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Black Hebrew Israelites

Black Hebrew Israelites (also called Hebrew Israelites, Black Hebrews, Black Israelites, and African Hebrew Israelites) are a new religious movement claiming that African Americans are descendants of the ancient Israelites. Some sub-groups believe that Native and Latin Americans are descendants of the Israelites as well.[1] Black Hebrew Israelites combine elements to their teaching from a wide range of sources[2] to varying degrees. Black Hebrew Israelites incorporate certain aspects of the religious beliefs and practices of both Christianity and Judaism, though they have created their own interpretation of the Bible,[3] and other influences include Freemasonry and New Thought, for example.[2] Many choose to identify as Hebrew Israelites or Black Hebrews rather than Jews in order to indicate their claimed historic connections.[4][5][6][7]

Black Hebrew Israelites are not associated with the mainstream Jewish community, and they do not meet the criteria that are used to identify people as Jewish by the Jewish community. They are also outside the fold of mainstream Christianity. Black Hebrew Israelism is a non-homogenous movement with a number of groups that have varying beliefs and practices.[5] Various sects of Black Hebrew Israelism have been criticized by academics for their promotion of historical revisionism and replacement theology due to the lack of evidence supporting their claims.[8][9]

The Black Hebrew Israelite movement originated at the end of the 19th century, when Frank Cherry and William Saunders Crowdy both claimed to have received visions that African Americans are descendants of the Hebrews in the Bible; Cherry established the Church of the Living God, the Pillar Ground of Truth for All Nations, in 1886, and Crowdy founded the Church of God and Saints of Christ in 1896.[10][11][12][13] Subsequently, Black Hebrew groups were founded in the United States during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, from Kansas to New York City, by both African Americans and West Indian immigrants.[14] In the mid-1980s, the number of Black Hebrews in the United States was between 25,000 and 40,000.[15]

Some of the Black Hebrew Israelite sects are considered black supremacist and antisemitic.[16][17][18] According to the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), "Some, but not all, [Black Hebrew Israelites] are outspoken anti-Semites and racists."[19] In 2017, the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) listed the Black Hebrew Israelites as one of the "black nationalist groups of concern", along with the Nation of Islam and others.[20] The SPLC has also described the Black Hebrew Israelites as a hate group which supports segregation, Holocaust denial, homophobia and promotes a race war,[21] and as of December 2019, it "lists 144 Black Hebrew Israelite organizations as black separatist hate groups because of their antisemitic and anti-white beliefs".[22] The SPLC has since clarified that they now use the term "Radical Hebrew Israelite" to distinguish between extremist and non-extremist sects and to acknowledge that some Hebrew Israelites are non-Black.[23]

History

 
A photograph of William Saunders Crowdy which appeared in a 1907 edition of The Baltimore Sun

The origins of the Black Hebrew Israelite movement are found in Frank Cherry and William Saunders Crowdy, who both claimed that they had revelations in which they believed that God told them that African Americans are descendants of the Hebrews in the Christian Bible; Cherry established the "Church of the Living God, the Pillar Ground of Truth for All Nations" in 1886, and Crowdy founded the "Church of God and Saints of Christ" in 1896.[10][11][12][13] Cherry taught that the Talmud was authoritative, that Jesus would return in the year A.D. 2000, and in a "square earth surrounded by three layers of heaven."[24] The playing of the piano and the collection of tithes during Black Hebrew Israelite worship was forbidden by Cherry, who also taught the eastward direction of prayer and "denigrated white Jews as interlopers".[24] The Church of God and Saints of Christ, originating in Kansas, retained elements of a messianic connection to Jesus.[14] Another early key figure was William Christian. The pioneers of the movement were Freemasons,[25] and it was strongly influenced by Masonic traditions.[2]

In the late 19th century, Cherry's and Crowdy's followers continued to propagate the claim that they were the biological descendants of the Israelites,[26] and during the following decades, many more Black Hebrew congregations were established; after Frank Cherry's death in 1963, his son Prince Benjamin F. Cherry took over leadership of the Black Hebrew Israelite movement.[24] After World War I, for example, Wentworth Arthur Matthew, an emigrant from Saint Kitts, founded another Black Hebrew congregation in Harlem, claiming descent from the ancient Israelites. He called it the "Commandment Keepers of the Living God".[27] Similar groups selected elements of Judaism and adapted them within a structure similar to that of the Black church.[14] Matthew incorporated his congregation in 1930 and moved it to Brooklyn, where he later founded the Israelite Rabbinical Seminary, where Black Hebrew rabbis have been educated and ordained.

Some sects of the Black Hebrew Israelite movement employ street preaching to promote their ideology. Sidewalk ministers may employ provocation to advance a message that is often antisemitic, racist, and xenophobic.[28][29][3] This primarily gained notice in the news through their street preaching that purportedly targeted students of Covington Catholic High School (Kentucky) in January 2019. One student reported that extremist Black Hebrew Israelites called students 'racists', 'bigots', 'white crackers', 'faggots', and 'incest kids', and told an African American student that white classmates would "harvest his organs".[30]

Shais Rishon, a Black Orthodox Jewish writer and activist, has stated that the "mainstream normative Black Jewish community" is distinct from the Black Hebrew Israelite movement and that Black Hebrew Israelites do not share the same identity, community, or issues as Black Jews. Rishon objects to the erasure of Black Jews, saying that Black Hebrew Israelites are not a denomination of Judaism and that the two communities are commonly confused or conflated.[31]

Groups

During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, dozens of Black Hebrew organizations were established.[14] In Harlem alone, at least eight such groups were founded between 1919 and 1931.[32]

Some of these include:

Church of the Living God, the Pillar Ground of Truth for All Nations

The oldest known Black Hebrew organization is the Church of the Living God, the Pillar Ground of Truth for All Nations.[33][40] The group was founded by Frank Cherry in Chattanooga, Tennessee, in 1886, and it later moved to Philadelphia.[41] Cherry, who was from the Deep South and had worked as a seaman and for the railroads before his ministry, taught himself Hebrew and Yiddish.[42] Theologically, the Church of the Living God mixed elements of Judaism and Christianity, counting the Bible—including the New Testament—and the Talmud as essential scriptures.[43][44]

The rituals of Cherry's flock incorporated many Jewish practices and prohibitions alongside some Christian traditions.[45] For example, during prayer the men wore skullcaps and congregants faced east. In addition, members of the Church were not permitted to eat pork.[45] Prayers were accompanied by musical instruments and gospel singing.[46] Cherry died in 1963, when he was about 95 years old; his son, Prince Benjamin F. Cherry, succeeded him.[44][47] Members of the church believed that he had temporarily left and would soon reappear in spirit in order to lead the church through his son.[47][34]

Church of God and Saints of Christ

 
The former headquarters of the Church of God and Saints of Christ in Washington, D.C. The building is now known as First Tabernacle Beth El and it is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

The Church of God and Saints of Christ was established in Lawrence, Kansas, in 1896 by African American William Saunders Crowdy.[48] The group established its headquarters in Philadelphia in 1899, and Crowdy later relocated to Washington, D.C., in 1903. After Crowdy's death in 1908, the church continued to grow under the leadership of William Henry Plummer, who moved the organization's headquarters to its permanent location in Belleville, Virginia, in 1921.[49]

In 1936, the Church of God and Saints of Christ had more than 200 "tabernacles" (congregations) and 37,000 members.[34][50] Howard Zebulun Plummer succeeded his father and became head of the organization in 1931.[51] His son, Levi Solomon Plummer, became the church's leader in 1975.[52] The Church of God and Saints of Christ was led by Rabbi Jehu A. Crowdy, Jr., a great-grandson of William Saunders Crowdy, from 2001 until his death in 2016.[53] Since 2016, it has been led by Phillip E. McNeil.[54] As of 2005, the church had fifty tabernacles in the United States and dozens more in Africa.[48]

The Church of God and Saints of Christ describes itself as "the oldest African-American congregation in the United States that adheres to the tenets of Judaism".[40][55] The church teaches that all Jews were originally black and that African Americans are descendants of the lost tribes of Israel.[56][57] Members believe that Jesus was neither God nor the son of God, but rather an adherent of Judaism and a prophet. They also consider William Saunders Crowdy, their founder, to be a prophet.[58]

The Church of God and Saints of Christ synthesizes rituals from both Judaism and Christianity. They have adopted rites drawn from both the Old and New Testaments. Its Old Testament observances include the use of the Jewish calendar, the celebration of Passover, the circumcision of infant males, the commemoration of the Sabbath on Saturday, and the wearing of yarmulkes. Its New Testament rites include baptism (immersion) and footwashing, both of which have Old Testament origins.[56][57]

Commandment Keepers

 
The founder of the Commandment Keepers, Wentworth Arthur Matthew holding a Sefer Torah.

