Priestly Ministry and the Patriarchal School
Ordained in 1817 for the Diocese of Damascus, Joseph served the Orthodox community of the city for more than four decades. From 1836 until his death in 1860 he directed the Patriarchal School in Damascus, which during his tenure grew into the leading Orthodox institution of higher learning in the Middle East.
Among the students formed at the school under his leadership was Raphael Hawaweeny, later Raphael of Brooklyn, the first Orthodox Christian bishop consecrated on American soil; Joseph is counted among Raphael's formative influences. Another alumnus was Ignatios Firzli, who became Greek Orthodox archbishop of Sao Paulo.
The 1860 Damascus Massacre
In mid-July 1860, anti-Christian violence engulfed Damascus, part of a wider conflict that had spread from the Christian-Druze war in Mount Lebanon. The rioting began on 8-9 July and the most intense killing lasted roughly eight days, ending by 17 July.
The Christian quarter of Bab Tuma was attacked by a crowd that contemporary accounts describe as Druze, Bedouins, Arab Muslim city commoners, and Kurdish auxiliary forces. Druze and Muslim marauders led by Druze feudal lords destroyed part of the old city and killed many thousands of Greek Orthodox and Melkite Greek Catholic Christians who had taken refuge in its churches and monasteries; estimates of the dead range upward of eleven thousand. Joseph was among those slain, dying on July 10, 1860.
The Algerian scholar Abd al-Qadir al-Jaza'iri sheltered many Christians during the violence, his residence becoming a place of refuge for civilians, consulate staff, and missionaries.
Glorification
Joseph was glorified as a saint in 1993 by the Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch, which numbers him among the new martyrs of Damascus. His feast day is observed on July 10, the day of his death.
Relics & Shrines
The available sources consulted do not record specific details of surviving relics or a dedicated shrine.
Miracles & Traditions
Historically Documented: The records consulted attest Joseph's martyrdom in the 1860 Damascus massacre and his formal glorification by the Church of Antioch in 1993, but do not document specific miracles.
Traditional Accounts: No traditional miracle accounts are recorded in the sources consulted.