventh century and is based on forms from the Ghaznavid dynasty (977– 1186 CE).[41] Specifically, it reflects a clearly structured urban geometry leading to the commercial royal, and religious centers. Herat’s design features axes and directions that, when possible, face Mecca, uniformly linking the physical to the sacred. The city’s town plan is based on the four-iwan building concept with one main hall (iwan) facing Mecca, Islam’s holiest city, flanked by three subordinate halls.[42] This architectural concept is based on the urban traditions of Herat’s Old City, and shares similarities with the design of a typical Arab town (medina).[43] The architect and planner Rafi Samizay performed a survey of Herat in 1977, listing the Friday Mosque, an Eidgah (a ceremonial square and associated mosque), eighty-two local mosques, three madrasas (religious schools), thirty-nine shrines, three synagogues, other religious edifices in three outlying suburbs such as the Timurid musalla (literally “place for prayer”),[44] as well as numerous other individual mosques that were constructed in close proximity to each other throughout the city.[45]

Herat, a UNESCO World Heritage Site (since Sept. 2004), in the fertile valley of Hari-Rud, was settled as early as the sixth-century B.C.E.The city  is thought to have been established before 500 BC as the ancient Persian town of Artacoana or Aria. Alexander the Great  besieged Herat in 330 BC during his campaign against the Achamenid Persian Empire. Known at the time as Artacoana, the city was rebuilt and called Alexandria of Aria. It is believed that a citadel was first established on its current site during this period.  The city's older section is partially surrounded by the remains of massive mud walls, where several monuments still stand. Incorporated into the northern perimeter of the square walled city by the Ghaznavids,  the Qal'a-i Ikhtiyar al-Din (a 15th-century citadel) stood witness to the changing fortunes of successive empires before being laid waste by Genghis Khan in 1222.[46]

The Masjid-i Jami (the Great Mosque) was the city's first  congregational mosque, which contains examples of 12th-century Ghurid brick-work and 15th-16th century Timurid tilework. The Great Mosque was built on the site of two smaller Ghaznavid mosques; they were destroyed by earthquake and fire. The present Great Mosque was begun by the ruler of the Ghurid Empire, Ghiyath al-Din Muhammad b. Sam (1162-1202) in 1200 (597 AH). The mosque continued after his death by his brother and successor Shihab al-Din.[47] Herat city's other important monuments are located outside the walls: to the north of the Old City, the  large artificial mound, known as  Kuhandazh (or Kohandez), [48] the 15th-century Abu'l Qasim Shrine (variant names:  Ziarar-i Shahzade Abu'l Qasim; Mazar-e Abu'l Qasim or Shahzada Kasim Mausoleum)[49] and the 15th-century Abdullah bin Muawiyah Shrine (variant names: Shrine of 'Abdullah bin Mu'awiyah;[50] Mazar-e Shahzade Abdullah or Shahzada Abdullah Mausoleum)  built  on the opposite side of the road. Farther to the north the Madrasah-i Gawhar Shad in the Musalla Complex, which was constructed between 1417-1438 (820-841 AH) according to its foundation plaque, now housed in the mausoleum. Only one minaret and the founder's mausoleum remain of the Madrasah-i Gawar ShadGawhar Shad.[51]

 

The Jewish Cemetery of Herat, Afghanistan

     As is the case with other known Jewish communities, the Jewish cemetery of  Herat is located on the edge of the settlement at a good distance from the capital, in this case, some kilometers away from the former Jewish quarter  of Herat. This important Jewish cemetery  is located nearby the Tomb of Sultan Agha   southwest of the Herat city walls. 
Fig.35 The oldest part of the Herat Jewish cemetery with the younger graves (in the background on the right) and the approx. 250 to 300 year old graves behind the row of trees (center of the picture); the administrator's house (on the left)- Courtesy of Werner Herberg, 1973
Fig.35 The oldest part of the Herat Jewish cemetery with the younger graves (in the background on the right) and the approx. 250 to 300 year old graves behind the row of trees (center of the picture); the administrator's house (on the left)- Courtesy of Werner Herberg, 1973
This important Jewish cemetery of Herat certainly is dedicated  to the members of  some of the most important Judeo-Persian communities once living in Afghanistan. This Cultural Heritage site  provides exceptional archaeological evidence not only of their intrinsic ties to Judaism but also to their place in the Afghan landscape. For several decades this once outstanding Jewish cemetery lay in ruins, totally collapsed, due to disuse, disregard, and neglect since the late 1970s when Herat’s remaining Jews departed. The architect, historian, and consultant Werner Herberg (1944-2013), who visited the Jewish cemetery during his expedition in 1973, gives a vivid description (unpublished document) of this important historical site:[53]

