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- From: faigin@aero.org (Daniel P. Faigin)
- Newsgroups: soc.culture.jewish,news.answers,soc.answers
- Subject: soc.culture.jewish FAQ: Jews As A Nation (7/10)
- Supersedes: <faq.7_778874825@solarium.aero.org>
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- Date: 6 Oct 1994 18:07:07 GMT
- Organization: The Aerospace Corporation, El Segundo, CA
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- Summary: Questions about the Jewish Nation
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu soc.culture.jewish:76840 news.answers:26929 soc.answers:1796
-
- Archive-name: judaism/FAQ/07-Jews-As-Nation
- Posting-Frequency: Monthly
-
- Frequently Asked Questions on Soc.Culture.Jewish
- Part 7: Jews as a Nation
- [Last Change: $Date: 1994/08/07 18:07:04 $ $Revision: 1.12 $]
- [Last Post: Tue Sep 6 11:07:06 1994]
-
-
- This posting is an attempt to answer questions that are continually asked on
- soc.culture.jewish. It was written by cooperating laypeople from the various
- Judaic movements. You SHOULD NOT make any assumption as to accuracy and/or
- authoritativeness of the answers provided herein. In all cases, it is always
- best to consult a competent authority -- your local rabbi is a good place to
- start.
-
- The deceased sages described within are of blessed memory, (assume a Z"L or
- ZT"L after their names) and the sages alive today should live to see long and
- good days (assume SHLITA). May Hashem grant complete recovery to the ill.
- Individual honorifics are omitted.
-
- The FAQ was produced by a committee and is a cooperative work. The
- contributors never standardized on a {Hebrew,Aramaic,Yiddish,Ladino}-->English
- transliteration scheme. As a result, the same original word might appear with
- a variety of spellings. This is complicated by the fact that there are
- regional variations in the pronunciation of Hebrew. In some places, the
- common spelling variations are mentioned; in others --- not. We hope that
- this is not too confusing.
-
- This list should be used in conjunction with the Soc.Culture.Jewish reading
- lists that are posted separately. Similar questions can be found in the books
- referenced in those lists.
-
- Reproduction of this posting for commercial use is subject to restriction. See
- Part 1 for more details.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: Organization
-
- This portion of the FAQ contains answers to the following questions:
-
- Section 13. Jews as a Nation
- 13.1. What are the different racial and cultural groups of Jews?
- 13.2. What are the differences between Sephardim and Ashkenazim?
- 13.3. Where did the Beita Yisrael (Falashas) come from?
- 13.4. Who were the Khazars? Are Ashkenazi Jews descended from the
- Khazars?
- 13.5. Who are Crypto-Jews (also known as "marranos")?
- 13.6. Sephardi/Ashkenazi vs. O/C/R?
-
- All portions of the FAQ are organized as digests, and should be
- undigestifyable by software such as Gnus or rn. Please report any
- difficulties.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: Archival and Credits
-
- Anonymous FTP:
-
- All portions of the FAQ and of the reading lists are archived on
- israel.nysernet.org [192.77.173.2] and on rtfm.mit.edu, and are available
- for anonymous FTP. The locations of parts of the FAQ on israel.nysernet.org
- are as follows:
-
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/FAQ/01-FAQ-intro
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/FAQ/02-Who-We-Are
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/FAQ/03-Torah-Halacha
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/FAQ/04-Observance
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/FAQ/05-Worship
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/FAQ/06-Jewish-Thought
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/FAQ/07-Jews-As-Nation
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/FAQ/08-Israel
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/FAQ/09-Antisemitism
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/FAQ/10-Miscellaneous
-
- The locations of the parts of the reading lists on israel.nysernet.org are
- as follows:
-
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/general
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/traditional
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/chasidism
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/reform
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/conservative
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/reconstructionist
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/humanistic
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/zionism
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/antisemitism
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/intermarriage
- ftp://israel.nysernet.org/israel/lists/scj-faq/reading-lists/periodicals
-
- If you are accessing the archives on rtfm.mit.edu, the pathname is
- pub/usenet/news.answers/judaism, instead of israel/lists/scj-faq.
