By: David Lee
Produced and Edited by: Sarah Wagner
Messianic Jews - minorities in the Jewish state
In
the United States, Christians, Muslims, and Jews have shown the ability to
share a common identity as an American. In Israel, having Jewish familial roots
is the only direct passage to citizenship. Messianic Jews – Jews who
unconventionally believe in Jesus – share in the Jewish heritage, but have been
an outlier within the Jewish establishment for decades.
“Basically,
the only group of Jewish people who can show clear Jewish heritage but not
permitted to immigrate to Israel,” said Jamie Cohen, a founder of the Israeli law
office Cohen, Decker, Pex & Brosh.
“They’re
either rejected out of hand by one of the Jewish [immigration] agencies or
there’s no movement [in the application process],” said Cohen.
He
and his partners assist individuals or families who get “stuck” in their
immigration to Israel.
The
Israeli statute called the Law of Return allows any person with a Jewish father
or grandfather to immigrate to Israel. However, there is another law that
terminates Jewish citizenship if one makes conversion from Judaism to another
religion. Messianic Jews usually end up “stuck” between these two laws.
“Our
lawyers set up meetings with the ministry [of immigration] and we throw
petitions, and if we can’t get a satisfactory answer from the ministry we take
it to the high courts,” said Cohen.
Messianic Jews in today’s Israel
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Photo Courtesy of: Wikimedia Commons |
Idan
Pinhas is a Messianic Jew who grew up in a traditional Jewish family in Israel.
As a manager of a museum in the Old City of Jerusalem, he attends an Anglican
church in the same area.
“My
dad became a Christian when I was young; my mom divorced him for that,” said
Pinhas.
He
describes the divisions in his family as a typical consequence for Orthodox Jews
who have converted to Christianity.
“You
do get some pressure from the family. They don’t want to talk to you, they
don’t want to invite you to family events,” said Pinhas.
He
also mentioned situations where people would slap, spit, or curse at Messianic
Jews advocating their faith in the streets. Yet, the injustices that Cohen mentioned
are more extensive.
Pinhas
emphasized that groups like Yad L’Achim meddled with the Ministry of Interior –
which handles immigration to Israel – to discourage the population of Messianic
Jews in Israel.
“These
[Orthodox Jewish] parties basically have a monopoly over the Ministry of
Interior,” said Pinhas. “These non-governmental groups inform the ministry
about Messianic groups in Israel, and the ministry takes action,” continued
Pinhas.
Yad
L’Achim refused to comment, but another orthodox group shared its
counter-missionary work.
The Preservation Movement
“It’s
an educational organization that starts with children and schools,” said Rabbi
Chaim Malinowitz, the American Liaison for Lev L’Achim.
Meaning
“Heart to Brothers,” Lev L’Achim has the goal of transferring Jewish children
in secular schools to religious schools that teach the Torah – the Hebrew
bible. Other objectives include preventing intermarriage and “saving” Jews from
missionary work and assimilation to non-Jewish groups.
“I
do not believe every Jewish person has the right to choose their own religion,”
said Malinowitz. “I don’t think God left it up to us to decide if we should
follow the rules and guidelines found in the Torah and the Bible,” continued
Malinowitz.
Outreach
Judaism – founded by Rabbi Tovia Singer – works outside of Israel and, also,
has its focus on discrediting the Messianic movement.
“What
the Messianic movement is doing is keeping superficial traditions and customs
that are not biblical, but are very visible and striking,” said Singer. “So,
they jettisoned the core tenant of the Jewish faith and they’re lighting
Hanukkah candles and wearing a kippah.”
Likewise,
Messianic Jews have become a controversy in that their existence brought out a
fundamental question about Jews: can you be Jewish without the Jewish religion?
“Israel
walks a very strange line: Israel is a democracy – it has a justice on the
Supreme Court who is Arabic; but, it is a Jewish state. So, it’s a very
difficult balancing act,” said Singer.
Can you be Christian, and a Jew?
Professor
David Randolph, the Director of Messianic Jewish Studies at the King’s
University, explained why Messianic Jews would want to keep their Jewish
identity even when they abandoned the Jewish faith.
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Israeli people praying at the Western Wall. Photo Courtesy of: Wikimedia Commons |
“In
the New Testament [of the Bible], Jesus, his apostles, and his first followers
were Jews; Jesus’ ministry was almost entirely in the land of Israel,” said
Randolph.
Centuries
later, Jesus’ movement of replacing the Jewish doctrine for the Christian
counterpart made Jews the minority and the non-Jews the overwhelming majority. Here,
Rudolph describes two different purposes for today’s Messianic movement:
missionary purposes and an emphasis on Jews as God’s chosen people.
“The
maintenance of the Jewish identity is important because of evangelism purposes
– Greeks to the Greeks and the Jews to the Jews,” said Pinhas.
In
addition to orthodox groups accusing the Messianic movement to be a deceptive
Christian cult, the political status quo of Israel also does not make life
easier for Messianic Jews.
“I
hate to say it, but to battle with the religious establishment – especially
this establishment which tends to be ultra-orthodox – you’re just not going to
win [cases for Messianic Jews],” said Cohen.
Still,
ordinary citizens like Pinhas have seen changes throughout their time in Israel,
which they hope will bring a different Israel. “The people have changed so the court decisions
might have to change as well; and there is a strong pool in our society to go
against [further discrimination],” said Pinhas.