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Ben Ezra Synagogue, Cairo , Egypt


The Ben Ezra Synagogue in Cairo is located behind the Hanging Church and was once a church itself.

The Ben Ezra Synagogue was originally a Christian church, which the Coptic Christians of Cairo had to sell to the Jews in 882 AD in order to pay the annual taxes imposed by the Muslim rulers of the time. The church was purchased by Abraham Ben Ezra, who came from Jerusalem during the reign of Ahmed Ibn Tulun, for 20,000 dinars.

The synagogue was a place of pilgrimage for North African Jews and the site of major festival celebrations. The famous medieval rabbi Moses Maimonides worshipped at Ben Ezra synagogue when he lived in Cairo.


Numerous restorations and renovations were made over the centuries, and the present building dates from 1892. It is a faithful reconstruction of the original, which had collapsed. During the reconstruction, a medieval Geniza (a hiding place for sacred books and worn-out Torah scrolls) was discovered, revealing thousands of original documents from the Middle Ages.

What to See


The Synagogue of Ben Ezra has a basilica-style plan and two floors, the lower one for men and the upper one for women.

The main floor is divided into three parts by steel bars, and in the center is an octagonal marble bima (platform for Torah reading). The synagogue is decorated with geometric and floral patterns in the Turkish style.

Today Ben Ezra Synagogue is a historical monument and the most-visited Jewish site in Cairo. Be prepared to pass through security in order to enter the synagogue.

Quick Facts

Names: Ben Ezra Synagogue; El-Geniza Synagogue; El-Yaho church; El-Shamieen Church

Type of site: Synagogue

Dates: Founded 882; rebuilt 1892

Size: 17m long x 11.3m wide

Location: Coptic Cairo, Egypt

Hours: Open daily.