Judaism in Dagestan is mainly practiced by Mountain Jews. By the beginning of the 8th century BCE Mountain Jews had reached Persia from Israel. Under the Sasanian Empire, with the arrival in Dagestan of Iranian-speaking tribes from the north, they settled in different regions of the Caucasus.
According to the 2002 census, there were 3,400 Jews in Dagestan, including 430 Jews (0.08%) in Makhachkala, of whom 61 were Mountain Jews (0.01%).
References to Jewish communities in the Caucasus are found in the works of Armenian, Georgian, and Arab historians, including Faustus of Byzantium, Elishe, Movses Kaghankatvatsi, Movses Khorenatsi, and Al-Masudi. Historical field research has also revealed many legends associated with the existence of Judaism in the region. Petroglyphs with the Star of David and other symbols of the Jewish faith have been found in many regions of Dagestan. The toponymy of the North-Eastern Caucasus has preserved many names associated with Jews. For example, the mountain village in the Tabasaransky District is called Dzhugud-kala (literally, âÂÂJewish fortressâ or âÂÂfortress of the JewsâÂÂ); the gorge near Madzhalis is Dzhut-Gatta, and the mountain in this area is Dzhufudag, meaning âÂÂJewish Mountain.âÂÂ
The settlement area of Mountain Jews completely coincides with the territory occupied by Sasanian settlers during the times of Kavad I and Khosrow I Anushirvan. Almost all chronicles, toponymy, petroglyphs, and folklore related to Judaism were recorded precisely on those lands where the border posts of the Sassanids and later the Arabs functioned. These areas include the modern Derbentsky, Tabasaransky, Kaytagsky, Suleyman-Stalsky, Khivsky, Magaramkentsky, Akhtynsky, Rutulsky, and Agulsky districts of Dagestan. Moreover, it was in those settlements that the strongholds of those administrations were located (Dzhalgan, Jarrakh, Nyugdi, Khanzhalkala, Mamrach, etc.). The material traces of Jewish communities are best preserved in the vicinity of Derbent, as well as in the historical lands of Tabasaran and Kaytag.
Adam Olearius, who visited Dagestan in the first half of the 17th century, wrote about the Jewish population of Kaitag, Tabasaran, and Derbent. He noted:
In another place he wrote:
The same words are repeated in the work of Jan Janszoon Struys, a Dutch traveler who visited Dagestan in 1670:
Faustus of Byzantium wrote that Armenian King Tigranes the Great (95âÂÂ55 BC) brought Jews from Israel to the Caucasus for the first time and settled them in mountain gorges in the 1st century BC. The Jewish colonists remained an influential military force in the Caucasus for many centuries until the conquest of Armenia by Shapur II (309âÂÂ379 AD), who carried out a devastating campaign in Armenia, led away tens of thousands of Jewish colonists, and settled them in Iran.
In the 2000s, Dagestan had four synagogues: three in Makhachkala, Derbent, and Buynaksk, and one prayer house in Khasavyurt.
In Derbent, there is a Jewish community and the Sephardic synagogue "Kele-Numaz." Additionally, Vatan, the only newspaper in Russia in the Mountain Jewish language (Juhuri), is published there. There are only six clergymen of the Jewish religious denomination operating in Dagestan (community chairmen, cantors, and acting rabbis). Hebrew school functioned at the synagogues. There were no higher or secondary Jewish educational institutions in the republic.
Amid the Hamas-Israel war war, there was a wave of anti-Semitic attacks in Dagestan and other areas of the North Caucasus. In one case, on 29 October 2023, a group waving Palestinian flags and chanting anti-Semitic slogans forcefully entered Makhachkala Airport. Their target was 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. Meanwhile, in the nearby city of Khasavyurt, protesters surrounded a hotel, suspecting it accommodated Jewish tourists.
On June 23, 2024, Islamist terrorists burned the Jewish synagogue in Derbent.