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Jews in Madagascar

Accounts of Jews in Madagascar go back to the earliest ethnographic descriptions of the island, from the mid-17th century. Madagascar has a small Jewish population, including normative adherents as well as Judaic mystics, but the island has not historically been a significant center for Jewish settlement. Despite this, an enduring origin myth across Malagasy ethnic groups suggests that the island's inhabitants descended from ancient Jews, and thus that the modern Malagasy and Jewish peoples share a racial affinity. This belief, termed the "Malagasy secret", is so widespread that some Malagasy refer to the island's people as the Diaspora Jiosy Gasy (Malagasy Jewish Diaspora). As a result, Jewish symbols, paraphernalia, and teachings have been integrated into the syncretic religious practices of some Malagasy populations. Similar notions of Madagascar's supposed Israelite roots persisted in European chronicles of the island until the early 20th century, and may have influenced a Nazi plan to relocate Europe's Jews to Madagascar. More recently, the possibility of Portuguese Jewish conversos making contact with Madagascar in the 15th century has been proposed.

Malagasy Jews
Jiosy Gasy
מָדָגַסְקָר סְפָרַד
(Madagascar Sepharad)
A Jiosy Gasy (Malagasy Jew) in Ampanotokana recites the Havdalah prayer to mark the end of Shabbat
Total population
132+
Regions with significant populations
Madagascar: Mainly in Ampanotokana.
Languages
Malagasy, Hebrew, French
Religion
Judaism
Related ethnic groups
Malagasy peoples, Sephardi Jews

Madagascar's small Jewish community faced challenges during the Vichy regime, which implemented antisemitic laws affecting the few Jews on the island. In the 21st century, some indigenous Malagasy communities informally identified with Jews and Judaism have adopted rabbinic Judaism, studying the Torah and Talmud across three small congregations and undergoing Orthodox conversion. The unified rabbinic Jewish community refers to its ethnic division within Judaism as Madagascar Sepharad.

Theories of Jewish origin of Malagasy people edit

 
Legends of ancient Jewish ancestry in Madagascar often feature red zebu—a local adaptation of the red heifer mentioned in the Torah.

The "Malagasy secret" edit

There is a widespread, centuries-old[1] belief in Madagascar that Malagasy people are descended from Jews, with "probably millions" of people in Madagascar claiming genealogical origins in ancient Israel.[2] This belief is termed the "Malagasy secret", and is so common that some Malagasy refer to their people(s) as the Diaspora Jiosy Gasy (Malagasy Jewish Diaspora).[3] The origin myths, which vary across clans, often include ancestors arriving at the shores of Madagascar wearing white and bearing "red zebu", a localized adaptation of the biblical red heifer tradition.[4][5] Katherine Quanbeck records an oral testimony from a man of the Tavaratra clan, from Sandravinany, of his people's ancestors who...[4]

...came from somewhere in the area of Medina, or somewhere on the sea coast of Saudi Arabia, in scores of botries [boats] full of families to the northern coast of Madagascar. Some of them, the Tantakara, stayed in the area of that northern coast, others continued southward along the eastern coast of Madagascar. The dhow of our family contained one red zebu and when the dhow reached the Vohipeno area, the zebu brayed, so they stopped here temporarily. But then they continued southward, past what is known as Fort Dauphin, and continued on around the southern coast, even going as far as Androka. At the mouth of that river, the zebu brayed again, two times; so they stopped there but eventually left again, and returned the way they had come. After travelling back eastward along Madagascar’s southern coast, then northward along part of the eastern coast, at the Vohipeno area, the red zebu brayed three times. So they stopped there, and our family eventually moved as far south as Sandravinany, a region which was open totally, with no persons having settled it. We were the original Malagasy people in that area around what is now known as Sandravinany.

Further belief holds that Madagascar has been settled by Jews since ancient times, and that the island was associated with ancient Ophir.[6] These same legends assert that the rosewood used in the construction of the Temple of Solomon came from the lowland forests of Madagascar.[2]

 
 
Betsileo legend holds that the rosewood collected for Solomon's Temple came from Madagascar's lowland forests.

Descent from members of this Solomonic fleet is prominently claimed by the Merina and Betsileo peoples.[7] Betsileo legend associated with a site called Ivolamena describes two Betsileo ancestors, Antos and Cathy, sent by Solomon to Madagascar to look for gold and precious stones.[8]

The Merina royal line has often claimed to descend from an ancient wave of Israelite migration that arrived via Asia in Madagascar, after being exiled by the Neo-Babylonian emperor Nebuchadnezzar.[9] Antemoro people claim Moses as their forebearer. Sakalava and Antandroy people explain certain taboos within their respective cultures as originating with ancient Israelite ancestors. Some Malagasy theories of Jewish provenance suggest ancestral origin in one or more of the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel, most commonly Gad, Issachar, Dan, and Asher. Another narrative linking ancient Hebrews to Madagascar asserts that Madagascar was the site of the Garden of Eden (with various island rivers around the Malagasy settlement of Mananzara cited as the true Biblical Pishon), and that Noah's Ark departed from Madagascar at the time of the flood.[10][11][12] One Antemoro legend recounts that the Islamic prophet Mahomet had five sons who all became kings in Arabia: Abraham, Noah, Joseph, Moses, and Jesus, the last four of them having fathered Tsimeto, Kazimambo, Anakara, and Raminia.[8]

Edith Bruder describes an oral testimony from the archives of Katherine Quanbeck, in which, "after several meetings," a young Sevohitse man "cautiously mentioned the existence of a place from where he came, Foibe Jiosy, which means 'the headquarters of the Jews,' near Ambovombe, Madagascar. He commented, 'We marry only within our clan. No one likes to come to our town. People do not like us. We have to hide the fact that we are Jewish.'"[4]

 
It has been claimed by Prince Ndriana Rabarioelina, a member of the Merina royal family, that the red, white, and black royal lamba (pictured above on King Andrianampoinimerina) shares roots with similar Levite robes described in the Midrash.[13]

Similar "crypto-Jewish" legends exist in neighboring Comoros and Mozambique.[12]

Alakamisy Ambohimaha edit

 
The highlands Betsileo commune of Alakamisy Ambohimaha is home to Ivolamena, a holy site where cliffs bearing inscriptions are held by believers as artifacts of ancient Solomonic ancestors of the Betsileo people.

A site called Ivolamena in Alakamisy Ambohimaha contains cliffs that were studied in the 1950s by a team of French researchers following "rumors in the region of Fianarantsoa about the existence of letters carved in stone", discovered by local stonemason Edouard Randrianasolo.[8][7][14] The French researchers described an inscription on the cliff-face "imputable to characters derived from the Phoenician alphabet with a high probability that the [glyphs] emanate from the family of southern-Arabic [glyphs] called Sabaean." The team also hypothesized, based on commonalities between Sabaean and Malagasy irrigation techniques, that "Hamito-Semites" may have been the first to bring zebu cattle to Madagascar. Another nearby site, Vohisoratra (meaning 'the mountain with writings'), was reported to bear "an inscription calling to mind Hebrew characters." The researchers had received tips from a Malagasy informant, who suggested that the Vohisoratra inscriptions might be dated "to the time of king Solomon, who sent the Israelites across the world to seek precious stones for the building of Jerusalem".[7] In 1962, Pierre Vérin summarized scientific opinions of the inscriptions as "divided", and asserted that geologists consider the supposed inscriptions to be the products of "natural erosion".[7][15]

The Ivolamena and Vohisoratra sites[a] are today revered as a supernatural holy site by Betsileo claimants of ancient Israelite ancestry, who believe that both cliffs' inscriptions were left by their forebearers during a voyage to gather materials for Solomon's Temple during which they married the locals of a legendary "Zafindrandoto" tribe and settled to found the earliest Betsileo communities.[8][12] A January 1989 speech by then-president of Madagascar Didier Ratsiraka made reference to the local beliefs surrounding the Ambohimaha cliff, which he claimed bore "proto-Hebraïc" writings. Ratsiraka also reportedly requested that teams of Malagasy archaeologists investigate the question of Madagascar's Jewish roots and conduct digs in the Betsileo region to search for the biblical Queen of Sheba's treasure.[7] In 2009, residents of Alakamisy Ambohimaha threatened adherents of "Hebraic Judaism" who had come to the cliffs and sacrificed two lambs, one black and one white, despite the local fady (taboo) against slaughtering sheep.[8] The Betsileo locals called for the government to recognize the commune as a sacred site of historical heritage, and protect it accordingly.[16]

The "Jewish thesis" edit

The theory that Malagasy people can trace their ancestry to ancient Jews—termed the "Jewish thesis"—is asserted in the earliest writings on the question of Malagasy origins, and by the late 19th and early 20th centuries had become a "conviction" of the many European chroniclers of the island.[7] Common substantiations for the thesis included observations of "linguistic similarities [between Hebrew and Malagasy]; common physiognomic traits; alimentary and hygiene taboos; some sort of monotheism [with the Malagasy naming Zanahary as their one, un-picturable God];[17] observance of a lunar calendar; and life-cycle events resembling those in the Jewish tradition, circumcision in particular".[18][7] A similar "Arab thesis" was also prevalent, though less persistent and popular than its Jewish counterpart.[5]

