March 2009 – Digital Restoration of Beirut’s Magen Avraham Synagogue

(Photographs are courtesy of Jono David/HaChayim HaYehudim Jewish Photo Library)

Built in the 1920s, the Magen Avraham Synagogue in downtown Beirut stands as a hollow shell of its former self. Once the anchor of thriving Jewish community that included over a dozen synagogues and several schools, Magen Avraham has suffered from neglect and destruction during Lebanon’s ongoing wars and the Jewish community’s exodus. The roof has largely collapsed, the sanctuary is stripped bare, and weeds grow where services were once led. There has long been talk of restoring the synagogue, though no rehabilitation work has yet begun. In the world of Google Earth, however, Magen Avraham has been restored. Install the Google Earth plug-in to visit a virtual 3-D model of the synagogue in its former (and perhaps future) glory.  The building’s roof has been ‘repaired,’ its walls ‘repainted,’ and the wooden pews ‘returned.’ Visitors are welcome to tour inside the sanctuary.

Take a look at this dramatic work in progress:

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Visting Diarna
  • View our Media Gallery, including video tours of ancient cemeteries, synagogues, and communities
  • Download a sample Google Earth tour
  • Make a Virtual Pilgramage to Moroccan Anti-Atlas Mountain Shrines
  • Tour a 3-D Reconstruction of Beirut's Magen Avraham Synagogue
Praise for Diarna

Diarna is an extraordinarily innovative project that illustrates spatially the lost worlds of the Jewish communities in the lands of Islam. It is a vivid illustration of how current digital technology can be used to advance our understanding of the past and the present, and give substance to what often remains distant and abstract. This visual online reconstruction of Jewish space delights and instructs at the same time. — Aron Rodrigue, Stanford University

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