Wentworth Arthur Matthew founded the Commandment Keepers Congregation in Harlem in 1919.[5] Matthew was influenced by the non-black Jews he met as well as by Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League. Garvey used the Biblical Jews in exile as a metaphor for black people in North America. One of the accomplishments of Garvey's movement was to strengthen the connection between black Americans and Africa, Ethiopia in particular. When Matthew later learned about the Beta Israel—Ethiopian Jews—he identified with them.[59]

Today the Commandment Keepers follow traditional Jewish practices and observe Jewish holidays.[35] Members observe kashrut, circumcise newborn boys, and celebrate Bar and Bat Mitzvahs, and their synagogue has a mechitza to separate men and women during worship.[60]

The Commandment Keepers believe that they are descendants of Solomon and the Queen of Sheba.[61] Matthew taught that "the Black man is a Jew" and "all genuine Jews are Black men",[62] but he valued non-black Jews as those who had preserved Judaism over the centuries.[5] Matthew maintained cordial ties with non-black Jewish leaders in New York and frequently invited them to worship at his synagogue.[63]

Matthew established the Ethiopian Hebrew Rabbinical College (later renamed the Israelite Rabbinical Academy) in Brooklyn. He ordained more than 20 rabbis, who went on to lead congregations throughout the United States and the Caribbean.[62][63] He remained the leader of the Commandment Keepers in Harlem, and in 1962 the congregation moved to a landmark building on 123rd Street.[64]

Matthew died in 1973, sparking an internal conflict over who would succeed him as head of the Harlem congregation. Shortly before his death, Matthew named his grandson, David Matthew Doré, as the new spiritual leader. Doré was 16 years old at the time. In 1975, the synagogue's board elected Rabbi Willie White to be its leader. Rabbi Doré occasionally conducted services at the synagogue until the early 1980s, when White had Doré and some other members locked out of the building. Membership declined throughout the 1990s, and by 2004, only a few dozen people belonged to the synagogue. In 2007 the Commandment Keepers sold the building while various factions among former members sued one another.[60][65]

Besides the Harlem group, there are eight or ten Commandment Keeper congregations in the New York area, and others exist throughout North America as well as in Israel.[66] Since 2000, seven rabbis have graduated from the Israelite Rabbinical Academy founded by Matthew.[67]

African Hebrew Israelites of Jerusalem

 
African Hebrew Israelites speak to visitors in Dimona, Israel.
 
A sign in Dimona.

Ben Ammi Ben-Israel established the African Hebrew Israelites of Jerusalem in Chicago, Illinois, in 1966, a time when black nationalism was on the rise as a response to the Civil Rights Movement. In 1969, after a sojourn in Liberia, Ben Ammi and around 30 Hebrew Israelites moved to Israel.[37] Over the next 20 years, nearly 600 more members left the United States for Israel. As of 2006, about 2,500 Hebrew Israelites live in Dimona and two other towns in the Negev region of Israel, where they are widely referred to as Black Hebrews.[68] In addition, there are African Hebrew Israelite communities in several major American cities, including Chicago, St. Louis, and Washington, D.C.[69]

The Black Hebrews believe they are descended from members of the Tribe of Judah who were exiled from the Land of Israel after the Romans destroyed the Second Temple in 70 CE.[68][70] The group incorporates elements of African-American culture into their interpretation of the Bible.[69] They do not recognize rabbinical Jewish interpretations such as the Talmud.[68] The Black Hebrews observe Shabbat and biblically ordained Jewish holidays such as Yom Kippur and Passover.[71]

Men wear tzitzit on their African print shirts, women follow the niddah (biblical laws concerning menstruation),[69] and newborn boys are circumcised.[37] In accordance with their interpretation of the Bible, the Black Hebrews follow a strictly vegan diet and only wear natural fabrics.[37][70] Most men have more than one wife, and birth control is not permitted.[68]

When the first Black Hebrews arrived in Israel in 1969, they claimed citizenship under the Law of Return, which gives eligible Jews immediate citizenship.[72] The Israeli government ruled in 1973 that the group did not qualify for automatic citizenship because they could not prove Jewish descent and had not undergone Orthodox conversion. The Black Hebrews were denied work permits and state benefits. The group accused the Israeli government of racist discrimination.[73] In 1981, a group of American civil rights activists led by Bayard Rustin investigated and concluded that racism was not the cause of the Black Hebrews' situation.[36] No official action was taken to return the Black Hebrews to the United States, but some individual members were deported for working illegally.[73]

Some Black Hebrews renounced their American citizenship in order to try to prevent more deportations. In 1990, Illinois legislators helped negotiate an agreement that resolved the Black Hebrews' legal status in Israel. Members of the group are permitted to work, and they also have access to housing and social services. The Black Hebrews reclaimed their American citizenship and have received aid from the U.S. government, which helped them build a school and additional housing.[73] In 2003 the agreement was revised, and the Black Hebrews were granted permanent residency in Israel.[38][74]

In 2009, Elyakim Ben-Israel became the first Black Hebrew to gain Israeli citizenship. The Israeli government said that more Black Hebrews may be granted citizenship.[75]

Today, young men and some women from the African Hebrew community of Jerusalem serve in the IDF, they have entered international sporting events and academic competitions under the Israeli flag, as well as having represented Israel twice in the Eurovision song contest.[76]

The Black Hebrews of Israel maintain a popular gospel choir, which tours throughout Israel and the United States. The group owns restaurants in several Israeli cities.[73] In 2003 the Black Hebrews garnered public attention when singer Whitney Houston visited them in Dimona.[77][78][79] In 2006, Eddie Butler, a Black Hebrew, was chosen by the Israeli public to represent Israel in the Eurovision Song Contest.[68][74]

One West Camp and splinter groups

The One West Camp is a messianic subdivision of Black Hebrew Israelite groups that believe in the Old Testament, the New Testament and the exclusive identification of the Twelve Tribes of Israel with ethnic communities of Black, Latin American, and Native American descent in the Americas.[80] The camp is named after its first grouping, which was located at One West 125th Street in Harlem in New York City, then known as the 'Israeli School of Universal Practical Knowledge'. The movement has since splintered into numerous "camps", including the Israelite Church of God in Jesus Christ, and the Israelite School of Universal Practical Knowledge. Other notable groups descended from the One West Camp include the Gathering of Christ Church,[81] Masharah Yasharahla,[82] and Israel United in Christ.[83][84]

Extremist fringe

In late 2008, the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) wrote that "the extremist fringe of the Hebrew Israelite movement" has a Black supremacist outlook. It wrote that the members of such groups "believe that Jews are devilish impostors and ... openly condemn Whites as evil personified, deserving only death or slavery". The SPLC wrote that "most Hebrew Israelites are neither explicitly racist nor anti-Semitic and do not advocate violence".[85]

The Black Hebrew groups that are characterized as being Black supremacist by the SPLC include the Israelite School of Universal Practical Knowledge,[86] the Nation of Yahweh[87] and the Israelite Church of God in Jesus Christ.[85] The Anti-Defamation League has written that the "12 Tribes of Israel" website, which is maintained by a Black Hebrew group, promotes Black supremacy.[88]

As of December 2019, the Southern Poverty Law Center "lists 144 Black Hebrew Israelite organizations as black separatist hate groups because of their antisemitic and anti-white beliefs".[22][needs context]

A 1999 FBI terrorism risk assessment report stated that "violent radical fringe members" of the Black Hebrew Israelite movement hold "beliefs [that] bear a striking resemblance to the Christian Identity theology practiced by many white supremacists".[89][90] The 1999 assessment concluded that "the overwhelming majority of [Black Hebrew Israelites] are unlikely to engage in violence."[89]

Attacks

Alberta Williams King, the mother of Martin Luther King Jr. was shot and killed on June 30, 1974, at age 69, by Marcus Wayne Chenault, a 23-year-old Black man from Ohio, who had adopted the theology of a Black Hebrew Israelite preacher, Hananiah E. Israel of Cincinnati, and had shown interest in a group called the "Hebrew Pentecostal Church of the Living God".[91] Israel, Chenault's mentor, castigated Black civil rights activists and Black church leaders as being evil and deceptive, but claimed in interviews not to have advocated violence.[92] Chenault did not draw any such distinction, and first decided to assassinate Rev. Jesse Jackson in Chicago, but canceled the plan at the last minute.

On December 10, 2019, two people who had expressed interest in the Black Hebrew Israelite movement were killed in a shootout with police. They had killed a police detective at Bayview Cemetery, and three people at the JC Kosher Supermarket in Jersey City, New Jersey. The victims were the Jewish co-owner of the grocery store, an employee, and a Jewish shopper. Authorities treated the incident as an act of domestic terrorism.[93]

Capers Funnye, who had been the rabbi for 26 years of the 200-member Beth Shalom B'nai Zaken Ethiopian Hebrew Congregation,[94][95] condemned the attack and said that his community was "gripped by sadness" over "the heinous actions of two disturbed individuals who cloaked themselves in anti-Semitism and hate-filled rhetoric". He criticized the media reports by saying it was "unfortunate that the media uses the term 'Black Hebrew Israelites' without distinction as if the description is a one size fits all and it is absolutely not!". Funnye stated that "we don't want to be seen as some radical fringe group with a false narrative because we are black and profess Judaism; we are Torah-oriented Jews."[96]

On December 28, 2019, a man with a machete attacked several Orthodox Jewish people during Hanukkah celebrations in a house in Monsey, New York. Authorities revealed that his journals included references to Black Hebrew Israelites, stating that "Hebrew Israelites" have taken from "ebinoid Israelites".[97]

Criticism of theological and historical claims

African American Christian apologetics organizations, such as the Jude 3 Project, have critiqued the theological and historical claims which have been presented by various Black Hebrew Israelite sects.[98]

