[2] However, the community left Kairouan for other towns in Tunisia following its expulsion by the Almohads in the mid 1100s,[3] after many Jews who refused to convert to Islam were killed.
Under the dominance of the Hafsid dynasty in the late 1200s, the situation of the Jews in Kairouan improved notably, but it did not have the same splendor of its golden age.
[4] The Jewish community of Kairouan was formed again during the French Protectorate of Tunisia, and it was not until 1920 that the city returned to have its vibrant Jewish past with the inauguration of a new synagogue located on the Salah-Souissi street.
[5] Around the 1970s, with the departure again of the Jewish community after the country's independence and the Six-Day War, the synagogue was made available by the Tunisian authorities in order to be used as a madrasa.
This article about a synagogue or other Jewish place of worship in Tunisia is a stub.