The standard line on the Kaifeng Jews goes like this:
A group of Jews
emigrated to imperial China during the Northern Song dynasty (960
C.E.-1127 C.E.), where they settled in the city of Kaifeng, which was
then the capital. They built a synagogue and thrived
for a time, but because they were not persecuted in China as they had
been elsewhere, they quickly adopted Chinese culture. Eventually they
lost their Jewish identity through assimilation and passed into history.
It is true that a
group of Jews (probably merchants from Persia) settled in Kaifeng some
time before 1127 C.E. It is also true that their descendants thoroughly
embraced Chinese culture, and eventually
gave up Jewish traditions. It is not true, however, that they lost
their Jewish identity to assimilation.
If we look at the
written records the Kaifeng Jews left behind, we can see that they saw
no contradiction between being good Jews and loyal subjects of the
empire. Many of the leaders of the Kaifeng community
sat for and passed the Confucian examinations to become high officials
of the Ming dynasty (1368 C.E.-1644 C.E.). Stone inscriptions that they
erected outside of the synagogue in Kaifeng alternately quote the Hebrew
Bible and Confucian classics as equivalent
sources of sacred wisdom. The leaders of the Kaifeng community
deliberately practiced a form of Judaism that could thrive in a
religiously plural and vibrantly multiethnic empire.
This cosmopolitan
Judaism proved very durable. The Kaifeng community was small, never
numbering more than two-thousand people. Yet they continued to maintain
Jewish traditions for more than six hundred
years. In the end, it was not assimilation, but the crisis of the imperial
state and society with which they had become thoroughly integrated, that caused the Jewish community of Kaifeng to
disintegrate. Wars and natural disasters eroded the coherence of both
the imperial state and the Kaifeng congregation.
The cataclysmic Taiping Rebellion (1850 C.E.-1864 C.E.) dealt the final
blow to the religious institutions of the Kaifeng Jews.
What can we Jews here in
the U.S. learn from the experience of the Kaifeng Jews? The recent surge
of antisemitism has challenged American Jews to decide which threat is
more dangerous, that from the “left” or the
“right.” From the left, critics invoke old antisemitic stereotypes in
attacking the Jewish community’s support of Israel. On the right, racist groups, encouraged by rhetoric coming from the Oval Office, demonize Jews as the architects and beneficiaries of a
pluralism white nationalists despise.
If the historical
experience of the Kaifeng Jews is any guide, the security of the Jewish
community here in the U.S. is best safeguarded by the continued
coherence and dynamism of the democracy in which we live.
The Kaifeng Jews did not persist by being aggressively exclusionary or
parochial, but by integrating their Jewish communal life into that of
the larger Chinese empire. In the same way, Jews here in the U.S. have
thrived because we have been full participants
in a political system that not only guarantees our rights, but those of
all our neighbors and compatriots regardless of race, creed, or
ethnicity.
If we want to know which form of antisemitism poses the greatest
danger, we need only ask: “which is the greater threat to democracy?”
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