- Ephraim Alnaqua
Ephraim ben Israel Alnaqua (d. 1442) (
Hebrew : אפרים בן ישראל אלנאקוה) (also, "Al-Nakawa", "Al-Nakava", "Ankava", "Ankoa", "Alnucawi", etc,Hebrew : "נקוה", "אלנאקוה", "אנקווה", "אנקאווא") was a physician, rabbi, theological writer, and founder of the Jewish community atTlemçen ,North Africa , where he died in 1442.According to a legend, Alnaqua escaped from the
Spanish Inquisition , which had martyred his father and mother at the stake, and came toAfrica mounted on a lion, using a serpent as a halter.Azulai refers to him as a miracle-worker. Alnaqua succeeded, after all other physicians had failed, in curing the only daughter of a king of the family Beni Zion. Refusing the reward of gold and silver offered him by the king, he begged only that the Jews living near Tlemçen might be united in it. In this way the community was formed. Alnaqua's first care was to establish a large synagogue: this is still in existence (as of 1906), and bears his name. Above the rabbi's chair, on which the verse Jer. xvii.12 is engraved, a lamp burns perpetually. Alnaqua's grave, surrounded by those of his family, is in the old cemetery: it is sacred to North African Jews, and (as of 1906) is frequently visited by pilgrims from allAlgeria .Alnaqua had two sons, Israel and Judah. The latter lived at Oran,
Mostaganem , and, later, at Tlemçen, and became the father-in-law ofZemah Duran . Alnaqua wrote for his elder son Israel "Shaar Kevod Adonai" (Entrance to the Glory of God), containing answers to the criticisms ofNahmanides on the "Moreh" ofMaimonides . Manuscripts of this work exist in theBodleian Library , Oxford. He wrote, also, some religious hymns.Other Family Members
*
Israel Alnaqua Jewish Encyclopedia Bibliography
*
Azulai , Shem ha-Gedolim, s.v.;
*Benjacob , Oẓar ha-Sefarim, p. 599;
*Neubauer, Cat. Bodl. Hebr. MSS. Nos. 939, 2; 1258, 2;
*Revue Africaine, 1870, pp. 377-383;
*Zunz , Z. G. p. 435;
*idem, Literaturgesch. p. 524.References
*JewishEncyclopedia
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