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The Virtual Jewish History Tour
China
By Eli Braun
The
Pien-Liang (Kiafang) Jewish Community
The Harbin Jewish Community
The Shanghai Jewish Community
The Chinese Jewish Community Today
Contacts

The Pien-Liang (Kiafang)
Jewish Community
The merchant economy of ancient China brought Jewish
traders to the region as early as the eighth century. Jewish merchants
travelling the Silk Route settled in the far western region of the country
in the city of Pien-Liang (today's Kiafang), capital of the Honan province.
Jews were officially allowed in Pien-Liang in 960 C.E. and built the
Purity and Truth Synagogue, the first in the region, in 1163. The community
thrived through eight centuries, reaching its height in the 17th century
at 5,000 members. But following generations of war, poverty, and religious
isolation, the Pien-Liang Jewish community significantly declined. The
poverty-stricken community lost many Jewish traditions, including the
knowledge of Hebrew, and by the mid-19th century, the community's last
rabbi had died, long after the position of rabbi had become hereditary.
The synagogue, repeatedly
destroyed by floods, was finally demolished in around 1860.
Today, the community had begun to repair itself and
is trying to reconnect with the world Jewish community. In Keifeng,
an estimated 500 to 1,000 residents have ties to Jewish ancestry, though
only 40 to 50 individuals partake in Jewish activities. It is speculated
that this lack of religious affiliation is due to the strict police
surveillance of religion under the Chinese government, despite the emergence
of Capitalism. Citizens affirm their Jewish identity discreetly to avoid
incuring official displeasure. The community as a whole manages to maintain
only a few traditions, such as refraining from eating pork and mixing
milk and meat. As the Keifeng Jews try to reach out to the world Jewish
community and return to their Jewish roots, they face a number of obstacles,
including poverty and lack of knowledge about Judaism. By adopting the
Chinese patrilineal tradition, the Kiefeng Jews are no longer considered
Jewish according to Orthodox Judaism. Nevertheless, the community is
determined to reeducate its members and convert to revive Judaism in
China.
China's growth as a leading economic power combined
with the remodeling of Kaifeng into a tourist destination has led to
a greater acceptance of Jewish expression in the city. Tours of the
city's historical sites are given, which give foreign Jews access to
the remains of first synangogue and various synagogue relics, including
a massive stone water jar and a large stone stele, both dating to 1489.
These artifacts are located in the Kaifeng Municipal Museum, while other
Jewish relics are housed in various museums worldwide, such as the British
Musuem in London and
the Royal Ontario Museum
in Canada. The stele, originally
one of many that decorated the synagogue, is inscribed with the history
of the local Jewish population and how Jewish families recieved Chinese
patronymics. A Ming emperor gave the Jews the typical Chinese surnames
Ai, Gao, Jin, Li, Zhang, Shi and Zhau because he found Hebrew names
confusing.
The Harbin
Jewish Community
In the late nineteenth century, communities of Russian Jews settled
in Harbin and Tientsin, especially at the urging of the Russian government,
which aimed to construct a railway to eastern Asia and needed population
centers there. The Russian government, eager to populate the cities,
encouraged minorities such as Jews and Karaites
to move to these cities. As the religious freedoms in Eastern Europe
became more limited and as pogroms in the Pale
of Settlement increased, many Jews joined these Southeast Asian
communities, raising the Jewish population of Harbin to 8,000 by 1908.
The Shanghai
Jewish Community
Shanghai, a port city in the Kiangsu province in Eastern China, opened
to foreign trade in 1842. Subsequently, the city of Shanghai absorbed
many of the Ashkenazi
émigrés fleeing repression in Eastern Europe. Russian
Jews fleeing persecution and massacres under the Tsar also emigrated
and built the Ohel Moishe Synagogue in Shanghai in 1907. But the majority
of the Shanghai Jewish population was Sephardim
from Baghdad, Bombay, and Cairo, including the wealthy families Sassoon,
Kadoorie, Hardoon, Ezra, Shamoon, and Baroukh. These families raised
the Jewish population of Shanghai to approximately 700, including 400
Sephardim, 250 Europeans, and 50 Americans. Most of them were merchants,
although some were in medicine, teaching, and diplomatic service.
Jews fleeing the Russian Revolution of 1917 further increased the Jewish
population and raised awareness for the Zionist
movement. Then in the 1930s and 40s, Jewish refugees from Germany
and German-occupied areas fleeing the Nazi
regime increased the Shanghai population to approximately 25,000. Lubavitch
Hasidim, as well as remnants of the Mir and Slobodka Lithuanian
yeshivot (Jewish religious schools), found refuge in Shanghai, which
became a frequent destination because the free port did not require
visas.
Between 1904 and 1939, three synagogues were built in Shanghai, and
12 Jewish magazines in English, German, and Russian were established
and published there. A Hebrew newspaper was also published as early
as 1904. The leading magazine, Israel's Messenger, was a Zionist monthly
founded in 1904 by N. E. B. Ezra and published until his death in 1936.
The Japanese captured Shanghai in 1937 and
closed it to further immigration in December 1941. They deported
most of their Jews to the miserable Hongkew district of Shanghai
and kept them in unsanitary semi-internment camps under Japanese
occupation forces. The Shanghai Jews, including the transferred
Japanese Jews, suffered great economic and property loss
during the war, after which, most left to the United States,
Britain, Israel, Australia, and other communities. Since
1948, 1,070 Jews from China have immigrated
to Israel, with 504 leaving
between 1948 and 1951.
The Chinese
Jewish Community Today
During the past decade, Jewish and Chinese students
have met on academic exchange programs to Israel and elsewhere. A small
Jewish Museum exists in Kaifang, though most remnants of the Jewish
community lie in Shanghai. Israel and China established formal relations
in 1992.
Today, China's Jewish community numbers around 200,
nearly all in Shanghai. But led by Chabad-Lubavitch Rabbi Shalom Greenberg,
efforts are underway to revive the small Jewish community.
Contacts
Kaifeng Tourist Administration
14 Yingbin Road
Kaifeng, Henan 475000, China
Phone: 011-86-378-595-4370
Fax: 86-378-595-6662
The city's tourist bureau can arrange tours, guides,
traslators, and access to the Qingming park Jewish museum building and
jewihs section of the municpal museum to visitors.
Sources:
Beker, Avi, ed. Jewish
Communities of the World. 1998-1999 edition. Jerusalem:
Institute
of the World Jewish Congress, 1998.
Gruber, Samuel D. Synagogues.
New York: MetroBooks, 1999.
Leowenthal, Rudolf. Shanghai. Encyclopedia
Judaica. CD-ROM Edition. Judaica Multimedia. 1995.
Shanghai
Jewish Center
Edinger, Bernard. "Chinese Jews: Reverence for
Ancestors." Hadassah
Magazine, December 2005.
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