“In the afternoon of October 7th, 1973 we were accompanied  to the old Jewish cemetery, which is about three kilometers outside the city. The cemetery, which roughly measures  the size of a sports field, is surrounded by a  mudbrick wall, on the inside of which trees are planted (Fig.35). Access is next to the simple mud -brick house, where a cemetery custodian lives with his family. Most of the area is flat and weakly covered with grass and low shrubs.

It is difficult to trace the oldest  scarcely preserved tombs; their age is thought to be approximately 800 years (Fig. 35). A quarter of the territory shows poorly preserved burial sites (Fig. 36), the younger ones are furnished with epitaphs (Fig. 37)

In the corner opposite the mud-brick building there is a burial place for Torah scrolls (Fig. 37). The Torah scrolls  out of use are not allowed to be destroyed, they  will be buried in this place going along with a special ritual (cf. the famous Geniza of Cairo).“[54]

Fig. 36 Already decaying graves approx. 250 - 300 years old  located near to the cemetery administrator's building - Courtesy Werner Herberg, 1973 (www.museo-on.com)
Fig. 36 Already decaying graves approx. 250 - 300 years old located near to the cemetery administrator's building - Courtesy Werner Herberg, 1973 (www.museo-on.com)

Indeed, in 1973 many of these important tombs, all of which are made of mud brick, no longer existed. Werner Herberg's sketch [57] of the Jewish cemetery with all documented traceable tombs (1973)  reveals important insights. However, the figures referring to the age of the tombs (cf. 800 years) might be incorrect. The information is based on local oral tradition, there is a lack of documentation. The age of the mud-brick tombs can be specified with a period of approximately 100 up to 250-300 years or even approximately up to 350-400 years:

- about 18 tombs dedicated to adults (approx. 250-300 years old)

- about 40 more recent tombs (barrel vaults) featuring epitaphs dedicated to adults

- about 34 tombs dedicated to children (approx. 100 years old)

- about 46 tombs dedicated to adults (approx. 100 years old)

- tombs scarcely traceable (approx. 350-400 years old)

Sketch of Herat's Jewish cemetery after Werner Herberg 1973 - Copyright Ulrike-Christiane Lintz, www.museo-on.com
Sketch of Herat's Jewish cemetery after Werner Herberg 1973 - Copyright Ulrike-Christiane Lintz, www.museo-on.com
 

This Jewish  cemetery of Herat certainly contains some of the most important Hebrew-Persian inscriptions found in Herat, Afghanistan. All of the tombs were built  in commemoration of members belonging to the Jewish-Persian community, which definitely spanned several generations. The population of this Judaeo-Persian speaking community seems to have been grown significantly during the last 200-300 years. The increasing presence of hundreds of Jewish families in Herat - many were immigrants from the Jewish community of Mashhad founded during the reign of the Persian ruler Nadir Shah (r. 1736-47),[55] who was known for his tolerance toward Jews  - helped strengthen existing Jewish institutions and contributed to the flowering of Jewish life in Afghanistan.

In fact, in 1741 he allowed Jewish immigrants (approximately forty families) to settle in Mashhad where they coexisted peacefully with Muslims for decades. Over time, however, they began to suffer at the hands of zealous Shi’ites who initially attacked them by making false accusations. On March 26, 1839, a hostile Shi’ite mob, consisting of both city residents and Muslim pilgrims, launched an attack on the Jewish Quarter (known as the idgah or “place of celebrations”), which came to be known in Persian as Allahdad (lit. “God’s Justice). Nearly 2,400 Mashhad Jews who did not flee were compelled to convert to Islam. Thus, the Allahdad against the Jewish community put an end to the official and recognized existence of Mashhad’s Jewish community and drove them into a dual religious life as forced converts (anusim). Even though they outwardly embraced Islam, the majority of the converted Jews or jadid-e Islam (“new to Islam”) secretly continued to practice Judaism for well over a century as “crypto-Jews” in secret underground synagogues. Those who refused to lead a double life fled to Herat, where they intermingled with the large Jewish community there. Later, during the early decades of the twentieth century, Mashhad’s forced converts publicly returned to Judaism.[56]
Fig.21 Preserved barrel vaulted tombs of more recent date (in the foreground), older tombs (in the background) and the "Torah Ground" behind - Courtesy Werner Herberg, 1973 (www.museo-on.com)
Fig.21 Preserved barrel vaulted tombs of more recent date (in the foreground), older tombs (in the background) and the "Torah Ground" behind - Courtesy Werner Herberg, 1973 (www.museo-on.com)

