Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Wikipedia

Bukharan Jews

Bukharan Jews,[a] in modern times calledBukharian Jews,[b] are theMizrahi Jewish sub-group ofCentral Asia that traditionally spokeBukharian, aJudeo-Persian language most similar to theTajik dialect ofFarsi.[8][7][9] Their name comes from the former polityEmirate of Bukhara which once had a sizable Jewish population. The vast majority lived in modern-dayUzbekistan andTajikistan, with small groups inKyrgyzstan,Turkmenistan, andAfghanistan.

Bukharan Jews
יהודים בוכרים
Jewish family inBukhara, 1880
Total population
300,000–350,000 (est.)[1]
Regions with significant populations
 Israel160,000
 United States
120,000
80,000
 United Kingdom15,000
 Austria3,000–3,500
 Germany2,000
 Uzbekistan
1,500
150[2][3]
 Canada1,500
 Russia1,000
 Australia130+
130+[4][5]
 Tajikistan34
 Afghanistan0[6]
Languages
TraditionallyBukharian (Judeo-Tajik),[7]Russian,Hebrew (Israel),English (United States, Canada, United Kingdom and Australia) andGerman (Austria and Germany),Uzbek (Uzbekistan)
Religion
Judaism
Related ethnic groups
Iranian Jews,Iraqi Jews,Afghan Jews,Mountain Jews,Kurdish Jews,Georgian Jews,Mizrahi Jews,Soviet Jews

Bukharan Jews are one of the oldest Jewish diaspora groups, dating back to theBabylonian exile, and comprise a branch ofPersian speaking-Jewry.[10] They are also one of the oldest ethno-religious groups in Central Asia.[7][11][8]

Since thedissolution of the Soviet Union, the great majority haveimmigrated to Israel orthe United States, with othersimmigrating to Europe orAustralia.

Name

edit

The name by which the community originally called itself was Bnei Israel.[12]

The termBukharan was coined byEuropean travelers who visited Central Asia around the 16th century. The Jewish community at the time lived in theKhanate of Bukhara, theKhanate of Khiva, and theKhanate of Kokand, with the term "Bukharan" likely being coined as the Bukharan Emirate was the largest of the three khanates.[13]

The local populace referred to them asYahūdī (Persian: یهودی) orJuhud (Persian:جهود), the latter of which was a pejorative term.[14]

Language

edit

The Jews in theAchaemenid Empire spokeHebrew,Aramaic, andPersian. Persian would become the prominent language for Jews in Central Asia and Iran, though Jews who were educated in Jewishcheder's spoke fluently in Hebrew, the latter of which[clarification needed] lasted until the early 20th century.

Up until the 19th century, Persian speakers in Central Asia (including Jews) had no name for the dialect/language and simply regarded themselves as speaking Farsi. By then, Bukharan Jews had dubbed theirJudeo-Persian language "Bukharian" orBukhori, itself most similar to theTajik andDari dialect of Farsi, with linguistic elements ofHebrew andAramaic to communicate among themselves.[7]

This language, along with Hebrew was used for all cultural and educational life among the Jews. It was used widely until Central Asia was "Russified" by theSoviet Union and the dissemination of religious information was halted, as the Soviet Union wanted Russian as thelingua franca in the region.

During the Soviet era, the two main languages spoken by Bukharan Jews wereBukharian andRussian (some also spoke inUzbek, depending on where they worked or lived). The younger generation today either born outside Central Asia or who left as children generally use Russian as their secondary language, but sometimes do understand or speakBukhori.

History

edit

According to one legend, Bukharan Jews are exiles from the tribes ofNaphtali andIssachar during theAssyrian captivity, basing this assumption on a reading of "Habor" at II Kings 17:6 as a reference to Bukhara.[15] However, modern day scholarship associate this telling withEuropean myths, where stories about the "Ten Lost Tribes" had been propagated in Europe.[16]

Historians associate their establishment in the region following the conquest ofBabylonia byCyrus the Great, which became part of thePersian Empire. Cyrus granted all the Jews citizenship and allowed them to return to theprovince of Judah, but a significant portion of the population chose to remain inMesopotamia, later spreading to all parts of thePersian Empire.[17] In the opinion of some scholars, Jews settled in Central Asia in the sixth century, but it is certain that during the eighth to ninth centuries they lived in Central Asian cities such asBalkh,Khwarezm, andMerv. At that time, and until approximately the sixteenth century, Bukharan Jews formed a homogeneous group with the Jews of Iran and Afghanistan.[18]

The first primary written account of Jews in Central Asia dates to the beginning of the 4th century CE. It is recalled in theTalmud by Rabbi Shmuel bar Bisna, a member of the Talmudic academy inPumbeditha, who traveled to Margiana (present-day Merv inTurkmenistan).[19] The presence of Jewish communities in Merv is also proven by Jewish writings onossuaries from the 5th and 6th centuries, uncovered between 1954 and 1956.[14]

Under the Kara-Khanid Khanate

edit

In the 12th century,Benjamin of Tudela, a Jewish traveler fromSpain, wrote of the populous Jewish community inSamarkand and claimed that there were about 50,000 "Israelites" in that city, among them "very wise and rich men."[20]

Under the rule of Tamerlane

edit

In the 14th century under the rule ofTimur in theTimurid Empire, Jewish weavers and dyers contributed greatly to his effort to rebuild Central Asia followingGenghis Khan and theMongol invasions. In the centuries following Timur's demise, Jews came to dominate the region’s textile and dye industry.[18]

Splintering of the Judeo-Persian communities

edit
 
Map of travel routes in the Silk Road that connected Persian-Jewry
 
Jews fromMashad,Iran and Jews fromSoviet Uzbekistan meeting inBukhara, c 1930s

Until the start of the 16th century, the Jews of Iran and Central Asia constituted one community. However, during theSafavid dynasty, Iran adopted theShia branch of Islam, while Central Asia retained their allegiance to theSunni branch of Islam. Due to the hostile relationship between the neighboring states that developed because of this, the links between the Jews of the area were severed, and the Jewish community was divided into two similar but separate communities. From this point, the ethnonym and cultural identity of "Bukharan Jews" began to form.[14]

A similar event happened to the Jews of Afghanistan in the middle of the 18th century. TheDurrani dynasty took control of the Afghani kingdom while theManghud dynasty ruled the Emirate of Bukhara. Due to the hostile relationship between the two dynasties, the ties between the Jews of Afghanistan and Bukharan Jews were split into two similar but separate communities.[18]

