Peki'in Synagogue
The Peki’in Synagogue, is a former Jewish congregation and synagogue located in the centre of Peki'in, in the Northern District of Israel. The current building was erected in 1873, on the site of older ones. The site is also said to be where Rabbi Joshua ben Hananiah established his beth midrash in antiquity.
The synagogue, not usually active as of 2005, is kept by Margalit Zinati. Zinati is a member of a Jewish family who have lived for centuries in Peki'in, reportedly since the time of the Second Temple. Zinati, the last Jewish woman in Peki'in, was honoured for her work on the 70th Independence Day in 2018, and her family home is run as a heritage site by the Education Department of the World Zionist Organization.
History
Establishment
The current structure dates from 1873, according to a commemorative plaque. This structure replaced an earlier one destroyed by an earthquake roughly three decades prior. Funding for the construction, attested to on a plaque commemorating the donation, was given by Rabbi Rafael Halevy from Beirut, possibly allowing for its completion in Nissan 30 of the year Tarlag, equivalent to April 27, 1873. It was a tall, white bricked, domed building against a blue sky.According to local tradition, the synagogue was built on the site of the beth midrash where Rabbi Joshua ben Hananiah taught before the Bar Kokhba revolt, and Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai after it. Scholars, however, disagree on whether the cave and town known from the life story of Shimon bar Yochai can be identified with modern Peki'in.
Local elders told Ben Zvi that the present structure differs from its predecessor; the original synagogue featured a wood ceiling, whereas the current one is topped by a stone dome.
Later history
In 1921/22, Yitzhak Ben-Zvi reported that prayers were held in the synagogue on Shabbat and holidays. The synagogue housed seven kosher Torah scrolls and four that were pasul. It also functioned as a school for children.In 1955, the Israeli Ministry of Religious Affairs renovated the building at the request of by Ben-Zvi, who was then President of Israel. The Second Series of the Israeli new shekel, put in circulation in 1999 and phased out in the 2010s, features on the 100 NIS banknote a portrait of Ben-Zvi, and the Peki'in synagogue along with a view of the village.