Zimbabwean novelist Masimba Musodza has stated that the doctrine which is taught by Black Hebrew Israelites "force[s] their own ideas onto the text to promote their own agenda, which serves no purpose at all except to engender antisemitism in Black communities in western countries".[3] The historian Josephus, as well as theologians Emil Schürer and Friedrich Münter, wrote of Jewish slaves who were sold and served as labourers in Egypt and the Roman Empire, contradicting the Black Hebrew Israelite claim that Egypt is a metaphor for the Americas.[3] Additionally, contrary to what is taught by Black Hebrew Israelites, no Kingdom of Judah existed in West Africa, and the Middle Eastern state has no connection with the Kingdom of Whydah.[3] Black Hebrew Israelites have been criticized for making historical revisionist claims that do not acknowledge the poverty that Jews experienced as immigrants in the United States.[3]

Fran Markowitz, a professor of Cultural Anthropology at the Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, writes that the Hebrew Israelite view of the transatlantic slave trade conflicts with historical accounts, as does the Hebrew Israelite belief that Socrates and William Shakespeare were black.[8]

Notable Black Hebrew Israelites

See also

References

  1. ^ Hauck, Grace. "Jersey City shooting: Who are the Black Hebrew Israelites?". USA Today. from the original on December 12, 2019. Retrieved December 11, 2021.
  2. ^ a b c Jacob S. Dorman: Black Israelites aka Black Jews aka Black Hebrews: Black Israelism, Black Judaism, Judaic Christianity. In Eugene V. Gallagher & William M. Ashcraft (eds.): Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America. Greenwood, 2006.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Musodza, Masimba (November 8, 2019). "Two Hebrew Israelite Biblical Verses Examined". The Times of Israel. Retrieved May 12, 2020.
  4. ^ Ben-Jochannan, p. 306.
  5. ^ a b c d Ben Levy, Sholomo. . Jewish Virtual Library. Archived from the original on July 9, 2012. Retrieved December 15, 2007.
  6. ^ Johannes P. Schade, ed. (2006). "Black Hebrews". Encyclopedia of World Religions. Franklin Park, N.J.: Foreign Media Group. ISBN 1-60136-000-2.
  7. ^ Bahrampour, Tara (June 26, 2000). "They're Jewish, With a Gospel Accent". The New York Times. Retrieved November 5, 2016.
  8. ^ a b Markowitz, Fran (2013). Ethnographic Encounters in Israel: Poetics and Ethics of Fieldwork. Indiana University Press. p. 69. ISBN 978-0-253-00889-3. The ICUPK starts with a premise about the Middle Passage that isn't all that dissimilar from the one that grounds the AHIJ's historical revisionism, a reading of the transatlantic slave trade that is fairly cut-and-dried: African pagans and Arab Muslims sold Hebrew Israelites into European slavery. Anything else, the ICUPK argue, is a lie, a conspirational rewriting of history. The rest of ICUPK's arguments (about the "lost tribes," about the Bible's true meaning, about figures like Socrates and Shakespeare actually being black) stem from that central interpretation of the transatlantic slave trade, and they are unflinching in their commitment to its paradigmatic purpose.
  9. ^ Miles, Jennifer (November 3, 2022). "The Unbiblical Teachings of the Black Hebrew Israelite Movement". Alliance for the Peace of Jerusalem. Retrieved May 3, 2023.
  10. ^ a b Hutchinson, Dawn (2010). Antiquity and Social Reform: Religious Experience in the Unification Church, Feminist Wicca and Nation of Yahweh. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 139. ISBN 9781443823081. The first was the Church of the Living God, the Pillar Ground of Truth for All Nations founded by F.S. Cherry in 1886 in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Cherry preached that Adam, Eve, and Jesus were black and that African Americans lost their Hebrew identity during slavery. Later, William S. Crowdy founded the Church of God and Saints of Christ in 1896 in Lawrence, Kansas. Crowdy taught that blacks were heirs of the lost tribes of Israel, while white Jews were descendants of inter-racial marriages between Israelites and white Christians.
  11. ^ a b Fernheimer, Janice W. (2014). Stepping Into Zion: Hatzaad Harishon, Black Jews, and the Remaking of Jewish Identity. University of Alabama Press. p. 10. ISBN 9780817318246. One of these groups, Prophet Cherry's Church of the Living God, the Pillar and Ground of Truth for All Nations is the oldest known Black Judaic sect. It was originally established in Chattanooga, Tennessee, in 1886. Prophet Cherry argued they were part of the original Israelite tribes chased from Babylonia (and, they claim, into Central and Western Africa where they were later sold into slavery) by the Romans in 70 CE.
  12. ^ a b Rubel, Nora L. (2009). "'Chased Out of Palestine': Prophet Cherry's Church of God and Early Black Judaisms in the United States". In Curtis I.V., Edward E.; Sigler, Danielle Brune (eds.). The New Black Gods: Arthur Huff Fauset and the Study of African American Religions. Indiana University Press. p. 57. ISBN 9780253004086. In 1893, Crowdy had a vision that resulted in the establishment of the Church of God and Saints in Christ.
  13. ^ a b Bleich, J. David (Spring–Summer 1975). "Black Jews: A Halakhic Perspective". Tradition: A Journal of Orthodox Jewish Thought. 15 (1): 63. JSTOR 23258489. Crowdy claimed to be the recipient of a series of revelations in which, among other things, he was told that Blacks were descendants of the ten lost tribes of Israel.
  14. ^ a b c d Chireau, p. 21.
  15. ^ Sundquist, p. 118.
  16. ^ Ong, Kyler (2020). "Ideological Convergence in the Extreme Right". Counter Terrorist Trends and Analyses. 12 (5): 1–7. ISSN 2382-6444. JSTOR 26954256.
  17. ^ Jikeli, Gunther (2020). "Is Religion Coming Back as a Source for Antisemitic Views?". Religions. 11 (5): 255. doi:10.3390/rel11050255. ISSN 2077-1444.
  18. ^ Salazar, Philippe-Joseph (2022). "The Covington smile: Norms and forms of violence in the age of the White Awakening". Acta Juridica. 2022: 198–219. doi:10.47348/ACTA/2022/a9. S2CID 253755632.
  19. ^ "Black Hebrew Israelites". ADL. Retrieved December 15, 2019.
  20. ^ Johnson, Daryl (April 8, 2017). "Return of the Violent Black Nationalist". Southern Poverty Law Center. Retrieved February 25, 2023.
  21. ^ Strick, Simon (2020). "Discomforting Silences in Alt-Right America". In Birke, Dorothee; Butler, Stella (eds.). Comfort in Contemporary Culture: The Challenges of a Concept. Transcript Verlag. p. 237. doi:10.1515/9783839449028-013. ISBN 978-3-8394-4902-8.
  22. ^ a b "Suspects in Jersey City Attack 'Expressed Interest' in Black Hebrew Israelites, Authorities Say". Southern Poverty Law Center. December 12, 2019.
  23. ^ "Radical Hebrew Israelites". SPLC. Retrieved March 4, 2023.
  24. ^ a b c Gallagher, Eugene V. (2006). Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America [Five Volumes]. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 73. ISBN 978-0-313-05078-7. ...he accepted the collection of Jewish law known as the Talmud as the ultimate authority on religious matters. Like many black Israelites and black Muslims, Cherry stigmatized Southern black culture, forbidding his followers to eat pork, drink heavily, or observe Christian holidays. He also separated himself from African American Christianity by forbidding pianos, public collections, emotional expression in worship, or speaking in tongues. ... Services began and ended with a prayer said while facing east ... Prophet Cherry's theology was strongly millenarian, black nationalist, and idiosyncratic. He emphasized strict adherence to the Ten Commandments, and his followers believed in a square earth surrounded by three layers of heaven. He claimed that Jesus was black and would return in the year 2000 and raise all the saints who obeyed the Ten Commandments and the teachings of Prophet Cherry. Cherry denigrated white Jews as interlopers and frauds and vilified them for denying the divinity of Jesus. Prophet Cherry passed away in 1963 and was succeeded by his son Prince Benjamin F. Cherry.
  25. ^ Jacob S. Dorman: Chosen People: The Rise of American Black Israelite Religions, p. 79. Oxford University Press, 2013.
  26. ^ Chireau, pp. 18, 21.
  27. ^ Chafets, Zev (April 5, 2009). "Obama's Rabbi". The New York Times. Retrieved December 28, 2016.
  28. ^ Nir, Sarah Maslin (December 11, 2019). "Black Hebrew Israelites: What We Know About the Fringe Group". The New York Times – via NYTimes.com.
  29. ^ "New Jersey attackers linked to anti-Semitic fringe movement". AP NEWS. April 21, 2021.
  30. ^ Curnutte, Mark (January 22, 2019). "What to know about Black Hebrew Israelites, the group in that Covington Catholic video". USA Today. Retrieved June 17, 2020.
  31. ^ "A Case of Mistaken Identity: Black Jews & Hebrew Israelites". TribeHerald.com. Retrieved September 17, 2023.
  32. ^ Parfitt, Judaising Movements, p. 96.
  33. ^ a b Singer, "Symbolic Identity Formation in an African American Religious Sect", p. 57.
  34. ^ a b c Hudson, Peter (1999). "Black Jews". In Kwame Anthony Appiah; Henry Louis Gates, Jr. (eds.). Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience. New York: Basic Civitas Books. p. 1050.
  35. ^ a b Moses, p. 537.
  36. ^ a b Shipler, David K. (January 30, 1981). "Israelis Urged To Act Over Black Hebrew Cult". The New York Times. Retrieved May 28, 2008.
  37. ^ a b c d Haas, Danielle (November 15, 2002). "Black Hebrews fight for citizenship in Israel". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved May 25, 2008.
  38. ^ a b "The Hebrew Israelite Community". Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs. September 29, 2006. Retrieved November 5, 2016.
  39. ^ Martin, Douglas (May 9, 2007). "Yahweh ben Yahweh, Leader of Separatist Sect, Dies at 71". The New York Times – via NYTimes.com.
  40. ^ a b Chireau, pp. 30–31. "The founding dates of the earliest black-Jewish congregations are in dispute. Shapiro notes that F.S. Cherry's Church of God was organized in Tennessee in 1886, but other sources do not confirm this date. Another group, the Moorish Zion Temple, founded in 1899 by a Rabbi Richlieu of Brooklyn, New York, was one of the earliest black Jewish congregations that did not combine Jewish and Christian beliefs, as did the Church of God and the Saints of Christ."
  41. ^ Singer, "Symbolic Identity Formation in an African American Religious Sect", pp. 57–58.
  42. ^ Parfitt, Black Jews in Africa and the Americas, p. 88.
  43. ^ Fauset, p. 34.
  44. ^ a b Dorman, "Black Israelites", p. 73.
  45. ^ a b Fauset, pp. 36–40.
  46. ^ Fauset, pp. 36–37.
  47. ^ a b Singer, "The Southern Origin of Black Judaism", p. 130.
  48. ^ a b Fox, Andrew (September 29, 2005). . The College Hill Independent. Archived from the original on March 10, 2006. Retrieved June 23, 2016.
  49. ^ Wynia, pp. 31–34.
  50. ^ Wynia, n.p.
  51. ^ Greene, p. 42.
  52. ^ "Chief Rabbi Levi S. Plummer, G.F.A." Church of God and Saints of Christ. Retrieved January 1, 2018.
  53. ^ "Chief Rabbi Jehu A. Crowdy, Jr., G.F.A." Church of God and Saints of Christ. Retrieved January 1, 2018.
  54. ^ "Chief Rabbi Phillip E. McNeil". Church of God and Saints of Christ. Retrieved January 1, 2018.
  55. ^ . Archived from the original on January 30, 2008. Retrieved February 9, 2008.
  56. ^ a b Kidd, p. 59.
  57. ^ a b Singer, "Symbolic Identity Formation in an African American Religious Sect", p. 59.
  58. ^ Gallagher, p. 146.
  59. ^ Chireau, p. 25.
  60. ^ a b Herschthal, Eric (July 6, 2007). "Decline Of A Black Synagogue". The Jewish Week. Archived from the original on January 12, 2013. Retrieved February 9, 2008.
  61. ^ Parfitt, Judaising Movements, p. 95.
  62. ^ a b Sundquist, p. 116.
  63. ^ a b Wolfson, p. 48.
  64. ^ "Commandment Keepers Ethiopian Hebrew Congregation". New York Architecture. Retrieved February 1, 2008.
  65. ^ Ben Levy, Sholomo. "The Destruction of Commandment Keepers, Inc. 1919–2007". BlackJews.org. International Israelite Board of Rabbis. Retrieved February 10, 2008.
  66. ^ Goldschmidt, p. 221.
  67. ^ "Israelite Academy". BlackJews.org. International Israelite Board of Rabbis. Retrieved February 10, 2008.
  68. ^ a b c d e . CBS News. Associated Press. April 5, 2006. Archived from the original on May 7, 2006. Retrieved May 25, 2008.
  69. ^ a b c Michaeli, p. 75.
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Sources