Over the centuries, whether it was to escape political turmoil, persecution, or to pursue economic opportunities, Jews from Iran and Central Asia would frequently migrate to each other's communities. Notable instances that spurred such migrations include persecution under the Safavid dynasty in the mid 17th century which caused Jews to flee Iran and forced conversion to Islam in the mid 19th century which resulted in Jewish flight from the Afghan cities ofKabul andHerat .[21] Other Jews from Iran and Afghanistan migrated during the Russian conquest of Central Asia as the Russians had extended greater freedoms and economic opportunities for Jews. However, whenJoseph Stalin and Soviet authorities consolidated their hold over the borders in Central Asia in the mid 1930s, living conditions for the Bukharan Jews deteriorated drastically, forcing a significant number of them to migrate to Iran or Afghanistan.[22][23]

Under Sunni Muslim rule

edit
 
Bukharan Jewish girl, c. 1860s

In the Khanate of Bukhara, Bukharan Jews lived under the status ofDhimmi, and experienced a series of discriminatory practices from the Muslim majority. They were forced to wear clothing that identified them as Jews, such as ayellow patch, a hat called aTilpak, and belts made of rope while the leather belts were reserved for Muslims.[24] Jewish homes also had to be marked as "Jewish" with a dirty cloth nailed to their front doors, and their stores and homes had to be lower than Muslim ones.[24] In court cases, any evidence from a Jew was inadmissible involving a Muslim. They were also forbidden to ride horses and donkeys and had to transport themselves by foot. Lastly, when paying their annualJizya tax, the Jewish men would be ritually slapped in the face by Muslim authorities.[25] Despite these prohibitions and humiliations, the Jews were able to achieve financial success primarily as merchants and established lucrative trade businesses.[24]

Towards the end of the 16th and the beginning of the 17th century, the Jewish quarter, Mahalla, was established in the town of Bukhara. The Jews were forbidden to reside outside its boundaries.[26]

During the 18th century, Bukharan Jews continued to face considerable discrimination and persecution. Jewish centers were closed down, and the Muslims of the region forced conversion on a significant number of Jews (over one-third, according to one estimate), under a threat of torture and agonizing execution. Some were killed for refusing to convert.[27] Jews who forcibly converted were known asChalas, a term meaning "neither this nor that."[28]

By the middle of the 18th century, practically all Bukharan Jews lived in theBukharan Emirate. In the early 1860s,Arminius Vambery, a Hungarian-Jewish traveler, visited the emirate disguised as aSunnidervish and noted in his journals that the Jews of Bukhara "live in utmost oppression, being despised by everyone."[29]

Adopting Sephardic liturgy

edit
 
RabbiShimon Hakham, the great-grandson of Rabbi Yosef Maimon

In 1793, a missionary kabbalist named RabbiYosef Maimon, who was aSephardic Jew originally fromTetuan,Morocco, travelled toBukhara to collect/solicit money from Jewish patrons. It was during his search for funds that he chose to stay, in order to strengthen Judaism within the local Jewish population, who were said to be in a state of disarray.[30]

Prior to Maimon's arrival, the native Jews of Bukhara followed the Persian religious tradition. Maimon staunchly demanded that the native Jews of Bukhara adoptSephardic traditions.[31][32] Many of the native Jews were opposed to this and the community split into two factions. The opposing faction was led by Rabbi Zacchariah ben Mashiah, who was originally fromSanaa,Yemen.[33] The followers of the Maimon clan eventually won the struggle for religious authority over the native Bukharans, and Bukharan Jewry forcefully switched to Sephardi customs. The supporters of the Maimon clan, in the conflict, credit Maimon with causing a revival of Jewish practice among Bukharan Jews which they claim was in danger of dying out. However, there is evidence that there were Torah scholars present upon his arrival to Bukhara, but because they followed the Persian rite their practices were aggressively rejected as incorrect by Maimon.[34]

Maimon's great-grandsonShimon Hakham continued his great-grandfather's work as a Rabbi, and in 1870 opened theTalmid Hakham yeshiva in Bukhara, where religious law was promoted. At that time Bukharan Jews were getting only a general education, which mostly consisted of religious laws, reading, writing and some math. Even though they studiedTorah, many Bukharan Jews did not speak fluent Hebrew. Only a few books were written inPersian and many of them were old and incomplete. Hakham decided to change this situation by translating religious books into Bukhori.[35] However, since there was no printing in Bukhara at that time, he went toJerusalem to print his books.[36][37]

Under Imperial Russia rule

edit
 
TheRussian imperial territories ofKhiva,Bukhara, and neighboring provinces in 1902–1903

In 1865, Russian colonial troops took overTashkent and established theRussian Turkestan region as part of their expanding empire. Unlike the Jews ofEastern Europe, Tsarist Russia was largely favorable towards the Jews living there. This was due to years of trade relations with the Bukharan Jews, resulting in their being viewed as potential allies in the region and as interpreters with the local authorities.[38] As a Russian official explained in 1866:

"Whatever we know of the interior of Bukhara we are chiefly indebted for its Jewish inhabitants..... Upon the whole the Jews of Bukhara are much shrewder than their oppressive masters, and able to converse on subjects of which a genuine Bokharan has no idea."[38]

In spring of 1868, Russian authorities relied on Jewish support when their armies attacked the Emirate of Bukhara as young Jewish men acted as scouts for the Russians and brought food and drinks to the Russian troops.[38]

An 1884 report byVasily Radlov described how the Bukharan Jews viewed Tsarist Russia rule:

"The Jew, who in Europe has lived for centuries in enmity with the Christian, welcomes him here with a shining gaze (…) and is delighted to be able to wave a greeting to him. He proudly regards him as his new friend, his protector. In his proximity, he looks down on the Mohammedan with contempt."[39]

Dubbed the "Golden Age" for Bukharan Jews, from 1876 to 1916 they were no longer restricted in their autonomy and had the same rights as their Muslim neighbors.[40][41] Dozens of Bukharan Jews held prestigious jobs in medicine, law, and government, and many of them prospered. Many Bukharan Jews became successful and well-respected actors, artists, dancers, musicians, singers, film producers, and sportsmen. Several Bukharan entertainers became artists of merit and gained the title "People's Artist of Uzbekistan", "People's Artist of Tajikistan", and even (in the Soviet era) "People's Artist of the Soviet Union". Many succeeded in the world of sport, with several Bukharan Jews in Uzbekistan becoming renowned boxers and winning many medals for the country.[42]

