In
the year 5560 (1800), there lived in Akko a distinguished, pious, and rich man,
called Rabbi Hayim Pharchi, whose family belonged to Damascus. He was famous
throughout the East not only on account of his great wealth, but also through
his virtuous and generous course of life. He stood in high esteem at the
imperial court of Constantinople; and the choice of all the Pachas in the whole
of Syria depended on him. Whomsoever he proposed at court was appointed and
installed, so that he might be considered in a measure as the ruler of all
Syria. Nothing also was undertaken by the Sublime Porte in the East without
first informing him of it. His house was the asylum for all the distressed and
the sufferers of all nations and religions. Nothing but justice and equity could
be executed in the whole land; because all the officers and authorities dreaded
this just and excellent man too much to do anything wrong. In him the house of
Israel in Palestine had, so to say, a pious and faithful regent, who protects
his people in every possible manner, and bestows on them all kinds of benefits,
and endeavours that all shall live happily under his sway. He knew nothing of
oppression and exclusion, not to mention persecution.
There
lived also at the same time in Akko the tyrannical Pacha, Achmad Djizer, of whom
I shall have to say more hereafter; he endeavoured to accuse the above noble
philanthropist of treasonable devices: he accordingly had him arrested, and put
out one of his eyes, and cut off the end of his nose. The court at
Constantinople was informed of this terrible deed of infamy, but was not able to
act against the tyrant, because it was feared
that he would employ this as a pretext to organize a rebellion against
the Sultan, and indeed there was ample evidence to make this intention a matter
of certainty almost. But Achmad died soon after, and his place was conferred on
Seliman Pacha. Pharchi had a distinguished Mahomedan friend, who died suddenly,
with his wife, and left quite a young child, only a few years old, called
Abdalla, who was without any protectors, and was therefore educated in the house
of the noble Pharchi, who viewed him as his own child, and had him instructed in
all the necessary scientific branches; and in addition to this, Pharchi caused
that Abdalla was appointed Pacha of Akko, after the decease of Seliman. He at
first viewed Pharchi as his father, and followed his guidance to execute justice
and equity in the land. But as early as one year after assuming the government,
he commenced to act counter to this advice and instruction, and was reproved
occasionally on this account by his venerable guardian. Abdalla now observed
that he stood in his way, and that he would be a check on the exercise of his
mere will and pleasure, and resolved therefore to get rid of him. He endeavoured
first secretly to accuse him of treason and other charges, to find thus an
opportunity to lay violent hands on him. The confidants of Pharchi revealed to
him the terrible purpose of his ungrateful ward, and advised him to save himself
by flight. But he declined doing this, and he answered magnanimously that his
flight would call down on all the Israelites of Palestine the greatest
persecution, and might indeed cause their entire extermination, since the Pacha
might be induced through his escaping, to wreak his fury on this innocent
people. He added, that he was prepared for everything, and would bear patiently
whatever might occur, in order to save thereby, or at least to benefit in some
degree, his own people.
Now
it happened, on Thursday, the 28th of Ab, 5579 (August,
1817), which the pious Pharchi kept as a fast day (as the eve of the New Moon of
the month Elul), and as he was about to take his supper, that an officer with
his soldiers suddenly entered his apartment; his death-warrant was read to
him, in which he was condemned on account of treason, and with the offence that
his private Synagogue was built higher than the mosque of Akko, and several
other diabolical charges and crimes; and this sentence was instantly executed.
The
day following his house and court-yard were ransacked and plundered, and a
large quantity of gold, money, silver, and other valuable articles were carried
to the Pacha, the monster and parricide. The corpse of this martyr he did not
even permit to be interred, but ordered it to be cast into the sea; and when,
the day following, it was carried again on shore, he ordered it to be taken out
far into the sea, and then to be thrown into the water. The pious widow of
Pharchi fled in all haste towards Damascus, but died suddenly on the road, and
was buried in Zafed; and suspicion was entertained that she had been poisoned by
the furies who surrounded the Pacha.