  • Ben-Jochannan, Yosef A.A. (1993) [1983]. We, the Black Jews: Witness to the "White Jewish Race" Myth. Baltimore: Black Classic Press. ISBN 0-933121-40-7.
  • Bruder, Edith; Parfitt, Tudor (2012). . In Edith Bruder; Tudor Parfitt (eds.). African Zion: Studies in Black Judaism. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4438-3802-3. Archived from the original on December 26, 2016. Retrieved December 28, 2016.
  • Chireau, Yvonne (2000). "Black Culture and Black Zion: African American Religious Encounters with Judaism, 1790–1930, an Overview". In Yvonne Patricia Chireau; Nathaniel Deutsch (eds.). Black Zion: African American Religious Encounters with Judaism. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-511257-1.
  • Dorman, Jacob S. (2006). "Black Israelites". In Gallagher, Eugene V.; Ashcraft, W. Michael (eds.). Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America. Vol. 1. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-275-98713-2.
  • Fauset, Arthur Huff (2002) [1944]. Black Gods of the Metropolis: Negro Religious Cults of the Urban North. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0-8122-1001-8.
  • Gallagher, Eugene V. (2004). The New Religious Movements Experience in America. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press. ISBN 0-313-32807-2.
  • Goldschmidt, Henry (2006). Race and Religion Among the Chosen Peoples of Crown Heights. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press. ISBN 0-8135-3897-1.
  • Greene, Lorenzo Johnston (1996). Arvarh E. Strickland (ed.). Selling Black History for Carter G. Woodson: A Diary, 1930–1933. Columbia: University of Missouri Press. ISBN 0-8262-1068-6.
  • Isaac, Walter (2006). "Locating African-American Judaism: A Critique of White Normativity". In Lewis R. Gordon; Jane Anna Gordon (eds.). A Companion to African-American Studies. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 0-631-23516-7.
  • Kidd, Colin (2006). The Forging of Races: Race and Scripture in the Protestant Atlantic World, 1600-2000. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-79324-6.
  • Landing, James E. (2002). Black Judaism: Story of an American Movement. Durham, N.C.: Carolina Academic Press. ISBN 0-89089-820-0.
  • Michaeli, Ethan (2000). "Another Exodus: The Hebrew Israelites from Chicago to Dimona". In Yvonne Patricia Chireau; Nathaniel Deutsch (eds.). Black Zion: African American Religious Encounters with Judaism. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-511257-1.
  • Moses, Wilson Jeremiah (2003). "Chosen Peoples of the Metropolis: Black Muslims, Black Jews, and Others". In Cornel West; Eddie S. Glaude, Jr. (eds.). African American Religious Thought: An Anthology. Louisville, Ky.: Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN 0-664-22459-8.
  • Parfitt, Tudor (2013). Black Jews in Africa and the Americas. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-07150-6.
  • Parfitt, Tudor; Emanuela Trevisan Semi (2002). Judaising Movements: Studies in the Margins of Judaism in Modern Times. New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-7007-1515-0.
  • Singer, Merrill (1992). "The Southern Origin of Black Judaism". In Baer, Hans A.; Jones, Yvonne (eds.). African Americans in the South: Issues of Race, Class, and Gender. Athens, Ga.: University of Georgia Press. ISBN 0-8203-1376-9.
  • Singer, Merrill (2000). "Symbolic Identity Formation in an African American Religious Sect: The Black Hebrew Israelites". In Yvonne Patricia Chireau; Nathaniel Deutsch (eds.). Black Zion: African American Religious Encounters with Judaism. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-511257-1.
  • Sundquist, Eric J. (2002). Strangers in the Land: Blacks, Jews, Post-Holocaust America. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-01942-3.
  • Wolfson, Bernard J. (2000). "African American Jews: Dispelling Myths, Bridging the Divide". In Yvonne Patricia Chireau; Nathaniel Deutsch (eds.). Black Zion: African American Religious Encounters with Judaism. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-511257-1.
  • Wynia, Elly M. (1994). The Church of God and Saints of Christ: The Rise of Black Jews. New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-8153-1136-2.

Further reading

  • Jacob S. Dorman (2013). Chosen People: The Rise of American Black Israelite Religions. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-530140-3.
  • Martina Könighofer (2008). The New Ship of Zion: Dynamic Diaspora Dimensions of the African Hebrew Israelites of Jerusalem. LIT Verlag Münster. ISBN 978-3-8258-1055-9.
  • Steven Thrasher (March 30, 2011). . The Village Voice. Archived from the original on April 8, 2011. Retrieved April 10, 2011.

