Return and Conversion of Afrikans
I wrote this in response to the past few months' news
(August 2002 - February 2003) concerning the Abayudaya
of Uganda and their being turned away from studying at
orthodox yeshiboth and kibbutzim. Please forward to any
and all individuals and organizations you feel may make
some difference in the future in regards to similar groups
who may undergo the same woe.
Thank you,
Yafeu ibn Taom
While by no means deprecative of any of the European
Jewish movements my heartfelt opinion is that returnees
from the African diaspora of Judah and Israel should be
assisted by established Jewries of their near relations.
Those of West Africa need teachers from the Maghreb
(Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Libya) employing their
traditional ritual, customs, and prayerbooks. After
all, they passed through the Maghreb to get to the
Sahel, savanna, and forests of the western Sudan,
greater Guinea, and possibly Bini.
Those of the Atlantic coast of West and Central Africa
are known to have some impetus from Spanish & Portuguese
Jews banished from Iberia and forcibly transported to
those shores to build up Portuguese colonies and trade.
Since they lost S&P traditions isn't that what they
need to relearn?
Those of East Africa and possibly Bini would have been in
touch through trade with the Mushrek (Sudan and Egypt) and
Teiman (Yemen, Aden, and Hadramaut). Surely sympathetic
teachers can be recruited from those Jewries for these
populations.
Africans not of Hebrew stock could have teachers from any
Jewry since they are not recovering a submerged heritage,
but then maybe they too are returnees who have lost all
memory of Israelite ancestry except for the pull of their
Jewish souls longing to be reunited with their true people.
For those without links to `Am Yisra'el conversion to one
of the modern movements is fine. Their is no compulsion
to make Jews out of non-Jews for they too have a share
in HaShem and the world to come by simply adhering to
and abiding by the Noahide laws. Jewry is not a numbers
game for we were never a great horde nor is there any
requirement for us to increase our numbers though we
may lose members in any one generation.
HaShem did not set His love upon you, nor
choose you,
because ye were more in number
than any people
--for ye were the fewest of
all peoples--
but because HaShem loved you,
and because
He would keep the oath which He
swore unto your fathers.
Deuteronomy 7:7,8
Returning and converting Africans should not become,
shall we say, ammunition in the war of the younger
Jewish movements (Reform, Conservative, etc.) with
the older established traditional Jewish movements
(Hasidim, Orthodox, Haredi). Nor should they be
punished by the older established traditional Jewish
movements for an alleged "mistake." They should be made
aware of the issues between all of these movements and
the consequences of alligning with either of them. It
should not come as a surprise to them when applying for
schooling in Israel or making aliyah. They need to know
the available options in full detail and make a choice on their own
without any coercion or pressures.
If necessary, assistance should be provided as available
for them to form communities within walking distance of
their prayer centers with training in kasher slaughter
techniques to overcome potential difficulties with the
Israeli Chief Rabbinate instead of fighting against the
established religious authority and then blaming the
fallout on "racism" when the issue is really over
observance of handed down tradition defined by Hokmei
Yisra'el.
When the Americans from Chicago now settled in Dimona
first arrived in Israel a Mughrebi (Moroccan) rabbi was
willing to recognize them as returnees needing only giyur
hhelqi to re-establish their links to world Jewry.
The Beta Israel and their Falas Mura brethren have always
been recognized by Mizrahhi and Sepharade rabbis. It's
the Hasidim, Haredi, and secular Jews who seem to have
a problem wth them due, in my opinion, to their color
and hair though disguised as doubts as to their lineage.
I feel it is only right that it is these above listed
Sepharade and Teimani sources that need to be solicited in
normalizing relations between lapsed African Hebrews and
the rest of cognizant world Jewry. The vast Sepharade world
has its own struggle to maintain tradition, custom, and
culture in Israel today. Should returning Africans be
immediately stripped of this which was once also their
heritage too as the price of their return?
If there is a will to do so this it can be accomplished.
Is there some rush to acheive the re-integration of African
Hebrews that proper time and effort cannot be spent to
retain Sephardi, Maghrebi, Mushreki, Mizrahhi, and Teimani instructors
for African Hebrews who will help them recoup their losses?
Why saddle them unbeknownst with the extra burden of the
O-C-R conflict, a conflict rejected en masse by the Jews
of Iberia, North Africa, the eastern Mediterranean, and
the Gulfs?
SR' Yafeu ibn Taom
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