The British merchant Richard Boothby of the East India Company posited in 1646 that the people of Madagascar are descended from the Hebrew patriarch Abraham and his wife Keturah, and were sent away by Abraham to "inhabit the East".[19] The introduction (credited to Captain William Mackett) of Robert Drury's 1729 memoir suggests that "the Jew derived a great deal from [the Malagasy], instead of they from the Jews ... their religion is more ancient".[20] Samuel Copland wrote in 1822 that "The origin of the [Malagasy], is, by the generality of writers, ascribed to the Jews."[21][22] The naturalist Alfred Grandider affirmed supposed evidence of two waves of ancient Israelite migration to Madagascar in 1901, concluding: "The fleets sent by King Solomon towards the Southeast coast of Africa [to procure materials for his Temple] had probably some of their ships lost on the coasts of Madagascar and it is not unlikely that, in ancient times, some Jewish colonies had been founded, voluntarily or not, in this island."[7] Grandider also compared the cultural practices of the Malagasy to those of the ancient Israelites, finding in common thirty-five features including animal sacrifice, scapegoating, similar funerary conventions, and practices comparable to metzitzah b'peh and the ordeal of the bitter water.[23] That same year, Irish anthropologist Augustus Henry Keane published The Gold of Ophir: Whence Brought and by Whom?, in which he proposed that Ophir's gold was brought from Madagascar.[7][24] In 1946, Arthur Leib wrote that Malagasy practice of numerology is the product of Jewish influence on the people.[25] Also in 1946, Joseph Briant published L'hebreu à Madagascar, an influential comparative study of the Malagasy and Hebrew languages that purported to find substantial commonalities between the two.[26]

Lars Dahle wrote critically on the comparative arguments for the thesis in 1833: "The truth is, I think, that similarity of customs is nearly worthless as a sign of relationship, if not supported and borne out by other proofs of more importance".[7] The British explorer Samuel Copeland argued in 1847 that Malagasy people have "neither customs, traditions, rites, nor ceremonies sufficiently analogous to justify us in assigning their origin to that [Jewish] people."[27] In 1924, Chase Osborn protested at the Jewish thesis that "not one of the [Malagasy] tribes have the great Jewish nose which has followed that people during all time and is a sign of strength."[28]

Contemporary analyses of colonial European theories of Jewish Malagasy origin have noted that "the identification of Levitical customs was an obsession of the missionaries and early European anthropologists,"[12] and that "squaring the Bible's assertion of universality and shared descent from Noah's three sons with the realities of global diversity was [...] a central preoccupation of generations of ecclesiasts and Christian voyagers."[7] Eric T. Jennings argues that the discourses about Jewish roots in Madagascar led to the selection of the island by Nazi Germany for the Madagascar Plan, a proposed forcible relocation of Europe's Jews to Madagascar.[7]

Later investigations edit

No genetic testing has been done on specific Malagasy populations to corroborate claims of Jewish phylogenetic heritage. Genetic and linguistic studies that inquire broadly about Malagasy origins generally point to Austronesian settlement as the earliest human presence on the island, followed by waves of migration from other regions including East Africa.[12] A 2013 DNA study of the Antemoro people found two haplogroups linked to Middle Eastern origins in their parental lineages. Haplogroup J1 was found to connect the Antemoro with, among others, Portuguese Jews and people from Israel and Palestine. Haplogroup T1 connected the Antemoro to Israel, Spain, Lebanon, and Palestine.[29][30]

Nathan Devir judged the possibility of Malagasy racial descent from one of the Ten Lost Tribes to be "unlikely but possible" given the body of genetic research on Malagasy origins.[31] It has been alternatively proposed that Jews or their converted descendants may have been among the 10th-century Arab traders, or among the 15th-century sailors fleeing the Portuguese Inquisition, who came to Madagascar.[2][32][33] Edith Bruder writes that "the presence of Idumean colonies or Arab Jews from Yemen in Madagascar may be considered."[4] Tudor Parfitt, who describes 18th and 19th-century Merina royal tombstones with Hebrew writing, asserts that "There is good reason to believe that Portuguese anusim settled in Madagascar … There is no reason to doubt a historic connection with the Jews, but in the absence of any proof, it would be audacious to say there was a connection."[34]

Jewish communities in Madagascar edit

Zafy Ibrahim edit

17th century French colonial governor Étienne de Flacourt reported of a group called the Zafy Ibrahim, whom he'd encountered between 1644 and 1648 in the vicinity of the island of Nosy Boraha and judged to be of Jewish identity and descent.[35] The 500-600 people constituting the group were described in de Flacourt's account as being unfamiliar with Muhammad (considering his followers to be "lawless men"), celebrating and resting on Saturdays (unlike members of the island's Muslim population, who rested on Fridays), and bearing Hebrew names like Moses, Isaac, Jacob, Rachel and Noah.[17] The group collectively maintained a regional monopoly on religious animal sacrifice.[35] The Zafy Ibrahim have been theorized variously to be Yemenite Jews, Khajirites, Qarmatian Ismaili Gnostics, Coptic or Nestorian Christians, and descendants of pre-Islamic Arabs coming from Ethiopia.[35] In 1880, James Sibree published an account of the Zafy Ibrahim in Vohipeno, quoting one in affirmation: "we are altogether Jews".[35] An 1888 report described the Zafy Ibrahim's Hebraic rites and observances as "only a remote vibration of Judeo-Arabic influence."[36] By the French colonial period, Zafy Ibrahim began to identify themselves as Arabs and integrate into the Betsimisaraka people, and the people of Nosy Boraha today call themselves "Arabs".[35]

Colonial Period edit

 
Abraham Schrameck, a Jew of Alsatian origin, was the Governor General of Madagascar from 1918 to 1920.

After France colonized the island and Europeans began settling there in the 19th century, a small number of Jewish families settled in Antananarivo, but did not establish a Jewish community.[37]

Madagascar was governed between August 1918 and July 1919 by a French-Jewish politician, Abraham Schrameck.[38][39][40]

 
A telegram from the governor of Mahajanga, dated 14 April 1942, reporting that two Jews in the region had identified themselves in accordance with Vichy anti-Jewish legislation

On July 5, 1941, Madagascar, then under Vichy France's colonial rule, instituted a law mandating a census of all Jewish residents. Jews had to register and declare their wealth within a month of the law's enactment.[41] The census that year identified only 26 Jews, with half holding French nationality.[42] Despite this small population, Olivier Leroy, Madagascar's Pétainist Director of Education, conducted a public conference in 1942 in Antananarivo titled "Antisémitisme et Révolution nationale"—"Antisemitism and national revolution". The implementation of Vichy France's antisemitic laws in Madagascar led to the exclusion of the island's 26 Jews from various sectors, including the military, media, commerce, industry, and civil service.[42] These laws were strictly enforced. By August 15, 1941, those working in administrative roles were removed from their positions.[41] In one case, a civilian's letter to regional authorities identified Alexander Dreyfus, a rice merchant in Antanimena, as a Jew, and thus in breach of the law prohibiting Jews from trading in cereals or grains. The letter's author urged the administration to stop Dreyfus, lest the government seem "ridiculed by a common Jew". The regional leader in Tananarive ordered the police chief to see that Dreyfus "immediately cease his activities in the grain sector".[41]

In 2011, Adam Rovner found one Jewish grave on the island, belonging to Captain Israel Solomon Genussow. Genussow was a South African Jewish soldier for the British Army who grew up in Palestine and died in action on July 30, 1944, at the age of 28.[38][43] It was described in 2017 as the only known Jewish grave in Madagascar.[44]

A series of letters from a Jew in Madagascar to the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee were sent between 1947 and 1948, describing the conditions of Madagascar's Jews and requesting legal and financial assistance for the community.[45] The author writes in his first letter: "Since June 1940, when armistice was signed between France and Germany, all Jews in Madagascar were in troubles. Even our properties were taken by the government ruling the country at that time. We are not allowed to work as merchants, because we are Jews. In 1942, my brother had a big stock of rice, corn and manioc which was requisitioned by the government and since that time he never received any payment for those goods ... A few people here in [Antananarivo] who are Jews do not want to declare that they are so as they are afraid ... Consequently, the Jew Community here cannot have any meeting (official)."[46] He goes on in further letters to approximate the number of Jews in Madagascar as 1,200 including children, some of whom were born on the island.[47]

In 1950, a council of Haredi rabbis in Paris sought the guidance of the Chief Rabbi of Israel, Yitzhak HaLevi Herzog, regarding the permissibility of consuming zebu meat under Jewish dietary laws. Their inquiry was part of an effort to set up kosher slaughterhouses in Madagascar for the purpose of exporting meat to Israel. The inquiry generated a halakhic controversy among rabbinic authorities. Rabbi Herzog's positive stance was prominently challenged by Rabbi Avrohom Yeshaya Karelitz. Ultimately, the Chief Rabbinate declined to approve the Malagasy meat, in deference to Rabbi Karelitz's argument.[48]

In 1955, the Rebbe Menachem Mendel Schneerson, leader of the Lubavitch-Chabad Hasidic Jewish movement, asked Rabbi Yosef Wineberg to go to Madagascar "in order to find any stray sheep of the House of Israel". At that time, the Jewish community in nearby South Africa was aware of only two Jews in Madagascar: a French doctor who did not identify with his Jewish heritage, and an Orthodox Tunisian Jew, Mr. Louzon, who had sent a telegram requesting conserved Kosher meats, due to the lack of Kosher butchers in the region.[49] "I'm sure you'll find there more than one [Jew]," the Rebbe reportedly wrote in a letter to Rabbi Wineberg. Wineberg found and made contact with "about eight" Iraqi Jewish families in Madagascar. He affixed mezuzot to their doors, gave them a shofar, and taught them how to pray as a group.[50][51] The Rebbe maintained contact with Mr. Louzon and his wife.[52][49][53]

Communauté Juive de Madagascar edit

 
Touvya (Ferdinand Jean Andriatovomanana), the chazzan of the Jewish community in Ampanotokana
 
