With the approaching fast of Tisha Be’av, I was reminded of a momentous visit to Rome in 2017. My wife and I stayed at My Guest Roma, a guest house owned by a wonderful Roman Jew, Stefano Milano. Like most travelers these days, we discovered him by chance on the Internet. From the very beginning, Stefano was incredibly helpful. His family roots run deep in Italy. His father’s family moved out of Rome’s Jewish ghetto in the late 19th century, having suffered decades of discrimination and persecution. A few weeks ago, we decided to revisit Rome. We went back to the neighborhood of Nomentana, where we reconnected with Stefano, who welcomed us warmly. 

Rome’s Jewish community represents the oldest Diaspora in Europe and goes back 2,200 years. Jews first settled in Rome not because they were enslaved but because of the thriving economy of the city in ancient times. According to Philo, Rome’s Jewish population only grew in the middle of the first century BCE. Most of the Jews arrived as slaves in the wake of Pompey’s conquest of the Hasmonean kingdom in 63 BCE. The next wave of Jews arriving in Rome took place after the destruction of the Second Temple, when thousands of Jewish slaves were brought to Rome and paraded through the Arch of Titus, which still stands today in the ruins of the Roman Forum next to the Colosseum. The tragedy of this Second Temple exile is marked by a custom that decrees that no Jew should ever walk under Titus’s infamous arch. Intriguingly, Stefano explained to us that on Tisha Be’av, until the present day, the Jews of Rome go to the Arch of Titus and deliberately walk through it in the opposite direction, away from the city, in a gesture of defiance, to show their pride at being liberated from slavery, discrimination, and humiliation. 

In a recent series of fascinating lectures by Prof. Kenneth Stow sponsored by Beit Avi Chai, Stow explained that Jews who merited Roman citizenship were treated fairly. Both Julius and Augustus Caesar supported the Jewish community. Synagogues were classified as colleges to get around Roman laws banning secret societies, and the synagogues were allowed to collect the yearly tax paid by all Jewish men for synagogue maintenance. 

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