Black Hebrew Polygamists Begin To Gain Acceptance In Israel

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  |   05/ 4/09 06:21 PM

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Black Hebrew

By Stephanie Rice
DIMONA, Israel -- As a young African-American man in late 1970s Chicago, Atur Yirmeyahu was contemplating the fairly standard dilemmas of whether to go to graduate school and ask his girlfriend of three years to marry him.

Before the year was over, he had decided on a wholly unorthodox way forward. Scrapping the university plans and breaking up with his girlfriend, he left his hometown for a sleepy desert settlement in southern Israel.

He has hardly seen his family in the three decades since he packed his bags, but here, in this working-class Negev town, he says he has found his rightful home. Yirmeyahu is part of the 2,500-strong Hebrew Israelite community settled in one of three neighboring villages.

The first group of vegan, polygamous and ethnically African-American settlers arrived in 1969, following their young, charismatic leader, Ben Ammi Ben Israel. Ben Ammi, formerly a Chicago factory worker named Ben Carter, preached that black Americans were descendants of one of Israel's lost tribes and needed to return to their homeland.

To the Hebrew Israelites, or Black Hebrews as they're known here, Ben Ammi is the Messiah and their exodus from America an escape from oppression and violence.

Yirmeyahu said he grew up in a crime-ridden neighborhood, experimented with drugs in college and "shudders to think" what might have become of him if he had stayed in Chicago.

"The most common cause of death in the black community was handgun murder," he said, sitting on a bench in the village courtyard on a recent afternoon, a group of teenage boys playing basketball nearby. "I've been shot. I've wrestled with individuals with guns. The black experience -- the captivity -- it wasn't a picnic."

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Life hasn't always been carefree here either. For decades, the group battled the government for the right to live in Israel. They refused to officially convert to Judaism to satisfy the religious nationalists who doubted their authenticity, arguing they didn't need to prove themselves to anyone. There were mass deportations, and newcomers often resorted to sneaking in, sometimes posing as tour groups.

"It was a big struggle," said Hagit Peres, a Ben-Gurion University professor and anthropologist who has studied the Black Hebrews. "They didn't get anything easily, and many left during the process."

In recent years, some of that tension has dissolved. There was a turning point in 2003 when the government awarded the community permanent residency, allowing them to join the army and apply for full citizenship. Several weeks ago, the government approved a citizenship application from a Black Hebrew man for the first time.

"It's a great victory for us," said Avichiel Ben Israel, a spokesman for the group. "It shows us that the God of Israel lives. We see it in a very historic manner -- after 40 years, being recognized."

Hiskiyahoo, the director of the one of the nearby villages, said the citizenship is validation that Ben Ammi's teachings are correct and that community members are following the right path in their quest to create what they call the Kingdom of Yah, or "Kingdom of God," on Earth.

"All the things he said have come to pass," Hiskiyahoo said.

To be sure, the Black Hebrews have come a long way in their relations with government and society here. They run a successful national chain of vegan restaurants, more than 300 of their youth are serving in the army and their choirs regularly perform throughout the country. In 2006, Israelis even chose Black Hebrew singer Eddie Butler to represent them in the Eurovision song contest.

"Before, people thought that we were a cult," said Avichiel, the spokesman. "That perception has changed now that people have the opportunity to visit and see that it couldn't be farther from the truth. We have a culture, a way of life."

But while their lifestyle has similarities to Judaism -- they practice circumcision, celebrate Passover and observe the Sabbath -- there are major differences that still raise eyebrows among Jewish Israelis. There's the polygamy, for example. It's common for men to take several wives and have more than a dozen children -- a practice Avichiel says stems from an uneven female-to-male ratio and strict purity rules that keep women from fulfilling their domestic role during their periods and after childbirth.

"There are more women than there are men, it's really practical," he said, sitting on a couch in an office with a framed photo of Ben Ammi staring serenely from the wall. "During menstruation, she's set aside and doesn't prepare food. After childbirth she's isolated for 40 days after a boy, or 80 days after a female. So you kind of need more than one."

Yirmeyahu, the Chicago native, has only one wife and no children but hopes to marry two more women and have at least 10 kids. He is also hopeful he will be among the next to receive Israeli citizenship. "I was never an American anyway," he said.


