Genizah Ketubbah with Special Condition
Genizah Ketubbah with Special Condition
A ketubbah (“writ”) is a pre-nuptual contract that specifies many of a groom’s obligations to his bride in the event of divorce or the death of the husband. Rooted in ancient traditions, the ketubbah, the purpose of which is to protect a woman’s interests, was for much of its history a genuine contract, the specifics of which could be modified for individual relationships.
The ketubbah in front of you is from the Cairo Genizah. An ordinary Genizah is a place where sacred Jewish writings that can no longer be used are stored until they are sent for burial. But the Genizah in the Ben Ezra Synagogue in Fustat (Old Cairo) was unique in two significant respects: (1) none of it was ever sent for burial, so it accumulated for nearly 1000 years, from the founding of the synagogue until the discovery of the Genizah by Europeans in the mid-19th century; and (2) the Jews behind the Genizah apparently felt that Hebrew letters themselves were sacred, so anything written with Hebrew characters, including secular documents and writings in Arabic, for which Jews used Hebrew letters, was thrown into the Genizah.
This ketubbah, written in Fustat (Old Cairo), is typical of Genizah ketubbot—written in a common hand (non-scribal), with witness signatures at the bottom. The conditions of this ketubbah reflect the acceptance of polygyny (multiple wives) among Cairo’s Jews, as the husband expresses his desire to remarry his divorcee if she consents to live with second wife.