30 January 2026

Jewish Salonika - great cultural centre

Thessaloniki was once the largest Jewish city in the world. Alexander the Great granted legal equality to Jews in 331 BC and this new freedom drew many Jews to Hellenistic cities. Sephardi Jews migrated in very large numbers when they were expelled from Spain in 1492. Thessaloniki’s community influenced Sephardim around the world, both culturally and economically. The Great Fire of 1917 that raged over the city damaged half the Jewish districts, 45 synagogues, schools, shops and businesses. c50,000 were made homeless and many Jewish sites were greatly harmed. But until WW2, Thessaloniki had a key Jewish community, the only important European city with a Jewish majority. 

Jewish Museum of Thessaloniki

1. Jewish Museum of Thessaloniki is in the central city. Built in 1904-6, the building hosted commercial sites owned by Jewish merchants, a fine example of urban architecture that survived the 1917 fire. Luckily the renovations were carried out with respect for its architectural identity, now a Heritage Listed site.

Once housing the Bank of Athens and a French-language Jewish newspaper, the Jewish Museum opened mid 2001. It’s permanent & temporary displays highlight the community’s history via photos, documents, domestic objects & cultural artefacts. And archives of Holocaust records.

Monasterioton Synagogue, 1927
 
2. Atop Syngrou St, Monasterioton Synagogue is the only surviving pre-war synagogue in a city that once had 40-50 synagogues. It was built in 1927 by Jews from Monastir in Macedonia. The site was saved in WW2 because it was requisitioned as a Red Cross warehouse and although damaged by the 1978 earthquake, it was restored by the Greek government. And there are other small prayer houses.

3. In late 1930s, new laws were passed so Jews were slowly segregated and made 2nd-class citizens. With Nazis arriving, many Jews joined the Greek resistance & others went into hiding. In the Black Shabbat July 1942, all Jewish men in town aged 18-45 were rounded up in Central Liberty Sq., waiting to go. This made anti-Semitism legal, forcing many Jews to flee. Holocaust Memorial in Liberty Sq recalls 50,000 Greek Jews killed. The memorial is a bronze 7-branch menorah, wrapped in flames and corpses.

 Ancient Jewish cemetery
Photo from before the marble was stolen in 2019

4. The ancient Jewish cemetery was razed by the Nazis, and the new campus of the Aristotle Uni of Thessaloniki was built on the site. Recently the university unveiled a Jewish Memorial to the graveyard destroyed by the Nazis. The monument is a series of gravestones in a bed of green grass next to a broken menorah that became a significant historical marker. Yet in Jan 2019 vandals smashed the campus monument, days before International Holocaust Remembrance Day.

And Aristotelean Uni of Thessaloniki has reestablished its Jewish Studies Centre, 80+ years after it was abolished by Greek dictator Ioannis Metaxas in 1935. The decision to reestablish it was made with the city’s Jewish community, which agreed to help fund the programme. The programme began 2014-5, offering undergraduate and graduate studies.

Originally an Ottoman hamam
Later Bath of the Jews

5 Hamam/Bath of the Jews is an early C16th Ottoman-era bath house, not originally built by the Jewish community. It stands on the corner of Vasileos Irakleiou & Frangini Sts, this area being settled by Sephardim.

6. In 1878-1914, flour mills, hotels, cafés, brick factories, breweries, silk-worm nurseries, carpet & shoe factories, soap works and large tobacco workshops were established, mainly by Jews, many working class. So the Workers’ Union, formed by Jewish workers, became the key workers’ organisation in the Ottoman Empire in 1909. The sheltered Modiano Market was designed by Modiano family in 1922-5 as a central food market, with a glass roof and 4 galleries.

Stoa Saul, 
bonflaneur 

7. Built by famous banker Saul Modiano in 1867-1871, Stoa Saul is a commercial complex built in 1867-71. The arcade served architect Eli Modiano, as was the Modiano Mortgage Bank. A section was destroyed in the 1917 fire then rebuilt in 1929, as a tribute to the important Saul Modiano family.