Petoela (Andre Jacque Rabisisoa) teaching Hebrew

The country is home to a small normative Jewish Malagasy population (in addition to a greater number of Jewish-identifying practitioners of syncretic combinations of Christianity, Judaism, Islam and traditional ancestor-worship and animism, including the 2,000 members of the "approximate[ly]... dozens"[12] of Messianic Jewish congregations in Madagascar, which syncretically incorporate Judaic elements into Christian belief).[54][55]

The community of "a couple hundred" Malagasy Jews in Ampanotokana arrived at rabbinic Judaism in 2010 as the result of three regional Messianic Jewish groups splintering off and studying the Torah.[56][57] In 2012, the community obtained state authorization to operate as a religious congregation, and in 2014 the group was recognized by the provincial office of the Ministry of the Interior and Decentralization, first under the Hebrew name Ôrah Vesimh’a ('Light and Joy'), and later as the formal Communauté Juive de Madagascar (Jewish Community of Madagascar).[58][54] The group refers to its ethnic division within Judaism as Madagascar Sepharad, praying in Sephardic-accented Hebrew and practicing a Sephardic-style liturgy, which they say was suggested to them by a Dutch Messianic Jew who thought Ashkenazi tradition would be inappropriate for such a decidedly non-European population.[59][58]

The community's president is Ashrey Dayves (born Andrianarisao Asarery), who leads alongside Peteola (Andre Jacque Rabisisoa), who serves as the Hebrew teacher, and Touvya (Ferdinand Jean Andriatovomanana), the community's chazzan.[56] Most of those in the administrative and spiritual leadership of the community are of a lower socioeconomic class relative to the general congregation. These leaders cite a lack of steady work as a reason for their wealth of free time that allows them to amass the knowledge necessary for their roles.[58]

Nathan Devir analyzes Malagasy Judaic adherence in context of the ancestor-honoring traditions of Madagascar's culture, writing that for Madagascar's new Jews, "the imperative to live Jewishly is a way to honour the ancestors more truly and efficiently." He also notes that Malagasy Jews reject the ancestor-venerating funerary practice of famadihana because it is effectively prohibited by Jewish burial custom. Though the dominant belief among Malagasy Jews is that Judaism is the same religion as their indigenous spirituality, there is no practical syncretism within the group.[58] William F. S. Miles observes anti-colonial sentiment in Malagasy Jewish identity, which is often characterized by a belief that the colonial French powers suppressed the truth of the Malagasy peoples' ancient Israelite and Jewish origins.[54]

Conversion and post-conversion activities edit

In 2013, group members came in contact with a Jewish outreach group, who helped the community to organize a group Orthodox conversion.[60] Some members of this community were reportedly hesitant to convert to Orthodoxy because they understood themselves to already be ethnically Jewish.[2][61][31] Nathan Devir interpreted the Malagasy view of Judaism—which considers it an inherited parentage to be enacted through religious practice—as being "out of step" with the traditional notion of conversion. He reports that in 2013, some Malagasy Jews opposed to the prospect of conversion "[saw] their 'Jewish blood' as precluding the need for any formal conversion process."[62][63] In May 2016, after five years of self-study in Judaism, 121 members of the Malagasy Jewish community underwent conversion in accordance with traditional Jewish rituals; appearing before a beit din and submerged in a river mikvah. Because the local Parks Department denied the Communauté's request to build a temporary structure on the Ikopa River in which to disrobe (with mikvah baths traditionally requiring complete nudity), the ritual occurred at a river far from town, and the converts built a tent from tarp and wood to protect their privacy.[64][65] The conversion, presided over by three Orthodox rabbis, was followed by fourteen weddings and vow renewals under a makeshift chuppah at a hotel in Antananarivo.[66][33]

Members of the Communauté Juive de Madagascar reported antisemitic discrimination following their conversion: some private schools refused to register Jewish children after learning of their religious affiliation, and one landlord cancelled a lease contract after learning that the rental house was going to be used as a Jewish religious school. Members of the community also reported "unwelcome attention" and comments for their religious attire.[67]

In 2018, 11 more members of the Ampanotokana Jewish community underwent Orthodox conversion, presided over by a Belgian-Malagasy rabbi.[68] In November 2019, the group formed a Vaad (rabbinical council) to handle and publish guidance of halakha (Jewish law).[69] In 2021, the Communauté Juive de Madagascar opened a printing shop to generate income for the community and print Jewish texts.[70][71]

 
Malagasy people with a valiha, an indigenous musical instrument believed by many Malagasy to have been inherited from King David.

Aaronites edit

 
A villager of Mananzara holding the election flag of mayor Roger Randrianomanana, which features a Magen David and a valiha

William F.S. Miles documents various Malagasy religious communities claiming Jewish lineage, including a robe-wearing, animal-sacrificing "Aaronite" sect in their village of Mananzara, who assert that their Jewish ancestors, among whom they count Aaron, brother of Moses, were swept to Madagascar in the deluge of Genesis. Mananzara's Aaronite community is organized with priests (analogous to kohenim) and their assistants (analogous to Levites) officiating to the community.[72] The Jewish identity of Mananzara villagers is also expressed in the logo of their elected leader Roger Randrianomanana, which features a six-pointed Star of David alongside a Malagasy valiha (which many Malagasy claim are inherited from King David).[2][12]

Nathan Devir describes Merina traditionalist groups, among them the Temple of Loharanom-Pitahiana (meaning 'the Source of the Blessing') of Ambohimiadana, who are identified with rabbinic and Messianic Jewish communities on the island but do not feel a need to align their own religion, which they prefer to call "Hebraic religion" or "Aaronism", with the norms of rabbinic Judaism, which they regard as a later and somewhat strayed derivation from the ancient Israelite creed inherited by the Merina. While many Malagasy claim such treasures as the Ark of the Covenant, fragments of the Tablets of Stone, and Moses' staff to be kept in Vatumasina, though the kings and scribes maintain that the Hebrew treasures were lost in a fire during the French repression of the Malagasy Uprising of 1947.[32] The narrative account of their origin was related to Devir as follows:

Before the Babylonian invasion that destroyed the Temple of Solomon, our priestly and Levite ancestors had received prophetic messages that foresaw this devastation. They were instructed to leave Jerusalem and to take with them the sacred objects held in the holy of Holies [...] They left Jerusalem before the disaster and arrived on the eastern coast of Madagascar in 1305, having passed by India, Vietnam, Indonesia [Java], and the Indian Ocean (a sea voyage guided by the winds and the tides).

According to local priests, the leaders of Ambohimiadana did not write down their oral histories and ancestral codes until 1977. Some of these writings are said to be in Hebrew, but Devir was unable to verify this. The Merina Loharanom-Pitahiana traditionalists reject the Talmud, Kabbalah, and other post-biblical texts, and have "politely declined" invitations to integrate into the Communauté Juive de Madagascar.[2][12]

Miles also documents a group of contemporary "kings and scribes" in Vatumasina, who claim descendance from an Arabized Jewish figure named Ali Ben Forah, or Alitawarat (Ali of the Torah), who came to Madagascar from Mecca in the 15th century.[73][2]

Other Judaic groups edit

The Église du Judaïsme Hébraïque is a charismatic cult in Madagascar led by the Judaic mystic Rivo Lala, whose teachings circulate via the internet.[2] Nathan Devir describes Lala's religion as "a mélange of spiritualism, Catholicism, and theosophy with a healthy dose of Aaronite-descent propaganda and a cultlike emphasis on his own supernatural abilities." Lala's followers are described as wearing kippot and flowing tunics similar to Arabian thawbs.[12] In 2012, Lala publicly claimed that he could guarantee a return to acceptance and power for the then-exiled former President of Madagascar Marc Ravalomanana "if he accepts me as [his] rabbi and agrees to follow the religion of Hebraic Judaism".[12][74] Lala has been arrested several times, and in November 2015 was arrested in Miandrivazo for "witchcraft against around fifty high school girls" after authorities alleged to have found found wooden idols in his car.[75][12] His arrest incited a frenzy in the town, with the families of the allegedly possessed girls demanding that Lala be handed over to them.[76] He was sentenced to one year in prison for witchcraft in January 2016, and was acquitted in June of that year.[77][78]

 
The Trano Koltoraly Malagasy celebrating the Malagasy new year in March 2012

Since 2004, a Malagasy organization called Trano koltoraly malagasy has advocated for a Jewish origin and identity among Malagasy people, proposing origins among the Israelites of the Exodus. The group observes a "Malagasy new year" at the end of March or beginning of April.[10]

Foreign affairs edit

The Madagascar Plan edit

 
Léon Cayla, the Governor-General of Madagascar from 1930 to 1939, was a strong opponent of Jewish relocation to Madagascar.