Epitaphs from the Jewish Cemetery in Herat

Most of the former tombs and epitaphs are not traceable. It is pity that most of these important tombs and epitaphs were lost and irrecoverable. Thanks to the research of Werner Herberg, two epitaphs are well documented, one of them dating April 26th, 1953 (Fig. 38a), the other attesting 11th October 1852 (Fig.38b).[58] 
Fig. 38 a Epitaph dating October 11th, 1852 - Courtesy Werner Herberg (www.museo-on.com)
Fig. 38 a Epitaph dating October 11th, 1852 - Courtesy Werner Herberg (www.museo-on.com)
The Hebrew-Persian epitaphs  can offer an invaluable insight into the Jewish life and burial practice in the region if the inscriptions are studied in the context of Jewish funeral practice as a whole in their particular historical and geographical contexts. As for the physical condition of the two tombstone inscriptions (Figs.38a-b), their paleography and complete arrangement of the epitaph in eight lines are exceptionally well preserved. The epigraphical features are comparable with the Jewish tombstones of the medieval European cemeteries of Mainz, Speyer, and Worms.
Fig. 38 b Epitaph dating April 26th, 1953 -Courtesy Werner Herberg (www.museo-on.com
Fig. 38 b Epitaph dating April 26th, 1953 -Courtesy Werner Herberg (www.museo-on.com

Saving Cultural Heritage - "The Herat Jewish Cemetery Project"

 
With financial support from the State Department of the United States Government under President Barack Obama - obtained through our cooperation partner Ms. Osnat Gad, New York - this project idea started in 2015. Together with our cooperation partners in Herat, Afghanistan the cultural project  was successfully realised (see photos and documentation). Moreover, the subsistence of the Afghan workers involved in this cultural project could be  secured over a longer period.
 

Due to the current warfare in Afghanistan, no further investigation at the Jewish cemetery could be undertaken, since the  "Herat Cemetery Project"  started in 2015: the Jewish cemetery was secured with a new wall, the ground and graves were cleaned from rubbish. A great part of the traceable tombs was restored and the epitaphs saved from decay (Fig.39-41).      

   

Future research and fieldwork could shed further light on many of the important questions raised and might reveal the social and ethnic background of the deceased more clearly. How did the Jewish community come to live at Herat?  Future archaeological findings in the region would help to document the origin of the Judaeo-Persian speakers in Afghanistan. That is another compelling reason to hope for a future peace in Afghanistan and its surrounding regions.


Fig. 39-41 Traceable Tombs from the Jewish Cemetery in Herat, Afghanistan - Courtesy of  Saraj Sarajudin  (www.museoon.com)
Fig. 39-41 Traceable Tombs from the Jewish Cemetery in Herat, Afghanistan - Courtesy of Saraj Sarajudin (www.museoon.com)

 [1] Raverty, H.G. Tabakāt-i-Nāsirī: A General History of the Muhammadan Dynasties of Asia, Including Hindustan; from A.H. 194 (810 A.D.) to A.H. 658 (1260 A.D.) and the Irruption of the Infidel Mughals into Islam by Minhāj-ud-Dīn Abū- ‘Umar-i-‘Usmān Maulānā Juzjani. Vol.1. Calcutta: The Asiatic Society, 2010, 313-315

[2] Niẓām al-Mulk, Abū ʿAlı̄ Ḥasan ibn ʿAlı̄, 'Siyásat-náma',Traité de gouvernement: Siyaset-Name composé pour le sultan Malik Chah, traduit du persan et annoté par Charles Schefer et préfacé par Jean-Paul Roux (Paris: Sindbad, 1984), 138-205 (139).