-
- Mail:
- The files may also be obtained via Email by sending a message to
- mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with the following line in the body of the message:
-
- send usenet/news.answers/judaism/(portionname)
-
- Where (portionname) is replaced by the appropriate subdirectory and
- filenames; for example, to get the first part of the reading list, one would
- say:
-
- send usenet/news.answers/judaism/reading-lists/general
-
- WWW/Mosaic:
- The FAQ and reading lists are available by following the following pointer:
-
- http://www.cis.ohio-state.edu/hypertext/faq/bngusenet/soc/culture/jewish/top.htm
-
- Comments and corrections are welcome. Note that the goal is to present
- a balanced view of Judaism; where a response is applicable to a particular
- movement only, this will be noted. Unless otherwise noted or implied by the
- text, all responses reflect the traditional viewpoint.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 13.1. What are the different racial and cultural groups of Jews?
-
- Among North American Jews, individuals of Eastern European Ashkenazi heritage
- are predominant, although before the late 1800's, individuals of Sephardi
- origin (i.e. Jews who settled around the Mediterranean basin at the time of
- the diaspora) were more common.
-
- Other groups of Jews include the Arab and Yameni Jews. There are also Jews of
- Persian origin. The larger groups of non-Caucasian Jews include the Jews from
- Ethiopia.
-
- Other Jewish communities include the Kaifeng Jews of China (now mostly
- assimilated) and rumors of Jews in Mongolia. Until 1960, there was a
- community of cave-dwelling Jews in southern Libya. A community in Burma
- claimed to be Jews, and rumors and legends abound about African, Native
- American, and other tribes claiming Jewish ancestry. There are also Jewish
- communities in India.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 13.2. What are the differences between Sephardim and Ashkenazim?
-
- They came from different cultures, and so particular customs developed
- differently, such as details of the prayer service and permitted foods on
- Pesach. The _Shulchan Aruch_ by R' Joseph Karo is the definitive Sephardic
- work on halacha, and R' Moshe Isserles later added glosses to describe
- Ashkenazi practice. Other works describe the customs and practices of
- particular communities.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 13.3. Where did the Beita Yisrael (Falashas) come from?
-
- First off, know that "Falasha" (Amharic for "stranger") is considered very
- derogatory. Just say "Ethiopian Jew" if you can't remember "Beita Yisrael."
- Older reference books will probably list them under "Falasha," i.e. the 1972
- article in the Encyclopaedia Judaica.
-
- Their own legends date them back to Shlomo ha-melech [King Solomon], and
- ascribe their origin to the tribe of Dan. See the book _The Lost Jews_ by
- Rappoport.
-
- Researchers also think some of the defeated Yemenite Jews from the Abu Duwas
- Jewish Kingdom came to Ethiopia, and that some Elephantine Jews migrated south
- from Egypt. Another Ethiopian legend has one of Moses' sons migrating South
- and establishing a Hebrew community before King Solomon.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 13.4. Who were the Khazars? Are Ashkenazi Jews descended from the
- Khazars?
-
- The Khazars were a Turko-Mongol tribe that migrated to the Russian steppes
- region, and established a powerful military kingdom, some time before the
- twelfth century. Surrounded by the Islamic Eastern Caliphate of Persia and
- the Christian Byzantine Empire, they chose Judaism as their state religion
- to avoid being religiously (and hence politically) dominated by either
- Empire, so that they could avoid being labelled as heathens without
- identifying with either of their powerful neighbors.
-
- The Khazars were a potent military force in the area until about the middle
- of the twelfth century, their last power base being the Crimean peninsula.
- The Khazars had a two king system, consisting of a military king (kaqhan)
- and a civilian king (bek). They defeated the Eastern Caliphate in several
- key battles, thus ensuring the halt of Islam at what are essentially its
- current boundaries, much the same as what the Carolingian rulers did to the
- Western Caliphate at the Pyrenees. (Ironically, these Jewish converts made
- Eastern Europe safe for Christianity.) The emerging Rus (Russians) were
- also defeated, and tribute was exacted to allow Viking and Rus ships to
- pass through Khazar dominated waterways to raid for treasure in the Persian
- cities on the Caspian Sea coast. The Empress Theodora of the Byzantine
- Empire was a Khazar princess given in marriage as a political alliance.
-
- The Khazar ruling classes were were converted to Judaism by Persian Jewish
- rabbis, who stayed with them and taught them (and probably provided Kohanim
- and Levites as well). Many of the Khazar soldiers were known to be either
- Christians or Muslims, so the total conversion of the Khazars is unlikely.
