Home
BOOKS TEXTS LINKS CONTACT BUY BOOKS
 

 

 

 
 

Muslim Jew

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

A Muslim Jew is someone who is Jewish by ethnicity, but who has converted to Islam.

Contents

Background

Jews who have converted to faiths other than Judaism, or who abandon Judaism for atheism, or the many Jews who simply view themselves as secular, often still feel strongly connected to their Jewish ethnicity. Although conversion to Islam is considered apostasy by all branches of Judaism, halakha (Jewish law) states that a child born of a Jewish mother is a Jew regardless of the faith they practice. Thus in Jewish law a Jew who converts to Islam remains a Jew, and is able to return to Judaism without conversion (see Baal teshuva).

Historical occurrences

In the past groups of Jews and individual Jews have converted to Islam; some voluntarily, some by force, some due to social pressure, and some in hopes of improving prospects for themselves and their families. While those who converted voluntarily have typically lost their identification as Jews, others who converted under various kinds of pressures have sometimes retained a connection to their ethnicity and faith, and some have even eventually returned to Judaism.

In Persia, during the Safavid dynasty of the 16th and 17th centuries, Jews were forced to abandon their religion, proclaim publicly that they had converted to Islam, and were given the name Jadid-al-Islam (New Muslims); in 1661 an edict was issued overturning this forced conversion, and the Jews returned to openly practising Judaism. Similarly, after a pogrom in 1839, the Jews of Mashhad were forced to convert to Islam. They practiced Judaism secretly for over a century before openly returning to their faith. At the turn of the 21st century, around 10,000 lived in Israel, another 4,000 in New York City, and 1,000 elsewhere.1

In Turkey the claimed messiah Sabbatai Zevi was imprisoned until he converted to Islam in 1666, and was subsequently given a high position in the Sultan's court. A number of his followers converted as well, becoming known as the Donmeh (a Turkish word for a religious convert). While outwardly Muslim, they worshipped Zevi as the Messiah and an incarnation of God. The Donmeh secretly remained Jews by most definitions, observed certain Jewish rituals, prayed in Hebrew and Aramaic, and celebrated Jewish festivals and fasts. The Donmeh still exist today.

A number of groups who converted from Judaism to Islam have remained Muslim, while maintaining a connection to and interest in their Jewish heritage. These groups include the anusim or Daggataun of Timbuktu who converted in 1492, when Askia Muhammed came to power in Timbuktu and decreed that Jews must convert to Islam or leave,[1], and the Chala Bukharan Jews, who converted voluntarily.

Modern times

In modern times conversion of Jews to Islam is entirely voluntary, and a small number Jews have converted to Islam. Probably the most notable of these are:

Footnote

Note 1: Dan Ross, Acts of Faith, Schocken Books, New York, 1984, pp. 67-82. ISBN 0-8052-0759-7

 


 

 

eXTReMe Tracker

Search Engine Optimization and Free Submission