[3] The historical term ‘dhimmī’ (Arabic: ذمي ) refers to non-Muslim subjects of a Muslim state who were "second- class" citizens deprived of social and political equality by contract

[4] The son of the first Saljuq ruler of Khorasan, Čaḡrī Beg Dāwūd, brother of Ṭoḡrel, the first sultan of the Great Saljuqs of Iraq and Iran. See K. A. Luther, “ALP ARSLĀN: Saljuq sultan from 455/1063 to 465/1072,” Encyclopaedia Iranica, vol. 8-9 (1985): 895-898, http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/alp-arslan-saljuq-sultan  .

[5]  Browne, Edward G. A Literary History of Persia, vol. II: From Firdawsi to Sa’di. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009, 214.

[6] Walter J. Fischel, “Persia,” Jewish Virtual Library, 2008 http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/judaica/ejud_0002_0015_0_15625.html

[7] A Persian prose work written in the 6th/12th century by Abu’l-Ḥasan Neẓām-al-Dīn (or Najm-al-Dīn), Aḥmad b., ʿOmar b., ʿAlī Neẓāmī, ʿArūżī Samarqandī, originally entitled Majmaʿ al-nawāder. See Ḡolām-Ḥosayn Yūsofī, “ČAHĀR MAQĀLA,” Encyclopaedia Iranica, vol. 4:6 (1990): 621-623, online: http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/caharmaqala   .

[8] Browne 2009, 336.

[9] His name can also be spelled as Nidhámí-i-'Arúḍi. The reference is in Anecdote XXII of the ‘Third Discourse on Astrologers.’ See Ferdinand Wüstenfeld, Geschichte der arabischen Aerzte und Naturforscher (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck und Ruprecht, 1840).

[10] Edward G. Browne, Revised Translation of the Chahár Maqála ("Four Discourses") of Niẓámí - I- 'Arúḍí of Samarqand. Followed by an Abridged Translation of Mírzá Muḥammad's Notes to the Persian Text (London: Cambridge University Press, 1921), 64 and note 1.

[11] David C. Thomas, The ebb and flow of an empire: the Ghūrid polity of central Afghanistan in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, vol. 1 (Bundoora, Victoria: La Trobe University, 2011), 87.

[12] Thomas 2011, vol. 2, 376-392.

[13] Clifford E. Bosworth, The New Islamic Dynasties: A Chronological and Genealogical Manual (Edinburgh: University Press Ltd., 1967); Clifford E. Bosworth, “The Early Islamic history of Ghur,” Central Asiatic Journal, vol. 6 (1961): 116-133.

[14] Ulrike-Christiane Lintz, “The Qur'anic Inscriptions of the Minaret of Jam in Afghanistan,“ in: Calligraphy and Architecture, ed. Mohammad Gharipour and Irvin Cemil Schick (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2013), 83-102.

[15] Raverty 2010,vol. 1, 339.

[16] Browne 2009, 340.

[17] Bosworth, Clifford E., “The Early Islamic history of Ghur.” Central Asiatic Journal 6 (1961): 116-133 (121-124); Pinder-Wilson, Ralph. “Ghaznavid and Ghūrid Minarets.” Iran: Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies 39 (2001): 155-186; Nizami, Khaliq A. “The Ghurids.” In Muhammad S. Asimov and Clifford E. Bosworth, ed., History of civilizations of Central Asia, vol. IV: The age of achievement: A.D. 750 to the end of the fifteenth century. Part 1: The historical, social and economic setting. Paris: UNESCO Publishin178. Not in Bibliography 1998.

[18] Pinder-Wilson 2001, 155-186 (124,180); Nahid Pirnazar, Voluntary Cenversions of Iranian Jews in the Nineteenth Century, Iran Namag 4:2 (Summer 2019); Heshmat Allah Kermanshahchi, Iranian Jewish Community: Social Developments in the Twentieth Century (Los Angeles, Ketab Corporation, 2007), 347-350; Mehrdad Amanat, Negotiating Identities, Iranian Jews, Muslims and Baha'is in the Memoirs of Rayhan Rayhani (1859-1939), Ph. D. Dissertation (Los Angeles: University of California, 2006), 107, 146-47; Habib Levi, Trkh-e Yahd-e Irn, 2nd ed., vol.3 (Beverly Hills: Iranian Jewish Cultural Organization of California, 1984), 668-669 (635), 744-747, reporting from the memoirs of Rahim Misha'il. In 1892, Zulaykha, the wife of Zaghi, converted to Islam in order to gt divorced. She married the Muslim clergyman who right away claimed all the property of Zaghi for Zulaykha according to the Law of Aposty.

