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Legends of the Chinese Jews of Kaifeng

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Chinese Jews! A curious pairing, but strange as it may seem, there have been Jews in China for more than a thousand years. The country's Jewish community, located in Kaifeng, once the capital city, numbered several thousand at its height. Because of China's tolerance and openness, its members attained success in many fields - commerce, crafts, government service, the military. Their synagogue, a unique amalgam of Chinese architecture with Judaic tradition, was one of the city's most striking sights.
The story of Chinese Jewry is both historically interesting and profoundly inspiring. Long isolated from other Jews because they were living in a land that sought to cut itself off from the rest of the world, they tenaciously maintained their traditions and identity. Though they adopted Chinese customs and intermarried with their neighbors, Kaifeng's Jews held together as a community until well into modern times. Even today there are people in Kaifeng who remain aware of their ancestry and register as Jews on official census forms.
Of the many fascinating tales related in this beautifully illustrated, lovingly written book, perhaps the most touching is the one about Kaifeng's Jews and the first Christian missionaries in China. The Jews, never having heard of Christianity, assumed that anyone who believed in one God must be a coreligionist. The missionaries, never having imagined there might be Jews in China, assumed they were lost Christians. When the misunderstanding was cleared up, the Christians set about trying to convert the Jewsbut to no avail, because Kaifeng's Jews were adamantly loyal to their heritage.

140 pages, Hardcover

First published September 1, 1995

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Xu Xin

74 books

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118 reviews
July 19, 2014
I've had this book on my list of things to read and what a bummer it turned out to be. While the author stated that he took liberties and indulged the stories, it felt like he really just had an outline of dates and names and filled in the rest with story. I love legends, even fully fabricated ones, but these reached no where near the quality which I was expecting. I recognize the constraints-The Revolution, the assimilation over centuries, and perhaps, if written in Chinese originally, it is a matter of bad translation. It read like a child's book with little to interest the child, not even the child in me.
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