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09/02/2025
Storm in Damascus
This week, 185 years ago, the horrific blood libel against the Jews of Damascus began.
It started with a mysterious incident.
On February 5, 1840, in the afternoon, Father Tommaso, the head of the Franciscan monastery in Damascus, and his personal servant, Ibrahim Amara, made their way to the Jewish quarter to post a notice on the door of one of the synagogues. Then they vanished without a trace.
Count de Ratti-Menton, the lead investigator of the case, sent a report to France with his findings. He wrote:
"The street leading to the monastery was filled with Christians of all denominations, shouting that Father Tommaso had been murdered by the Jews."
Following the accusations against the Jewish community for the murder of Father Tommaso and his servant, key figures in the Jewish community were arrested by the authorities.
They endured horrific torture during their interrogations and were eventually charged with the abduction and murder of the two men to use their blood for making matzah.
During the investigations, authorities kidnapped and tortured over sixty Jewish children in an attempt to extract confessions from their parents regarding the alleged murder.
The rumor of the blood libel in Damascus spread waves and reached Jewish communities worldwide. The Jewish world was in turmoil, and efforts began in communities everywhere to clear the name of the Jews of Damascus. Poets and writers also joined the outreach efforts.
One of them was the Hebrew poet Eliahu Mordechai Verbil from Tarnopol, who wrote a poem detailing the blood libel in Damascus:
A priest named Tommaso and his servant both disappeared,
And from among the community, they suddenly vanished.
Then arose a clamor; the oppressor Menton shouted,
Only by the hands of these Jews were they murdered.
And to make matzah, they took their blood,
We will now strike them for this sin of murder.
Pictured above: Poet Eliahu Mordechai Verbil’s manuscript of the poem "Content of the Libel," from the archives of the National Library of Israel
Pictured below: Father Tommaso and his servant as documented in a consular report published in 1850
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