Copy of a Caliphal Edict (Egypt)

A petition was submitted by the Rabbanite Jewish Community to the Court of the Commander of the Faithful in which they requested that they be treated in accordance with the exalted document which had been issued on their behalf, to the effect that their rabbis should be enabled to fulfill the commandments of their faith and the customary usages of…

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This Judeo-Arabic copy of an edict from the Fātimid caliphal chancery of al-Ẓāhir (r. 1021–1035) was copied from the original, which would have been written in Arabic script. In it, the Fātimid administration affirmed the rights of both the Rabbanite and Karaite communities to practice their respective forms of Judaism unimpeded. In 1029, a group of Rabbanites had excommunicated some Karaites as “eaters of meat with milk” on the Mount of Olives, and some Rabbanites were imprisoned in the ensuing protests. A series of attempts to free these individuals led to an exchange of letters and, finally, to this attempt to calm the situation. This decree had some precedent; for example, a document from 1024 records that the caliph involved himself in a different internal Jewish disagreement.

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