-
- Evidence of the Khazars comes from Arab travelogues of the period, from two
- letters to Sephardic rabbis from the Khaqan Saul found in the Cairo Genizeh
- (along with some important responsas from Maimonides), and from a single
- archeological excavation in the USSR just after WWI. (The site was later
- flooded for a dam, and is not available for further research.) A Russian
- language book describing the excavation is available, as are translations
- of the letters. Secondary sources are the Al-Kuzari, a religious work
- using the story of the Khazars as justification for Judaism in the face of
- intense missionary pressure especially in Spain, and Arthur Koestler's
- modern "The Thirteenth Tribe", which theorizes more than the facts we have
- allow. Records of German Jews fleeing the earliest Crusades indicate that
- small Khazar communities were already living in Poland in the 12th century
- (see Encyclopedia Judaica article on Poland), and records exist of a
- boatload of Khazars arriving in pre-Expulsion Spain.
-
- The destruction of Khazaria ended what was probably the best chance of
- re-establishment of Jewish sovereignty of the Holy Land prior to 1948,
- since a confederation of Khazaria and Sephardic Jews could have negotiated
- for, or purchased back, the Holy Land from its then Byzantine rulers.
-
- Are Ashkenazi Jews descended from the Khazars? The answer is probably
- mixed. As the Khazar kingdom broke up, some Khazars must have fled into
- Eastern Europe, but from Sephardic travelogues we know that "Russian Jews"
- were known to the Sephardi community as early as the 11th century, distinct
- from Khazars. We also know that the Ukraine, the most likely place for the
- Khazars to have gone, experienced its largest growth in population not when
- the Khazar kingdom was breaking up, but rather with its conquest by Poland
- nearly 200 years later. At that time, Polish Jews flooded into the
- country, nearly tripling the Jewish population in 40 years.
-
- There is no remnant of Khazar custom or Khazar names in Ashkenazi Jews. The
- name Kogan is sometimes used to point to Khaqan, but the more likely
- derivation has always been Ukrainian for Kohan (where the h-g substitution
- is common as in Gitler). No evidence of Turkic or Mongolian language
- remains in Yiddish, although some Jews do have features that might be
- considered almost Mongolian or Oriental. There are, however, secondary
- influences of Khazars in the Magyar culture, since the Magyars were allies
- of the Khazars; early Hungarian monarchies were divided up into two
- kingships like their former neighbors.
-
- The accepted lineage of Eastern European Jews is still that they are
- descendants of the refugees from the English and French expulsions, the
- Crusades, and Black Plague massacres in Germany-Austria-Switzerland, and
- Sephardim fleeing Spain early in the 16th century. If converts are a part
- of the heritage this is more likely to have been early among Romans,
- Greeks, or Gauls. Jewish peasants and slaves being raped and forced to
- breed with Germanic Roman legionnaires after the destruction of Jerusalem,
- as well as during pogroms in the centuries that followed, is another source
- of European features among Ashkenazi Jews.
-
- The most likely explanation of what happened to the Khazars that they
- became the ancestors of the Crimean Karaites. Polish Karaites are also
- known to exist (and are still in Poland), possibly descended from the early
- Khazar settlers of Poland. During WWII, the Karaites were spared the Nazi
- exterminations because Jewish scholars at YIVO in Vilno advised the Germans
- that they were not ethnic Jews, but rather Khazars. It is possible this
- explanation was given just to save lives, but Karaites' hostility to Jews
- in the area suggests otherwise.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 13.5. Who are Crypto-Jews (also known as "marranos")?
-
- At the time of the Spanish Inquisition and the expulsion from Spain in 1492,
- Jews were offered conversion or expulsion. Many chose to leave Spain, but
- others stayed behind.
-
- "Marranos" actually started appearing with the first riots in the Juderias of
- Spain. Many were forced to convert to save their lives. These were naturally
- not faithful Catholics. The laws in 14th and 15th century Spain became
- increasingly oppressive towards practicing Jews, while providing an easy
- escape by conversion. Large numbers of middle class Jews outwardly took on
- Christianity to avoid the laws, while secretly practicing Judaism.
