African-American Jews are people who are bothAfrican American andJewish, whether by mixed ancestry or conversion. African-American Jews may be eitherJewish from birth orconverts to Judaism. Many African-American Jews are of mixed heritage, having both non-Jewish African-American and non-Black Jewish ancestors. Many African-American Jews identify asJews of color, but some do not. Black American Jews fromAfrica, such as theBeta Israel fromEthiopia, may or may not identify as African-American Jews.
An 1899Baltimore Sun article mentioning German-speaking Black Jews in Pennsylvania and New York.
Caribbean Jews both became members ofAshkenazi Jewish synagogues in the United States and helped form early African-American synagogues in Harlem in the first part of the 20th century.[citation needed]
Several historic Jewish congregations in the United States mention early African-American worshippers.[1]Lucy Marks (1778-1838), who lived with and worked for the Marks family of Philadelphia, was known as a "devout observer of the precepts of Judaism" and sat in the women's section ofMikveh Israel during services. Upon her death, the Marks family successfully petitioned to have her buried in theSpruce Street Cemetery, where today she rests in an unmarked grave next toHaym Salomon.[2]Billy Simmons (1780-1860) attended services atBeth Elohim in Charleston, South Carolina, even though its constitution forbade converts with African ancestry from being members.[3][1]
By the first part of the 20th century, at least eight different African-American run religious organizations self-identified as Jewish. Most traced or claimed connections either to the Caribbean or Ethiopia.[1] Today African-American Jews worship both in predominantly African-American congregations and predominantly mixed congregations.
In New York City, African-American Jews have been present since colonial times, with many having Caribbean Sephardi roots. The portraits ofSarah Brandon Moses andIsaac Lopez Brandon, both born enslaved inBarbados and later living in New York City, are the oldest known paintings of Jews with African ancestry.[4][5]
A Black Sephardi community existed in Harlem during the 1970s; it descended from Black Southerner slaves who had been owned by white Sephardi slave owners. In accordance withDeutoronomy Chapter 15, which implies that "bondsmen" in Jewish households should also be Jewish, Sephardi slave ownersconverted their slaves to Judaism. Many of the freed Sephardi slaves passed their religion on to their children and grandchildren. Birmingham wrote that "Black Sephardim are as fiercely proud of their ancient religion as white Sephardim, and consider themselves among the elite of Jewry."[6]
Black Jews have often been erased from historical accounts of theCrown Heights riot. In 1991,Crown Heights was home to over a dozen Black Jewish families affiliated withChabad, as well as BlackSephardi Jews. Akedah Fulcher-Eze, a fourth-generation Black Jew who grew up in Crown Heights, has stated that the riot was not a "pogrom" and that while some of the attackers were motivated byantisemitic stereotypes, antisemitism was not the only factor in the riot. According to Fulcher-Eze, they were viewed as privileged community members with deep pockets, strong political ties, and lots of protectsia from the police. "Are these classic antisemitic tropes? Yes. But that doesn't mean there wasn't a kernel of truth to them or that people didn't believe them."[7]
ActressZoë Kravitz's (whose father is Lenny Kravitz and mother isLisa Bonet) has Ashkenazi Jewish heritage through both maternal grandmother and paternal grandfather and African-American heritage through both her maternal grandfather and paternal grandmother. Kravitz, who does not practice the Jewish faith, considers herself "mixed" and having Jewish heritage[10][25]
TheAmerican Jewish community includes Jews withAfrican-American backgrounds. Like their other Jewish counterparts, there are African-American Jewish secularists and African-American Jews who may rarely or never take part in religious practices.[26]
A BlackOrthodox Jewish and BlackHasidic community exists in Brooklyn, with deep roots going back many generations.[27] There is no specific documentation of the exact number of Black Orthodox Jews in New York City, but the numbers are small yet growing. Black Orthodox Jews have struggled to form a minyan in Crown Heights.[28]
In 1963, theCentral Conference of American Rabbis issued aresponsa written by RabbiSolomon Freehof titled "Miscegenation and Conversion of Negroes", stating that there was no prohibition in Reform Judaism against interracial marriage, citing the marriage of Moses to Zipporah, an Ethiopian woman. The responsa describes the conversion of African-Americans to Judaism as a "troublesome situation", because a "Negro becoming a Jew subjects himself to double difficulties." Freehof wrote that he would discourage an African-American man who wanted to marry a Jewish woman "For the sake of their happiness", but would not refuse.[29]
Robin Washington, an American journalist and filmmaker, became one of three founders of the National Conference of Black Jews, later called the Alliance of Black Jews. It was conceived to build bridges among all African-American Jews, who are affiliated with many different groups. Estimates of the number of black Jews in the United States range from 20,000[30] to 200,000.[31]
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.[36]
^abcHaynes, Bruce D. (August 14, 2018).The soul of Judaism : Jews of African descent in America. New York: New York University Press.ISBN978-1-4798-1123-6.OCLC1006531808.
^Pickard, Kate E. R.; Whiteman, Maxwell (1995).The kidnapped and the ransomed: the narrative of Peter and Vina Still after forty years of slavery. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.ISBN0-8032-9233-3.OCLC32738920.
^O'Brien, Michael (2004).Conjectures of order: intellectual life and the American South, 1810-1860. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.ISBN0-8078-6373-4.OCLC57759012.
^Leibman, Laura Arnold (2020).The art of the Jewish family: a history of women in early New York in five objects. New York City.ISBN978-1-941792-21-6.OCLC1158017660.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
"Rashida Jones Talks Comedy, Parents".Porter Edit / NET-A-PORTER.COM. May 18, 2018.Archived from the original on May 25, 2018. RetrievedMay 25, 2018.Rashida Jones: "I am a product of slaves. I am also a product of Jewish immigrants and Holocaust survivors."
Miller, Gerri (2007)."The Daughter of Q".American Jewish Life Magazine. Genco Media LLC. Archived fromthe original on May 16, 2008. RetrievedNovember 1, 2007.
^"Lisa Bonet on family, husband Jason Momoa & working with Bill Cosby".Porter Edit / NET-A-PORTER.COM. March 9, 2018.Archived from the original on May 11, 2018. RetrievedMay 21, 2018.Bonet was born in the heart of the hippie movement, in November 1967 in San Francisco, to a white Jewish schoolteacher mother and a black opera-singing father.
Parfitt, Tudor (2013).Black Jews in Africa and the Americas. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.ISBN978-0-674-06698-4.
Tobin, Diane;Tobin, Gary A.; Rubin, Scott (2005).In Every Tongue: The Racial and Ethnic Diversity of the Jewish People. San Francisco: Institute for Jewish & Community Research.ISBN1-893671-01-1.
"Center for Afro-Jewish Studies". Archived fromthe original on September 11, 2007. atTemple University, a "research and learning institution dedicated to scholarship on Afro-Jewish peoples and developing awareness of the historical, political, religious, and philosophical issues that arise from the convergence of the African and Jewish diasporas".
"Jewish Multiracial Network". Archived from the original on March 12, 2008., a group whose mission is "to build a community of Jews of color and multiracial Jewish families".
Holzinger, Kay (1998)."Black Jews".The Encyclopedia of Cults, Sects, and New Religions. Religious Movements Homepage Project at theUniversity of Virginia. Archived fromthe original on April 8, 2006. RetrievedAugust 31, 2010.