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- Place Types Synagogue
- Address Ouirgane, Morocco
- Coordinate 31.1698187,-8.0640902
- Website Unknown
- Rating 4.8
- Compound Code 5W9P+W9 Ouirgane, Morocco
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This is the tomb of Rabbi Chaim, the son of Rabbi Amram ben Divan Ziya'a.
Getting to Rabbi Chaim's grave is not easy but well worth the effort
Amram Ben Diwan was born in Jerusalem in 1880 to Rabbi Ephraim Aszer of a well-known rabbinical family in Jerusalem. He studied at his uncle's "Neve Shalom" meeting, Rabbi Yehuda Bar Amram Diwan, Then he settled in Hebron and in the 1763 (1763) was sent to the Jewish community of Hebron when Dr. Morocco. In his appointment letter, signed by Rabbi Yitzhak Ze'evi, who crowned him Hebron's dignitaries with the titles: R 'Amram Diwan settled in Essen as soon as he arrived in the Inner West and opened a yeshiva there. After going through Israeli communities throughout Morocco and collecting donations for the inclusion of Hebron, he broke down. 'Amram Diwan to the Land of Israel.
After a brief stay in Eretz Israel, R. Amram went to Morocco on a second mission on behalf of the Kollel Hebron in 1774 (1774). During that mission he stayed for more than eight years, most of them in Meknes (from the 5th of the 18th to the 1st in Kislev ), In the home of Rabbi Zachary Mashash [2]. The reason for his stay in Morocco was due to the tribal wars that were going on around Meknes, but his health may also have prevented him from continuing on his way because of the severe embezzlement he took on. Towards the port of Tangier, however, he died on his way back to Eretz Yisrael on the eve of Tel Aviv on the eighth of the 16th of September, and was buried in the cemetery of the village of Essen, near Lausanne. Over the years, his grave has become a pilgrimage site for tens of thousands of devotees and admirers every year, and there is also an annual commemoration.
Ha-Fatan R. David Hasin, who personally knew many years of acquaintance, composed in his honor a poem and lament called "The Good Mountain" very near the time of his death when he visited his grave.
Named after Amram Ben Diwan, a yeshiva was set up in Hebron. The yeshiva building, adjacent to the Hadassah building, was abandoned following the 1948 riots, which was rebuilt and is now used for residential purposes.
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The place respects the laws of the Ministries of Health and the Interior
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