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Chinese Jews Feel More At Home In Israel

Israel

First Posted: 10/16/11 09:07 PM ET Updated: 10/16/11 09:07 PM ET


By Benjamin Haas, Los Angeles Times

Reporting from Jerusalem and Beijing— As a child growing up in Kaifeng in central China, Jin Jin was constantly reminded of her unusual heritage.

"We weren't supposed to eat pork, our graves were different from other people, and we had a mezuza on our door," said the 25-year-old, referring to the prayer scroll affixed to doorways of Jewish homes.

Her father told her of a faraway land called Israel that he said was her rightful home, she recalls. But "we didn't know anything about daily prayers or the weekly reading of the Torah."

Jin has since fulfilled her father's dream. On a hot summer day in Jerusalem, where she works as a tour guide for Chinese citizens visiting Israel, Jin, who now goes by the Hebrew name Yecholya, wore a long khaki skirt, indicative of her conservative religious views, and Teva-like sandals, the national footwear of Israel.

Jin and her relatives belong to a community of Chinese Jews that was established in the 9th century by Persian traders who traveled along the Silk Road to Kaifeng, at the time China's capital.

Records documenting the group's history are spotty, but experts do know that some of the Jewish traders settled in Kaifeng and eventually built a synagogue with official recognition from the emperor. After the last rabbi in Kaifeng died in 1809, many began to forsake their religious practices while holding on to certain traditions, like the prohibition against pork and the celebration of a communal meal on Passover.

Then in 2005, Shavei Israel arrived. The privately funded conservative religious organization, based in Jerusalem, specifically targets descendants of Jews who have lost their connection to the religion, such as those forced to convert to Catholicism during the Inquisition in Spain.

"Chinese have a strong reverence for ancestry," said Michael Freund, founder and chairman of Shavei Israel. "Even though they don't know how to read the Torah, they know they're Jewish."

So far the organization has helped 14 Jews, out of an estimated 3,000 who live in Kaifeng, move to Israel. But Freund complained that Israel's bureaucratic and religious red tape has prevented Shavei Israel from bringing over more of these Chinese Jews.

Because the community intermarried and based Jewishness on patrilineal heritage rather than matrilineal, the norm in Judaism, Kaifeng Jews who want to move to Israel need to undergo Orthodox conversions under Israeli law.

The process takes a year or more of study at an Orthodox yeshiva, and requires a final examination before a rabbinical court.

Jin was brought to Israel with three others from her hometown by Shavei Israel specifically to begin the conversion process. Once converted, she was eligible to remain in Israel under the country's Law of Return. The statute allows Jews to claim citizenship, which she did along with her three Chinese classmates. Jin's father remains in China, although she said he hopes to join her soon.

At first, Jin and others were indignant about the need to formally convert to Judaism.

"According to me and my family, we were always Jewish," she said. "I was confused why we needed to go through the conversion process."

But after she started studying in Jerusalem, Jin said, she realized how little she knew of Jewish traditions and rules.

Jin eventually became such an expert in prayers before meals, Freund said, that she stumped him at a dinner with other Jews from Kaifeng at a kosher sushi restaurant, where they discussed which prayer should be uttered first: the one for the rice or for the fish.

"This is something that I, or most Jews for that matter, would never have given a second thought," Freund said. "It shows how much they can add to Judaism."

The first family of Kaifeng Jews to immigrate to Israel was almost sent back to China. Shlomo and Deena Jin (no relation to Yecholya Jin) had overstayed their tourist visas in 2005. As they faced deportation, Shavei Israel worked with authorities to allow them to stay after going through the conversion process. Shlomo, at the time in his late 40s, endured a circumcision to complete the conversion.

More recent arrivals have been in their early 20s and most have felt more at home in Israel than in Kaifeng.

Wang Yage said he stood out his whole life. His house was filled with Hebrew books, a language no one in his family understood, and even his name was different: It's the transliterated version of Jacob, a biblical name.

After studying one year at Henan University in Kaifeng, the 25-year-old jumped at the opportunity to move to Israel. He hasn't looked back.

"I feel Israel is my home and I'm more comfortable here," said Wang, who now refers to himself as Yaakov. "Israelis help you out when you need it; it's like belonging to a big family."

After his conversion, Wang plans to become a rabbi to help Kaifeng Jews immigrate to Israel. If he succeeds, he will be the first Chinese rabbi in almost 200 years.

Despite this progress, bureaucracy in Israel and China may prevent larger-scale immigration. According to Shavei Israel, the Israeli Ministry of the Interior has been reluctant to give visas to a group not officially considered Jewish by Israel's chief rabbinate.

