Synagogue of Funchal

Synagogue of Funchal
Synagogue of Funchal
Basic information
Location Funchal, Madeira, Portugal
Geographic coordinates 32°39′01.7″N 16°54′17.4″W / 32.650472°N 16.904833°W / 32.650472; -16.904833Coordinates: 32°39′01.7″N 16°54′17.4″W / 32.650472°N 16.904833°W / 32.650472; -16.904833
Affiliation Judaism
Rite Sephardi
Status Currently disused
Architectural description
Architect(s) Miguel Ventura Terra
Architectural type Synagogue
Completed 1836

The Synagogue of Funchal, called Shaar Hashamain located at 33 Rua do Carmo, Funchal, Madeira is disused and the only known synagogue that has ever existed in Madeira.

History

The construction period was around 1836, believed to be updated around 1914 by architect Miguel Ventura Terra, as he designed the Lisbon Synagogue around the same time. Jews from Morocco arrived in 1819 and set themselves up in the cloth and wine trades. The Abudarham family were involved in the Madeira wine industry from the early 1860s onwards. Rabbi David Zaguri became its spiritual leader in 1857. Another period of immigration followed in the 20th century, with the arrival of refugees from the First and Second World Wars. The Jewish community also grew due to the Evacuation of the Gibraltarian civilian population during World War II to Madeira, which included a number of Jews, some of which are buried in the Jewish Cemetery.[1]

Tito Benady, a historian on Gibraltar Jewry, noted that when some 200 Jews from Gibraltar were evacuated as non combatants to Funchal, Madeira, at the start of World War II, they found a Jewish cemetery that belonged to the Abudarham family. The same family after whom the Abudarham Synagogue in Gibraltar was named.[2]

The Jewish Cemetery of Funchal located in nearby Rua do Lazareto, was built in 1851, the last burial took place in 1976.[3]

References

  1. Jono David (2015). "MADEIRA (Portugal), Funchal. Jewish Cemetery (8.2015)". HaChayim HaYehudim Jewish Photo Library. Retrieved 2015-12-13.
  2. Yitzchak Kerem (2015). "Portuguese Crypto Jews". jewishwebsight.com. Retrieved 2015-12-20.
  3. Jeffrey Malka (2010). "The Jewish Cemetery of Funchal, Madeira". SephardicGen. Retrieved 2015-12-13.

See also

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