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By Stephanie Rice DIMONA, Israel -- As a young African-American man in late 1970s Chicago, Atur Yirmeyahu was contemplating the fairly standard dilemmas of whether to go to graduate school and ask h...
By Stephanie Rice DIMONA, Israel -- As a young African-American man in late 1970s Chicago, Atur Yirmeyahu was contemplating the fairly standard dilemmas of whether to go to graduate school and ask h...
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- AERO I'm a Fan of AERO 4 fans permalink
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I think at this point, just about anybody who's willing to go squat on some occupied territory is welcome.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:14 PM on 05/04/2009

these guys are ridiculous. i see them near Bryant park with their mega phones screaming in everybody's ears. and they say the most racist things. i am all for equality, freedom of religion blah blah but seriously get a job.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:20 PM on 05/04/2009

those are members of a TOTALLY different group.

i've had the pleasure of working with the african hebrew israelites of jerusalem (this was when they were based in dimona).

not the "bullhorn in the park, hate yt" type.

and to be truthful, the issue of polygamy was pretty far down on the list of issues discused. they talked more about entrepreneurship, self-suffiency, their vegan diet, the lack of diet-related disease in their community (no heart attacks, no diabetes) and the like.

but, i guess "polygamists" is sexier than "vegans"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:31 PM on 05/04/2009

"Black Jews ruled the world from ancient times until the Enlightenment. King Tut and Socrates were Black Hebrews. And centuries later, many of their kin survived Rome’s terror and rose to prominence in Europe—Shakespeare, King Arthur, Mozart—all were black and Jewish."

http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/display.php?id=34768

Mmmkay...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:06 PM on 05/04/2009
- msfsi I'm a Fan of msfsi 19 fans permalink
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Shakespeare, King Arthur, enlightenment and Europeans aside... that's crazy speak....
I'm a palestinian with dark skin. Both my brother and I have at one time or another grown a full blown afro. There are many dark jews with tight curls... I wouldn't be surprised that if we go back more then 2 millennia most inhabitants of Canaan, Kingdom of Israel, Judea etc. would have dark brown to black skin. Take a look at the neighbourh­ood... beduins, sudanese,egyptains, yemenites, saudis. When I lived in Saudi Arabia, my best friend was a yemeni kid who was as black as you can get.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:34 PM on 05/04/2009

I've heard of a "Jew-fro" before, but never a "Pal-fro".­.. nice!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:06 PM on 05/04/2009

Which Arab country is your family from?? Where were you born??

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:27 PM on 05/04/2009
- wadenelson1 I'm a Fan of wadenelson1 240 fans permalink
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What's next? Bisexual Pygmy Hindus?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:43 PM on 05/04/2009
- chaos4700 I'm a Fan of chaos4700 85 fans permalink
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I'm sure these people were a bit shocked at the amount of racism they've experienced since coming to Israel -- it's bad enough for Arabs there, I've heard some pretty chilling stories about how Israeli attitudes toward those of African descent, whether they are Ethiopian Jewish immigrants who are discriminated against or whether it is Israelis chanting racial epithets at international sporting events. Most Israelis /still/ don't consider these people to be "real" Jews.

One can only hope, however, that while the Hebrew Israelites have found some measure of peace now since immigrating to Israel that they are not blind to the extreme suffering of Palestinians -- ostensibly, the Hebrew Israelites are benefiting from that suffering. And /anyone/ of African descent who has been anywhere in the Western world or places that were colonized, has an especially keen awareness of what apartheid is like and what evil it inflicts.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5C3bzPMArSc

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:15 PM on 05/04/2009
- Hedonist I'm a Fan of Hedonist 20 fans permalink
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Of course, muslims are so kind toward blacks. Just ask the several 100,000 blacks slaughtered by muslims in Darfur.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:28 PM on 05/04/2009
- msfsi I'm a Fan of msfsi 19 fans permalink
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Many of the dead and displaced in Darfur are muslim. The NRF alliance is made up of factions like the Justice and Equality Movement, which is Islamic. The founder of Sudan Liberation Movement, another part of the alliance, is Abdulwahid Mohammed Nour. On the other side you have the janjaweed who are black, and I don't know if you happened to see a picture of Al-Bashir, but he's no white boy. So you see, on either side, you have black muslims.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:09 PM on 05/04/2009
- simcha I'm a Fan of simcha 5 fans permalink

Yes, and chaos should go to Israel and see for himself how an incredibly diverse, and I mean diverse bunch of people generally manage to get along. Of course there are tensions, prejudices etc., as exist everywhere, but there is no other country in that region with as much diversity.
Some of the Druze that I met the last time I was there were amazing, and "welcomed me to Israel". It was so great. And no I'm not a Pollyanna. Just someone who can appreciate sincere efforts made by anyone who takes the time to try and understand another point of view.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:35 PM on 05/04/2009

They may have experienced some racism in Israel, but everywhere else, they would have experienced a lot more racism, such as in Israel's neighboring countries.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:26 AM on 05/11/2009
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"During menstruation, she's set aside and doesn't prepare food. After childbirth she's isolated for 40 days after a boy, or 80 days after a female. So you kind of need more than one."

Men are useless year-round. Does that mean I should have more than one???

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:14 PM on 05/04/2009
- msfsi I'm a Fan of msfsi 19 fans permalink
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LOL... sure! why not ? :)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:27 PM on 05/04/2009

Good grief, 'useless' multiplied. Not a good idea :) Just have a group of great men friends with different talents from mechanic to cook, etc.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:48 PM on 05/04/2009
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Mazel Tov -- if they support Israel, more power to them. We Americans aren't always so kind to our Black brothers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:54 PM on 05/04/2009
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