Kazakh Jews

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kazakh Jews have a long history. There are approximately 12,000 to 30,000 Jews in Kazakhstan, less than 1% of the population.

Most Kazakh Jews are Ashkenazi and speak Russian.[1][2]

Contents

[edit] Jewish history in Kazakhstan

General Secretary Joseph Stalin forcibly moved thousands of Jews from other parts of the Soviet Union to the Kazakh SSR. During the Holocaust 8,000 Jews fled to Kazakhstan.[2]

In 1997 the Kazakh KGB arrested Jewish labor leader Leonid Solomin and others. Newspapers published antisemitic canards warning of an international conspiracy of "Zionists" and the "international Jewry." One newspaper called on citizens to kill Jews.[2] mendel gershovits, the Chief Rabbi of Kazakhstan, told Kazinform on January 16, 2004 that a new synagogue would be built in Astana. He thanked President Nazarbayev for "paying so much attention to distinguishing between those who truly believe and those who want to hijack their religion."[3] President of the Euro-Asian Jewish Congress, presented Nazarbayev with a menorah on 7 September 2004.[4] http://www.ncsj.org/AuxPages/081001Kazakhstan.shtml Kazakhstan’s Jews Celebrate] National Conference on Soviet Jewry</ref>

[edit] Jewish life today

About 2,000 Jewish Kazakhs are Bukharian and Juhuro (Mountain Jews). There are synagogues and large Jewish communities in Almaty where there are 10,000 Jews and in Astana and Pavlodar. There are smaller communities in Karaganda, Chimkent, Semey, Kokchetav, Dzhambul, Uralsk, Aktyubinsk, Petropavlovsk.

There are twenty Jewish Kazakh organizations, including the Mitzvah Association, Chabad-Lubavitch, the Joint Distribution Committee, Jewish Agency for Israel, and the All-Kazakhstan Jewish Congress AKJC). The Jewish communities formed the AKJC in December 1999 in a ceremony attended by Kazakh government officials and United States Ambassador to Kazakhstan Richard Jones.

There are fourteen Jewish day schools attended by more than 700 students. Between 2005 and 2006 attendance in religious services and education in Almaty among Jews greatly increased. The Kazakh government registered eight foreign rabbis and "Jewish missionaries" (see Jewish outreach.) It has also donated buildings and land for the building of new synagogues.[1][2]

Rabbi gershovits has applauded the efforts of the Nazarbayev administration in protecting the Kazakh Jewish community from antisemitic attacks, saying he has not encountered antisemitism since he came to Kazakhstan ten years earlier. The only registered instances of antisemitism in 2005-2006 came from members of Hizb ut-Tahrir, which is banned as a terrorist organization in Kazakhstan.[1]

The Habar television channel hosted an hour-long television series on Judaism and the history of the Jews on 8 February 2007. The program, airing twice a month, is hosted by Elka Gershovitz and Rabbi Menahem Mendel Gershovitz, the Chabad representative to Almaty, Kazakhstan[5]. The first half-hour discusses Shabbat and Jewish cuisine.[6]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[[1]]

Languages