External links

black, hebrew, israelites, confused, with, african, american, jews, also, called, hebrew, israelites, black, hebrews, black, israelites, african, hebrew, israelites, religious, movement, claiming, that, african, americans, descendants, ancient, israelites, som. Not to be confused with African American Jews Black Hebrew Israelites also called Hebrew Israelites Black Hebrews Black Israelites and African Hebrew Israelites are a new religious movement claiming that African Americans are descendants of the ancient Israelites Some sub groups believe that Native and Latin Americans are descendants of the Israelites as well 1 Black Hebrew Israelites combine elements to their teaching from a wide range of sources 2 to varying degrees Black Hebrew Israelites incorporate certain aspects of the religious beliefs and practices of both Christianity and Judaism though they have created their own interpretation of the Bible 3 and other influences include Freemasonry and New Thought for example 2 Many choose to identify as Hebrew Israelites or Black Hebrews rather than Jews in order to indicate their claimed historic connections 4 5 6 7 Black Hebrew Israelites are not associated with the mainstream Jewish community and they do not meet the criteria that are used to identify people as Jewish by the Jewish community They are also outside the fold of mainstream Christianity Black Hebrew Israelism is a non homogenous movement with a number of groups that have varying beliefs and practices 5 Various sects of Black Hebrew Israelism have been criticized by academics for their promotion of historical revisionism and replacement theology due to the lack of evidence supporting their claims 8 9 The Black Hebrew Israelite movement originated at the end of the 19th century when Frank Cherry and William Saunders Crowdy both claimed to have received visions that African Americans are descendants of the Hebrews in the Bible Cherry established the Church of the Living God the Pillar Ground of Truth for All Nations in 1886 and Crowdy founded the Church of God and Saints of Christ in 1896 10 11 12 13 Subsequently Black Hebrew groups were founded in the United States during the late 19th and early 20th centuries from Kansas to New York City by both African Americans and West Indian immigrants 14 In the mid 1980s the number of Black Hebrews in the United States was between 25 000 and 40 000 15 Some of the Black Hebrew Israelite sects are considered black supremacist and antisemitic 16 17 18 According to the Anti Defamation League ADL Some but not all Black Hebrew Israelites are outspoken anti Semites and racists 19 In 2017 the Southern Poverty Law Center SPLC listed the Black Hebrew Israelites as one of the black nationalist groups of concern along with the Nation of Islam and others 20 The SPLC has also described the Black Hebrew Israelites as a hate group which supports segregation Holocaust denial homophobia and promotes a race war 21 and as of December 2019 it lists 144 Black Hebrew Israelite organizations as black separatist hate groups because of their antisemitic and anti white beliefs 22 The SPLC has since clarified that they now use the term Radical Hebrew Israelite to distinguish between extremist and non extremist sects and to acknowledge that some Hebrew Israelites are non Black 23 Contents 1 History 2 Groups 2 1 Church of the Living God the Pillar Ground of Truth for All Nations 2 2 Church of God and Saints of Christ 2 3 Commandment Keepers 2 4 African Hebrew Israelites of Jerusalem 2 5 One West Camp and splinter groups 3 Extremist fringe 3 1 Attacks 4 Criticism of theological and historical claims 5 Notable Black Hebrew Israelites 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory nbsp A photograph of William Saunders Crowdy which appeared in a 1907 edition of The Baltimore SunThe origins of the Black Hebrew Israelite movement are found in Frank Cherry and William Saunders Crowdy who both claimed that they had revelations in which they believed that God told them that African Americans are descendants of the Hebrews in the Christian Bible Cherry established the Church of the Living God the Pillar Ground of Truth for All Nations in 1886 and Crowdy founded the Church of God and Saints of Christ in 1896 10 11 12 13 Cherry taught that the Talmud was authoritative that Jesus would return in the year A D 2000 and in a square earth surrounded by three layers of heaven 24 The playing of the piano and the collection of tithes during Black Hebrew Israelite worship was forbidden by Cherry who also taught the eastward direction of prayer and denigrated white Jews as interlopers 24 The Church of God and Saints of Christ originating in Kansas retained elements of a messianic connection to Jesus 14 Another early key figure was William Christian The pioneers of the movement were Freemasons 25 and it was strongly influenced by Masonic traditions 2 In the late 19th century Cherry s and Crowdy s followers continued to propagate the claim that they were the biological descendants of the Israelites 26 and during the following decades many more Black Hebrew congregations were established after Frank Cherry s death in 1963 his son Prince Benjamin F Cherry took over leadership of the Black Hebrew Israelite movement 24 After World War I for example Wentworth Arthur Matthew an emigrant from Saint Kitts founded another Black Hebrew congregation in Harlem claiming descent from the ancient Israelites He called it the Commandment Keepers of the Living God 27 Similar groups selected elements of Judaism and adapted them within a structure similar to that of the Black church 14 Matthew incorporated his congregation in 1930 and moved it to Brooklyn where he later founded the Israelite Rabbinical Seminary where Black Hebrew rabbis have been educated and ordained Some sects of the Black Hebrew Israelite movement employ street preaching to promote their ideology Sidewalk ministers may employ provocation to advance a message that is often antisemitic racist and xenophobic 28 29 3 This primarily gained notice in the news through their street preaching that purportedly targeted students of Covington Catholic High School Kentucky in January 2019 One student reported that extremist Black Hebrew Israelites called students racists bigots white crackers faggots and incest kids and told an African American student that white classmates would harvest his organs 30 Shais Rishon a Black Orthodox Jewish writer and activist has stated that the mainstream normative Black Jewish community is distinct from the Black Hebrew Israelite movement and that Black Hebrew Israelites do not share the same identity community or issues as Black Jews Rishon objects to the erasure of Black Jews saying that Black Hebrew Israelites are not a denomination of Judaism and that the two communities are commonly confused or conflated 31 GroupsDuring the late 19th and early 20th centuries dozens of Black Hebrew organizations were established 14 In Harlem alone at least eight such groups were founded between 1919 and 1931 32 Some of these include The Church of the Living God the Pillar Ground of Truth for All Nations is the oldest known Black Hebrew group 33 The Church of God and Saints of Christ is one of the largest Black Hebrew organizations 34 The Commandment Keepers founded by Wentworth Arthur Matthew in New York are noted for their adherence to traditional Judaism 35 The African Hebrew Israelites of Jerusalem are widely known for having moved from the United States primarily Chicago to Israel in the late 20th century 36 37 38 The Israelite School of Universal Practical Knowledge based in Philadelphia The Nation of Yahweh based in Miami and whose founding members were accused of violent behavior including the murder of defecting members 39 Church of the Living God the Pillar Ground of Truth for All Nations The oldest known Black Hebrew organization is the Church of the Living God the Pillar Ground of Truth for All Nations 33 40 The group was founded by Frank Cherry in Chattanooga Tennessee in 1886 and it later moved to Philadelphia 41 Cherry who was from the Deep South and had worked as a seaman and for the railroads before his ministry taught himself Hebrew and Yiddish 42 Theologically the Church of the Living God mixed elements of Judaism and Christianity counting the Bible including the New Testament and the Talmud as essential scriptures 43 44 The rituals of Cherry s flock incorporated many Jewish practices and prohibitions alongside some Christian traditions 45 For example during prayer the men wore skullcaps and congregants faced east In addition members of the Church were not permitted to eat pork 45 Prayers were accompanied by musical instruments and gospel singing 46 Cherry died in 1963 when he was about 95 years old his son Prince Benjamin F Cherry succeeded him 44 47 Members of the church believed that he had temporarily left and would soon reappear in spirit in order to lead the church through his son 47 34 Church of God and Saints of Christ Main article Church of God and Saints of Christ nbsp The former headquarters of the Church of God and Saints of Christ in Washington D C The building is now known as First Tabernacle Beth El and it is listed on the National Register of Historic Places The Church of God and Saints of Christ was established in Lawrence Kansas in 1896 by African American William Saunders Crowdy 48 The group established its headquarters in Philadelphia in 1899 and Crowdy later relocated to Washington D C in 1903 After Crowdy s death in 1908 the church continued to grow under the leadership of William Henry Plummer who moved the organization s headquarters to its permanent location in Belleville Virginia in 1921 49 In 1936 the Church of God and Saints of Christ had more than 200 tabernacles congregations and 37 000 members 34 50 Howard Zebulun Plummer succeeded his father and became head of the organization in 1931 51 His son Levi Solomon Plummer became the church s leader in 1975 52 The Church of God and Saints of Christ was led by Rabbi Jehu A Crowdy Jr a great grandson of William Saunders Crowdy from 2001 until his death in 2016 53 Since 2016 it has been led by Phillip E McNeil 54 As of 2005 the church had fifty tabernacles in the United States and dozens more in Africa 48 The Church of God and Saints of Christ describes itself as the oldest African American congregation in the United States that