Hibbat Zion and immigrating into Ottoman Palestine

edit
 
Bukharan Jewish family in Jerusalem, 1909
 
Bukharan Jewish men in Jerusalem, 1927
Bukharan Jewish women in Jerusalem, 1927

Beginning from 1872, Bukharan Jews began to move into the region ofOttoman Palestine, motivated by religious convictions and the desire to return to their ancestral homeland.[43] The land on which they settled inJerusalem was named theBukharan Quarter (Sh'hunat HaBucharim) and still exists today.[44][45] In 1890, seven members of the Bukharan Jewish community formed theHovevei Zion Association of the Jewish communities of Bukhara,Samarkand andTashkent.[44][45] In 1891, the association bought land and drew up a charter stating that the new quarter would be built in the style of Europe's major cities.[45] ArchitectConrad Schick was employed to design the neighborhood.[44] The streets were three times wider than even major thoroughfares in Jerusalem at the time, and spacious mansions were built with large courtyards.[44] The homes were designed withneo-Gothic windows, European tiled roofs,neo-Moorish arches and Italian marble. Facades were decorated with Jewish motifs such as theStar of David and Hebrew inscriptions.[45]

RabbiShimon Hakham and RabbiShlomo Moussaieff were some of the organizers of the quarter where Bukharan homes, synagogues, schools, libraries, and a bath house were established.[46][47]

The Bukharan Quarter was one of the most affluent sections of the city, populated by Bukharan Jewish merchants and religious scholars supported primarily by various trading activities such ascotton,gemstones, andtea from Central Asia. Following World War I and the Bolshevik Revolution, the quarter fell into decline as sources of income from foreign trade became cut off leaving many residents with little more than just their homes in Jerusalem, forcing them to subdivide and rent out rooms to bring in income.[47][48] From being lauded as one of the most beautiful neighborhoods in the city, the Bukharian Quarter earned the opposite sobriquet, of being one of the poorest neighborhoods of Jerusalem.[49] In the 1920s and 1930s, the neighborhood also became one of the centers of the Zionist movement with many of its leaders and philosophers living there.[50]

Between 1953 and 1963, RabbiBernard M. Casper was working as Dean for Student Affairs at theHebrew University of Jerusalem, and during this period he became deeply concerned about the impoverished Quarter.[51] After his appointment asChief Rabbi inSouth Africa he set up a special fund for the Quarter's improvement and this was tied with Prime MinisterMenachem Begin's urban revitalization program, Project Renewal.[51]Johannesburg was twinned with the Bukharan Quarter, and Johannesburg Jewry raised enormous funds for its rehabilitation.[51] Frustrated by the lack of progress, Casper traveled to Jerusalem in 1981 to resolve the hurdles.[51] He consulted with community organizer Moshe Kahan and suggested that they present the dormant agencies with concrete evidence of what could be done.[51] Using a private discretionary fund, he initiated development of several pilot projects, among them a free loan fund, a dental clinic and a hearing center whose successes spurred the municipality back on track.[51]

The quarter bordersTel Arza on the west, theShmuel HaNavi neighborhood on the north,Arzei HaBira on the east, andGeula on the south. Today, most of the residents areHaredi Jews.[52]

Under Soviet Union rule

edit
 
Family of David Kalontarov, head ofSamarkand’s Bukharan Quarter, in front of theirSukkah, 1902
 
Bukharan Jewish family celebrateHanukkah inTel Aviv, 1959
 
Bukharan Jewish family celebrate Passover inJerusalem, c. 1970s

Following theSoviet capture of Bukhara and the creation of the Soviet Socialist Republics ofUzbekistan andTajikistan, synagogues were destroyed or closed down, and were replaced by Soviet institutions.[53] As a result, many Bukharan Jews fled tothe West.

Stalin's decision to end Lenin'sNew Economic Policy and initiate theFirst five-year plan in the late 1920s resulted in a drastic deterioration of living conditions for the Bukharan Jews. By the time Soviet authorities established their hold over the borders in Central Asia in the mid 1930s, many tens of thousands of households from Central Asia had crossed the border into Iran and Afghanistan, amongst them some 4,000 Bukharan Jews who were heading towardsMandatory Palestine.[22]

Soviet doctrines, ideology and nationalities policy had a large impact on the everyday life, culture and identity of the Bukharan Jews.[53] Bukharan Jews who had put efforts into creating a Bukharan Jewish Soviet culture and national identity were charged during Stalin'sGreat Purge or, as part of the Soviet Union's nationalities policies and nation building campaigns, were forced to assimilate into the larger Soviet Uzbek or Soviet Tajik national identities. Nevertheless, the community still attempted to preserve their traditions while displaying loyalty to the new government.[22]

During this time, both Jews and Muslims suffered from the anti-religious policies the Soviets imposed on Central Asia, which aimed to break the power of their religious institutions and eventually replace religious belief with atheism.[54]

In 1950, the "Black Years of Soviet Jewry" began when suppression of the Jewish religion resumed after having paused due to World War II. AfterJoseph Stalin's attempt to turn the newly founded state ofIsrael into a socialist country failed, an anti-Israel, anti-Zionist, and antisemitic campaign launched against Soviet Jews.[55] Several religious and prominent Bukharan Jews were arrested and sentenced to 25 years on charges of "Zionist propagation."[55] Even those who uttered the traditional phrase said by Jews on thePassover holiday,"Next Year in Jerusalem", were subject to arrests.[55] These arrests were all part of the Sovietanti-cosmopolitan campaign, where antisemitism was often disguised under the banner ofanti-Zionism.[56]

After the creation of the state ofIsrael in 1948, and later theSix-Day Arab–Israeli War of 1967, antisemitism intensified amongst the Muslim majority, with the 1967 war leading to a rise inJewish patriotism. The Soviet Union forbade Jews to makealiyah to Israel though these restrictions loosened in the 1970s and ceased in the 1980s.[57]

Relationship between other Jewish communities

edit

After the Russian conquest of Central Asia, a small number ofAshkenazi Jews emigrated from Eastern Europe and the European part of the Russian Empire toRussian Turkestan. DuringWorld War II, tens of thousands of Ashkenazi Jews from the European regions of the Soviet Union headed eastward to various Soviet republics in Central Asia, either asrefugees, or were forcefully deported there byJoseph Stalin.[58] InSoviet Uzbekistan, the Bukharan Jewish communities helped contribute to the resettlement of these refugees, housing families in their homes and assisted them with finding jobs until they settled in to their new surroundings.[59]

Despite this, Bukharan and Ashkenazi Jews largely remained separate from one another, and intermarriage between the two was extremely rare.[60] Bukharan Jews ranged from religious to traditional, and clustered together (particular those who lived in the Jewish Quarters), while most Ashkenazi Jews living in Central Asia were secular, both structurally and culturally, and assimilated into the general populace.[60][61] Some Bukharan Jews viewed Ashkenazi Jews as inauthentic Jews, and looked down on them for their lack of Jewish identity.[62] Both groups are also buried in separate cemeteries.[63]

However, Bukharan Jewry had good relations with theChabad-Lubavitch, beginning from the end of the 19th century with the arrival of Rabbi Shlomo Leib Eliezrov, a student of RabbiSholom Dovber Schneersohn.[64] Rabbi Eliezrov accepted a temporary rabbinical position in Uzbekistan and helped organize the provision of kosher meat in surrounding cities where Jews lived. Over the decades, other emissaries from Chabad would come to support the community as well.[64]

Amongst otherMizrahim, there were numerous migrations of Jews fromIraq andYemen who migrated into Central Asia (by way of theSilk Road), and were absorbed into the Bukharan Jewish community.[65] Some Bukharan Jews also have Sephardic ancestry, similarly from various migrations of Jews fromSyria,Morocco, andTurkey in the late 18th through 19th century.[66]

Mass migration after 1991

edit

In the late 1980s to the late 1990s, following the collapse of the Soviet Union and foundation of the independent Republic ofUzbekistan in 1991, most of the remaining Bukharan Jews left Central Asia for theUnited States,Israel,Europe, orAustralia in the last mass emigration of Bukharan Jews from their resident lands.

