Jewish Synagogue in Rome |
It is not only the impressive synagogue, built in 1874 and facing the Tiber Island, which attracts many visitors who come to visit, but also the Roman, medieval and renaissance ruins in Via del Portico d'Ottavia, the symbolic center of the district along with Piazza delle Cinque Scole. An architectural hybrid surrounded by tall, Umbertine palaces moving towards the Tiber which exemplify the different building stratification in the neighborhood. These layers are perhaps matched only by the wide wine and food offerings in the district. In the ghetto of Rome it is also possible to sample the authentic, traditional, Roman-Jewish cuisine and choose from many kosher eateries there, and the best bakery in town.
The Ghetto is also a place of memory. In fact, there are many testaments to the Nazi persecution and one of its squares, named after the date of the largest sequestration of Jews in the history of Italy: Piazza 16 Ottobre 1943. That day, roughly 1,000 Jews, mostly women and children, were rounded up and deported to Auschwitz where almost all perished.
The Jewish Rome is, however, more extensive than the ancient perimeter of the ghetto. All over Rome you can attend and visit many temples with different customs - Sephardic, Italian, Moadim - and discover the traces of Jewish presence even in the Roman Forum or the archaeological site of Ostia Antica.
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