News Lone synagogue in Beirut to reopen Facebook Twitter Email SMS WhatsApp Share By J. Correspondent | May 23, 2014 Beirut’s only synagogue is set to reopen following a five-year renovation. The Magen Avraham synagogue, located in the former Jewish quarter of the city, was opened in 1926 but partially destroyed at the beginning of Lebanon’s 15-year civil war in 1975, according to the Times of Israel, via an Arabic report in London’s Asharq al-Awsat. The Lebanese Jewish community now has 100 members, and Isaac Arazi, the community’s leader, said Jews, Christians and Muslims all donated to the project, estimated to cost $1 million. The renovation began in 2009. Arazi hopes the synagogue will rejuvenate Jewish life in Lebanon. He said he is proud to be Lebanese, and conveyed antipathy toward Zionism and Israel. “You can rest assured that if I was a Zionist-Israeli, I would not stay in Lebanon for a second,” said Arazi, according to the Times of Israel. The Lebanese Jewish community “has no connection to those who wanted to live in Palestine and kill innocent people. We identify as Lebanese 100 percent.” — jta J. Correspondent Also On J. Recipe Help! I need a main course and a tasty Pesach dessert Sports Meet Zack Gelof, a Jewish ballplayer inspiring high hopes in the A’s organization Israel In Israel, American teens join protests — or not The Bagel Report ‘Extrapolations’ and AI haggadahs Subscribe to our Newsletter Enter Email Sign Up