Population - Ethnic Divisions - Beta Israel
The Beta Israel (or "House of Israel"),
known by outsiders by the pejorative term Falasha or Falash Mura
("exiles" or "strangers") are Jews of Ethiopian origin. Under the
provisions of Israel's Law of Return (1950), over 90,000 of them have
emigrated to Israel, most notably during Operation Moses and Operation
Solomon, but also continuing until the present time.
The Beta Israel come from a Jewish enclave in the Ethiopian highlands
which had no contact with other Jewish communities until the 1860s. The
isolation of the Beta Israel was reported by an explorer James Bruce,
who published his Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile in
Edinburgh in 1790. But in 1860 a Christian who converted from Judaism
actually traveled to Ethiopia in order to attempt to convert the Beta
Israel to Christianity. Popularly touted as a "lost tribe", the Beta
Israel at first found many cultural barriers to acculturating in Israel.
Languages
The Beta Israel once spoke the Qwara language (Kayla), a Cushitic
language, but now they speak Amharic, a Semitic language. Their
liturgical language is Ge'ez; more recently they have adopted Hebrew.
They consider the term "Falasha" pejorative, and today they prefer the
term "Beta Israel" for themselves.
Israel intervenes
The Israeli government accepted the Beta Israel as Jews officially in
1975; Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin obtained clear rulings from
Chief Rabbi Ovadia Yosef that they were legitimate descendants of the
lost tribes. They were however required to undergo pro forma halakhic
conversions to Judaism.
"Operation Moses" came to an abrupt halt in 1985, leaving many Beta
Israel still in Ethiopia. It was not until 1990 that Israel and Ethiopia
came to an agreement that would allow the remaining Beta Israel a chance
to migrate to Israel. In 1991 however, the political and economic
stability of Ethiopia deteriorated as rebels mounted attacks against and
eventually won over the capital city of Addis Ababa. Worried about the
fate of the Beta Israel during the transition period, the Israeli
government along with several private groups prepared to covertly
continue along with the migration. On Friday, May 24, Operation Solomon
began. Over the course of 36 hours, a total of 34 El Al C-130 Hercules
turboprop planes, with their seats removed to maximize passenger
capacity, flew 14,325 Ethiopian Jews non-stop to Israel.
Origins
Traditions of the Beta Israel
The Ethiopian legend described in the Kebra Negast relates that
Ethiopians are descendants of Israelite tribes who came to Ethiopia with
Menelik I, alleged to be the son of King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba
(or Makida, in the legend). The legend relates that Menelik, as an
adult, returned to his father in Jerusalem, and then resettled in
Ethiopia, and that he took with him the Ark of the Covenant. In the
Bible there is no mention that the Queen of Sheba either married or had
any sexual relations with King Solomon; rather, the narrative records
that she was impressed with his wealth and wisdom, and they exchanged
royal gifts, and then she returned to rule her people in "Kush".
However, the "royal gifts" are interpreted by some as sexual contact.
The loss of the Ark is also not mentioned in the Bible.
However, most of the Beta Israel consider the Kebra Negast legend to be
a fabrication. Instead they believe, based on the 9th century stories of
Eldad ha-Dani (the Danite), that the tribe of Dan attempted to avoid the
civil war in the Kingdom of Israel between Solomon's son Rehoboam and
Jeroboam the son of Nebat, by resettling in Egypt. From there they moved
southwards up the Nile into Ethiopia, and the Ethiopian Jews are
descended from these Danites.
Rabbinical views
Some Jewish halakhic authorities have asserted that the Beta Israel are
the descendants of the tribe of Dan, one of the Ten Lost Tribes. In
their view, these people established a Jewish kingdom which lasted for
hundreds of years. With the rise of Christianity and later Islam,
schisms arose and three kingdoms competed (probably others as well in
Africa). Eventually, the Christian and Islamic Ethiopian kingdoms
reduced the Jewish kingdom to a small impoverished section. The earliest
authority to rule this way was the Radbaz (Rabbi David ben Zimra,
1462–1572). A recent authority who has ruled this way is Rabbi Ovadia
Yosef, in 1973.
Other halakhic authorities have maintained that the Jewishness of the
Beta Israel is seriously suspect. The earliest to do so was Rabbi
Ya'akov Kastro, a student of the Radbaz (who had ruled that the Beta
Israel were Jews). Most recent authorities have also ruled this way,
including Rabbis Moshe Feinstein, Elazar Shach, Yosef Shalom Eliashiv,
and Shlomo Zalman Auerbach.
In either case, rabbinical authorities require the Beta Israel to
undergo shortened conversions as a religious precaution. Among those who
carry the latter opinion, however, conversion is no mere formality if an
Ethopian Jew wishes to be accepted within other Jewish communities.
DNA evidence
Gerard Lucotte and Pierre Smets in Human Biology (vol 71, December 1999,
pp. 989–993) [1] studied the DNA of 38 unrelated Beta Israel males
living in Israel and 104 Ethiopians living in regions located north of
Addis Ababa and concluded that "the distinctiveness of the Y-chromosome
haplotype distribution of Beta Israel Jews from conventional Jewish
populations and their relatively greater similarity in haplotype profile
to non-Jewish Ethiopians are consistent with the view that the Beta
Israel people descended from ancient inhabitants of Ethiopia who
converted to Judaism." [2] This study confirms the findings of an
earlier study by Avshalom Zoossmann-Disken, A. Ticher, I. Hakim, Z.
Goldwitch, A. Rubinstein, and Batsheva Bonné-Tamir titled Genetic
affinities of Ethiopian Jews, published in Israel Journal of Medical
Sciences 27:245 (1991).[3] A study of Y-chromosome biallelic haplotypes
of Jewish and non-Jewish groups titled Jewish and Middle Eastern
non-Jewish populations share a common pool of Y-chromosome biallelic
haplotypes and published in Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences in June, 2000 suggested that "paternal gene pools of Jewish
communities from Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East descended
from a common Middle Eastern ancestral population", with the exception
of the Beta Israel, who were "affiliated more closely with non-Jewish
Ethiopians and other North Africans" [4]. These Y-chromosome studies
only speak to the paternal lineage (some ethnic groups are a product of
one maternal lineage and a different paternal lineage, see Métis people
(Canada)), but a study of the Mitochondrial DNA [5] (which is passed
only along the maternal lineage) shows that the most common mtDNA type
found among the Ethiopian Jewish sample was present elsewhere only in
Somalia, furthering the view that the Ethiopian Jews are of local
(Ethiopian) origin.
Scholarly view
In the past secular scholars were divided on the origins of the Beta
Israel; whether they were the descendents of an Israeli tribe, or
converted by Jews living in Yemen, by the Jewish community in southern
Egypt (Elephantine), or even by the permanent Jewish community in
Ethiopia implied in Isaiah 11:11 (ca 740 BCE). However, modern scholars
of Ethiopian history and Ethiopian Jews, such as James Quirin, Steve
Kaplan, Kay Shelemay, and Harold Marcus, consider the Beta Israel to be
a native group of Ethiopian Christians, who took on Biblical practices
in the 14th to 16th centuries, and came to see themselves as Jews.
Marcus pinpoints their origins to the persecutions of the sabbatarian
movement of Abba Ewostatewos (c. 1273–1352), the remnants of which he
believes grew into the Beta Israel of today. These views also accord
with the DNA evidence on the Beta Israel.
From:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beta_Israel
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