In Damascus, Restoring Beit Farhi and the City’s Jewish Past
An architect works to restore the grand palace of Raphael Farhi, one of the most powerful men in the Ottoman world
- By Stephen Glain
- Smithsonian.com, June 11, 2009, Subscribe
Ghosts inhabit Damascus’ Old City like players on a stage. You can see them peering through the ramparts of the citadel and tending to the faithful at the Omayyad Mosque. In the narrow passageways of the main souk, they clamor among the spice markets and connive between the caravansary and Byzantine colonnade.
You can see them. There is the Ottoman Governor As’ad Pasha al-Azem, receiving visitors and hearing petitions in the salamlik of his palace, a Mamlukian treasure. Across the way is a merchant from Andalusia offering textiles from Pisa for a set of Persian ceramics. At the Burmistan al Nur, or “house of patients,” a group of surgeons are gathered under a kumquat tree for a lecture on the latest techniques of scapulimancy – a method of divination – from Toledo, Spain. And here among litter of citrus fruit, chatting among shop owners and munching on Arab pastry, is the cunning and charismatic Mu’awiya – the caliph himself – so secure in his authority he is attended by only a single bodyguard.
But the real power center in Old Damascus – indeed, in the whole empire – is a few hundred yards away, off Al-Amin Street in the old Jewish Quarter. That would be Beit Farhi, the grand palace of Raphael Farhi, the successful banker and chief financial adviser to the Ottoman sultanate. It was Raphael and his older brother, Haim, who collected the taxes that financed the granaries, foundries and academies of Greater Syria, and it was the subterranean vaults of his palace that held the gold that backed the imperial coin. Until his family’s tragic dissolution in the mid-19th century, Raphael Farhi – known as “El Muallim,” or the teacher – was not simply the leader of Syria’s famously prominent and prosperous Jewish community; He was one of the most powerful men in the Ottoman world.
Hakam Roukbti knows this better than anyone. As the architect who has assigned himself the epic task of restoring Beit Farhi to its former glory, he has been working with a full complement of ghosts – Raphael, his brothers and their extended families, the palace guests and servants – peering over his shoulder. “The Farhis controlled all the finances in Greater Syria,” says Roukbti. “He was paying the pashas’ salaries. He appointed governors. This house was the most important of all the houses in Damascus.”
Roukbti, a Syrian who left for Spain in 1966 to study Islamic art, and his wife, Shirley Dijksma, have devoted themselves to the faithful renovation of the massive and labyrinthian Beit Farhi -- from the Hebrew language inscriptions carved in the reception hall to the orange trees in the courtyards. Their goal is to complete the work this summer and launch it as a luxury boutique hotel not long after that.
It is all part of a wider renaissance in one of the longest-inhabited cities in the world. While an economic boom is transforming greater Damascus into a modern metropolis with five-star hotels and shopping malls, the old city is keeping true to itself. Villas and caravansary are being carefully restored and converted into restaurants, cafés, inns, and art salons. Even the usually absent municipal government is getting into the act; the citadel has been completely renovated and strips of the souk’s narrow streets have been appointed with gas lamps.
At the epicenter of this reawakening is Beit Farhi, all 25,000 square feet of it. The rooms are nearly finished, complete with spot lighting and central heating, and soon the reception hall will be sealed under a glass canopy that will protect guests from the city’s pollution and insects. (It was one concession Roukbti made to modernity.) The cellar bar, which will stretch along the entire north side of the palace, is poised to become a favored watering hole of Damascus’ well-fixed expatriates. It was dug out at a price, however; according to Dijksma, an interior designer who promotes local Syrian artists, the same laborer was bitten three times by scorpions.
But while Beit Farhi may soon be hosting international film stars and celebrity politicians in its pricey chambers, it is far more than a commercial enterprise. The Muslim Roukbti and the Christian, Dutch-born Dijksma are on a mission that is as much ecumenical as aesthetic. The Syrian Jewish population has a history, as lush and complex as Beit Farhi’s marble-inlaid floors, that begins on one end of the Mediterranean and ends on the other. For centuries, it was a vital part of the mosaic of varied religions and ethnicities that made Damascus the world’s first city of commerce and culture.
For decades, the Jewish quarter has been a mute stepchild to the perennially chaotic main souk. Emptied after the creation of Israel and the wars that followed, its apartments and stalls have been padlocked by families now living elsewhere.
Today, the remains of Syria’s Jewish community consist of about three dozen aged men and women in Damascus and even fewer in the northern city of Aleppo. Albert Cameo, a leader of Syria’s residual Jews, recalls with delight the day Roukbti introduced himself as the man who was going to save Beit Farhi. “I assumed he was crazy,” Cameo says above the din of workers sanding stone walls in preparation for painting. “But then I thought, ‘What does it matter if he can pull it off?’ And now, look at this miracle.”
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Comments (5)
I was fascinated by the story read above,one of the reasons is that my "Nonna" born Bahia Abadi born in Aleppo or Damascus and later emigrated to Cairo where both my father and I were born, this is a description of her past.
Posted by André Aslan Levy on June 10,2011 | 03:43 PM
I had a look over the resroration only last month - Feb 2010 - it was facinating!! The Damacences including the active Jews made Damascus one of the finest cities of the Middle East. I hope the Jewish families come back to thier loved city and see and meet with their own warm friends of other Damacenes Muslims and Christian as they were as always.
Posted by Mamoun on February 17,2010 | 04:12 PM
Fascinating!
Since my grandfather was named Raphael and my brother named after him, according to the tradition of naming children after ancestors,I can only wonder if I am a descendant of the Raphael described in the article.
As a child, my mother, born Rosa Farhi and married to her cousin Soloman Farhi, would relate tales of the home of our ancestors. Since we were very poor, I thought at that time she was making it all up. As I grew older, I realized she was probably repeating what she heard as a child.
I often considered a visit to Damascus, but with restoration of Beit Farhi, it is a must.
Any Farhi's reading that intend to visit Beit Farhi should please contact me. Perhaps we can arrange a congenial group visit.
Sivy Farhi
Posted by Sivy Farhi on January 14,2010 | 11:14 AM
This is inspiring. As an Armenian who does care about his Jewish roots and is eager to reveal (for himself) the ancient city of Damascus, I would be delighted to see that house and the Jewish heritage of Damascus.
Posted by Sevak on October 28,2009 | 05:50 PM
You will see the history and genealogy of the Farhi at Les Fleurs de l'Orient. http://www.farhi.org
You will also see pictures of the Farhi houses (at least 3 palaces) in Old Damascus at the following URL: http://www.farhi.org/Documents/Farhi_Houses.htm
The photos of Beit El Muallim are before the current restoration.
You will find more history on the Farhi of Damascus at
http://www.farhi.org/documents.htm
Posted by Alain Farhi on October 25,2009 | 04:22 PM