-
- Most of the remaining Marranic practice in Spain and Portugal today is from
- those religious Jews who escaped from Spain to Portugal in 1492, only to be
- trapped there later when the expulsion was instituted there as well. The most
- active Marranism in the Iberian peninsula is in the mountainous border areas
- between Spain and Portugal, in towns such as Belmonte'. Jewish outreach in
- these areas is achieving success in bringing them forward and restoring full
- Judaic practice, but many still fear burning or other persecution if they go
- public.
-
- Some faithful Catholic converts were won by the efforts of famous apostates
- like Pablo de Santa Maria who went around disputing the rabbis and ordinary
- Jews, winning some converts. In the most famous disputation, with
- Nachmanides, he was soundly defeated, but the Franciscans published false
- reports of the disputation to win more converts. Nachmanides, who had been
- protected from heresy laws during the disputations, was forced to publish his
- refutations in public. He was forced into exile rather than be burned as a
- heretic. In any case, the faithfulness of these converts is doubtful, since
- the Order of Expulsion was primarily due to the recidivism of Conversos once
- they had to live next door to practicing Jews again. It was felt that
- expelling all open Jews was the only way to keep the Conversos Christian.
-
- Among those who stayed behind were Jews who pretended to convert to Roman
- Catholicism, but who secretly maintained a practice of Judaism. The term
- "Marrano" was at one time used to describe them, as the term refers to the
- swine which they'd publicly eat to demonstrate their outward conversion. It
- isn't clear if the "Old Christians" or the practicing Jews called them
- "marrano".
-
- In Majorca the community was converted in the 1430's and are called Chuetas,
- from "pork lard" since they regularly keep pork lard boiling in cauldrons on
- their porches. They themselves still call themselves Israelitas in private,
- and ask forgiveness from el Grande Dio for worshipping in front of statues of
- a man. They typically sacrified (in a figurative, not literal, sense) their
- first born sons to the Catholic priesthood as a means of getting protection
- from Church persecution, so, ironically, many of the priests across the
- Baleiric Islands are from Marrano families.
-
- Crypto-Jew is the correct term, as it also refers to Jews forced to adopt
- other religions and political philosophies while maintaining Jewish practices.
- Crypto-Judaism pre-dates the Inquisition, as Jews were forced by the
- Al-Mohavid invasions of Spain to become Muslims, creating Crypto-Jews who
- gradually fled to Christian districts for protection from the Muslims (see
- Roth's History of the Jews). In modern times outwardly Muslim Crypto-Jews are
- known to be in Meshed, Iran, and in Turkey.
-
- A number of Crypto-Jewish communities survive today, especially in former
- Spanish-influenced regions, such as the southwestern U.S.A. They still
- maintain extensive secrecy after centuries. Other communities were lost to
- assimilation, but maintained residual Jewish practices such as lighting
- candles Friday night. Based on information in Cohen's _The Marranos_ and
- Prinz's _The Secret Jews_, the following are some examples of these
- communities:
-
- o The Antiquen~as of Colombia.
- o Much of Northern Mexico's middle and upper classes (Nuevo Leon is the "New
- Lion of Judah").
- o The Naucalpan and Vallejo districts of Mexico City.
- o The Chuetas of Majorca.
-
- Famous Hispanics who have acknowledged Marrano ancestry include Rita Moreno
- and Fidel Castro.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- Subject: 13.6. Sephardi/Ashkenazi vs. O/C/R?
-
- QUESTION: How does the Sephardi/Ashkenazi differences differ from the O/C/R
- differences.
-
- ANSWER: Traditional Sephardic and Ashkenazic Jews agree that the oral and
- written Torah are from G-d, and that the sages may rule on halachic matters.
- The differences in practice are mostly in culture and customs. Traditional
- and liberal Jews disagree on the Divine origin of the oral and written Torah,
- and on the ability of present-day sages and secular scholars to overrule
- earlier halachic decisors.
-
- Also, Sephardic Jews tend not to separate along "denominational" lines, but
- rather "observant" and "non-observant."
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
- --
- Please mail additions or corrections to me at faigin@aero.org.
-
-
- End of SCJ FAQ Part 7 (Jewish as a Nation) Digest
- **************************
- -------
- --
- [W]: The Aerospace Corp. M1/055 * POB 92957 * LA, CA 90009-2957 * 310/336-8228
- [Email]:faigin@aero.org, faigin@acm.org [Vmail]:310/336-5454 Box#68228
- "Socks are just like expectations....one always gets away"
- Amanda McBroom, "Heartbeats"
-