adheres to the tenets of Judaism 40 55 The church teaches that all Jews were originally black and that African Americans are descendants of the lost tribes of Israel 56 57 Members believe that Jesus was neither God nor the son of God but rather an adherent of Judaism and a prophet They also consider William Saunders Crowdy their founder to be a prophet 58 The Church of God and Saints of Christ synthesizes rituals from both Judaism and Christianity They have adopted rites drawn from both the Old and New Testaments Its Old Testament observances include the use of the Jewish calendar the celebration of Passover the circumcision of infant males the commemoration of the Sabbath on Saturday and the wearing of yarmulkes Its New Testament rites include baptism immersion and footwashing both of which have Old Testament origins 56 57 Commandment Keepers Main article Commandment Keepers nbsp The founder of the Commandment Keepers Wentworth Arthur Matthew holding a Sefer Torah Wentworth Arthur Matthew founded the Commandment Keepers Congregation in Harlem in 1919 5 Matthew was influenced by the non black Jews he met as well as by Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League Garvey used the Biblical Jews in exile as a metaphor for black people in North America One of the accomplishments of Garvey s movement was to strengthen the connection between black Americans and Africa Ethiopia in particular When Matthew later learned about the Beta Israel Ethiopian Jews he identified with them 59 Today the Commandment Keepers follow traditional Jewish practices and observe Jewish holidays 35 Members observe kashrut circumcise newborn boys and celebrate Bar and Bat Mitzvahs and their synagogue has a mechitza to separate men and women during worship 60 The Commandment Keepers believe that they are descendants of Solomon and the Queen of Sheba 61 Matthew taught that the Black man is a Jew and all genuine Jews are Black men 62 but he valued non black Jews as those who had preserved Judaism over the centuries 5 Matthew maintained cordial ties with non black Jewish leaders in New York and frequently invited them to worship at his synagogue 63 Matthew established the Ethiopian Hebrew Rabbinical College later renamed the Israelite Rabbinical Academy in Brooklyn He ordained more than 20 rabbis who went on to lead congregations throughout the United States and the Caribbean 62 63 He remained the leader of the Commandment Keepers in Harlem and in 1962 the congregation moved to a landmark building on 123rd Street 64 Matthew died in 1973 sparking an internal conflict over who would succeed him as head of the Harlem congregation Shortly before his death Matthew named his grandson David Matthew Dore as the new spiritual leader Dore was 16 years old at the time In 1975 the synagogue s board elected Rabbi Willie White to be its leader Rabbi Dore occasionally conducted services at the synagogue until the early 1980s when White had Dore and some other members locked out of the building Membership declined throughout the 1990s and by 2004 only a few dozen people belonged to the synagogue In 2007 the Commandment Keepers sold the building while various factions among former members sued one another 60 65 Besides the Harlem group there are eight or ten Commandment Keeper congregations in the New York area and others exist throughout North America as well as in Israel 66 Since 2000 seven rabbis have graduated from the Israelite Rabbinical Academy founded by Matthew 67 African Hebrew Israelites of Jerusalem Main article African Hebrew Israelites of Jerusalem nbsp African Hebrew Israelites speak to visitors in Dimona Israel nbsp A sign in Dimona Ben Ammi Ben Israel established the African Hebrew Israelites of Jerusalem in Chicago Illinois in 1966 a time when black nationalism was on the rise as a response to the Civil Rights Movement In 1969 after a sojourn in Liberia Ben Ammi and around 30 Hebrew Israelites moved to Israel 37 Over the next 20 years nearly 600 more members left the United States for Israel As of 2006 about 2 500 Hebrew Israelites live in Dimona and two other towns in the Negev region of Israel where they are widely referred to as Black Hebrews 68 In addition there are African Hebrew Israelite communities in several major American cities including Chicago St Louis and Washington D C 69 The Black Hebrews believe they are descended from members of the Tribe of Judah who were exiled from the Land of Israel after the Romans destroyed the Second Temple in 70 CE 68 70 The group incorporates elements of African American culture into their interpretation of the Bible 69 They do not recognize rabbinical Jewish interpretations such as the Talmud 68 The Black Hebrews observe Shabbat and biblically ordained Jewish holidays such as Yom Kippur and Passover 71 Men wear tzitzit on their African print shirts women follow the niddah biblical laws concerning menstruation 69 and newborn boys are circumcised 37 In accordance with their interpretation of the Bible the Black Hebrews follow a strictly vegan diet and only wear natural fabrics 37 70 Most men have more than one wife and birth control is not permitted 68 When the first Black Hebrews arrived in Israel in 1969 they claimed citizenship under the Law of Return which gives eligible Jews immediate citizenship 72 The Israeli government ruled in 1973 that the group did not qualify for automatic citizenship because they could not prove Jewish descent and had not undergone Orthodox conversion The Black Hebrews were denied work permits and state benefits The group accused the Israeli government of racist discrimination 73 In 1981 a group of American civil rights activists led by Bayard Rustin investigated and concluded that racism was not the cause of the Black Hebrews situation 36 No official action was taken to return the Black Hebrews to the United States but some individual members were deported for working illegally 73 Some Black Hebrews renounced their American citizenship in order to try to prevent more deportations In 1990 Illinois legislators helped negotiate an agreement that resolved the Black Hebrews legal status in Israel Members of the group are permitted to work and they also have access to housing and social services The Black Hebrews reclaimed their American citizenship and have received aid from the U S government which helped them build a school and additional housing 73 In 2003 the agreement was revised and the Black Hebrews were granted permanent residency in Israel 38 74 In 2009 Elyakim Ben Israel became the first Black Hebrew to gain Israeli citizenship The Israeli government said that more Black Hebrews may be granted citizenship 75 Today young men and some women from the African Hebrew community of Jerusalem serve in the IDF they have entered international sporting events and academic competitions under the Israeli flag as well as having represented Israel twice in the Eurovision song contest 76 The Black Hebrews of Israel maintain a popular gospel choir which tours throughout Israel and the United States The group owns restaurants in several Israeli cities 73 In 2003 the Black Hebrews garnered public attention when singer Whitney Houston visited them in Dimona 77 78 79 In 2006 Eddie Butler a Black Hebrew was chosen by the Israeli public to represent Israel in the Eurovision Song Contest 68 74 One West Camp and splinter groups The One West Camp is a messianic subdivision of Black Hebrew Israelite groups that believe in the Old Testament the New Testament and the exclusive identification of the Twelve Tribes of Israel with ethnic communities of Black Latin American and Native American descent in the Americas 80 The camp is named after its first grouping which was located at One West 125th Street in Harlem in New York City then known as the Israeli School of Universal Practical Knowledge The movement has since splintered into numerous camps including the Israelite Church of God in Jesus Christ and the Israelite School of Universal Practical Knowledge Other notable groups descended from the One West Camp include the Gathering of Christ Church 81 Masharah Yasharahla 82 and Israel United in Christ 83 84 Extremist fringeIn late 2008 the Southern Poverty Law Center SPLC wrote that the extremist fringe of the Hebrew Israelite movement has a Black supremacist outlook It wrote that the members of such groups believe that Jews are devilish impostors and openly condemn Whites as evil personified deserving only death or slavery The SPLC wrote that most Hebrew Israelites are neither explicitly racist nor anti Semitic and do not advocate violence 85 The Black Hebrew groups that are characterized as being Black supremacist by the SPLC include the Israelite School of Universal Practical Knowledge 86 the Nation of Yahweh 87 and the Israelite Church of God in Jesus Christ 85 The Anti Defamation League has written that the 12 Tribes of Israel website which is maintained by a Black Hebrew group promotes Black supremacy 88 As of December 2019 the Southern Poverty Law Center lists 144 Black Hebrew Israelite organizations as black separatist hate groups because of their antisemitic and anti white beliefs 22 needs context A 1999 FBI terrorism risk assessment report stated that violent radical fringe members of the Black Hebrew Israelite movement hold beliefs that bear a striking resemblance to the Christian Identity theology practiced by many white supremacists 89 90 The 1999 assessment concluded that the overwhelming majority of Black Hebrew Israelites are unlikely to engage in violence 89 Attacks Alberta Williams King the mother of Martin Luther King Jr was shot and killed on June 30 1974 at age 69 by Marcus Wayne Chenault a 23 year old Black man from Ohio who had adopted the theology of a Black Hebrew Israelite preacher Hananiah E Israel of Cincinnati and had shown interest in a group called the Hebrew Pentecostal Church of the Living God 91 Israel Chenault s mentor castigated Black civil rights activists and Black church leaders as being evil and deceptive but claimed in interviews not to have advocated violence 92 Chenault did not draw any such distinction and first decided to assassinate Rev Jesse Jackson in Chicago but canceled the plan at the last minute On December 10 2019 two people who had expressed interest in the Black Hebrew Israelite movement were killed in a shootout with police They had killed a police detective at Bayview Cemetery