[19] Susan Gilson Miller, Attilio Petruccioli, and Mauro Bertagnin, “Inscribing Minority Space in the Islamic City: The Jewish Quarter of Fez (1438–1912),” Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 60, no. 3 (September, 2001): 310–327.

[20] Daniel Tsadik, “Judeo-Persian Communities of Iran: V. Quajar Period (1876–1925),” in Encyclopaedia Iranica (2012): http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/judeo-persian-communities-v-qajar-period#  ; idem , Between Foreigners and Shi’is: Nineteenth-Century Iran and its Jewish Minority, 36, 81 (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2007), 121.

[21] Abigail Green, “Old Networks, New Connections: The Emergence of the Jewish International,” In Green and Viaene, Religious Internationals in the Modern World, 113.

[22] Jack, Joseph, and Morton Mandel Wing for Jewish Art & Life: Costume and Jewelry: A Matter of Identity, The Israel Museum: Permanent Exhibitions.

[23] In contrast, the Jews of Balkh lived along one street, and their quarter was “closed in by a gate, locked every evening caused by security reasons and shut up on a Sabbath-day”; Joseph Wolff, Researches and Missionary Labours Among the Jews, Mohammedans and Other Sects, During His Travels Between the Year 1831 and 1834 (London: James Nisbet & Co., 1837), 209.

[24] Najimi, Herat: The Islamic City, 45, Fig. 3, 13.

[25] Hanegbi and Yaniv, Afghanistan, 28–39.

[26] The mikva (plural: mikva’ot): a bath used for the purpose of ritual immersion and ablution in Judaism to achieve ritual purity.

[27] Samizay, Islamic Architecture in Herat, 210.

[28] Samizay, “Herat: Pearl of Khurasan,” 92.

[29] Samizay, Islamic Architecture in Herat, 174.

[30] Hanegbi and Yaniv, Afghanistan, 18.

[31] “Hariva School: Herat, Afghanistan,” Archnet, http://archnet.org/sites/14829  (accessed October 5, 2016)

[32] See “maktab,” in Encyclopaedia Britannica (2014).

[33] “Hariva School: Herat, Afghanistan.”

[34] See “Afghanistan: Kabul and Herat Area Development Projects,” Aga Khan Trust for Culture Historic Cities Programme, http://www.akdn.org 

[35] Samizay, “Herat: Pearl of Khurasan,” 86–99; See also David C. Thomas, “The Ebb and Flow of an Empire: The Ghurid Polity of Central Afghanistan in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries” (Ph.D. diss., La Trobe University, 2011).

[36] Warwick Ball, The Monuments of Afghanistan: History, Archaeology and Architecture (London: I. B. Tauris, 2008).

[37] Anette Gangler, Heinz Gaube, and Attilio Petruccioli, Bukhara: The Eastern Dome of Islam; Urban Space, Architecture, and Population (Stuttgart: Axel Menges, 2004), 35–37.

[38] Abdul Wasay Najimi, Herat: The Islamic City; A Study in Urban Conservation (London: Curzon Press, 1988), 36–37 and Figs. 3.2, 3.3; Oskar von Niedermayer, Afghanistan (Leipzig: Verlag Karl W. Hiersemann, 1924), Plan 3.

[39] Elena Georgieva Paskaleva, “The Architecture of the Four-Iwan Building Tradition as a Representation of Paradise and Dynastic Power Aspirations” (Ph.D. diss., Leiden University, 2010), 133; see also Rafi Samizay, “Herat: Pearl of Khurasan,” Environmental Design: Journal of the Islamic Environmental Design Research Centre 1–2 (1987): 86–93.

[40] Four walls of about half of a farsakh (three miles) each, forming a rough square; Maria Szuppe, “Herat,” in Encyclopaedia Iranica, 211–217, http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/herat-iv ; Samizay, “Herat: Pearl of Khurasan,” 88.

[41] Paskaleva, “The Architecture of the Four-Iwan Building Tradition,” 133.

