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Ben Ezer's Temple, lying at the end point of church buildings , is reported to have been erected in the 6th or presumably the 9th Century AD. The temple site and the surrounding grounds, originally a property of the church, was acquired by the Jews in return for "kantars of gold". The basilica-style temple contains a Jewish heritage library, that was inaugurated on November 25,1997. In 1896, a collection of documents known
as "Jineesah" were found in the temple. The document, written
mostly in what was called "Hebrew Arabic", a variation of Arabic
in Hebrew alphabet, exclusively used by Jews in the Middle Ages, reflected
political, economic and social conditions of Jews under the Arab rule
of Egypt as well as sectarial organizations and relations between different
Jewish sects. |