International Association of Jewish Genealogical Societies - Cemetery Project

Instructions & Information Africa Asia & Pacific Ocean Middle East, Near East & Caucasus Eastern Europe Western Europe Atlantic Ocean & Caribbean British Isles North America Central America South America

LEBANON

THE JEWISH COMMUNITY

http://thejewsoflebanon.org/me/index.php is a blog for the Jewish community of Lebanon in French at the top and English below. Cemetery pictures are located there. http://thejewsoflebanon.org/me/?page_id=124 has history of the Jewish community. [February 2008]
 

THE CEMETERIES


BEIRUT:
http://almashriq.hiof.no/lebanon/700/770/779/ludvigsen/pcd1264/html/img0055.html. A series of photographs (navigation bar in upper right corner) [January 2001]

SIDON:

http://www.sephardicstudies.org/census_sidon.pdf [September 2002]
 

UPDATE: http://thejewsoflebanon.org/me/?m200711 has information about the cemetery with an accompanying story at http://thejewsoflebanon.org/me/?p221 with photographs: "A few kilometers south of An-Nijmeh Square/Place d’?toile, downtown Sidon, lies the Jewish cemetery on a small hill supposedly overlooking the ever blue Mediterranean. On the western side, the cemetery is in very bad shape, the hill is sinking; and some of the graves have actually tilted. Unfortunately, the cemetery is right next to the biggest dump in south Lebanon. A 100-feet high mountain of garbage on the southern coast of Sidon, by all means an environmental catastrophe. The Sidon Municipality has had enough pressure and scandals from the media I presume, so they have guards there preventing anyone from taking photos. They stopped me from taking the photos of the tilting side of the cemetery or from entering it from that side. I tried to explain I was after the cemetery and had no interest in the dump, to no avail. Eventually, I had to sneak from the other side of the cemetery, and climb the dusty hill, in broad daylight, which seems the best time to sneak anywhere without raising suspicion! There is no “entrance” per se for the cemetery. I recall there used to be a sign with Hebrew letters marking the cemetery, but that was removed. I think this is some sort of “hiding” the place to protect it from vandals. Many of the inscriptions that only have Hebrew letters are broken, but those that have Arabic writing and Hebrew letters are left intact! I believe that there is more than a coincidence to this. I got to know that last year the place was cleaned by the municipality, the weeds, trees, etc, seem reasonably within control for a deserted graveyard." [February 2008]

Revised Sunday June 29 2008