Le Banque de Salonique, 1907
Now Malakopi shopping gallery

8. La Banque de Salonique, founded by talented Italian-Jewish Allatini family, is now Malakopi Arcade. Designed in 1907 by noted architect Vitaliano Poselli and built on Stock Exchange Squ. The clock on the façade stopped when a major earthquake hit in 1978, ruining buildings and killing 45 people. Today it’s a fine shopping gallery.

9. Queen Olga Avenue is lined with fin de siècle villas, some now wasting away. This was once the most elegant and richest areas of the city, and the home of many ruling families in the late C19th. Some villas are galleries, others house cultural and historical institutions. Many retain the colourful decorations and classy C19th furniture while other villas are still awaiting renewal. Emmanuel Salem (1859-1940) became one of the most prominent jurists in International Law, then was the first Gen. Sec. of the Bar Association. He was involved in founding companies for: water, gas, trams, electricity and Banque du Salonique.

Salem Mansion was designed in 1878 for the wealthy Jeborga merchant family. It was bought in 1894 by Emmanuel Salem and remained in his family for 20+ years. After WW1, Salem was involved in negotiating the Lausanne Treaty in 1923. 

This 3-storey mansion’s architectural styles were Classicism, Renaissance or Baroque. When the family left, the villa was the Austro-Hungarian Empire Consulate. It was bought by Italy in 1924 and served as Italian Consulate for 50+ years until damaged.  The Heritage Listed house is still empty.

10. A Great Tragedy happened at the Old Railway Station, early 1943. Jews were shoved into cattle carriages and sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau & Bergen-Belsen camps, 46,000+ in 19 rail convoys in 1943. In all, 96% of Salonika’s Jewish community had been murdered by 1945. The Jewish cemetery was pulled down by vandals, and most of the surviving Jewish culture of the city were destroyed. In 1951, the Old Railway Station became a goods station. An C19th railway administrative building has a monument with historic details of the Baron Hirsch Jewish district. Other reminders of Jewish life were lost with the city’s post-war renewal which peaked in the 1960s, and then with the earthquake in 1978. Only 1,200 Jews live in Thessaloniki now.

Hirsch Hospital, opened 1908
now Hippocrateon Hospital

11. Thessaloniki’s biggest and most modern hospital today, Hirsch Hospital, was built between 1905-8, designed by architect Pierro Arrigoni. Built as a hospital for the Jewish community, the costs were covered by Baroness Clara de Hirsch, wife of Austrian-Jewish philanthropist Maurice de Hirsch. In the inter-war era, Hirsch was used as a military hospital by French and British. Post-WW2 it served British military bases, so then the Jewish Community transferred ownership to the Greek State.




22 comments:

Hadassah Magazine said...

Greece’s second-largest city and its cultural capital, long known to English speakers as Salonika, is a workaday port town enlivened by youthful energy from Aristotle University, named for the philosopher born nearby. Ladino was the language of the streets. Downtown Thessaloniki was full of Jewish businesses, and the city’s cosmopolitanism became a magnet attracting Jewish intellectuals and thinkers from Bulgaria, Armenia and beyond.

The heart of Thessaloniki is Aristotle Square, a cafe-lined plaza that is the southern terminus of Aristotle Street, a wide esplanade lined with porticoed edifices and popular eateries. At night, the city’s liveliest scene extends west from Aristotle to the cobblestoned Ladadika district, a tangle of Ottoman-era lanes thick with restaurants and bars.

Parnassus said...

Hello Hels, There was a blogger a while ago from Thessaloniki named Olimpia, who talked about and showed the city's modern culture, but I did not know about its important Jewish history. After the tragedies of World War II, it is nice to know that the Jewish buildings and history are getting new respect, but also disheartening to see the continued vandalism and anti-Semitism.
--Jim

nikana.gr said...

Learn about the life of Saint Demetrius and the protector of the city, whose relics preserve the centuries-old tradition of faith. The Church of Saint Demetrius in Thessaloniki, rich history and architecture, is the largest church in the city and is included in UNESCO World Heritage Sites. His martyrdom c306 AD and has since been the spiritual centre of Thessaloniki and the wider region.

Margaret D said...

Interesting history there, Hels. Gorgeous architecture as well and it's pleasing that they were restored those effected after the earthquake.

diane b said...

Another interesting history lesson.

Andrew said...