and three people at the JC Kosher Supermarket in Jersey City New Jersey The victims were the Jewish co owner of the grocery store an employee and a Jewish shopper Authorities treated the incident as an act of domestic terrorism 93 Capers Funnye who had been the rabbi for 26 years of the 200 member Beth Shalom B nai Zaken Ethiopian Hebrew Congregation 94 95 condemned the attack and said that his community was gripped by sadness over the heinous actions of two disturbed individuals who cloaked themselves in anti Semitism and hate filled rhetoric He criticized the media reports by saying it was unfortunate that the media uses the term Black Hebrew Israelites without distinction as if the description is a one size fits all and it is absolutely not Funnye stated that we don t want to be seen as some radical fringe group with a false narrative because we are black and profess Judaism we are Torah oriented Jews 96 On December 28 2019 a man with a machete attacked several Orthodox Jewish people during Hanukkah celebrations in a house in Monsey New York Authorities revealed that his journals included references to Black Hebrew Israelites stating that Hebrew Israelites have taken from ebinoid Israelites 97 Criticism of theological and historical claimsAfrican American Christian apologetics organizations such as the Jude 3 Project have critiqued the theological and historical claims which have been presented by various Black Hebrew Israelite sects 98 Zimbabwean novelist Masimba Musodza has stated that the doctrine which is taught by Black Hebrew Israelites force s their own ideas onto the text to promote their own agenda which serves no purpose at all except to engender antisemitism in Black communities in western countries 3 The historian Josephus as well as theologians Emil Schurer and Friedrich Munter wrote of Jewish slaves who were sold and served as labourers in Egypt and the Roman Empire contradicting the Black Hebrew Israelite claim that Egypt is a metaphor for the Americas 3 Additionally contrary to what is taught by Black Hebrew Israelites no Kingdom of Judah existed in West Africa and the Middle Eastern state has no connection with the Kingdom of Whydah 3 Black Hebrew Israelites have been criticized for making historical revisionist claims that do not acknowledge the poverty that Jews experienced as immigrants in the United States 3 Fran Markowitz a professor of Cultural Anthropology at the Ben Gurion University of the Negev writes that the Hebrew Israelite view of the transatlantic slave trade conflicts with historical accounts as does the Hebrew Israelite belief that Socrates and William Shakespeare were black 8 Notable Black Hebrew IsraelitesFurther information List of Black Hebrew IsraelitesSee also nbsp United States portalAfrican American Jewish relations Afro American religion Black Judaism Cultural appropriation Groups claiming affiliation with Israelites British Israelism Christian Identity French Israelism Nordic Israelism Hoteps Messianic Judaism Moorish Science Temple of America Pretendian Religion in Black AmericaReferences Hauck Grace Jersey City shooting Who are the Black Hebrew Israelites USA Today Archived from the original on December 12 2019 Retrieved December 11 2021 a b c Jacob S Dorman Black Israelites aka Black Jews aka Black Hebrews Black Israelism Black Judaism Judaic Christianity In Eugene V Gallagher amp William M Ashcraft eds Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Greenwood 2006 a b c d e f Musodza Masimba November 8 2019 Two Hebrew Israelite Biblical Verses Examined The Times of Israel Retrieved May 12 2020 Ben Jochannan p 306 a b c d Ben Levy Sholomo The Black Jewish or Hebrew Israelite Community Jewish Virtual Library Archived from the original on July 9 2012 Retrieved December 15 2007 Johannes P Schade ed 2006 Black Hebrews Encyclopedia of World Religions Franklin Park N J Foreign Media Group ISBN 1 60136 000 2 Bahrampour Tara June 26 2000 They re Jewish With a Gospel Accent The New York Times Retrieved November 5 2016 a b Markowitz Fran 2013 Ethnographic Encounters in Israel Poetics and Ethics of Fieldwork Indiana University Press p 69 ISBN 978 0 253 00889 3 The ICUPK starts with a premise about the Middle Passage that isn t all that dissimilar from the one that grounds the AHIJ s historical revisionism a reading of the transatlantic slave trade that is fairly cut and dried African pagans and Arab Muslims sold Hebrew Israelites into European slavery Anything else the ICUPK argue is a lie a conspirational rewriting of history The rest of ICUPK s arguments about the lost tribes about the Bible s true meaning about figures like Socrates and Shakespeare actually being black stem from that central interpretation of the transatlantic slave trade and they are unflinching in their commitment to its paradigmatic purpose Miles Jennifer November 3 2022 The Unbiblical Teachings of the Black Hebrew Israelite Movement Alliance for the Peace of Jerusalem Retrieved May 3 2023 a b Hutchinson Dawn 2010 Antiquity and Social Reform Religious Experience in the Unification Church Feminist Wicca and Nation of Yahweh Cambridge Scholars Publishing p 139 ISBN 9781443823081 The first was the Church of the Living God the Pillar Ground of Truth for All Nations founded by F S Cherry in 1886 in Chattanooga Tennessee Cherry preached that Adam Eve and Jesus were black and that African Americans lost their Hebrew identity during slavery Later William S Crowdy founded the Church of God and Saints of Christ in 1896 in Lawrence Kansas Crowdy taught that blacks were heirs of the lost tribes of Israel while white Jews were descendants of inter racial marriages between Israelites and white Christians a b Fernheimer Janice W 2014 Stepping Into Zion Hatzaad Harishon Black Jews and the Remaking of Jewish Identity University of Alabama Press p 10 ISBN 9780817318246 One of these groups Prophet Cherry s Church of the Living God the Pillar and Ground of Truth for All Nations is the oldest known Black Judaic sect It was originally established in Chattanooga Tennessee in 1886 Prophet Cherry argued they were part of the original Israelite tribes chased from Babylonia and they claim into Central and Western Africa where they were later sold into slavery by the Romans in 70 CE a b Rubel Nora L 2009 Chased Out of Palestine Prophet Cherry s Church of God and Early Black Judaisms in the United States In Curtis I V Edward E Sigler Danielle Brune eds The New Black Gods Arthur Huff Fauset and the Study of African American Religions Indiana University Press p 57 ISBN 9780253004086 In 1893 Crowdy had a vision that resulted in the establishment of the Church of God and Saints in Christ a b Bleich J David Spring Summer 1975 Black Jews A Halakhic Perspective Tradition A Journal of Orthodox Jewish Thought 15 1 63 JSTOR 23258489 Crowdy claimed to be the recipient of a series of revelations in which among other things he was told that Blacks were descendants of the ten lost tribes of Israel a b c d Chireau p 21 Sundquist p 118 Ong Kyler 2020 Ideological Convergence in the Extreme Right Counter Terrorist Trends and Analyses 12 5 1 7 ISSN 2382 6444 JSTOR 26954256 Jikeli Gunther 2020 Is Religion Coming Back as a Source for Antisemitic Views Religions 11 5 255 doi 10 3390 rel11050255 ISSN 2077 1444 Salazar Philippe Joseph 2022 The Covington smile Norms and forms of violence in the age of the White Awakening Acta Juridica 2022 198 219 doi 10 47348 ACTA 2022 a9 S2CID 253755632 Black Hebrew Israelites ADL Retrieved December 15 2019 Johnson Daryl April 8 2017 Return of the Violent Black Nationalist Southern Poverty Law Center Retrieved February 25 2023 Strick Simon 2020 Discomforting Silences in Alt Right America In Birke Dorothee Butler Stella eds Comfort in Contemporary Culture The Challenges of a Concept Transcript Verlag p 237 doi 10 1515 9783839449028 013 ISBN 978 3 8394 4902 8 a b Suspects in Jersey City Attack Expressed Interest in Black Hebrew Israelites Authorities Say Southern Poverty Law Center December 12 2019 Radical Hebrew Israelites SPLC Retrieved March 4 2023 a b c Gallagher Eugene V 2006 Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Five Volumes Greenwood Publishing Group p 73 ISBN 978 0 313 05078 7 he accepted the collection of Jewish law known as the Talmud as the ultimate authority on religious matters Like many black Israelites and black Muslims Cherry stigmatized Southern black culture forbidding his followers to eat pork drink heavily or observe Christian holidays He also separated himself from African American Christianity by forbidding pianos public collections emotional expression in worship or speaking in tongues Services began and ended with a prayer said while facing east Prophet Cherry s theology was strongly millenarian black nationalist and idiosyncratic He emphasized strict adherence to the Ten Commandments and his followers believed in a square earth surrounded by three layers of heaven He claimed that Jesus was black and would return in the year 2000 and raise all the saints who obeyed the Ten Commandments and the teachings of Prophet Cherry Cherry denigrated white Jews as interlopers and frauds and vilified them for denying the divinity of Jesus Prophet Cherry passed away in 1963 and was succeeded by his son Prince Benjamin F Cherry Jacob S Dorman Chosen People The Rise of American Black Israelite Religions p 79 Oxford University Press 2013 Chireau pp 18 21 Chafets Zev April 5 2009 Obama s Rabbi The New York Times Retrieved December 28 2016 Nir Sarah Maslin December 11 2019 Black Hebrew Israelites What We Know About the Fringe Group The New York Times via NYTimes com New Jersey attackers linked to anti Semitic fringe movement AP NEWS April 21 2021 Curnutte Mark January 22 2019 What to know about Black Hebrew Israelites the group in that Covington Catholic video USA Today Retrieved June 17 2020 A Case of Mistaken Identity Black Jews amp Hebrew Israelites TribeHerald com Retrieved September 17 2023 Parfitt Judaising Movements p 96 a b Singer Symbolic Identity Formation in an African American Religious Sect p 57 a b c Hudson Peter 1999 Black Jews In Kwame Anthony Appiah Henry Louis Gates Jr eds Africana The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience New York Basic Civitas Books p 1050 a b Moses p 537 a b Shipler David K January 30 1981 Israelis Urged To Act Over Black Hebrew Cult The New York Times Retrieved May 28 2008 a b