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PALERMO, ITALY - 22 MARCH 2017: Evelyn Aouate, an Algerian-born, Parisian-raised transplant whose deepening exploration of her own Jewish roots drove her and others open a synagogue, walks in Piazza Marina, where death sentenced occured during the Inquisition, in Palermo, Italy, on March 22nd 2017.
In 1492, Sicily’s Jews were banished from the island, the victims of a Spanish edict that forced thousands to leave and others to convert to Roman Catholicism. On Jan. 12, exactly 524 years to the day that the edict gave as a deadline for Sicily’s Jews to depart, Palermo’s archbishop, Corrado Lorefice, granted the emerging community the use of a deconsacrated oratory, to be transformed into Palermo’s first stable synagogue in five centuries. The synagogue will be located in what once was known as the Giudecca, Palermo’s ancient Jewish quarter
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- ©2017 Gianni Cipriano
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