Some left due to economic instability, while others left fearing growth of nationalistic policies in the country. The resurgence ofIslamic fundamentalism in Uzbekistan and Tajikistan (such as theFergana massacre and the1990 Dushanbe riots) prompted an increase in the level of Jewish emigration. According to various Bukharan Jews, the Uzbek and Tajik locals would come to Jewish homes and say things in line with "Go back to where you came from. You don't belong here." Because of this, Jewish citizens also found it difficult to sell their homes at a reasonable price.[67] In 1990, there were riots against theJewish population ofAndijan and nearby areas. This led to most Jews in theFergana Valley immigrating to Israel or the United States.[57]

Immigrant populations

edit

Tajikistan

edit
 
Entrance to the now demolishedDushanbe Synagogue in 2006

In early 2006, the still activeDushanbe Synagogue inTajikistan as well as the city'smikveh (ritual bath),kosher butcher, and Jewish schools were demolished by the government (without compensation to the community) to make room for the newPalace of Nations. After an international outcry, the government of Tajikistan announced a reversal of its decision and publicly claimed that it would permit the synagogue to be rebuilt on its current site. However, in mid-2008, the government of Tajikistan destroyed the whole synagogue and started construction of the Palace of Nations. The Dushanbe synagogue was Tajikistan's only synagogue, and the community were therefore left without a center or a place to pray. In 2009, the Tajik government reestablished the synagogue in a different location for the small Jewish community.[68]

As of the 2010 census, there are 36 Jews left in Tajikistan. Two are Bukharan Jews while the other 34 are Ashkenazi.[69] On January 15, 2021, Jura Abaev, the last Jew in the city ofKhujand, Tajikistan died.[70]

Afghanistan

edit
 
Zablon Simintov, known as the last Jew of Afghanistan

AsAfghanistan is a landlocked country located between Central Asia and South Asia,the Jews who lived in Afghanistan are sometimes considered to be the same as Bukharan Jews though some Jews from Afghanistan identify solely as "Afghan Jews."[71]

With theKazakh famine of 1930–1933, a significant number of Bukharan Jews crossed the border into theKingdom of Afghanistan as part of the wider famine-related refugee crisis; leaders of the communities petitioned Jewish communities in Europe and the United States for support.[72] In total, some 60,000 refugees had fled from theSoviet Union and reached Afghanistan.[73]

In 1935, theJewish Telegraphic Agency reported that "ghetto rules" had been imposed on Afghan Jews, requiring them to wear particular clothes, requiring Jewish women to stay outside markets, requiring all Jews to live within certain distances frommosques and banning Jews from riding horses.[74] In 1935, a delegate to theWorld Zionist Congress claimed that an estimated 40,000 Bukharan Jews had been killed or starved to death.[73]

By the end of 2004, only two known Jews were left in Afghanistan,Zablon Simintov and Isaac Levy (born c. 1920). Levy relied on charity to survive while Simintov ran a store selling carpets and jewelry until 2001. They lived on opposite sides of the dilapidated Kabul synagogue. In January 2005, Levy died of natural causes, leaving Simintov as the sole known Jew in Afghanistan.[75]

Due todecades of warfare,antisemitism, andreligious persecution, there are officially no Jews remaining in Afghanistan today.[76][77]

United States

edit
 
Congregation Beth-El inFresh Meadows, Queens, a Bukharan synagogue

The largest number of Bukharan Jews in the U.S. is inNew York City.[11] InForest Hills, Queens, 108th Street, often referred to as "Bukharan Broadway"[78] or "Bukharian Broadway",[79] is filled with Bukharan restaurants and gift shops. Furthermore, Forest Hills is nicknamed "Bukharlem" due to the majority of the population being Bukharan.[80] They have formed a tight-knit enclave in this area that was once primarily inhabited byAshkenazi Jews.Congregation Tifereth Israel inCorona, Queens, a synagogue founded in the early 1900s by Ashkenazi Jews, became Bukharan in the 1990s.Kew Gardens, Queens, also has a very large population of Bukharan Jews. Although Bukharan Jews in Queens remain insular in some ways (living in close proximity to each other, owning and patronizing clusters of stores, and attending their own synagogue rather than other synagogues in the area), they have connections with non-Bukharans in the area. In December 1999, the First Congress of the Bukharian Jews of the United States and Canada convened in Queens.[81] In 2007, Bukharan-American Jews initiated lobbying efforts on behalf of their community.[82] Zoya Maksumova, president of the Bukharan women's organization "Esther Hamalka" said "This event represents a huge leap forward for our community. Now, for the first time, Americans will know who we are."[citation needed] During a speech, SenatorJoseph Lieberman stated, "God said to Abraham, 'You'll be an eternal people'… and now we see that the State of Israel lives, and this historic [Bukharan] community, which was cut off from the Jewish world for centuries in Central Asia and suffered oppression during the Soviet Union, is alive and well in America. God has kept his promise to the Jewish people."[82]

Culture

edit

Dress codes

edit
 
Bukharan kippah

Bukharan Jews had their owndress code, similar to but also different from other cultures (mainlyTurco-Mongol) living in Central Asia, which they were wore as their daily attire until theSoviet Union, though was still worn during communal events. Today, the traditionalkaftan (Jomah-ҷома-ג'אמה in Bukhori and Tajik) is worn during weddings andBar Mitzvahs.[83]

Bukharan Jews also have a uniquekippah, a full head-sized covering with rich patterns and lively colors embroidered. In present times, this kippah can sometimes be seen being worn by liberal-leaning andReform Jews.[84]