[42] Vincent J. Cornell, Voices of Islam, vol. 4, Voices of Art, Beauty, and Science (Westport, CT: Praeger, 2007), 94–95; Cenk Yoldas, A Prototypical (School) Design Strategy for Soil–Cement Construction in Afghanistan (Manhattan, KS: Kansas State University Press, 2004).

[43] Samizay, “Herat: Pearl of Khurasan,” 88; Najimi, Herat: The Islamic City, 94–95.

[44] Musalla is a large open-air gathering place for Muslim worship, especially for the two major annual festivals.

[45] Samizay, Islamic Architecture in Herat, 114–115; idem, “Herat: Pearl of Khurasan,” 90

(46) archnet.org/sites/6834

[47] archnet.org/sites/3931

[48] archnet.org/sites/3934

[49] archnet.org/sites/5417

[50] archnet.org/sites/ 5551

[51] archnet.org/sites/ 5415

[52] archnet.org/sites/ 5552

[53] Werner Herberg,  Forschungsreise 1973 nach Afghanistan (unpublished document)

[54] translation by the author

[55] “Nadir Shah,” Encyclopaedia Britannica. Nadir Shah (1688–1747) was an Iranian ruler, and conqueror who created an Iranian empire that stretched from the Indus River to the Caucasus Mountains, http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/401451/Nadir-Shah .

[56] Werner Herberg, Forschungsreise 1973 nach Afghanistan (unpublished document); David Yeroushalmi. The Jews of Iran in the Nineteenth Century. Leiden: Brill , 2010, 31-32 n12; 32 n13, 33, 247 n9.   Ulrike-Christiane Lintz, Reflection of Sacred Realities in Urban Contexts: The Synagogues of Herat." In Mohammad Gharipour, ed., Synagogues in the Islamic Word, Architecture, Design, and Identity. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2017, 51-72 (with a detailed documentation of Herat's Jewish community). 

[57] Zohar Hanegbi and Bracha Yaniv, Afghanistan: The Synagogue and the Jewish Home (Jerusalem: Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 1991), 13–17.

[58] Fotos made by Werner Herberg in Herat, Afghanistan 1973 (courtesy of Werner Herberg) copyright www.museo-on.com

Further Reading:

- Bezalel, Izhak. A Community of its Own: The Jews of Afghanistan and their Classification between the Jews of Iran and Bukhara, Pe'amim 79 (1999): 15-40 (in Hebrew).

- Sabar, Shalom. The Origins of the illustrated Ketubbah in Iran and Afghanistan, Pe'amim  79 (1999): 129-158 (in Hebrew).

- Seroussi, Edwin and Davidoff, Boaz. On the Stuy of the Musical Tradition of the Jews of Afghanistan, Pe'amim 79 (1999): 159-170 (in Hebrew).

- Shaked, Shaul. New Data on the Jews of Afghanistan in the Middle Ages, Pe'amim 79 (1999): 5-14 (in Hebrew).

- Yaniv, Bracha. Content and Form in the Flat Torah Finials from Eastern Iran and Afghanistan, Pe'amim 79 (1999): 96-128 (in Hebrew).

 - Mishael, Yisrael. Bein afganistan le-ereṣ yisrael: mizikhronotav shel nesi haqehila biṣefon afganistan. Jerusalem: Ministry of Education and Culture, 1980.

 
- Brauer, Erich. The Jews of Afghanistan: An Anthropological Report. Jewish Social Studies, Vol. 4, No. 2, 1942, pp. 121-138.
 
- Bar‘am-Ben-Yosef. No‘am (ed.), Bo-i kala: minhagei erusin veḥatuna shel yehudei afganistan. Jerusalem: Israel Museum, 1997.
 
- Kort, Zevulun. Minhagei erusin venissu’in beherat afganistan. Yeda‘ ‘Am, Vol. XV, No. 37/38, 1971, pp. 15-22.
 
-  Wigoder, Geoffrey, The New Standard Jewish Encyclopedia. Facts on File, New York, 1992.
 
- Vladimirsly, Irena. The Jews of Afghanistan, The Museum of the Jewish People (online).
 
- "Marranos, Conversos, Anusim, & New Christians," Jewish Virtual Library (online)
 
- Dupree, Nancy. "CLOTHING xiii. Clothing in Afghanistan," Encyclopaedia Iranica, V/8, pp. 811-815, available online.