The Faranj Synagogue is considered the oldest of the still-extant synagogues in the Old City of Damascus. According to oral tradition of Damascene Jews, it was founded by
Sephardic refugees at the end of the 15th century following the
Reconquista, with the synagogue operating in
Judaeo-Spanish. The temple was named "
Franj" () after the Franks, European foreigners. Following
1949 pogroms in Syria, many Jews fled and left the country, dwindling the local population able to attend the synagogue. A second wave of immigration occurred following an edict by
Hafez al-Assad allowing Jews to leave the country. In 2020, journalist Rania Kataf claimed that 12 Jews still resided in the city, all elderly, who renovated the synagogue in 2019. In February 2025, Rabbi Yusuf Hamra and his son Henry, along with a small delegation of Jewish religious officials and Stephen Rapp, a former U.S. diplomat, visited the synagogue for the first time since it closed in the 1990s. == Architecture ==