by Gil Ronen
(IsraelNN.com) Seventy-eight members of India's Bnei Menashe community
entered Israel by bus from Jordan on Thursday and 40 more were
scheduled to arrive at Ben-Gurion Airport early Friday morning on an El
Al flight from Mumbai (Bombay), according to Shavei Israel Chairman
Michael Freund, whose organization organized the operation.
Freund said that the "Aliyah" (Jewish immigration to Israel) operation
had been coordinated with all relevant government authorities. The Bnei
Menashe entered Israel on tourist visas and will undergo conversion to
Judaism in Israel. Then they will receive permanent status as citizens.
These details were worked out in an agreement with the former Interior
Minister, Meir Sheetrit, who is now Minister of Construction and
Housing.
Bnei Menashe Children in Kiryat Arba
Yigal Henshin, the Bnei Menashe community's president, said Friday:
"This is a historical day for us. We have come home."
The Bnei Menashe claim descent from the tribe of Menashe, one of the
ten tribes exiled from the Land of Israel by the Assyrian empire over
2,700 years ago. They reside primarily in the two Indian states of
Mizoram and Manipur, along the border with Burma and Bangladesh. In
recent years alone, over 800 members of the community have made Aliyah,
thanks largely to the efforts of Shavei Israel, a Jerusalem-based group
that reaches out and assists “lost Jews” seeking to return to the
Jewish people. They reside mainly in Kiryat Arba, south of Jerusalem,
and Beit El and Ofrah, north of Jerusalem.
Shavei Israel locates and identifies long-lost Jewish communities. A
total of more than 1,700 Bnei Menas
'This is a historical day for us. We have come home.'
he have immigrated to Israel and about 5,000 are still in India,
waiting to come.
Until six years ago, the Interior Ministry allowed 100 Bnei Menashe to
come to Israel as tourists annually. They then converted here and
became Israelis, a policy that was ended by then-Interior Minister
Avraham Poraz (Shinui), who reportedly preferred to have no olim
(immigrants) from the group rather than increase the number of G-d
fearing Jews in Israel who support Israel's right to sovereignty over
Judea and Samaria.
To overcome the Poraz's ban on immigration of this lost Jewish
community, the Israeli Chief Rabbinate agreed to send a Beit Din
(rabbinical court) on its behalf to India to formally convert the Bnei
Menashe to Judaism there. More than 200 Bnei Menashe were converted by
the Beit Din and arrived in Israel at the end of 2006 as new
immigrants. But then the Indian authorities forced Shavei Israel to
stop the program because conversion is against the law in India. Hence
the need for the new system of entry on tourist visas and conversion in
Israel.
The existence of the Bnei Menashe, known in India as the Manmassi
tribe, was publicized in the Jewish world about 30 years ago by Rabbi
Eliyahu Avichayil. When it was observed that the tribe's members
maintained certain ancient traditions unlike any observed in the Indian
subcontinent, investigation revealed that the
Bnei Menashe claim descent from the tribe of Menashe, one of the ten
tribes exiled by the Assyrians over 2,700 years ago
rituals were of Jewish origin.
The Bnei Menashe who arrived on Thursday were put up in Midrashiyat
Noam in Pardess Chana (near Hadera) – an institution with deep roots in
the religious-Zionist movement – where they will study Judaism over the
coming months and eventually undergo conversion to Judaism.
The Mayor of Pardess Chana, Chaim Ga'ash, has been less than
enthusiastic about the new arrivals, however. Ga'ash said that the
arrival of the Bnei Menashe had not been coordinated with him or with
the Ministry of Absorption of Aliya. Ga'ash has even gone so far as to
raise the possibility that the Bnei Menashe are in fact "foreign
workers in disguise," because as he put it, "it makes no sense that a
group of immigrants would arrive in Israel secretly.
Rabbi Eliyahu Birnboim of Shavei Israel said that the Bnei Menashe have
been keeping the Jewish mitzvot, or rules and commandments, for at
least the last four decades. He also stressed that the immigrants were
well off materially in India and came to Israel because of Zionism.
Chief Sephardic Rabbi Shlomo Amar sent a delegation of two rabbinic
judges to India about three years ago, to conduct a thorough
investigation of the community and its origins. After a review of their
findings, it was decided that the Bnei Menashe are in fact descendants
of Israel and should be drawn closer to the Jewish people.
Original
Source
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More Than 200 Bnei Menashe Arriving in Israel
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