Rome – Vatican And Rome Jewish Community To Host Landmark Menorah Exhibition

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    Director of the Vatican Museums, Barbara Jatta, left, and Director of Rome's Jewish Museum Alessandra Di Castro pose for a photo in front of a bas-relief showing a menorah at the end of a press conference in Rome, Monday, Feb. 20, 2017. The Vatican and Rome Jewish community are teaming up for the first- ever joint exhibit by the two institutions' museums. Focus will be the menorah, the candelabra depicted in both Jewish and Catholic art over the centuries. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)Rome – The Vatican and Rome’s Jewish museum will jointly host an unprecedented exhibition on the menorah, the ancient symbol of Judaism, and try to put to rest legends on the fate of one candelabra missing for 15 centuries.

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    The May 15-July 23 exhibition, which Vatican and Jewish officials presented on Monday, will be held simultaneously in St. Peter’s Square and in the Rome synagogue complex.

    It will include about 130 menorah or depictions of them in paintings, ancient gravestones and sculptures, and medieval and Renaissance illustrations and manuscripts.

    Nearly 20 world museums, including the Louvre and London’s National Gallery, have contributed pieces.

    “It will be significant from both the religious as well as the historical aspects,” said Barbara Jatta, who last month became the first woman to head the Vatican Museums.

    But the absolute star of the show – the solid gold menorah taken as a trophy by the Romans when they destroyed the temple in Jerusalem in the year 70 AD, won’t be there. Its fate has been a mystery for 1,500 years and the temple vessel has become the stuff of legends.

    Jerusalem and its temple was destroyed by Titus, a Roman general who became emperor nine years later. A relief on his victory arch in Rome, which still stands, shows the Jerusalem menorah and other war trophies being carried in a parade.

    Most historians believe the Jerusalem menorah was lost in the Vandal’s Sack of Rome in 455. But legends have persisted that it was thrown in the Tiber River and is still there, that it was buried in a cave or that it is hidden in the Vatican.

    “A lot of people will be disappointed to discover that these urban legends are not true,” said Rome’s chief Rabbi Ricardo Di Segni.

    However, the exhibition will contain what may be the next best thing – the Magdala Stone. It was found in 2009 in an archaeological dig that uncovered an ancient synagogue on the shores of the Sea of Galilee in Israel.

    It shows a seven-branched menorah, similar to the one depicted on the Arch of Titus in Rome, and is believed to have been carved by an artist who saw the missing Jerusalem menorah in the temple before the Roman’s destroyed it.


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    6 Comments
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    zooog
    zooog
    7 years ago

    Will it also include the Menorah of the Bais Hamikdosh they are hide?ing

    hashomer
    hashomer
    7 years ago

    I’m glad the Pope will have a nice photo op w the Yidden from Rome, but maybe he should return the Torah scrools, sacred books and objects that were stolen and are hidden in the Vatican archives…

    rebchuna
    rebchuna
    7 years ago

    Evidence? Erm the gemoro & more recent there are people who saw certain artifacts of the beis hamikdosh in the Vatican

    eliezer318
    eliezer318
    7 years ago

    Significently, this Exhibit is missing the menorah crafted by The Temple Mount Faithful for the Third and Final Beis HaMikdosh

    7 years ago

    The Vatican never never had the menorah, as it came into existence long after Rome was sacked several times by German hordes .One history book reports that it was taken to Carthage some time after the collapse of the roman empire ,where it was melted down.It is an embarrassment to keep on with this nonsense about seeing it in the Vatican. This shows why we need to educate the yeshiva students in history ,geography and other studies, not to be ignoramuses.