In the summer of 1940, following various similar proposals made by Jews and anti-semites alike since the late 19th century, Nazi Germany proposed the Madagascar Plan, according to which 4 million European Jews would be expelled and forcibly relocated to the island. Eric T. Jennings has argued that the plan's persistence, from its earliest public proposals to its explorations by the French, Polish, and German governments during World War II, stems from the "Jewish thesis" discourse regarding Madagascar's supposed ancient Jewish roots.[7]: 174  In 1937, Bealanana and Ankaizinana, two very remote areas with high elevations and low population densities, were identified by a French "expert" delegation of three men, two of whom were Jews, as a possible site for Jewish relocation.[38][7]

Léon Cayla [fr], the colonial Governor-General of Madagascar from May 1930 to April 1939, was a strong opponent of the Polish proposal, arguing persistently against Jewish immigration to the island, and ignoring and rebuffing repeated appeals from various Jewish organizations to allow for the mass resettlement and immigration of Polish Jews to Madagascar.[7]: 191–193  The reaction in the tightly-censored Malagasy press reflected this opposition, expressing concern that the relocated Jews "would not remain engaged in agriculture for long but would move into trading or compete with the locals for the remaining jobs" and would receive favorable treatment and assistance from the Colonial Minister over the indigenous Malagasy and long-established French settlers on the island. It was "unanimously lamented" that Madagascar was willing to spend money on the internment of Spanish refugees in France and the resettlement of Polish Jews, but did nothing for its colonies.[79] Two antisemitic letters to Cayla from Malagasy artillerymen stationed in Syria, both expressing opposition and concern at the prospect of Jewish settlement of the island, were apparently marked by Cayla for inclusion in a collection of negative reactions to potential Jewish immigration, to be shown to his superiors in Paris.[7]: 199 

The plan, which relied on the French colony of Madagascar being handed over to Germany, was shelved after the British capture of Madagascar from Vichy in 1942. It was permanently abandoned with the commencement of the Final Solution, the policy of systematic genocide of Jews.[80][7]

 
President Philibert Tsiranana of Madagascar, Foreign Minister of Israel Golda Meir, and Israeli President Yitzhak Ben-Zvi signing a treaty of friendship and mutual assistance in 1961.

Relations with Israel edit

When Madagascar gained independence as the Malagasy Republic in 1960, Israel was one of the first countries to recognize its independence, send an ambassador, and establish an embassy on the island. President Philibert Tsiranana of Madagascar and President Yitzhak Ben-Zvi of Israel each visited the other’s country during their overlapping terms. Bilateral relations were suspended after the Yom Kippur War in 1973.[81][37] In 1992, after visiting Israel at the invitations of Mashav and Histadrut, Malagasy politician Raherimasoandro "Hery" Andriamamonjy Andriamamonjy founded Club Shalom Madagascar, an organization liaising diplomatic, cultural, and commercial relations between the two countries.[73] Bilateral relations were restored in 1994.[37] In 2020, Madagascar formed a parliamentary Israel Allies Caucus, chaired by Retsanga Tovondray Brillant de l’Or, as part of the Israel Allies Foundation.[82]

See also edit

References edit

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  5. ^ a b Bruder, Edith (2013-05-01), "Chapter 10. The Descendants of David of Madagascar: Crypto-Judaism in Twentieth-Century Africa", Race, Color, Identity, Berghahn Books, pp. 196–214, doi:10.1515/9780857458933-013, ISBN 978-0-85745-893-3, retrieved 2024-01-10
  6. ^ Parfitt, Tudor (2002) The Lost Tribes of Israel: the History of a Myth. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson p.203.
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  8. ^ a b c d e Devir, Nathan P.; Roux, Magdel Le (2018-12-14). "Popular Perceptions of Israelite Genealogy in Madagascar". In Bruder, Edith (ed.). Africana Jewish Journeys: Studies in African Judaism. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN 978-1-5275-2345-6.
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Notes edit

  1. ^ Often referred to in French as le rocher qui parle ('the boulder that speaks') or le rocher sacré ('the sacred boulder')

External links edit

  • Jewish Virtual Library website
  • Jewish Photo Library images from Madagascar
  • Faces of Africa: The Jews of Madagascar — Documentary short by CGTN Africa
  • Journey to Judaism — Documentary short about the conversion of the Malagasy Sepharad Jews