c d Haas Danielle November 15 2002 Black Hebrews fight for citizenship in Israel San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved May 25 2008 a b The Hebrew Israelite Community Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs September 29 2006 Retrieved November 5 2016 Martin Douglas May 9 2007 Yahweh ben Yahweh Leader of Separatist Sect Dies at 71 The New York Times via NYTimes com a b Chireau pp 30 31 The founding dates of the earliest black Jewish congregations are in dispute Shapiro notes that F S Cherry s Church of God was organized in Tennessee in 1886 but other sources do not confirm this date Another group the Moorish Zion Temple founded in 1899 by a Rabbi Richlieu of Brooklyn New York was one of the earliest black Jewish congregations that did not combine Jewish and Christian beliefs as did the Church of God and the Saints of Christ Singer Symbolic Identity Formation in an African American Religious Sect pp 57 58 Parfitt Black Jews in Africa and the Americas p 88 Fauset p 34 a b Dorman Black Israelites p 73 a b Fauset pp 36 40 Fauset pp 36 37 a b Singer The Southern Origin of Black Judaism p 130 a b Fox Andrew September 29 2005 Sons of Abraham The College Hill Independent Archived from the original on March 10 2006 Retrieved June 23 2016 Wynia pp 31 34 Wynia n p Greene p 42 Chief Rabbi Levi S Plummer G F A Church of God and Saints of Christ Retrieved January 1 2018 Chief Rabbi Jehu A Crowdy Jr G F A Church of God and Saints of Christ Retrieved January 1 2018 Chief Rabbi Phillip E McNeil Church of God and Saints of Christ Retrieved January 1 2018 Church of God and Saints of Christ Archived from the original on January 30 2008 Retrieved February 9 2008 a b Kidd p 59 a b Singer Symbolic Identity Formation in an African American Religious Sect p 59 Gallagher p 146 Chireau p 25 a b Herschthal Eric July 6 2007 Decline Of A Black Synagogue The Jewish Week Archived from the original on January 12 2013 Retrieved February 9 2008 Parfitt Judaising Movements p 95 a b Sundquist p 116 a b Wolfson p 48 Commandment Keepers Ethiopian Hebrew Congregation New York Architecture Retrieved February 1 2008 Ben Levy Sholomo The Destruction of Commandment Keepers Inc 1919 2007 BlackJews org International Israelite Board of Rabbis Retrieved February 10 2008 Goldschmidt p 221 Israelite Academy BlackJews org International Israelite Board of Rabbis Retrieved February 10 2008 a b c d e Music Earns Black Hebrews Some Acceptance CBS News Associated Press April 5 2006 Archived from the original on May 7 2006 Retrieved May 25 2008 a b c Michaeli p 75 a b Our Story The African Hebrew Israelites of Jerusalem Archived from the original on May 15 2008 Retrieved May 25 2008 Michaeli p 76 Michaeli pp 73 74 a b c d Michaeli p 74 a b Kaufman David April 16 2006 Quest for a Homeland Gains a World Stage The New York Times Retrieved May 28 2008 Alush Zvi February 2 2009 First Black Hebrew Gets Israeli Citizenship Ynetnews Retrieved February 2 2009 Leader of African Hebrew Israelites of Jerusalem dies Jpost com Retrieved October 25 2017 Israel retreat for Houston BBC News Online May 27 2003 Retrieved May 26 2008 Whitney Houston visits Israel for Christmas album inspiration USA Today Associated Press May 28 2003 Retrieved May 26 2008 Palti Michal May 29 2003 Whitney does Dimona Haaretz Retrieved May 26 2008 Kestenbaum Sam January 22 2019 Who are the Black Israelites at the center of the viral standoff at the Lincoln Memorial The Washington Post Retrieved May 29 2019 Carodine Kennedi April 27 2016 Gathering of Christ Church to Tear Down Lies Retrieved January 3 2021 Black Separatist Southern Poverty Law Center Archived from the original on February 17 2021 Hatewatch Staff April 21 2018 Courting Butt Naked Israel United in Christ attempts to recruit former cannibal and leader of a Liberian child army Southern Poverty Law Center Retrieved January 3 2021 Musodza Masimba September 1 2016 The Hebrew Israelites Are A Real Threat Retrieved January 3 2021 a b Racist Black Hebrew Israelites Becoming More Militant Intelligence Report Southern Poverty Law Center Fall 2008 Retrieved November 5 2016 God and the General Leader Discusses Black Supremacist Group Intelligence Report Southern Poverty Law Center Fall 2008 Archived from the original on September 7 2008 Retrieved September 8 2008 Lee Martin A Winter 2001 Popularity and Populism Intelligence Report Southern Poverty Law Center Retrieved November 5 2016 Poisoning the Web Hatred Online African American Anti Semitism Anti Defamation League 2001 Archived from the original on January 2 2014 Retrieved November 5 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b Project Megiddo PDF Federal Bureau of Investigation 1999 pp 23 25 Archived PDF from the original on August 15 2000 Retrieved May 13 2018 Nacos Brigitte L 2015 Terrorism and Counterterrorism Routledge p 79 ISBN 9781317343646 The Decatur Daily Review 12 Jul 1974 page Page 6 Newspapers com Dayton Daily News 03 Jul 1974 page 1 Newspapers com Derek Hawkins December 15 2019 Probe of Jersey City shooting leads FBI to arrest pawn shop owner on weapons charge The Washington Post Chafets Zev April 3 2009 Obama s Rabbi The New York Times via NYTimes com Commentary Rabbi Capers Funnye other Black Hebrew Israelites wrongly connected to Jersey City shooters Chicago Tribune JTA Black Hebrew Israelite leader condemns heinous Jersey City shooting www timesofisrael com Retrieved December 22 2019 Shayna Jacobs Deanna Paul Maria Sacchetti and Hannah Knowles December 30 2019 Hanukkah stabbing suspect searched why did Hitler hate the Jews prosecutors say The Washington Post a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Lee Morgan January 24 2019 The Hebrew Israelites in That March for Life Viral Video Explained Christianity Today Retrieved February 2 2020 SourcesBen Jochannan Yosef A A 1993 1983 We the Black Jews Witness to the White Jewish Race Myth Baltimore Black Classic Press ISBN 0 933121 40 7 Bruder Edith Parfitt Tudor 2012 Introduction In Edith Bruder Tudor Parfitt eds African Zion Studies in Black Judaism Newcastle upon Tyne Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 978 1 4438 3802 3 Archived from the original on December 26 2016 Retrieved December 28 2016 Chireau Yvonne 2000 Black Culture and Black Zion African American Religious Encounters with Judaism 1790 1930 an Overview In Yvonne Patricia Chireau Nathaniel Deutsch eds Black Zion African American Religious Encounters with Judaism New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 511257 1 Dorman Jacob S 2006 Black Israelites In Gallagher Eugene V Ashcraft W Michael eds Introduction to New and Alternative Religions in America Vol 1 Westport Conn Greenwood Press ISBN 0 275 98713 2 Fauset Arthur Huff 2002 1944 Black Gods of the Metropolis Negro Religious Cults of the Urban North Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 0 8122 1001 8 Gallagher Eugene V 2004 The New Religious Movements Experience in America Westport Conn Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 32807 2 Goldschmidt Henry 2006 Race and Religion Among the Chosen Peoples of Crown Heights New Brunswick N J Rutgers University Press ISBN 0 8135 3897 1 Greene Lorenzo Johnston 1996 Arvarh E Strickland ed Selling Black History for Carter G Woodson A Diary 1930 1933 Columbia University of Missouri Press ISBN 0 8262 1068 6 Isaac Walter 2006 Locating African American Judaism A Critique of White Normativity In Lewis R Gordon Jane Anna Gordon eds A Companion to African American Studies Malden Mass Blackwell Publishing ISBN 0 631 23516 7 Kidd Colin 2006 The Forging of Races Race and Scripture in the Protestant Atlantic World 1600 2000 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 79324 6 Landing James E 2002 Black Judaism Story of an American Movement Durham N C Carolina Academic Press ISBN 0 89089 820 0 Michaeli Ethan 2000 Another Exodus The Hebrew Israelites from Chicago to Dimona In Yvonne Patricia Chireau Nathaniel Deutsch eds Black Zion African American Religious Encounters with Judaism New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 511257 1 Moses Wilson Jeremiah 2003 Chosen Peoples of the Metropolis Black Muslims Black Jews and Others In Cornel West Eddie S Glaude Jr eds African American Religious Thought An Anthology Louisville Ky Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 0 664 22459 8 Parfitt Tudor 2013 Black Jews in Africa and the Americas Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 07150 6 Parfitt Tudor Emanuela Trevisan Semi 2002 Judaising Movements Studies in the Margins of Judaism in Modern Times New York Routledge ISBN 0 7007 1515 0 Singer Merrill 1992 The Southern Origin of Black Judaism In Baer Hans A Jones Yvonne eds African Americans in the South Issues of Race Class and Gender Athens Ga University of Georgia Press ISBN 0 8203 1376 9 Singer Merrill 2000 Symbolic Identity Formation in an African American Religious Sect The Black Hebrew Israelites In Yvonne Patricia Chireau Nathaniel Deutsch eds Black Zion African American Religious Encounters with Judaism New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 511257 1 Sundquist Eric J 2002 Strangers in the Land Blacks Jews Post Holocaust America Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 01942 3 Wolfson Bernard J 2000 African American Jews Dispelling Myths Bridging the Divide In Yvonne Patricia Chireau Nathaniel Deutsch eds Black Zion African American Religious Encounters with Judaism New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 511257 1 Wynia Elly M 1994 The Church of God and Saints of Christ The Rise of Black Jews New York Routledge ISBN 0 8153 1136 2 Further readingJacob S Dorman 2013 Chosen People The Rise of American Black Israelite Religions Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 530140 3 Martina Konighofer 2008 The New Ship of Zion Dynamic Diaspora Dimensions of the African Hebrew Israelites of Jerusalem LIT Verlag Munster ISBN 978 3 8258 1055 9 Steven Thrasher March 30 2011 Black Hebrew Israelites New York s Most Obnoxious Prophets The Village Voice Archived from the original on April 8 2011 Retrieved April 10 2011 External linksTwo Hebrew Israelite Biblical Verses Examined The Times of Israel Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Black Hebrew Israelites amp oldid 1180096681, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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