During the era of the KhazarsKhanate, near Makhachkala in the village of Tarki, there was a Khazars settlement.[2]
Many Khazar scholars believe that the capital of the Khazar Khanate, the city of Samandar,[3] was located on the site of Makhachkala.
According to Ibn Hawqal, in the city of Samandar back in the 10th century there lived Jews who had their own synagogues.[2]
In 1862, the first synagogue was built in the city, in which both Ashkenazi Jews and merchants Mountain Jews prayed there (including 61 artisans and 20 soldiers of the local garrison).[1]
The city's rabbi in the 1860s was Rabbi Benjamin ben Rabi.[4]
In 1886, ethnographer Ilya Anisimov registered 15 Jewish families consisting of 123 people. There was a Jewish school in the city. Jews owned 4 manufacturing shops and 7 grocery stores.[4]
In 1890, there were 143-230 Jews living in the city.[4]
In 1895 there were 436 Jews. There were 2 synagogues.[4]
According to the 1897 census, 97 thousand inhabitants lived in the district, among them 2,795 were Jews. Makhachkala (Petrovsk) had 9,753 inhabitants, of which 563 were Jews (5.8%).[4]
In 1899 there were 739 Jews here. There was a school at the synagogue (9 male students). The rabbi of the Ashkenazim was Abram Movshovich Lozner, the rabbi of the Mountain Jews was Morduchai Iliazarov.[4]
In 1910, 379 Jews lived (11.8%), there were 3 synagogues, a Jewish cemetery, and a Jewish public elementary school.[5]
In 1912, 453 Mountain Jews lived in Makhachkala.[4]
In 1919, the "House of the Jewish People" opened, in which work was carried out among the youth of Mountain and Ashkenazi Jews.[4]
In the 1920s, a "Judeo-Tat" school operated in the city (the director until the 2nd half of the 1920s was Rabbi Meir Rafailov), and a drama club for Mountain Jews. At the same time, in the 1920s, during the Soviet Union, 2 synagogues were closed.[4]
In 1926, 3,481 Jews lived in the city (including 2,050 Mountain Jews), approximately 11% of the population of Makhachkala.[4]
Also in 1926, a Jewish pogrom took place in Makhachkala, provoked by a blood libel. In the fall of that year, a rumor spread in several villages of Dagestan that supposedly Mountain Jews had killed a Muslim boy (or two) for some "ritual purposes." The angry mob organized several pogroms in Makhachkala, Derbent and other populated areas of Dagestan.[4]
In 1930, a viticultural artel named after Joseph Stalin operated (about 26 farms, including 22 farms of Mountain Jews).[4]
In 1959, there were 2,692 Jews, including 1,900 Mountain Jews (1.6% of the city's population).
In 1970, 5,213 Jews (including 1,684 Mountain Jews) and 4 Karaites lived in the city. That year, the synagogue building in Makhachkala was requisitioned, and the community was given a smaller building on the outskirts of the city.[4]
In 1971, Bobi Iosifovich Ashurov was appointed rabbi.[4]
In the 1990s, Shimi Migirovich Dibiyaev was appointed chairman of the Jewish religious community of Makhachkala.[1]
In the late 1990s, a Jewish Sunday school was opened.[4]
During the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria in 1998−1999, several representatives of the Jewish community were kidnapped for ransom. Many Jews of Makhachkala left for Israel and other countries and regions.[6]
In 2002, according to the census, there were 430 Jews in the city (0.08%), there were 61 Mountain Jews (0.01%), and 417 Muslim Tats (0.08%).[4]
On the night of December 24, 2007, in Makhachkala, anti-Semites broke the windows in the synagogue building. Anti-Semites also desecrated a Jewish cemetery and distributed anti-Jewish leaflets in the 2000s.[7][8][9]
In the 2020s, the city had a synagogue, a Jewish cultural center, a Sunday school, and a club for older people. The size of the community, according to some sources, ranges from 300 to 430 Jews.[1]
Amidst the 2023 Hamas-Israel war, a group waving Palestinian flags and chanting anti-semitic slogans forcefully entered the Makhachkala airport, looking for Israeli and Jewish travelers arriving on a flight from Tel Aviv. The incident resulted in about 20 injuries, as reported by local health authorities. Passports of some passengers were scrutinized by the crowd.[10][11]
During the attack in Dagestan on 23 June 2024, Makhachkala's synagogue was set on fire by armed gunmen, possibly affiliated with ISIS.[12][13]