jews, madagascar, accounts, back, earliest, ethnographic, descriptions, island, from, 17th, century, madagascar, small, jewish, population, including, normative, adherents, well, judaic, mystics, island, historically, been, significant, center, jewish, settlem. Accounts of Jews in Madagascar go back to the earliest ethnographic descriptions of the island from the mid 17th century Madagascar has a small Jewish population including normative adherents as well as Judaic mystics but the island has not historically been a significant center for Jewish settlement Despite this an enduring origin myth across Malagasy ethnic groups suggests that the island s inhabitants descended from ancient Jews and thus that the modern Malagasy and Jewish peoples share a racial affinity This belief termed the Malagasy secret is so widespread that some Malagasy refer to the island s people as the Diaspora Jiosy Gasy Malagasy Jewish Diaspora As a result Jewish symbols paraphernalia and teachings have been integrated into the syncretic religious practices of some Malagasy populations Similar notions of Madagascar s supposed Israelite roots persisted in European chronicles of the island until the early 20th century and may have influenced a Nazi plan to relocate Europe s Jews to Madagascar More recently the possibility of Portuguese Jewish conversos making contact with Madagascar in the 15th century has been proposed Malagasy JewsJiosy Gasy מ ד ג ס ק ר ס פ ר ד Madagascar Sepharad A Jiosy Gasy Malagasy Jew in Ampanotokana recites the Havdalah prayer to mark the end of ShabbatTotal population132 Regions with significant populationsMadagascar Mainly in Ampanotokana LanguagesMalagasy Hebrew FrenchReligionJudaismRelated ethnic groupsMalagasy peoples Sephardi Jews Madagascar s small Jewish community faced challenges during the Vichy regime which implemented antisemitic laws affecting the few Jews on the island In the 21st century some indigenous Malagasy communities informally identified with Jews and Judaism have adopted rabbinic Judaism studying the Torah and Talmud across three small congregations and undergoing Orthodox conversion The unified rabbinic Jewish community refers to its ethnic division within Judaism as Madagascar Sepharad Contents 1 Theories of Jewish origin of Malagasy people 1 1 The Malagasy secret 1 2 Alakamisy Ambohimaha 1 3 The Jewish thesis 1 4 Later investigations 2 Jewish communities in Madagascar 2 1 Zafy Ibrahim 2 2 Colonial Period 2 3 Communaute Juive de Madagascar 2 3 1 Conversion and post conversion activities 2 4 Aaronites 2 5 Other Judaic groups 3 Foreign affairs 3 1 The Madagascar Plan 3 2 Relations with Israel 4 See also 5 References 6 Notes 7 External linksTheories of Jewish origin of Malagasy people edit nbsp Legends of ancient Jewish ancestry in Madagascar often feature red zebu a local adaptation of the red heifer mentioned in the Torah The Malagasy secret edit There is a widespread centuries old 1 belief in Madagascar that Malagasy people are descended from Jews with probably millions of people in Madagascar claiming genealogical origins in ancient Israel 2 This belief is termed the Malagasy secret and is so common that some Malagasy refer to their people s as the Diaspora Jiosy Gasy Malagasy Jewish Diaspora 3 The origin myths which vary across clans often include ancestors arriving at the shores of Madagascar wearing white and bearing red zebu a localized adaptation of the biblical red heifer tradition 4 5 Katherine Quanbeck records an oral testimony from a man of the Tavaratra clan from Sandravinany of his people s ancestors who 4 came from somewhere in the area of Medina or somewhere on the sea coast of Saudi Arabia in scores of botries boats full of families to the northern coast of Madagascar Some of them the Tantakara stayed in the area of that northern coast others continued southward along the eastern coast of Madagascar The dhow of our family contained one red zebu and when the dhow reached the Vohipeno area the zebu brayed so they stopped here temporarily But then they continued southward past what is known as Fort Dauphin and continued on around the southern coast even going as far as Androka At the mouth of that river the zebu brayed again two times so they stopped there but eventually left again and returned the way they had come After travelling back eastward along Madagascar s southern coast then northward along part of the eastern coast at the Vohipeno area the red zebu brayed three times So they stopped there and our family eventually moved as far south as Sandravinany a region which was open totally with no persons having settled it We were the original Malagasy people in that area around what is now known as Sandravinany Further belief holds that Madagascar has been settled by Jews since ancient times and that the island was associated with ancient Ophir 6 These same legends assert that the rosewood used in the construction of the Temple of Solomon came from the lowland forests of Madagascar 2 nbsp nbsp Betsileo legend holds that the rosewood collected for Solomon s Temple came from Madagascar s lowland forests Descent from members of this Solomonic fleet is prominently claimed by the Merina and Betsileo peoples 7 Betsileo legend associated with a site called Ivolamena describes two Betsileo ancestors Antos and Cathy sent by Solomon to Madagascar to look for gold and precious stones 8 The Merina royal line has often claimed to descend from an ancient wave of Israelite migration that arrived via Asia in Madagascar after being exiled by the Neo Babylonian emperor Nebuchadnezzar 9 Antemoro people claim Moses as their forebearer Sakalava and Antandroy people explain certain taboos within their respective cultures as originating with ancient Israelite ancestors Some Malagasy theories of Jewish provenance suggest ancestral origin in one or more of the Ten Lost Tribes of Israel most commonly Gad Issachar Dan and Asher Another narrative linking ancient Hebrews to Madagascar asserts that Madagascar was the site of the Garden of Eden with various island rivers around the Malagasy settlement of Mananzara cited as the true Biblical Pishon and that Noah s Ark departed from Madagascar at the time of the flood 10 11 12 One Antemoro legend recounts that the Islamic prophet Mahomet had five sons who all became kings in Arabia Abraham Noah Joseph Moses and Jesus the last four of them having fathered Tsimeto Kazimambo Anakara and Raminia 8 Edith Bruder describes an oral testimony from the archives of Katherine Quanbeck in which after several meetings a young Sevohitse man cautiously mentioned the existence of a place from where he came Foibe Jiosy which means the headquarters of the Jews near Ambovombe Madagascar He commented We marry only within our clan No one likes to come to our town People do not like us We have to hide the fact that we are Jewish 4 nbsp It has been claimed by Prince Ndriana Rabarioelina a member of the Merina royal family that the red white and black royal lamba pictured above on King Andrianampoinimerina shares roots with similar Levite robes described in the Midrash 13 Similar crypto Jewish legends exist in neighboring Comoros and Mozambique 12 Alakamisy Ambohimaha edit nbsp The highlands Betsileo commune of Alakamisy Ambohimaha is home to Ivolamena a holy site where cliffs bearing inscriptions are held by believers as artifacts of ancient Solomonic ancestors of the Betsileo people A site called Ivolamena in Alakamisy Ambohimaha contains cliffs that were studied in the 1950s by a team of French researchers following rumors in the region of Fianarantsoa about the existence of letters carved in stone discovered by local stonemason Edouard Randrianasolo 8 7 14 The French researchers described an inscription on the cliff face imputable to characters derived from the Phoenician alphabet with a high probability that the glyphs emanate from the family of southern Arabic glyphs called Sabaean The team also hypothesized based on commonalities between Sabaean and Malagasy irrigation techniques that Hamito Semites may have been the first to bring zebu cattle to Madagascar Another nearby site Vohisoratra meaning the mountain with writings was reported to bear an inscription calling to mind Hebrew characters The researchers had received tips from a Malagasy informant who suggested that the Vohisoratra inscriptions might be dated to the time of king Solomon who sent the Israelites across the world to seek precious stones for the building of Jerusalem 7 In 1962 Pierre Verin summarized scientific opinions of the inscriptions as divided and asserted that geologists consider the supposed inscriptions to be the products of natural erosion 7 15 The Ivolamena and Vohisoratra sites a are today revered as a supernatural holy site by Betsileo claimants of ancient Israelite ancestry who believe that both cliffs inscriptions were left by their forebearers during a voyage to gather materials for Solomon s Temple during which they married the locals of a legendary Zafindrandoto tribe and settled to found the earliest Betsileo communities 8 12 A January 1989 speech by then president of Madagascar Didier Ratsiraka made reference to the local beliefs surrounding the Ambohimaha cliff which he claimed bore proto Hebraic writings Ratsiraka also reportedly requested that teams of Malagasy archaeologists investigate the question of Madagascar s Jewish roots and conduct digs in the Betsileo region to search for the biblical Queen of Sheba s treasure 7 In 2009 residents of Alakamisy Ambohimaha threatened adherents of Hebraic Judaism who had come to the cliffs and sacrificed two lambs one black and one white despite the local fady taboo against slaughtering sheep 8 The Betsileo locals called for the government to recognize the commune as a sacred site of historical heritage and protect it accordingly 16 The Jewish thesis edit The theory that Malagasy people can trace their ancestry to ancient Jews termed the Jewish thesis is asserted in the earliest writings on the question of Malagasy origins and by the late 19th and early 20th centuries had become a conviction of the many European chroniclers of the island 7 Common substantiations for the thesis included observations of linguistic similarities between Hebrew and Malagasy common physiognomic traits alimentary and hygiene taboos some sort of monotheism with the Malagasy naming Zanahary as their one un picturable God 17 observance of a lunar calendar and life cycle events resembling those in the Jewish tradition circumcision in particular 18 7 A similar Arab thesis was also prevalent though less persistent and popular than its Jewish counterpart 5 The British merchant Richard Boothby of the East India Company posited in 1646 that the people of Madagascar are descended from the Hebrew patriarch Abraham and his wife Keturah and were sent away by Abraham to inhabit the East 19 The introduction credited to Captain William Mackett of Robert Drury s 1729 memoir suggests that the Jew derived a great deal from the Malagasy instead of they from the Jews their religion is more ancient 20 Samuel Copland wrote in 1822 that The origin of the Malagasy is by the generality of writers ascribed to the Jews 21 22 The naturalist Alfred Grandider affirmed supposed evidence of two waves of ancient Israelite migration to Madagascar in 1901 concluding The fleets sent by King Solomon towards the Southeast coast of Africa to procure materials for his Temple had probably some of their ships lost on the coasts of Madagascar and it is not unlikely that in ancient times some Jewish colonies had been founded voluntarily or not in this island 7 Grandider also compared the cultural practices of the Malagasy to those of the ancient Israelites finding in common thirty five features including animal sacrifice scapegoating similar funerary conventions and practices comparable