Music

edit
 
Jewish ensemble inBukhara, 1987

The Bukharan Jews have a distinct musical tradition calledshashmaqam, which is an ensemble of stringed instruments, infused withCentral Asian rhythms, and a considerableklezmer influence as well as Muslim melodies, and evenSpanishchords. The main instrument is thedayereh. Shashmaqam music "reflect[s] the mix of Hassidic vocals, Indian and Islamic instrumentals and Sufi-inspired texts and lyrical melodies." They were heavily responsible for sustaining and transmitting the music during the Soviet era, and later when immigrating to the United States. Ensemble Shashmaqam was one of the first New York-based ensembles created to showcase the music and dance of Bukharan Jews.[85]

An account from explorerHenry Lansdell in 1885, upon visitingSamarkand and hearing the music of the Bukharan Jews:

We went then to the synagogue, allowed to the Jews of Samarkand only since the Russians came, where the best chorister in the region was that evening to sing. The crowd was dense, and in a short time two singers appeared; the “primo,” a delicate, modest-looking man, who blushed at the eagerness with which his arrival was awaited, whilst the “secondo” was a brazen-faced fellow, who carried his head on one side, as if courting attention, and with the assurance that he should have it. They were introduced to us, and began at once, that we might hear. The singing, so called, was the most remarkable that up to that time I had ever heard. The first voice led off in a key so high, that he had to strain for some seconds before he could utter a sound at all. After this he proceeded very slowly as to the number of words he sang, but prolonged his notes into numerous flourishes, screaming as loud as he could in falsetto. The second voice was an accompaniment for the first; but as both bawled as loudly as possible, I soon voted it anything but good music, and intimated that it was time for us to go. The congregation, moreover, were crowding round, without the smallest semblance of their being engaged in divine worship.[86]

Weddings and marriage traditions

edit
 
Jewish bride at aKosh-Chinon ceremony inBukhara, 1999

Bukharan Jews celebrated their weddings in several stages leading up to the wedding ceremony. When a match between a couple was accepted, an engagement (Shirini-Khori) took place in the house of the bride. Following this, the Rabbi congratulated the father of the bride on the engagement and distributed sugar to those present. Other sweets were distributed towards relatives, notifying them that the engagement had taken place.[87] After engagement, the meeting between parents of the groom and bride was carried out in the house of the bride, where refreshments and gifts from the groom were sent. Further celebrations lasted a week in the house of the groom, where relatives of the groom brought gifts to the bride.[87]

Before the wedding, a unique practice that was done was aKosh-Chinon ceremony, a local custom practiced by both Jews and Muslims in Central Asia, which involved all the female guests of the wedding to pluck the bride's eyebrows and the strands of hair above her lip, as well as the sides of the bride's face being cleaned of their dark wisps.[88] Girls in Central Asia were taught that they shouldn't manicure their facial hair until they got married. The smooth, clean face served as a mark of womanhood.[88] This ceremony was done a few days before the wedding, and after the bride had immersed herself in theMikveh.[88]

The wedding itself followed the same traditions as a standard Jewish wedding, including the signing of theKetubah, theChuppah, and theKiddish. A few small differences were theChuppah being a prayer shawl that was held by members of the family, unlike it being hung on four poles as is widely practiced today in Jewish weddings. Furthermore, as the bride and groom would take their positions in the prayer shawl, the mothers of the bride and groom would stitch their needles through the fabric of their children's clothing.[88]

Cuisine

edit
 
Central Asian styledumpling soup calledshurboi dushpera ortushpera (left) along with traditionaltandoor style bread callednon in Bukharan, Tajik, and Uzbek (right)

The cooking of Bukharan Jews is based on traditionalCentral Asian cuisine, along with some uniquely Bukharan Jewish dishes such as bakhsh and osh savo, subject to the restrictions ofJewish dietary laws.[89]

The Bukharians' Jewish identity was always preserved in the kitchen. "Even though we were in exile from Jerusalem, we observed kashruth," said Isak Masturov, another owner of Cheburechnaya. "We could not go to restaurants, so we had to learn to cook for our own community."[90]

Authentic Bukharan Jewish dishes include:[91]

  • Osh palov – a Bukharan Jewish version ofpalov for weekdays, includes both beef andchicken.
  • Bakhsh – "green palov", rice with meat or chicken and green herbs (coriander,parsley,dill), exists in two varieties; bakhshikhaltagi cooked Jewish-style in a small bag immersed in a pot with boiling water or soup and bakhshidegi cooked like regular palov in a cauldron;[92] bakhshikhaltagi is precooked and therefore can be served onShabbat.
  • Oshi sabo (alsoosh savo orosovoh), a "meal in a pot" slowly cooked overnight and eaten hot forShabbat lunch. Oshi sabo is made with meat, rice, vegetables, and fruit added for a unique sweet and sour taste.[93] By virtue of its culinary function (a hot Shabbat meal in Jewish homes) and ingredients (rice, meat, vegetables cooked together overnight), oshi sabo is a Bukharan version ofcholent orhamin.
  • Khalta savo – food cooked in a bag (usually rice and meat, possibly with the addition of dried fruit).[89][94]
  • Yakhni – a dish consisting of two kinds of boiled meat (beef and chicken), brought whole to the table and sliced before serving with a little broth and a garnish of boiled vegetables; a main course forFriday night dinner.[89]
  • Kov roghan – fried pieces of chicken with fried potatoes piled on top.[95]
  • Serkaniz (Sirkoniz) – garlic rice dish, another variation ofpalov.[91]
  • Oshi piyozi – stuffed onion.[92]
  • Shulah – a Bukharan-stylerisotto.
  • Boyjon – eggplant puree mixed only with salt and garlic, the traditional starter for the Friday-night meal in Bukharan Jewish homes.[89]
  • Slotah Bukhori – a salad made with tomato, cucumber, green onion, cilantro, salt, pepper, and lemon juice. Some also put in lettuce and chili pepper.
  • Bichak - stuffed baked or fried pastry, traditional forRosh Hashanah andSukkot.
  • Samsa - pastries filled with spiced meat or vegetables, are baked in a unique, hollowed outtandoor oven, and greatly resemble the preparation and shape of Indiansamosas.
  • Noni Toki – a crispy flat bread that is baked on the back of a wok. This method creates a bowl-shaped bread.
  • Fried fish with garlic sauce (forFriday night dinner):[92] "Every Bukharian Sabbath ... is greeted with a dish of fried fish covered with a pounded sauce of garlic and cilantro".[96] In the Bukharan dialect, the dish is calledmai birion or in fullmai birion ovi sir, wheremai birion is fried fish andovi sir is garlic sauce (literally "garlic water").[89] Bread is sometimes fried and then dipped in the remaining garlic water and is callednoni-sir.
  • Chakchak, a popular sweet made from unleavened dough cut and rolled into hazelnut-sized balls, which are then deep-fried in oil. Optionally, hazelnuts or dried fruit (e.g. apricots and raisins) are added to the mixture. The fried balls are stacked in a mound in a special mold and drenched with hot honey.

