By New York Times
Rod Nordland
Rod Nordland
AMADIYA (IRAQ) This once-pretty picture postcard town, on its own 4,000-foot high mesa nestling between a pair of much higher mountain ranges, is in a bad neighborhood when it comes to tolerance.
So the mystery of the
Jewish holy figure Hazana, who is revered here by people of all the
local faiths, is even more profound than it might otherwise be.
Amadiya
is in the semiautonomous province of Kurdistan, which is the target of a
crackdown by Baghdad after aiming to achieve independence from Iraq.
This part of northern Iraq has been convulsed by violence since the
advance of the Islamic State, which sent Christians fleeing, enslaved
Yazidi women and killed Shiites on sight, until finally being wiped out
in the area last month.
Today Amadiya's population of 9,000 is
overwhelmingly Kurdish Muslim. But in the early 20th century there were
said to be about two-thirds that many people, about evenly divided among
Muslims, Christians and Jews -- although there were 10 mosques compared
with two churches and two synagogues. Everyone was packed into a
circumference of a mile and a half.
Amadiya's Jews all left after
the creation of Israel in 1948. And so many Christians have left amid
successive regional upheavals that the remaining 20 or 30 families can
no longer sustain both churches.
All three faiths here are brought
together by a longstanding reverence for Hazana, a Jewish religious
figure of unknown antiquity -- variously described as a son of David,
the grandson of Joseph or just a little-known prophet -- whose tomb is
in Amadiya.
"All the religions are going to that grave to pray,"
said Muhammad Abdullah, a local teacher and amateur historian. "For all
three religions, it's a sacred place. Each of them thinks he belongs to
them."
Hazana's biography is so hazy that he defeats a Google
search. Locals don't have much to add. He was "a really great guy, a
pure person," said Bzhar Ahmad, 55, a retired government worker who had
just emerged from noon prayers at the town's Amadi Grand Mosque, with a
group of other Muslim worshipers nodding agreement.
None of the
men found it strange that Muslims and Christians also prayed at Hazana's
tomb. "The Jews were always our friends," Mr. Ahmad said. "We never
thought about what we were, we were just people living together."
Directions given by locals to find Hazana's tomb varied, but all
ended up in a crooked lane narrow enough that in Amadiya's heyday there
were footbridges connecting roofs from one side to the other so that
residents could use their rooftops to go to the mosque while avoiding
the visitors in the overcrowded lanes below. Or so they say.
On
the way, opposite a chicken coop with a roof festooned in flowering
potted plants, Saran Sabah stood with her 18-year-old daughter, Amal. In
the side alley leading to her house was a huge pile of firewood, ready
for the coming winter. A Sunni Muslim, Ms. Sabah had prayed to Hazana,
and it had worked, she said; there was a daughter to prove it.
The
men hadn't mentioned that Hazana's popularity rested on his ability to
bring fertility to supplicants, but later confirmed it. Borhan Said, a
local Muslim resident and retired government worker, said people asked
for other things as well. "He was a religious man who was so clear and
so devout," he said.
It almost sounded as if they had met, but it
turned out that Mr. Said was not even sure what epoch Hazana came from.
"He was before my father's father, that's all I know," he said.
Mr. Said pointed out the nondescript red metal gate of what had been
the old synagogue, unlocked and unguarded, and said visitors were
welcome. Inside was a garden of fig trees and pomegranates, trumpet
creepers and hibiscus, unkempt but well-watered. Purple and blue prayer
cloths, used by those who came to ask Hazana's help, were hanging on
some of the bushes.
Here and there were piles of rubble, old stone
building blocks and sections of walls -- the remains of the synagogue
itself. Cut into the earth was a stone staircase leading to an
underground tomb.
On the plastered walls inside the tomb was some
fairly recent graffiti in Hebrew script, the verses of a religious song,
along with an emoji-like smiley face, plus a Star of David sketched
over Hazana's plain rectangular sarcophagus.
Just what accounts
for the town's communal tolerance, people say they're not sure, except
that it has always been so. "We grew up like this," Mr. Said said. "My
father always taught me to be like this and I teach my son the same."
Partly
the town benefits from its remoteness; even when Kurds engaged in civil
war from 1994 to 1997, fighting never arrived here, though both warring
factions were present.
Some attribute it to Amadiya's history. Take the Amadi Grand Mosque,
for example, the biggest and oldest of the town's 10 mosques.
Speculation runs that it was originally a temple for the ancient Romans'
Mithraic cult. Then, say locals, the building became a Jewish synagogue
for centuries before becoming a Christian church for more centuries and
finally, after the arrival of Islam 800 years ago, a mosque.
How
much of that is actually true is debatable; Amadiya is such an
out-of-the-way place that it seems not to have been much studied.
It
would be easy to say that part of the secret of Amadiya's harmony is
simply that most of the other faiths have now left town, though some
Jews have visited recently to help restore Hazana's tomb and to pray
there.
But locals insist that would be unfair. Nafae Paulis is the
caretaker of the Chaldean church and a veteran of the Kurdish pesh
merga Special Forces who is now retired after years of battling the
Islamic State. He talked as if the other faiths were still around in
numbers as before.
"That's the beauty of Amadiya," he said. "In this small place you can find Muslims, Jews, Christians."
Even if not actually true, it is a nice sentiment.