to metzitzah b peh and the ordeal of the bitter water 23 That same year Irish anthropologist Augustus Henry Keane published The Gold of Ophir Whence Brought and by Whom in which he proposed that Ophir s gold was brought from Madagascar 7 24 In 1946 Arthur Leib wrote that Malagasy practice of numerology is the product of Jewish influence on the people 25 Also in 1946 Joseph Briant published L hebreu a Madagascar an influential comparative study of the Malagasy and Hebrew languages that purported to find substantial commonalities between the two 26 Lars Dahle wrote critically on the comparative arguments for the thesis in 1833 The truth is I think that similarity of customs is nearly worthless as a sign of relationship if not supported and borne out by other proofs of more importance 7 The British explorer Samuel Copeland argued in 1847 that Malagasy people have neither customs traditions rites nor ceremonies sufficiently analogous to justify us in assigning their origin to that Jewish people 27 In 1924 Chase Osborn protested at the Jewish thesis that not one of the Malagasy tribes have the great Jewish nose which has followed that people during all time and is a sign of strength 28 Contemporary analyses of colonial European theories of Jewish Malagasy origin have noted that the identification of Levitical customs was an obsession of the missionaries and early European anthropologists 12 and that squaring the Bible s assertion of universality and shared descent from Noah s three sons with the realities of global diversity was a central preoccupation of generations of ecclesiasts and Christian voyagers 7 Eric T Jennings argues that the discourses about Jewish roots in Madagascar led to the selection of the island by Nazi Germany for the Madagascar Plan a proposed forcible relocation of Europe s Jews to Madagascar 7 Later investigations edit No genetic testing has been done on specific Malagasy populations to corroborate claims of Jewish phylogenetic heritage Genetic and linguistic studies that inquire broadly about Malagasy origins generally point to Austronesian settlement as the earliest human presence on the island followed by waves of migration from other regions including East Africa 12 A 2013 DNA study of the Antemoro people found two haplogroups linked to Middle Eastern origins in their parental lineages Haplogroup J1 was found to connect the Antemoro with among others Portuguese Jews and people from Israel and Palestine Haplogroup T1 connected the Antemoro to Israel Spain Lebanon and Palestine 29 30 Nathan Devir judged the possibility of Malagasy racial descent from one of the Ten Lost Tribes to be unlikely but possible given the body of genetic research on Malagasy origins 31 It has been alternatively proposed that Jews or their converted descendants may have been among the 10th century Arab traders or among the 15th century sailors fleeing the Portuguese Inquisition who came to Madagascar 2 32 33 Edith Bruder writes that the presence of Idumean colonies or Arab Jews from Yemen in Madagascar may be considered 4 Tudor Parfitt who describes 18th and 19th century Merina royal tombstones with Hebrew writing asserts that There is good reason to believe that Portuguese anusim settled in Madagascar There is no reason to doubt a historic connection with the Jews but in the absence of any proof it would be audacious to say there was a connection 34 Jewish communities in Madagascar editZafy Ibrahim edit 17th century French colonial governor Etienne de Flacourt reported of a group called the Zafy Ibrahim whom he d encountered between 1644 and 1648 in the vicinity of the island of Nosy Boraha and judged to be of Jewish identity and descent 35 The 500 600 people constituting the group were described in de Flacourt s account as being unfamiliar with Muhammad considering his followers to be lawless men celebrating and resting on Saturdays unlike members of the island s Muslim population who rested on Fridays and bearing Hebrew names like Moses Isaac Jacob Rachel and Noah 17 The group collectively maintained a regional monopoly on religious animal sacrifice 35 The Zafy Ibrahim have been theorized variously to be Yemenite Jews Khajirites Qarmatian Ismaili Gnostics Coptic or Nestorian Christians and descendants of pre Islamic Arabs coming from Ethiopia 35 In 1880 James Sibree published an account of the Zafy Ibrahim in Vohipeno quoting one in affirmation we are altogether Jews 35 An 1888 report described the Zafy Ibrahim s Hebraic rites and observances as only a remote vibration of Judeo Arabic influence 36 By the French colonial period Zafy Ibrahim began to identify themselves as Arabs and integrate into the Betsimisaraka people and the people of Nosy Boraha today call themselves Arabs 35 Colonial Period edit nbsp Abraham Schrameck a Jew of Alsatian origin was the Governor General of Madagascar from 1918 to 1920 After France colonized the island and Europeans began settling there in the 19th century a small number of Jewish families settled in Antananarivo but did not establish a Jewish community 37 Madagascar was governed between August 1918 and July 1919 by a French Jewish politician Abraham Schrameck 38 39 40 nbsp A telegram from the governor of Mahajanga dated 14 April 1942 reporting that two Jews in the region had identified themselves in accordance with Vichy anti Jewish legislation On July 5 1941 Madagascar then under Vichy France s colonial rule instituted a law mandating a census of all Jewish residents Jews had to register and declare their wealth within a month of the law s enactment 41 The census that year identified only 26 Jews with half holding French nationality 42 Despite this small population Olivier Leroy Madagascar s Petainist Director of Education conducted a public conference in 1942 in Antananarivo titled Antisemitisme et Revolution nationale Antisemitism and national revolution The implementation of Vichy France s antisemitic laws in Madagascar led to the exclusion of the island s 26 Jews from various sectors including the military media commerce industry and civil service 42 These laws were strictly enforced By August 15 1941 those working in administrative roles were removed from their positions 41 In one case a civilian s letter to regional authorities identified Alexander Dreyfus a rice merchant in Antanimena as a Jew and thus in breach of the law prohibiting Jews from trading in cereals or grains The letter s author urged the administration to stop Dreyfus lest the government seem ridiculed by a common Jew The regional leader in Tananarive ordered the police chief to see that Dreyfus immediately cease his activities in the grain sector 41 In 2011 Adam Rovner found one Jewish grave on the island belonging to Captain Israel Solomon Genussow Genussow was a South African Jewish soldier for the British Army who grew up in Palestine and died in action on July 30 1944 at the age of 28 38 43 It was described in 2017 as the only known Jewish grave in Madagascar 44 A series of letters from a Jew in Madagascar to the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee were sent between 1947 and 1948 describing the conditions of Madagascar s Jews and requesting legal and financial assistance for the community 45 The author writes in his first letter Since June 1940 when armistice was signed between France and Germany all Jews in Madagascar were in troubles Even our properties were taken by the government ruling the country at that time We are not allowed to work as merchants because we are Jews In 1942 my brother had a big stock of rice corn and manioc which was requisitioned by the government and since that time he never received any payment for those goods A few people here in Antananarivo who are Jews do not want to declare that they are so as they are afraid Consequently the Jew Community here cannot have any meeting official 46 He goes on in further letters to approximate the number of Jews in Madagascar as 1 200 including children some of whom were born on the island 47 In 1950 a council of Haredi rabbis in Paris sought the guidance of the Chief Rabbi of Israel Yitzhak HaLevi Herzog regarding the permissibility of consuming zebu meat under Jewish dietary laws Their inquiry was part of an effort to set up kosher slaughterhouses in Madagascar for the purpose of exporting meat to Israel The inquiry generated a halakhic controversy among rabbinic authorities Rabbi Herzog s positive stance was prominently challenged by Rabbi Avrohom Yeshaya Karelitz Ultimately the Chief Rabbinate declined to approve the Malagasy meat in deference to Rabbi Karelitz s argument 48 In 1955 the Rebbe Menachem Mendel Schneerson leader of the Lubavitch Chabad Hasidic Jewish movement asked Rabbi Yosef Wineberg to go to Madagascar in order to find any stray sheep of the House of Israel At that time the Jewish community in nearby South Africa was aware of only two Jews in Madagascar a French doctor who did not identify with his Jewish heritage and an Orthodox Tunisian Jew Mr Louzon who had sent a telegram requesting conserved Kosher meats due to the lack of Kosher butchers in the region 49 I m sure you ll find there more than one Jew the Rebbe reportedly wrote in a letter to Rabbi Wineberg Wineberg found and made contact with about eight Iraqi Jewish families in Madagascar He affixed mezuzot to their doors gave them a shofar and taught them how to pray as a group 50 51 The Rebbe maintained contact with Mr Louzon and his wife 52 49 53 Communaute Juive de Madagascar edit nbsp Touvya Ferdinand Jean Andriatovomanana the chazzan of the Jewish community in Ampanotokana nbsp Petoela Andre Jacque Rabisisoa teaching HebrewThe country is home to a small normative Jewish Malagasy population in addition to a greater number of Jewish identifying practitioners of syncretic combinations of Christianity Judaism Islam and traditional ancestor worship and animism including the 2 000 members of the approximate ly dozens 12 of Messianic Jewish congregations in Madagascar which syncretically incorporate Judaic elements into Christian belief 54 55 The community of a couple hundred Malagasy Jews in Ampanotokana arrived at rabbinic Judaism in 2010 as the result of three regional Messianic Jewish groups splintering off and studying the Torah 56 57 In 2012 the community obtained state authorization to operate as a religious congregation and in 2014 the group was recognized by the provincial office of the Ministry of the Interior and Decentralization first under the Hebrew name Orah Vesimh a Light and Joy and later as the formal Communaute Juive de Madagascar Jewish Community of Madagascar 58 54 The group refers to its ethnic division within Judaism as Madagascar Sepharad praying in Sephardic accented Hebrew and practicing a Sephardic style liturgy which they say was suggested to them by a Dutch Messianic Jew who thought Ashkenazi tradition would be inappropriate for such a decidedly non European population 59 58 The community s president is Ashrey Dayves born Andrianarisao Asarery who leads alongside Peteola Andre Jacque Rabisisoa who serves as the Hebrew teacher and Touvya Ferdinand Jean Andriatovomanana the community s chazzan 56 Most of those in the administrative and spiritual leadership of the community are of a lower socioeconomic class relative to the general congregation These leaders cite a lack of steady work as a reason for their wealth of free time that allows them to amass the knowledge necessary for their roles 58 Nathan Devir analyzes Malagasy Judaic adherence in context of the ancestor honoring traditions of Madagascar s culture writing that for Madagascar s new Jews the imperative to live Jewishly is a way to honour the ancestors more truly and efficiently He also notes that Malagasy Jews reject the ancestor venerating funerary practice of famadihana because it is effectively prohibited by Jewish burial custom Though the dominant belief among Malagasy Jews is that Judaism is the same religion as their indigenous spirituality there is no practical syncretism within the group 58 William F S Miles observes anti colonial sentiment in Malagasy Jewish identity which is often characterized by a belief that the colonial French powers suppressed the truth of the Malagasy peoples ancient Israelite and Jewish origins 54 Conversion and post conversion activities edit In 2013 group members came in contact with a Jewish outreach group who helped the community to organize a group Orthodox conversion 60 Some members of this community were reportedly hesitant to convert to Orthodoxy because they understood themselves to already be ethnically Jewish 2 61 31 Nathan Devir interpreted the Malagasy view of Judaism which considers it an inherited parentage to be enacted through religious practice as being out of step with the traditional notion of conversion He reports that in 2013 some Malagasy Jews opposed to the prospect of conversion saw their Jewish blood as precluding the need for any formal conversion process 62 63 In May 2016 after five years of self study in Judaism 121 members of the Malagasy Jewish community underwent conversion in accordance with traditional Jewish rituals appearing before a beit din and submerged in a river mikvah Because the local Parks Department denied the Communaute s request to build a temporary structure on the Ikopa River in which to disrobe with mikvah baths traditionally requiring complete nudity the ritual occurred at a river far from town and the converts built a tent from tarp and wood to protect their privacy 64 65 The conversion presided over by three Orthodox rabbis was followed by fourteen weddings and vow renewals under a makeshift chuppah at a hotel in Antananarivo 66 33 Members of the Communaute Juive de Madagascar reported antisemitic discrimination following their conversion some private schools refused to register Jewish children after learning of their religious affiliation and one landlord cancelled a lease contract after learning that the rental house was going to be used as a Jewish religious school Members of the community also reported unwelcome attention and comments for their religious attire 67 In 2018 11 more members of the Ampanotokana Jewish community underwent Orthodox conversion presided over by a Belgian Malagasy rabbi 68 In November 2019 the group formed a Vaad rabbinical council to handle and publish guidance of halakha Jewish law 69 In 2021 the Communaute Juive de Madagascar opened a printing shop to generate income for the community and print Jewish texts 70 71 nbsp Malagasy people with a valiha an indigenous musical instrument believed by many Malagasy to have been inherited from King David Aaronites edit nbsp A villager of Mananzara holding the election flag of mayor Roger Randrianomanana which features a Magen David and a valiha William F S Miles documents various Malagasy religious communities claiming Jewish lineage including a robe wearing animal sacrificing Aaronite sect in their village of Mananzara who assert that their Jewish ancestors among whom they count Aaron brother of Moses were swept to Madagascar in the deluge of Genesis Mananzara s Aaronite community is organized with priests analogous to kohenim and their assistants analogous to Levites officiating to the community 72 The Jewish identity of Mananzara villagers is also expressed in the logo of their elected leader Roger Randrianomanana which features a six pointed Star of David alongside a Malagasy valiha which many Malagasy claim are inherited from King David 2 12 Nathan Devir describes Merina traditionalist groups among them the Temple of Loharanom Pitahiana meaning the Source of the Blessing of Ambohimiadana who are identified with rabbinic and Messianic Jewish communities on the island but do not feel a need to align their own religion which they prefer to call Hebraic religion or Aaronism with the norms of rabbinic Judaism which they regard as a later and somewhat strayed derivation from the ancient Israelite creed inherited by the Merina While many Malagasy claim such treasures as the Ark of the Covenant fragments of the Tablets of Stone and Moses staff to be kept in Vatumasina though the kings and scribes maintain that the Hebrew treasures were lost in a fire during the French repression of the Malagasy Uprising of 1947 32 The narrative account of their origin was related to Devir as follows Before the Babylonian invasion that destroyed the Temple of Solomon our priestly and Levite ancestors had received prophetic messages that foresaw this devastation They were instructed to leave Jerusalem and to take with them the sacred objects held in the holy of Holies They left Jerusalem before the disaster and arrived on the eastern coast of Madagascar in 1305 having passed by India Vietnam Indonesia Java and the Indian Ocean a sea voyage guided by the winds and the tides According to local priests the leaders of Ambohimiadana did not write down their oral histories and ancestral codes until 1977 Some of these writings are said to be in Hebrew but Devir was unable to verify this The Merina Loharanom Pitahiana traditionalists reject the Talmud Kabbalah and other post biblical texts and have politely declined invitations to integrate into the Communaute Juive de Madagascar 2 12 Miles also documents a group of contemporary kings and scribes in Vatumasina who claim descendance from an Arabized Jewish figure named Ali Ben Forah or Alitawarat Ali of the Torah who came to Madagascar from Mecca in the 15th century 73 2 Other Judaic groups edit The Eglise du Judaisme Hebraique is a charismatic cult in Madagascar led by the Judaic mystic Rivo Lala whose teachings circulate via the internet 2 Nathan Devir describes Lala s religion as a melange of spiritualism Catholicism and theosophy with a healthy dose of Aaronite descent propaganda and a cultlike emphasis on his own supernatural abilities Lala s followers are described as wearing kippot and flowing tunics similar to Arabian thawbs 12 In 2012 Lala publicly claimed that he could guarantee a return to acceptance and power for the then exiled former President of Madagascar Marc Ravalomanana if he accepts me as his rabbi and agrees to follow the religion of Hebraic Judaism 12 74 Lala has been arrested several times and in November 2015 was arrested in Miandrivazo for witchcraft against around fifty high school girls after authorities alleged to have found found wooden idols in his car 75 12 His arrest incited a frenzy in the town with the families of the allegedly possessed girls demanding that Lala be handed over to them 76 He was sentenced to one year in prison for witchcraft in January 2016 and was acquitted in June of that year 77 78 nbsp The Trano Koltoraly Malagasy celebrating the Malagasy new year in March 2012 Since 2004 a Malagasy organization called Trano koltoraly malagasy has advocated for a Jewish origin and identity among Malagasy people proposing origins among the Israelites of the Exodus The group observes a Malagasy new year at the end of March or beginning of April 10 Foreign affairs editThe Madagascar Plan edit Main article Madagascar Plan nbsp Leon Cayla the Governor General of Madagascar from 1930 to 1939 was a strong opponent of Jewish relocation to Madagascar In the summer of 1940 following various similar proposals made by Jews and anti semites alike since the late 19th century Nazi Germany proposed the Madagascar Plan according to which 4 million European Jews would be expelled and forcibly relocated to the island Eric T Jennings has argued that the plan s persistence from its earliest public proposals to its explorations by the French Polish and German governments during World War II stems from the Jewish thesis discourse regarding Madagascar s supposed ancient Jewish roots 7 174 In 1937 Bealanana and Ankaizinana two very remote areas with high elevations and low population densities were identified by a French expert delegation of three men two of whom were Jews as a possible site for Jewish relocation 38 7 Leon Cayla fr the colonial Governor General of Madagascar from May 1930 to April 1939 was a strong opponent of the Polish proposal arguing persistently against Jewish immigration to the island and ignoring and rebuffing repeated appeals from various Jewish organizations to allow for the mass resettlement and immigration of Polish Jews to Madagascar 7 191 193 The reaction in the tightly censored Malagasy press reflected this opposition expressing concern that the relocated Jews would not remain engaged in agriculture for long but would move into trading or compete with the locals for the remaining jobs and would receive favorable treatment and assistance from the Colonial Minister over the indigenous Malagasy and long established French settlers on the island It was unanimously lamented that Madagascar was willing to spend money on the internment of Spanish refugees in France and the resettlement of Polish Jews but did nothing for its colonies 79 Two antisemitic letters to Cayla from Malagasy artillerymen stationed in Syria both expressing opposition and concern at the prospect of Jewish settlement of the island were apparently marked by Cayla for inclusion in a collection of negative reactions to potential Jewish immigration to be shown to his superiors in Paris 7 199 The plan which relied on the French colony of Madagascar being handed over to Germany was shelved after the British capture of Madagascar from Vichy in 1942 It was permanently abandoned with the commencement of the Final Solution the policy of systematic genocide of Jews 80 7 nbsp President Philibert Tsiranana of Madagascar Foreign Minister of Israel Golda Meir and Israeli President Yitzhak Ben Zvi signing a treaty of friendship and mutual assistance in 1961 Relations with Israel edit When Madagascar gained independence as the Malagasy Republic in 1960 Israel was one of the first countries to recognize its independence send an ambassador and establish an embassy on the island President Philibert Tsiranana of Madagascar and President Yitzhak Ben Zvi of Israel each visited the other s country during their overlapping terms Bilateral relations were suspended after the Yom Kippur War in 1973 81 37 In 1992 after visiting Israel at the invitations of Mashav and Histadrut Malagasy politician Raherimasoandro Hery Andriamamonjy Andriamamonjy founded Club Shalom Madagascar an organization liaising diplomatic cultural and commercial relations between the two countries 73 Bilateral relations were restored in 1994 37 In 2020 Madagascar formed a parliamentary Israel Allies Caucus chaired by Retsanga Tovondray Brillant de l Or as part of the Israel Allies Foundation 82 See also editReligion in Madagascar Lemba people Crypto judaism Igbo Jews Kaifeng JewsReferences edit Devir Nathan 2018 Propagating Modern Jewish Identity in Madagascar A Contextual Analysis of One Community s Discursive Strategies Connected Jews Expressions of Community in Analogue and Digital Culture Liverpool University Press doi 10 2307 j ctv1198t80 ISBN 978 1 906764 86 9 JSTOR j ctv1198t80 S2CID 239843895 a b c d e f g h Miles William F S December 2017 Malagasy Judaism The who is a Jew conundrum comes to Madagascar Anthropology Today 33 6 7 10 doi 10 1111 1467 8322 12391 ISSN 0268 540X Devir Natan Origins and Motivations of Madagascar s Normative Jewish Movement Becoming Jewish 2016 49 a b c d Bruder Edith 2013 Descendants of David In Sicher Efraim ed Race color identity rethinking discourses about Jews in the twenty first century New York Berghahn Books ISBN 978 0 85745 892 6 a b Bruder Edith 2013 05 01 Chapter 10 The Descendants of David of Madagascar Crypto Judaism in Twentieth Century Africa Race Color Identity Berghahn Books pp 196 214 doi 10 1515 9780857458933 013 ISBN 978 0 85745 