Genetics

edit

In autosomal analyses, Bukharan Jews form a close genetic cluster withIranian Jews,Iraqi Jews,Mountain Jews,Georgian Jews, andKurdish Jews, and are genetically completely distinct to their local neighbors.[97] This cluster plots between Levantine and Northern West Asian populations.[98][99]

Among non-Jewish populations, Bukharan Jews also form a cluster with other West Asian people includingKurds,Iranians,Armenians,Assyrians, andLevantine Arabs.[97]

Notable Bukharan Jews

edit

Israel

edit

United States

edit

United Kingdom

edit

Other

edit

See also

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^Tajik:яҳудиёни Бухоро,romanizedyahudiyoni Buxoro,Bukharian dialect: יהודיאני בוכארא,Persian alphabet: یهودیان بخارا,IPA:[jɐɦudiˈjɔnɪbʊχɔˈɾo];Hebrew:יְהוּדֵי־בּוּכָרָה,romanizedyehudi Bucharah,IPA:[jehuˈdibuχaˈʁa];Uzbek:Бухоро яҳудийлари,romanized: Buxoro yahudiylari,IPA:[bʊχɒˈɾɒjæhuˌdijlæˈɾɪ̆]; Russian:бухарец,romanized:buharec,IPA:[bʊˈxarʲɪts]
  2. ^Tajik:яҳудиёни Бухорӣ,romanizedyahudiyoni Buxoriy,Bukharian: יהודי בוכרה,Persian alphabet: یهودیان بخارى,IPA:[jɐɦudiˈjɔnɪbʊχɔˈɾij];Hebrew:יְהוּדִים־בּוּכָרִים,romanizedyehudim Bucharim,IPA:[jehuˈdimbuχaˈʁim];Uzbek:Бухорий яҳудийлари,romanized: Buxoriy yahudiylari,IPA:[bʊχɒˈɾijjæhuˌdijlæˈɾɪ̆]; Russian:Бухарские евреи,romanized:Buharskije jevrei,IPA:[bʊˈxarskʲɪjejɪˈvrʲeɪ]