As is often the case, I knew nothing about this history, this post being about Jews in Thessaloniki. I like that Greece respects its Jewish history, in this city at least. Maybe a year ago I heard the correct pronunciation of the city's name, and it was nothing like I had learnt to say the name.

kylie said...

I would never have imagined Greece to have had a significant Jewish population but I really know next to nothing about history.
Razing the cemetery seems to be particularly nasty.

All the pictured buildings are beautiful.

Hels said...

Hadassah Magazine
Thessaloniki was certainly full of Jewish businesses, and the city’s cosmopolitanism became a magnet attracting Jewish intellectuals and thinkers from around. But I had no idea about Bulgaria and Armenia.

I spent plenty of time in and around Aristotle Street, a wide esplanade lined with porticoed edifices and restaurants that were fun.

Hels said...

Parnassus
I found "Olimpia: A Journey Through Time and Culture" and will have a good look, thank you. I wish I had read it before spending a week in the city in the 1970s. Fortunately that was decades before the vandals smashed the campus monument in Jan 2019 gggrrrrr.

Hels said...

nikana.gr
Thank you :) Spouse and I saw the Church of Saint Demetrius, and were very impressed with the _interior_ architecture. I will find a photo of the church in Thessaloniki, and add it to the post.

Hels said...

Margaret
I was aware of the Sephardi Jews who migrated to Greece in very large numbers when they were expelled from Spain and Portugal in the 1490s. But I had to see the facilities and architecture with my own eyes, before understanding how important the immigrants were to Salonika.

Hels said...

diane
very interesting history lesson, YES. I had lectured many times about Jewish history in Britain, France, Germany, Netherlands, Italy, Spain and Portugal etc but never about Greece.
Now I must thank my daughter in law for buying my history books about Salonika and Rhodes during her recent guided tours in those places.

Hels said...

Andrew
Thessaloniki is the correct name of the city, but Anglo Saxons still tend to call it Salonika.
Not knowing about Salonika was strange for me, considering Australia has nearly half a million people born in Greece or with Greek parents. But that could have been because almost everybody I personally know is Ashkenazi (from Russia, Central and Eastern Europe).

Hels said...

kylie
In the inter-war period, the total Greek population was c7 million.
In the same inter-war era, the Jewish population of Greece totalled c80,000.

The ancient Jewish cemetery, with marble on each grave, looked beautiful. Only since 2019 does this cemetery look like a bomb was dropped on it.

Jews of Thessaloniki said...

The Salonika and Greece Jewry Heritage Centre is an and inspiring environment, a nexus for the Greek-Jewish community and a wonderful resource for those who wish to look back in time. The Centre in Petach Tikva in Israel was established in 2010 by founder Leon Recanati (1890-1945), a member of the Thessaloniki Jewish community. The Centre presents Thessaloniki`s Jewish community, with its people, stories, traditions, cuisine, Ladino culture, music, and religion.

gluten Free A_Z Blog said...

We have relatives that came from Greece and I understood that the Jewish Greek population was almost eliminated during the Nazi regime. I had no idea about the Jewish history there. Thanks for this informative post.

My name is Erika. said...

I would like to visit this part of Greece someday. I read a book a couple of years ago -fiction-by Mitch Albom called Little Liar, and it was a WW2 story about some Jews in Thessaloniki. It was a good book, but it was historical fiction so I'm not sure how much of it was based on actual history.

Hels said...

Heritage Centre
Petach Tikva? I must ask my grandson to visit to see the documents and photos they display, and plan a visit next time I travel. My daughter in law comes from a Sephardi on one side, and she is very familiar with Ladino culture. This is becoming quite exciting, thank you

Hels said...

gluton Free
That is true... during the war, Jews fled Greece if they could or went into hiding if they could. But in the end, 50,000 Salonikan Jews died and a lot of the precious Jewish architecture was destroyed.

Hels said...

Erika
I rarely read historical fiction because I keep making corrections on the text. However I might read the Albom book (2023) because I am keen to learn more about the information Salonikans were hearing. Thank you.

Jo-Anne's Ramblings said...

What a wonderful looking building with so much history attached to it

Hels said...

Jo-Anne
the architecture of pre-WW2 Salonika was splendid. Which is the building that appealed to you most?