893 3 retrieved 2024 01 10 Parfitt Tudor 2002 The Lost Tribes of Israel the History of a Myth London Weidenfeld and Nicolson p 203 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Jennings Eric T 2017 Perspectives on French Colonial Madagascar New York Palgrave Macmillan US doi 10 1057 978 1 137 55967 8 ISBN 978 1 137 59690 1 a b c d e Devir Nathan P Roux Magdel Le 2018 12 14 Popular Perceptions of Israelite Genealogy in Madagascar In Bruder Edith ed Africana Jewish Journeys Studies in African Judaism Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 978 1 5275 2345 6 Brettschneider Marla Roux Magdel Le 2018 12 14 5 Anti Colonialism and Jewish Women in Madagascar In Bruder Edith ed Africana Jewish Journeys Studies in African Judaism Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 978 1 5275 2345 6 a b Domenichini Jean Pierre LE PEUPLEMENT DE MADAGASCAR Des migrations et origines mythiques aux realites de l histoire Madagascar Environmental Justice Network Goedefroit Sophie Roca Albert 2022 06 20 La plus belle enigme du monde ne veut pas etre resolue Le besoin de memoire multiple a Madagascar Quaderns de l Institut Catala d Antropologia 37 2 383 406 doi 10 56247 qua 371 ISSN 2385 4472 a b c d e f g h i j k Devir Nathan P 2022 02 28 First Century Christians in Twenty First Century Africa Between Law and Grace in Gabon and Madagascar First Century Christians in Twenty First Century Africa Brill doi 10 1163 9789004507708 ISBN 978 90 04 50770 8 S2CID 239810675 retrieved 2024 01 10 Faces Of Africa The Jews of Madagascar retrieved 2024 01 13 Sensationnelle decouverte d inscriptions rupestres Tana Journal July 17 1953 Verin Pierre 1962 Retrospective et Problemes de l Archeologie a Madagascar Asian Perspectives 6 1 2 198 218 ISSN 0066 8435 JSTOR 42928938 maitso 2010 05 12 Le rocher qui parle a Alakamisy Ambohimaha Fianarantsoa MADAGASCAR Mysteres et conspirations in French Retrieved 2024 01 13 a b Ferrand Gabriel 1905 Les Migrations Musulmanes Et Juives a Madagascar Revue de l histoire des religions 52 381 417 ISSN 0035 1423 JSTOR 23661459 Goedefroit Sophie Roca Albert 2021 La plus belle enigme du monde ne veut pas etre resolue Le besoin de memoire multiple a Madagascar Quaderns de l Institut Catala d Antropologia in French 37 2 383 406 doi 10 56247 qua 371 ISSN 2385 4472 Jakka Sarath Chandra September 2018 Fictive Possessions English Utopian Writing and the Colonial Promotion of Madagascar as the Greatest Island in the World 1640 1668 PDF phd thesis University of Kent University of Porto Drury Robert 1729 Introduction In Mackett William ed Madagascar Or Robert Drury s Journal During Fifteen Years Captivity on that Island 1st ed London W Meadows Copland Samuel 2009 09 24 A History Of The Island Of Madagascar Comprising A Political Account Of The Island The Religion Manners And Customs Of Its Inhabitants Kessinger Publishing ISBN 978 1 120 25217 3 Jews and Madagascar premium globalsecurity org Retrieved 2024 01 13 Grandidier Histoire vol 4 part 1 96 103 The Gold of Ophir Whence Brought and by Whom Nature 65 1690 460 461 March 1902 doi 10 1038 065460a0 ISSN 1476 4687 S2CID 13251803 Leib Arthur 1946 Malagasy Numerology Folklore 57 3 133 139 doi 10 1080 0015587X 1946 9717825 ISSN 0015 587X JSTOR 1257737 Parfitt Tudor Trevisan Semi Emanuela 2005 The Construction of Jewish Identities in Africa The jews of Ethiopia the birth of an elite Routledge jewish studies series London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 31838 9 Samuel Copeland A History of the Island of Madagascar Comprising a Political Account of the Island the Religion Manners and Customs of Its Inhabitants and Its Natural Productions London Burton and Smith 1822 56 Osborn Chase Salmon 1924 Madagascar Land of the Man eating Tree Republic Publishing Company pp 44 45 Capredon Melanie 2011 11 25 Histoire biologique d une population du sud est malgache les Antemoro phdthesis thesis in French Universite de la Reunion Capredon Melanie Brucato Nicolas Tonasso Laure Choesmel Cadamuro Valerie Ricaut Francois Xavier Razafindrazaka Harilanto Rakotondrabe Andriamihaja Bakomalala Ratolojanahary Mamisoa Adelta Randriamarolaza Louis Paul Champion Bernard Dugoujon Jean Michel 2013 11 22 Tracing Arab Islamic Inheritance in Madagascar Study of the Y chromosome and Mitochondrial DNA in the Antemoro PLOS ONE 8 11 e80932 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 880932C doi 10 1371 journal pone 0080932 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 3838347 PMID 24278350 a b Dolsten Josefin 7 December 2016 In Madagascar world s newest Jewish community seeks roots The Times of Israel a b The secrets of the Malagasy Jews of Madagascar The Jerusalem Post JPost com 2015 09 26 Retrieved 2024 01 10 a b Josefson Deborah 5 June 2016 In remote Madagascar a new community chooses to be Jewish Jewish Telegraphic Agency Retrieved 24 March 2017 Berkowitz Adam Eliyahu 2016 05 30 Mysterious Madagascar Community Practicing Jewish Rituals Officially Enters Covenant of Abraham PHOTOS Israel365 News Retrieved 2024 01 18 a b c d e Graeber David 2023 01 24 Pirate Enlightenment or the Real Libertalia Farrar Straus and Giroux p 47 ISBN 978 0 374 61020 3 PASEUDO JEWS The Sydney Morning Herald No 15 682 New South Wales Australia 28 June 1888 p 11 Retrieved 10 January 2024 via National Library of Australia a b c Skolnik Fred 2006 Madagascar Encyclopedia Judaica Vol 13 Detroit Macmillan Reference p 330 a b c Rovner Adam L 2020 05 28 The Lost Jewish Continent In the Shadow of Zion New York University Press doi 10 18574 nyu 9781479804573 001 0001 ISBN 978 1 4798 0457 3 S2CID 250109046 Skolnik Fred Berenbaum Michael 2007 Encyclopaedia judaica 2nd ed Detroit Mich Thomson Gale ISBN 978 0 02 865929 9 Graca J Da Graca John Da 2017 02 13 Madagascar Heads of State and Government Springer p 546 ISBN 978 1 349 65771 1 a b c Jennings Eric Thomas 2001 Vichy in the tropics Petain s national revolution in Madagascar Guadeloupe and Indochina 1940 1944 Stanford Calif Stanford university press ISBN 978 0 8047 4179 8 a b Jennings Eric T Verney Sebastien 2009 03 01 Vichy aux Colonies L exportation des statuts des Juifs dans l Empire Archives Juives 41 1 108 119 doi 10 3917 aj 411 0108 ISSN 0003 9837 Rovner Adam 2011 11 02 Madagascar An Almost Jewish Homeland Page 4 of 5 Moment Magazine Retrieved 2024 01 13 Greenspan Ari Zivotofsky Ari February 2017 The Jews of Madagascar Jewish Core in Island Lore PDF Mishpacha pp 69 77 Madagascar Tananarive Jews of Madagascar 1947 1948 retrieved 2024 01 17 Goldstein Melvin S 5 December 1947 Letter from Melvin S Goldstein to American Jewish Committee retrieved 2024 01 19 Mussard Lionel 3 February 1948 Letter to Dr Joel D Wolfsohn retrieved 2024 01 19 Bleich J David 2005 01 01 IX Kashrut Contemporary Halakhic Problems Vol 5 Southfield MI Targum Feldheim ISBN 978 1 56871 353 3 a b Rabinowitz Louis Isaac 29 August 2023 Where There Are No Jews No Small Jew Stories of the Lubavitcher Rebbe and the Infinite Value of the Individual Hasidic Archives pp 32 39 Zaklikowski Dovid June 27 2012 Globetrotting Ambassador Fueled Jewish Life in the Farthest Reaches of the Globe Chabad Wineberg Yosef There Are No Jews in Madagascar Chabad Wineberg Yosef 29 August 2023 Responsibility for Your Corner No Small Jew Stories of the Lubavitcher Rebbe and the Infinite Value of the Individual Hasidic Archives pp 40 45 Schneerson Menachem Fall 1961 A Jew in Madagascar Chabad a b c Miles William F S December 2017 Malagasy Judaism The who is a Jew conundrum comes to Madagascar Anthropology Today 33 6 7 10 doi 10 1111 1467 8322 12391 ISSN 0268 540X Kestenbaum Sam Joining Fabric of World Jewish Community 100 Convert on African Island of Madagascar The Forward Retrieved 2018 09 26 a b Josefson Deborah 5 June 2016 In remote Madagascar a new community chooses to be Jewish Jewish Telegraphic Agency Retrieved 24 March 2017 The secrets of the Malagasy Jews of Madagascar The Jerusalem Post JPost com 2015 09 26 Retrieved 2024 01 10 a b c d Devir Nathan P 2022 02 28 First Century Christians in Twenty First Century Africa Between Law and Grace in Gabon and Madagascar First Century Christians in Twenty First Century Africa Brill doi 10 1163 9789004507708 ISBN 978 90 04 50770 8 S2CID 239810675 retrieved 2024 01 10 Sussman Bonita September 2016 International Conference on Bnei Anousim Address by Bonita Nathan Sussman PDF p 18 Kestenbaum Sam Joining Fabric of World Jewish Community 100 Convert on African Island of Madagascar The Forward Retrieved 2018 09 26 US State Dept 2022 report Devir Nathan 2016 Origins and Motivations of Madagascar s Normative Jewish Movement In Parfitt Tudor Fisher Netanʾel eds Becoming Jewish new Jews and emerging Jewish communities in a globalised world Newcastle upon Tyne Cambridge Scholars Publishing pp 49 63 ISBN 978 1 4438 9965 9 Josefson Deborah 2016 06 05 In remote Madagascar a new community chooses to be Jewish Jewish Telegraphic Agency Retrieved 2024 01 18 The Other Side of the World My Journey to Jewish Madagascar www brandeis edu Retrieved 2024 01 18 Hayyim Mayyim 2016 07 20 Mikveh Moments in Madagascar Immersion and Conversion on the Other Side of the World Mayyim Hayyim Retrieved 2024 01 13 Vinick Barbara September 2022 Jewish Weddings Around the World PDF Kulanu Madagascar United States Department of State Retrieved 2024 01 13 Page Posted In Home Uncategorized 2018 12 03 Madagascar Community Members Convert to Judaism Kulanu Retrieved 2024 01 13 Madagascar Jewish Community Forms Vaad PDF Kulanu Fall 2019 Mini Grants Update PDF Kulanu Winter 2021 p 15 Kulanu Year End Celebration Kulanu Inc was live By Kulanu Inc Facebook retrieved 2024 01 14 Miles William F S 2019 01 02 Who Is a Jew in Africa Definitional and Ethical Considerations in the Study of Sub Saharan Jewry and Judaism The Journal of the Middle East and Africa 10 1 1 15 doi 10 1080 21520844 2019 1565199 ISSN 2152 0844 a b Weisfield Cynthia Madagascar Groups Seek Closer Jewish Ties Kulanu Retrieved 2024 01 10 Kohen Rivo Lala Je peux faire revenir Marc Ravalomanana si TANANEWS 2012 04 24 Archived from the original on 2012 04 26 Retrieved 2024 02 05 Sorcellerie presumee le Kohen Rivolala ecroue NewsMada 28 November 2015 Archived from the original on 2 January 2016 Retrieved 2024 02 05 Madagascar arrestation d un gourou soupconne d avoir jete des mauvais sorts lexpress mu in French 2015 11 28 Retrieved 2024 02 05 Andriamarohasina Seth 22 January 2016 Madagascar Sorcellerie Le Kohen Rivolala condamne a un an ferme L Express de Madagascar Andriamarohasina Seth 9 June 2016 Sorcellerie Kohen Rivolala acquitte L Express de Madagascar Brechtken Magnus 1998 06 10 Madagaskar fur die Juden Antisemitische Idee und politische Praxis 1885 1945 in German 2nd ed Munchen Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 486 56384 9 Browning Christopher R 1998 The path to Genocide essays on launching the final solution Reprint ed Cambridge Cambridge Univ Press ISBN 978 0 521 55878 5 Oded Arye 2010 Africa in Israeli Foreign Policy Expectations and Disenchantment Historical and Diplomatic Aspects Israel Studies 15 3 121 142 doi 10 2979 isr 2010 15 3 121 ISSN 1084 9513 JSTOR 10 2979 isr 2010 15 3 121 S2CID 143846951 Madagascar initiates Parliamentary Israel Allies Caucus The Jerusalem Post JPost com 2020 09 07 Retrieved 2024 01 17 Notes edit Often referred to in French as le rocher qui parle the boulder that speaks or le rocher sacre the sacred boulder External links editJewish Virtual Library website Jewish Photo Library images from Madagascar Faces of Africa The Jews of Madagascar Documentary short by CGTN Africa Journey to Judaism Documentary short about the conversion of the Malagasy Sepharad Jews Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jews in Madagascar amp oldid 1224960457, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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