References

edit
  1. ^"EAJC Deputy Secretary General Participates In World Congress of Bukharan Jews Meeting".jewseurasia. Retrieved19 November 2024.
  2. ^"In Bukhara, 10,000 Jewish Graves but Just 150 Jews".The New York Times. 7 April 2018.
  3. ^Ido, Shinji (June 15, 2017)."The Vowel System of Jewish Bukharan Tajik: With Special Reference to the Tajik Vowel Chain Shift".Journal of Jewish Languages.5 (1):81–103.doi:10.1163/22134638-12340078.
  4. ^"Shalom from the Silk Road: The Story of the Bukharians".Radio National. February 13, 2011.And what of Melbourne's Bukharians, with around 65 families?
  5. ^"Jewish community profile".State Government of Victoria. March 27, 2024.The Jewish community in Victoria is the largest in Australia, with the majority of Jewish people living in Melbourne.
  6. ^"Woman now thought to be Afghanistan's last Jew flees country".Independent. 29 October 2021. Retrieved2021-11-12.
  7. ^abcdZand, Michael (1989)."BUKHARA vii. Bukharan Jews". InYarshater, Ehsan (ed.).Encyclopædia Iranica. Vol. IV/5: Brick–Burial II. London and New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul. pp. 530–545.ISBN 978-0-71009-128-4.
  8. ^abEhrlich, M. Avrum, ed. (2009). "Caucasus and Central Asia".Encyclopedia of the Jewish Diaspora: Origins, Experiences, and Culture. ABC-CLIO. p. 1124.Bukharan Jews spoke a dialect of Tajik referred to as Bukhori or Judeo-Tajik, which is still used by Bukharan Jews today.
  9. ^Ido, Shinji (2017)."The Vowel System of Jewish Bukharan Tajik: With Special Reference to the Tajik Vowel Chain Shift".Journal of Jewish Languages.5 (1): 85.doi:10.1163/22134638-12340078.The term 'the Jewish dialect of Tajik' is often used interchangeably with such terms as Judeo-Tadzhik, Judeo-Tajik, Bukhori, Bukhari, Bukharic, Bukharan, Bukharian, and Bukharit (Cooper 2012:284) in the literature.
  10. ^Moreen, Vera (2010).Contracts and Controversies between Muslims, Jews and Christians in the Ottoman Empire and Pre-Modern Iran. Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft. p. 397-411.
  11. ^abGoodman, Peter. "Bukharian Jews find homes on Long Island",Newsday, September 2004.
  12. ^Abdullaev, Kamoludin (August 10, 2018)."Historical Dictionary of Tajikistan". Rowman & Littlefield – via Google Books.
  13. ^Ochildiev, D; R. Pinkhasov, I. Kalontarov.A History and Culture of the Bukharian Jews, p. 161. Roshnoyi-Light, New York, 2007.
  14. ^abcOchildiev, D; R. Pinkhasov, I. Kalontarov.A History and Culture of the Bukharian Jews, Roshnoyi-Light, New York, 2007.
  15. ^"The Jewish Palate: The Bukharian Jews".The Jerusalem Post.
  16. ^Kaye, Maïra (25 May 2023).Memory and Commemoration across Central Asia. Brill. p. 161.ISBN 9789004540996.
  17. ^Abraham N. Poliak,Uzbekistan,Encyclopedia Judaica, 2nd ed., 2007, volume 20 pp.447-448,447.
  18. ^abc"Bukharan Jews".
  19. ^Babylonian Talmud, Tractate Aboda Zara, 31b, and Rashi
  20. ^Botticini, Maristella.The Chosen Few. Educated Wandering Jews, 800–1250: Princeton University Press.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  21. ^Calmard, J.Cultural and Religious Cross-Fertilization between Central Asia and the Indo-Persian World. 2003: UNESCO. p. 557-561.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  22. ^abcLoy, Thomas (2022). "Cross-border biographies: representations of the "Bukharan" Jewish self in changing cultural and political settings".Journal of Modern Jewish Studies.22 (3): 5.doi:10.1080/14725886.2022.2090240.S2CID 250232378.
  23. ^Rapport, Evan (2014).Greeted With Smiles: Bukharian Jewish Music and Musicians in New York. Oxford University Press. p. 8.ISBN 978-0199379033.
  24. ^abcCooper, Alanna (December 7, 2012).Bukharan Jews and the Dynamics of Global Judaism. Indiana University Press.ISBN 9780253006554.
  25. ^Glueck, Grace (6 August 1999)."DESIGN REVIEW; when Russia Uncovered Exotic Jewish Cultures - the New York Times".The New York Times. Archived fromthe original on 2017-09-17.
  26. ^Iran & the Caucasus Vol. 9, No. 2 (2005), pp. 257-272
  27. ^Ochildiev, David.A history of the Bukharan Jews. MIR. p. 75.
  28. ^Akiner, Shirin (1986).Islamic Peoples of the Soviet Union. London: Routledge. p. 370.ISBN 0-7103-0188-X.
  29. ^Malikov A. Arminius Vambery and the urban culture of Samarkand In: Orpheus Noster, Vol. 14, no. 4, 2022, p.97-108
  30. ^Meindorf (1975).The Travel from Orenburg to Bukhara. p. 96-97.
  31. ^"Bukharan Jews of Central Asia".Geni. RetrievedJune 15, 2023.
  32. ^SHNIDMAN, RONEN (October 19, 2011)."Jews far and wide".The Jerusalem Post. RetrievedJune 15, 2023.
  33. ^Burton, Audrey (1997).Bukharan Jews, ancient and modern. Jewish Historical Society of England. p. 7.
  34. ^Cooper, Alanna (2012).Bukharian Jews. Indiana University Press. p. 60.
  35. ^Dymshits, Valery; Zwolle, Waanders Uitgevers; Emelyanenko, Tatjana; Netherlands), Joods Historisch Museum (Amsterdam (1998).Facing West: Oriental Jews of Central Asia and the Caucasus. Antique Collectors Club Limited.ISBN 978-90-400-9216-9.
  36. ^Thrower, James (2004).The Religious History of Central Asia from the Earliest Times to the Present Day. Edwin Mellen Press.ISBN 978-0-7734-6417-9.
  37. ^Goldberg, Harvey E. (1996).Sephardi and Middle Eastern Jewries: History and Culture in the Modern Era. Indiana University Press.ISBN 978-0-253-21041-8.
  38. ^abcBurton, Audrey (1997).Bukharan Jews, ancient and modern. Jewish Historical Society of England. p. 57.
  39. ^Radloff, Wilhelm (1884). "From Siberia. Loose Leaves from the Diary of a Travelling Linguist".Band 2. Leipzig: 446.
  40. ^Cooper, Alanna."Who Are the Bukharan Jews?".MyJewishLearning.
  41. ^LIPHSHIZ, CNAAN."Dwindling at home, Central Asia's Bukharian Jews thrive in Diaspora".The Times of Israel.
  42. ^Pinkhasov, Peter."The History of Bukharian Jews", Bukharian Jewish Global Portal website, p. 2. Retrieved December 13, 2009.
  43. ^Rapport, Evan (2014).Greeted With Smiles: Bukharian Jewish Music and Musicians in New York. Oxford University Press. p. 33.ISBN 978-0199379033.
  44. ^abcdWager, Eliyahu (1988).Bukharan Quarter. Illustrated guide to Jerusalem. The Jerusalem Publishing House. pp. 207–201.
  45. ^abcdEylon, Lili (2011)."Focus on Israel: Jerusalem: Architecture in the late Ottoman Period: The Bukharan Quarter".Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Retrieved10 May 2021.
  46. ^Shaked, Shaul; Netzar, Amnon (2003).איראנו-יודאיקה, כרך ה: לחקר פרס והיהדית [Irano-Judaica, Part V: Studies Relating to Jewish Contacts with Persian Culture Throughout the Ages]. מכון בן צבי לחקר קהילות ישראל במזרח. p. 199.ISBN 9789652350954.
  47. ^ab"Bukharim – Beit Yisrael". Jerusalem Municipality. Archived fromthe original on 2 August 2012. Retrieved12 April 2012.
  48. ^Housing in Jewish Palestine.Jewish Agency for Israel. 1938. p. 26.
  49. ^Ben-Arieh, Yehoshua (1979).עיר בראי תקופה: ירושלים החדשה בראשיתה [A City Reflected in its Times: New Jerusalem – The Beginnings] (in Hebrew). Jerusalem: Yad Izhak Ben-Zvi Publications. p. 253.
  50. ^"Toursite form atar Eng".www.jerusalem.muni.il. Archived fromthe original on August 2, 2012. RetrievedMarch 14, 2025.
  51. ^abcdefGrace under fireThe Jerusalem Post. 8 January 2009
  52. ^The Moussaieff Synagogue, a Relic of Bukhara in Jerusalem,Haaretz