Meanwhile, because Jews are not among China's 56 officially recognized ethnic groups and Judaism is not one of the five officially recognized religions, the Chinese government is suspicious of the Kaifeng community's efforts to organize.

"The government is still worried about religion and its negative effects," said Xu Xin, director of the Institute of Jewish Studies at Nanjing University. "They worry it will affect stability and encourage fundamentalism."

Ultimately, the government sees organized religion as a challenge to its power and state-sponsored atheism.

Along with a newfound freedom of religion, the 14 Kaifeng Jews are looking forward to stretching their political wings.

"The first time I went to vote, it was raining hard and three of us went together," Jin recalled. "I was so proud. For everyone else there it was just another election, but for us, it was the beginning of a new life."

Haas is a news assistant in The Times' Beijing bureau.

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By Benjamin Haas, Los Angeles Times Reporting from Jerusalem and Beijing— As a child growing up in Kaifeng in central China, Jin Jin was constantly reminded of her unusual heritage. "We were...
By Benjamin Haas, Los Angeles Times Reporting from Jerusalem and Beijing— As a child growing up in Kaifeng in central China, Jin Jin was constantly reminded of her unusual heritage. "We were...
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02:11 PM on 11/30/2011
That's pretty good considering that all of Israel is the size of a Chinese country club.
01:42 PM on 11/30/2011
Did you hear about the Jewish tourist inside a Chinese synagogue. Said one Chinese worshipper, "are you Jewish?" "Yes I am" replied the tourist. "Funny, you don't look Jewish" said the Chinaman.
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Sam D man
I stand 4 what I say.Not ur interpretation of it.
08:29 PM on 11/15/2011
My citizenship is not of this world.It is in heaven.I am just a pilgrim here.
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Sam D man
I stand 4 what I say.Not ur interpretation of it.
08:14 PM on 11/15/2011
We are all from the dust of the earth.End of story.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
munki
Global to Local now Local to Global
03:22 AM on 10/24/2011
I lived in Beverly Hills most of my life... I can see it. It is not religion, but what you grew up with. I respect all people... I love them all as long as they want to get to know all of us...
10:50 PM on 10/23/2011
There are about 25,000 Chinese living in Israel.

One of the famous Chinese Jew is Eli

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eli_Marom
05:43 PM on 10/23/2011
"Rightful home"....yeah, somewhere in a settlement in stolen land in the WB. They imported them from Europe, from Africa and now that the are running out, let's turn to China.

How much more of this propaganda must we be subjected too?

Get out of stolen land.
10:44 PM on 10/23/2011
Stolen land? You mean just like us in America?
01:37 PM on 11/30/2011
You did the only stealing

http://www.think-israel.org/goldreich.palestina.html
01:40 PM on 10/23/2011
this is pretty disturbing article

Basically the message is, segregate and be with your own kind.
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cdncommentator
10:33 PM on 10/23/2011
That may be why French people live in France, why Germans live in Germany, and why Americans think their country is the best and that they could not live anywhere else.

The Jewish people - at least many of them - would like to live in their state. Not any different than an Italian person wanting to live in Italy and not Iceland.
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09:15 AM on 10/24/2011
The difference is that in Germany or France you have full citizenship rights regardless of your religious affiliation, in Israel how ever you only enjoy those rights if your Jewish. So please don't compare Israel to the civilized world(you can compare it to Saudi).
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rick Golub
time to grow up
12:56 PM on 10/23/2011
I bet you could open a great chinese rest. love to eat there, LOL. Can't tell a Jew by the cover.
06:25 PM on 10/22/2011
The whole article is propaganda. The article premise the right for someone not indigenous of the land of Palestine to migrate just because they are part of a religion. Hell, let all Palestinians become Jewish!

This is a racist article full of misconceptions. Religion does not convey a title of property.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Original Intent
Because "Shall" is a directive, not a suggestion.
08:15 PM on 10/22/2011
Israel sets immigration policy for Israel, so yes... .people not indigenous to Israel can migrate there.
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cdncommentator
10:34 PM on 10/23/2011
Not part of the religion....part of the people: the Jewish people, which is transethnic, and therefore, the farthest thing from racist.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
StarGazr5992
Retired
02:20 PM on 10/22/2011
Wow I'm of the Jewish faith and I never know about any of these great to see and hear
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GiaMTL
12:13 AM on 10/22/2011
The average Chinese feels more at "home" anywhere other than China!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
I think I think
And I fear that it is later than we think.
07:40 PM on 10/21/2011
This is a surprise?
03:46 PM on 10/21/2011
Jews come from all over the word, my mother is a Turkish Jew