This
deed of terror excited universal consternation and mortal fear in all Palestine,
especially among the Israelites; and the parricide now showed himself openly as
the persecutor of the Jews in the Holy Land, and exercised such acts of violence
and abomination among them, as are not perpetrated by cannibals and savages. My
friend S. M., who lives at present in Jerusalem, was at that time an active and
courageous young man, who often went to Akko as dragoman, that is, interpreter,
with commissions from the Russian Jewish congregation of Zafed, and in
consequence came frequently to the house of the consul. A few days after the
above tragical occurrence, he had to attend to some business for the
congregation, and therefore visited Akko, and the consul’s house among others.
All at once, Abdalla came in, and was received very friendly by the consul, who
was his bosom friend from early youth, as both had been at the same time brought
up by the same nurse. They went together into a side room, and had a
confidential conversation. S. M. perceived that something very important was
being discussed between them, and had the courage to approach softly and to
overhear them. The substance of what reached him was, that the Pacha requested
his faithful fosterbrother not to interfere, in his consular capacity, with
his own affairs; that he had no intention to touch the foreigners who were under
the consul’s protection; but that he desired of him not to put any obstacles
in his way, in the manner he intended to proceed with the other Jews. The worthy
consul had humanity enough not to refuse any favour to his brother, and
promised him faithfully not to make any representations whatever to him in this
respect, notwithstanding his great influence. The Pacha then continued: “I
mean, on the coming Saturday, during divine worship, to surprise the Synagogue,
and to hang up before the same, on the instant, the spiritual chief of the Jews,
A. J. I intend, also, to proceed in the same manner at Zafed, to capture, during
worship, the three richest among them (giving here their names), to hang them,
and to confiscate their property.” My friend S. M. having thus listened to
this frightful conversation, moved quietly from the spot he had occupied. The
Pacha soon after took his leave; S. M. of course did not give the consul the
least cause to perceive that he had heard what was going on; he thereupon
concluded his business, and then left him. But he hastened to the chief, A. J.,
and revealed to him in secret the danger in which he was, and advised him to
escape on the instant by flight, without communicating the least to any
one of the whole affair. The advice was followed; A. J. disappeared suddenly, and no one, not
even his household and friends, knew what had become of him, or whither he had
gone. S. M. hastened next with equal speed to Zafed, and revealed the secret to
the three proscribed rich men, who also disappeared suddenly in the same
mysterious manner, and no one could tell where they were. The Saturday at length
came; no one knew anything of the fatal plan of the Pacha, and all assembled as
usual in the Synagogue at Akko. Suddenly the troops made their appearance with a
gallows’ frame before the Synagogue, and they entered to seize A. J., in order
to hang him. But he was not there, and could not be found all over the town. The
Pacha now commanded to seize another respected man in his stead; this was done,
they beat him cruelly, and dragged him, though perfectly innocent, to the
gallows, to hang him up. But the Pacha said he would pardon him, if he would
become Mussulman, and confess the Koran. The other, in his fright, assented, and
was thereupon liberated. But he afterwards fled the city, despising the Koran
and the Prophet, and lived again as a faithful Jew.
In
Zafed, also, the prior resolution of the Pacha was proceeded with; but the three
rich men destined to be hanged had likewise disappeared, and could nowhere be
found. He therefore ordered all the Jews of the place to be locked up in the
castle, a small Kallai, and demanded of them an exorbitant ransom, which they
were unable to furnish; so that they were compelled to sell even their garments,
and whatever of value they possessed, in order to obtain their liberty. He also
exacted much from the Jews in Tiberias and Akko. But Jerusalem and Hebron, being
in the southern part of Palestine, belonged not to the Pachalik of Akko, but to
that of Damascus, and the Jews residing there were spared for the present; they,
however, had to endure since then other persecutions and exactions, when the monster at Damascus opened wide
his fiery and deep jaws, and threatened to swallow up everything. Subsequently
to the above related event, no one was secure in life and property in Galilee,
on account of the tyrant Abdalla, till the excellent Austrian Jewish
consul-general at Aleppo, the well-known Baron of Picciotto, employed the
influence he had with him to restrain him in his barbarous procedure against his
own brothers in faith.
In
Damascus dwelt the three brothers of the martyr Pharchi; they were the most
distinguished and honoured men of the whole surrounding country, not only
through their wealth and their extensive commerce, which was carried on to all
parts of the Orient, but also for their great influence in Constantinople and
other large cities and towns, and they were likewise famed for their honest and
noble conduct.* Their names were Seliman, Raphael, and the youngest Mosé
Pharchi; the last mentioned died in 5600 (1840), through the torture inflicted
by Serif Pacha, as one of the accused for the murder of Father Thomas, in which
this excellent man was, among others, charged with having taken part in the
slaughter of that old priest, to make use of his blood at the celebration of the
Passover. When these men learned the deplorable death of their beloved brother,
they resolved to be revenged on his murderer, even at the greatest sacrifices.
Through their great influence at Constantinople they succeeded in obtaining a
firman (a decree), signed by the Sheich al Aslam,† literally, the chief of the
faith, authorizing them to take hostile measures against Abdalla. It was a small
matter with them, on account of their immense wealth, to engage Seliman Pacha of
Damascus, Mustapha Pacha of Aleppo, and two other minor Pachas, who were under
the jurisdiction of these two principal ones, with their soldiers, to take the
field against Abdalla. A large force having thus been collected, the expedition
passed over the Jordan in the month of Nissan, 5581 (April, 1821). Abdalla
marched out against the advancing Pachas; and a battle took place at the bridge
over Jordan called Djisr abné Yacob, in which he was defeated, and he fled in
haste, retreating to Akko. The brothers Pharchi now took possession of all
Galilee, deposed the officers appointed by Abdalla, and appointed others in
their place. The victors next laid siege to Akko, where the famine rose to such
a height, that a single egg was sold at 70 grush,‡ which at that time was near
six dollars, and a sheep at 900 grush, or 78 dollars. The siege was continued
for fourteen months, during which period the Pharchis supplied the place of the
Pacha in the country, and acted as governors. But it was decreed that Abdalla
should not yet meet his deserts, and he was permitted to have a few years more
indulgence. He succeeded, through treachery, to have the worthy Seliman Pharchi
poisoned, through which means he died suddenly in the month of Nissan, 5582
(April, 1822). Mustapha Pacha likewise showed, by his acts and conduct in
battle, that he was not true to the cause in which he had embarked. Raphael
Pharchi was therefore induced, shortly after the decease of his elder brother,
to withdraw with Seliman Pacha to Damascus. Mustapha, it is true, maintained the
siege till the month of Sivan (June), when he also withdrew to his own
government.
Abdalla saw himself thus freed from danger from that
quarter, and had only now to fear the action of the Porte, and therefore
requested Mahmud Ali, the Pacha of Egypt, to act as mediator between him and the
Sultan. The Egyptian Pacha now employed all his influence to obtain the pardon
of his compeer of Akko. The Sultan was greatly astonished to learn all the above
proceedings, which were perfect news to him, since he had never been before
informed of the tragical end of Pharchi of Akko, nor of the Damascus expedition
against Abdalla, as the firman of the Sheich al Aslam was obtained without any
knowledge on his part, and procured of the Divan (the council of ministers),
through the great influence of the Pharchi and their very rich Saraf or
court-agent, Rabbi Bechor Karmona. The Sultan was so incensed at this, that he
banished the Sheich al Aslam from Constantinople, as he dared not to have him
executed, but inflicted the punishment of death on the Saraf in the month of
Tamuz, 5582 (July, 1822). But the greatest and the real crime which induced the
sultan to this execution was, that the worthy Rabbi Bechor was too rich, and
that he desired to appropriate to his own use the alleged criminal’s great
wealth. Abdalla was thus saved a second time; but instead of being grateful to
Mahmud Ali, he subsequently commenced to defy him, till at length he was induced
to besiege Akko in 5592 (1832), when he took Abdalla and carried him as prisoner
to Egypt.
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