  53. ^abLoy, Thomas (2022). "Cross-border biographies: representations of the "Bukharan" Jewish self in changing cultural and political settings".Journal of Modern Jewish Studies.22 (3): 4.doi:10.1080/14725886.2022.2090240.S2CID 250232378.
  54. ^Arto Luukkanen (1994).The Party of Unbelief. Helsinki: Studia Historica 48.ISBN 951-710-008-6.OCLC 832629341.OL 25433417M.
  55. ^abcGitelman, Zvi (Apr 22, 2001).A Century of Ambivalence, Second Expanded Edition: The Jews of Russia and the Soviet Union, 1881 to the Present. Indiana University Press. pp. 144–145.ISBN 9780253013736.
  56. ^Laqueur, Walter (2006).Dying for Jerusalem: the past, present and future of the Holiest City. Naperville: Sourcebooks, Inc. p. 55.ISBN 1-4022-0632-1.
  57. ^abBlady, Ken (2000).Jewish Communities in Exotic Places. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 185.ISBN 9781283695763.OL 35782737M.
  58. ^Landé, Peter."Jewish Refugees in Tashkent".
  59. ^Ochildiev, David.A history of the Bukharan Jews. MIR. p. 154-155.
  60. ^ab"Rift over root differences remains unmended for Uzbek Jews". 31 December 2006.
  61. ^Krastev, Nikola (9 April 2008)."U.S.: Bukharian Jews Seek To Preserve Identity".Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.
  62. ^Cooper, Alanna (December 2011).Where Have All the Jews Gone? Mass Migration from Independent Uzbekistan. University Press of Florida. pp. 199–224.
  63. ^Cooper, Alanna E. (December 2011). Laskier, Michael M.; Yaacov, Lev (eds.).Where Have All the Jews Gone? Mass Migration from Independent Uzbekistan. University Press of Florida. pp. 199–224.ISBN 978-0-8130-3751-6.
  64. ^abZaltzman, Hillel."Early Chabad Presence in Bucharia".Chabad.
  65. ^"Wandering Jew: Bukhara, the ancient silk way city".The Jerusalem Post.
  66. ^Abramov, Markiel (2020).Bukharian Jews: history and people. p. 124-125.
  67. ^Manyuk, Grigory."Short documentary of the migration of Bukharian Jews, filmed by Russian filmaker in the mid 1990's".Vimeo.
  68. ^"New Synagogue Opens In Dushanbe".Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. 5 May 2009. Retrieved19 November 2017.
  69. ^"Tajikistan: Virtual Jewish History Tour". Jewishvirtuallibrary.org. 2006-03-01. Retrieved2013-04-14.
  70. ^LIPHSHIZ, CNAAN."After 3-time aliya, last Jew in Tajikistani city's centuries-old community dies".Times of Israel. Retrieved22 November 2024.
  71. ^Aharon, Sara Y. (2011).From Kabul to Queens: the Jews of Afghanistan and their move to the United States. New York: American Sephardi Federation: Decalogue Books. p. 128.ISBN 9780692010709.
  72. ^Koplik, S. (2015).A Political and Economic History of the Jews of Afghanistan. Brill's Series in Jewish Studies. Brill. p. 85-87.ISBN 978-90-04-29238-3. Retrieved2024-03-03.
  73. ^abKoplik, Sara (2003). "The demise of Afghanistan's Jewish community and the soviet refugee crisis (1932–1936)".Iranian Studies.36 (3):353–379.doi:10.1080/021086032000139131.ISSN 0021-0862.S2CID 161841657.
  74. ^"Ghetto Code Enacted by Afghanistan | Jewish Telegraphic Agency". Jta.org. 15 May 1935. Retrieved2 May 2016.
  75. ^Fletcher, Martin (14 June 2008)."The last Jew in Afghanistan".NBC News. Archived fromthe original on 13 April 2017. Retrieved12 April 2017.
  76. ^"Last Jew in Afghanistan en route to US: report".The New Arab. 7 September 2021. Retrieved17 September 2021.
  77. ^Mehrdad, Ezzatullah (16 July 2019)."Kabul, with Jewish population of 1, still suffers from widespread anti-Semitism".The Times of Israel. Retrieved9 September 2021.
  78. ^"Bukharan Broadway":
  79. ^Moskin, Julia."The Silk Road Leads to Queens"The New York Times, January 18, 2006.
  80. ^Popik, Barry."Buharlem or Bukharlem (Bukhara + Harlem)".www.barrypopik.com. Retrieved2017-01-29.
  81. ^"Heritage".bucharianlife.blogspot.com. Retrieved19 November 2017.
  82. ^abRuby, Walter."The Bukharian Lobby"Archived February 21, 2008, at theWayback Machine,The Jewish Week, October 31, 2007.
  83. ^For examples see men and women coats as well as children's clothing from Bukhara, ["Dress Codes: Revealing the Jewish Wardrobe""שפת לבוש". Archived fromthe original on 2014-07-03. Retrieved2014-07-23.] exhibition, Israel Museum, Jerusalem, March 11, 2014 – October 18, 2014
  84. ^Kippah Couture,The Forward, Angela Himsel, September 29, 2006.
  85. ^"Shashmaqam". The Wandering Muse. Archived from the original on 2011-10-08. Retrieved2012-01-05.
  86. ^Lansdell, Henry (1885).Russian Central Asia, including Kuldja, Bokhara, Khiva and Merv. Hansebooks.
  87. ^abOchildiev, David (2005).A history of the Bukharan Jews. MIR. p. 191.
  88. ^abcdCooper, Alanna (December 7, 2012).Bukharan Jews and the Dynamics of Global Judaism. Indiana University Press. p. 153.
  89. ^abcdeClaudia Roden,The Book of Jewish Food: An Odyssey from Samarkand to New York, Alfred Knopf, New York (1996).
  90. ^NYT,1-18-2006The Silk Road Leads to Queens
  91. ^abBJews.com."Bukharian Jewish Global Portal: Cuisine". Bukharianjews.com.Archived from the original on 2013-07-29. Retrieved2012-01-05.
  92. ^abcEthnographic Atlas of Uzbekistan: Central Asian JewsArchived 2009-10-07 at theWayback Machine, p. 93(in Russian)
  93. ^Oshi sabo recipeArchived 2008-03-11 at theWayback Machine(in Hebrew); recipe inEnglish fromJewish WomanArchived 2008-09-29 at theWayback Machine, Fall 2005.
  94. ^"This site is temporarily unavailable".www.bjews.com. Archived fromthe original on February 2, 2023.
  95. ^Kov roghan recipe and photoArchived 2012-10-14 at theWayback Machine in Wiki Cookbook
  96. ^"The Silk Road Leads to Queens"Archived 2023-02-02 at theWayback Machine, Brief culinary history of Central Asia fromNew York Times, 18 January 2006, accessed 13 September 2008.
  97. ^abBehar, Doron; Metspalu, Mait; Baran, Yael; Kopelman, Naama; Yunusbayev, Bayazit; Gladstein, Ariella; Tzur, Shay; Sahakyan, Havhannes; Bahmanimehr, Ardeshir; Yepiskoposyan, Levon; Tambets, Kristiina (2013-12-01)."No Evidence from Genome-Wide Data of a Khazar Origin for the Ashkenazi Jews".Human Biology Open Access Pre-Prints.85 (6).
  98. ^Lazaridis, Iosif; Patterson, Nick; Mittnik, Alissa; Renaud, Gabriel; Mallick, Swapan; Kirsanow, Karola; Sudmant, Peter H.; Schraiber, Joshua G.; Castellano, Sergi; Lipson, Mark; Berger, Bonnie; Economou, Christos; Bollongino, Ruth; Fu, Qiaomei; Bos, Kirsten I. (2014)."Ancient human genomes suggest three ancestral populations for present-day Europeans".Nature.513 (7518):409–413.arXiv:1312.6639.Bibcode:2014Natur.513..409L.doi:10.1038/nature13673.ISSN 0028-0836.PMC 4170574.PMID 25230663.
  99. ^Martiniano, Rui; Haber, Marc; Almarri, Mohamed A.; Mattiangeli, Valeria; Kuijpers, Mirte C.M.; Chamel, Berenice; Breslin, Emily M.; Littleton, Judith; Almahari, Salman; Aloraifi, Fatima; Bradley, Daniel G.; Lombard, Pierre; Durbin, Richard (2024)."Ancient genomes illuminate Eastern Arabian population history and adaptation against malaria".Cell Genomics.4 (3): 100507.doi:10.1016/j.xgen.2024.100507.PMC 10943591.PMID 38417441.
  100. ^"A Silk Road Bride Rides a London Taxi".Haaretz. 2015-01-27.

Bibliography

edit
  • Ricardo Garcia-Carcel:La Inquisición, Biblioteca El Sol. Biblioteca Básica de Historia. Grupo Anaya, Madrid, Spain 1990.ISBN 84-7969-011-9.

External links

edit

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp