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Jews came to
China as early as the Tang Dynasty, around the 8th
Century. The Jewish community in Kaifeng which prospered
during the Song Dynasty was known to all. From the
middle of the 19th Century, when the old Jewish
community in Kaifeng was assimilated, new Jewish
communities began to emerge in Hong
Kong, Shanghai, Harbin and Tianjing.
During the Holocaust, Shanghai became a safe
haven for Jewish Refugees from Nazi Europe and accepted
more Jewish refugees than those taken in by Canada,
Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and India
combined..
Although many Jews inhabited China from ancient
to modern times, no indigenous anti-Semitic activity has
ever taken place on Chinese soil. In more than 1000
years between the 8th Century and the 20th Century, the
culture and tradition of immigrant Jews drew upon and
were enriched by the host country--China. They also
exerted their influence on the cultural and social life
of China.
Chinese and Jewish cultures are the two
oldest civilizations in the world and share a lot in
common. Both highly emphasize the family tie function
and educational value, and although both have absorbed
various exotic cultures, their central core has never
changed since birth.
The topic “Jews in China” has academic
value in the fields of Jewish studies, sinology,
history, religious studies, ethnic studies, cultural
anthropology, and philosophy.
Moreover, this project has important practical
significance in opposing
racism and fascism, furthering friendly relations and
cultural harmony between all peoples, and preserving
peace in the world.
Jews
in Ancient China: The Case of Kaifeng
It was during the Tang Dynasty (around the 8th
Century) that the earliest groups of Jews came to China
via the overland Silk Road.
Others then may come by sea to the coastal areas
before moving inland. A few scholars believe that Jews
came to China as early as the Han Dynasty (206 B.C. –
220 A.D.)—some even go so far as to place their
arrival earlier, during the Zhou Dynasty (around the 6th
Century B.C.)—though there have been no archaeological
discoveries that would prove such claims. After entering
China, Jews lived in many cities and areas, but it was
not until in the Song Dynasty(960-1279) that the Kaifeng
Jewish Community formed.
In the Northern Song Dynasty, a group of Jews
came to the then capital Dongjing (now Kaifeng, as it
will be referred to below).
They were warmly received by the authorities and
allowed to live in Kaifeng as Chinese while keeping
their own traditions and religious faith. Thereafter,
they enjoyed, without prejudice, the same rights and
treatment as the Han peoples in matters of residence,
mobility, employment, education, land transactions,
religious beliefs and marriage. In such a safe, stable
and comfortable environment, Jews soon demonstrated
their talents in business and finance, achieving
successes in commerce and trade and becoming a rich
group in Kaifeng. At
the same time, their religious activities increased. In 1163, the Jews in Kaifeng built a synagogue right in the
heart of the city.
After more than 100 years, with the support of
the government of the Yuan Dynasty (1279 – 1368), the
synagogue was renovated.
By the Ming Dynasty (1368 – 1644), the Jewish
community in Kaifeng reached its most prosperous period.
It included more then 500 families, with a total
population at about 4,000 – 5,000.
The Jews’ social status also continued to rise. At that time, there were Jews who had become government
officials through imperial examinations, some had grown
extraordinarily wealthy through business, some had
become skilled craftsmen or hard-working prosperous
farmers, and still others doctors and clergymen.
At the same time, the Jews were almost
unconsciously becoming assimilated into the mainstream
of Chinese Confucian culture.
They took part in the imperial examinations,
changed their Hebrew names to Chinese ones, used Chinese
for speech and study, started to intermarry with other
nationalities, dressed like Chinese, and absorbed
Chinese habits and traditions while their own gradually
faded away. In 1642, Kaifeng Synagogue was destroyed and
many religious scriptures lost in a major flood of the
Yellow River. The Jews in Kaifeng rebuilt their
synagogue in 1663 and recovered some of the scriptures,
but the number of the Jewish community had decreased to
less then 2,000.
By the late 17th century, the Jewish
community had essentially lost contact with the Jewish
world outside. By
the mid-19th century, the Kaifeng Synagogue
lay in ruins, and the Jews in Kaifeng had lived without
a rabbi for many years.
They could not read Hebrew and had ceased
performing religious rituals.
Just around that time, Western missionaries
“discovered” the descendants of Jews in Kaifeng,
provoking a frenzy of research by Europeans and
Americans into the Kaifeng Jews. Later, Jews in Shanghai
also tried in vain to help the descendants of Jews in
Kaifeng to restore Jewish traditions. In the end, the
Jewish community in Kaifeng was integrated into Chinese
culture.
From
Baghdad to Hong Kong and Shanghai: The Sephardi
Experience
Sephardi Jews arrived in China as a result of the
Opium War and the subsequent upsurge of trade with
Britain. Coming
to China from British-controlled places such as Baghdad,
Bombay, and Singapore, most of them were merchants and
businessmen with British citizenship.
Originally from Baghdad, the Sassoon family first
shifted their operations eastward to India and then went
on to become the first Jews to establish firms and
engage in business in Hong Kong (1841) and Shanghai
(1845). In
the wake of the Sassoons, other Sephardi merchants
originally from Baghdad such as Hardoons and Kadoories
came to China to seek their fortunes.
As external trade centers open to foreign
countries, Hong Kong and Shanghai became their leading
bases for business. They soon revealed their commercial
talents, taking advantage of their traditional contacts
with various British dependencies as well as the
favorable geographic location of Shanghai and Hong Kong
to develop a thriving import – export trade from which
they quickly amassed a great amount of wealth.
They then turned around and invested this wealth
in real estate, finance, public works and manufacturing,
gradually becoming the most active foreign consortium in
Shanghai and Hong Kong, whose influence spread
throughout China and the entire Far East.
They were also engaged in public welfare and
charity work within the community, building synagogues,
establishing schools, and providing aid to Russian
Jewish immigrants and European Jewish refugees. They
supported the Zionist movement, and, in order to
safeguard their own interests, occasionally became
involved in Chinese politics. Some of them like Mr.
Silas Aaron Hardoon also patronized Chinese arts and
culture. Basically, they maintained friendly relations
with the social and political groups in China.
But the Sephardi merchants’ interests in China
sustained great losses following the Japanese invasion
of China in 1937, and when Japan occupied Shanghai and
Hong Kong after the Pearl Harbor Incident in 1941, the
Sephardi merchants lost all their property in those
occupied territories.
After the war, with the outbreak of the Chinese
civil war and the founding of the People’s Republic of
China, the Sephardi merchants gradually transferred
their property to Hong Kong and abroad. After 1949, they
continued to forge ahead, taking advantage of the Hong
Kong's position as the main trading channel between
China and the West.
Since the implementation of reform policies and
the “opening” of China to foreign businesses, many
Sephardi merchants have once again begun to make
investments on the Chinese mainland, promising that
their relations with China will continue to further
strengthen and expand.
The Second
Homeland: Russian (Ashkenazi) Jews in China
Unlike the Sephardic Jews, Russian (Ashkenazi)
Jews came to China not mainly for trade, but rather
because of rising anti-Semitism in Russia and Eastern
Europe from the 1880s onward. This wave led to the
migration of millions of Russian Jews to North America,
and tens of thousands also crossed Siberia, reaching
northeast China, Inner Mongolia, and further to southern
parts of China. During this period, the construction of
China Eastern Railway, the expansion of Russian power in
China, the Russo-Japanese War, and the two Russian
revolutions of 1905 and 1917 all propelled the migration
of Russian Jews to China.
At beginning, they mainly lived in Harbin and
neighboring areas, where they formed the largest Jewish
community in the Far East. After Japan’s invasion of
northeast China, they moved southward and settled in communities in cities such as Shanghai, Tianjin and Qingdao.
Most of these Russian Jews initially lived in
poverty, able only to eke out a meager living by running
small businesses. Later they rose to the middle class
through their own efforts. Because they greatly
outnumbered the Sephardic Jews, they became an active
community force. Some of them were technicians and
intellectuals, and after entering China, they
contributed to China’s economic and cultural
development by working in enterprises and organizations
set up by Chinese, Russians, Sephardic Jews and other
foreigners.
Long-resident Russian Jews looked upon China as
their second motherland. Some studied hard and were
integrated into Chinese culture, and played a positive
role in promoting Chinese-Jewish and Chinese-Russian
cultural exchanges. After the founding of the People’s
Republic of China in 1949, a number of Russians Jews
stayed on. Not until the beginning of the Cultural
Revolution did the last group of Russian Jews leave.
Haven for
Holocaust Victims from Nazi Europe
While the Nazis were conducting their furious
persecution and slaughter of European Jews over sixty
years ago, many persons upheld justice and boldly
rescued the Jewish victims of the Nazi terror. At the
same time, however, the governments of many nations were
imposing strict restrictions on the immigration of
Jewish refugees. Especially after 1938, almost all
countries closed their doors to the desperate Jews.
Looking back at what was done to the Jews by the
“civilized world”, Chinese people are proud of the
fact that when Jewish people were on the verge of death
and struggling for survival, the Chinese city of
Shanghai provided them with a vital haven and all
possible forms of relief. From 1933 to 1941, Shanghai
accepted over thirty thousand European Jewish refugees.
Excluding those who went on from Shanghai to
other countries, by the time of the Japanese bombing of
Pearl Harbor in December 1941 the city was sheltering
20,000 - 25,000 Jewish refugees. According to Simon
Wiesenthal Center, Shanghai took in more Jewish refugees
than Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and
India combined.
Before Pearl Harbor, Sephardic Jews, Russian Jews and
Jewish refugees from Nazi Europe in Shanghai amounted to
over thirty thousand, forming the largest Jewish
community in the Far East. The prosperous community had
its own communal association, synagogues, schools,
hospitals, clubs, cemeteries, chamber of commerce, more
than 50 publications, active political groups (from
Utopian Socialism to Revisionist Zionism) and a small
fighting unit - Jewish Company of Shanghai Volunteer
Corps. , which was at the time the world's sole legal
Jewish regular army.
The Nazis and their accomplices not only killed
six million Jews in Europe but also seriously menaced
Jewish communities outside Europe, including the Jewish
communities in China and especially in Shanghai. In
July, 1942, eight months after the outbreak of the
Pacific War, Colonel Josef Meisinger, chief
representative of the Gestapo in Japan, arrived in
Shanghai and proposed a “Final Solution in Shanghai”
to the Japanese occupation authorities.
Although the “Meisinger Plan” was not put
into effect due to differences between the Japanese and
German governments’ attitudes toward Jews, the
Japanese authorities proclaimed a “Designated Area for
Stateless Refugees”, ordering refugees who had arrived
in Shanghai from Europe after 1937 to move into the area
within a month. The pressure of Nazi Germany and the
vagaries of Japanese policy toward the Jews kept
Shanghai’s Jews in difficult, unpredictable, and
sometimes dangerous straits for nearly four years. But,
in the end, almost all Shanghai’s Jews, not only
Central European Jewish refugees but also the Sephardic
congregation and Russian Jews, survived the Holocaust
and the war, mainly depending upon their own mutual aid
as well as the great support from American Jews and
Chinese people.
Like “Schindler”, “Wallenberg” and
“Sugihara”, the name “Shanghai” has now become
synonymous with “rescue” and “haven” in the
annals of the Holocaust.
The
Historical Pages of Traditional Friendship between the
Chinese and Jewish People
The Jews who came to China were nurtured in some
cases by the breadth and profundity of Chinese culture;
likewise, they with their own cultural traditions had an
influence on Chinese society. The important point is
that although many Jews inhabited China from ancient to
modern times, no indigenous anti-Semitic activity has
ever taken place on Chinese soil. Why has China never
witnessed any spontaneous and native anti-Semitic
activity? The main reasons are as follows:
1. Anti-Semitic originated from deep-rooted
religious prejudice, which is more conspicuous in
Christian Europe. However, as a whole, Chinese are
influenced by the Confucianism, Buddhism and Taoism, and
therefore this kind of strong anti-Semitic fanaticism
with deep religious bias does not exist in China, and
never has.
2. From the cultural point of view, Chinese and
Jewish cultures share a lot in common. For example, both
highly emphasize the family tie function and educational
value, and although both have absorbed various exotic
cultures, their central core has never changed since
birth. On a stone monument erected in 1489, the Kaifeng
Jews wrote: “Our religion and Confucianism differ only
in minor details. In mind and deed both respect
Heaven’s Way, venerate ancestors, are loyal to
sovereigns and ministers, and filial to parents. Both
call for harmony with wives and children, respect for
rank, and for making friends.”
All these contributed to the prevention of the impact of
anti-Semitism on Chinese people.
3. Since the middle of last century, the Chinese
people suffered much devastation as the Jews did. Nearly
35 million Chinese were killed and wounded by the
Japanese fascists during wartime.
Anti-Chinese atrocities which happened in some parts of
the world in the past several centuries and even in
Indonesia in1998 remind us of similar anti-Jewish
outrages which occurred in Europe in the past many
centuries, especially between 1933 and 1945. This shared
experience engendered in the Chinese people a deep
sympathy for Jewish people and made them oppose firmly
any kind of anti-Semitism.
What is especially worth mentioning is mutual
respect, sympathy and support between Jews and Chinese
people. As early as December 14, 1918, in his letter to
Mr. E. S. Kadoorie, Mr. Chen Lu, Vice-Minister of
Foreign Affairs of the Chinese government expressed that
China endorses the establishment of a Jewish national
home in Palestine.
On April 24, 1920, Mr.N.E.B.Ezra, another leader of
Shanghai Jewish community, received a letter from Dr.Sun
Yat-sen, founder of the Republic of China. In his
letter, Dr. Sun wrote: " All lovers of Democracy
cannot help but support the movement to restore your
wonderful and historic nation, which has contributed so
much to the civilization of the world and which
rightfully deserves an honorable place in the family of
nations."
Soon after Hitler's anti-Semitic campaign
started, Madame Sun Yet-sen (Ms. Song Qingling) headed a
delegation to meet with the German Consul in Shanghai
and lodged a strong protest against Nazi atrocities. Her
delegation included all the important leaders of The
China League for Civil Rights: Cai Yuanpei, Lu Xun, Lin
Yutang, Yang Xingfo a.o.
As the materials recently discovered indicate, Dr. Feng
Shan Ho, Chinese Consul General in Vienna, Austria 1938
to 1940 was one of the first diplomats to save Jews by
issuing them visas from the Holocaust.
Also, we found some documents which indicate in 1939,
the Chinese government planned to set aside territory in
Yunnan for the resettlement of Jewish refugees from
Europe. For various reasons, the plan was never carried
out.
When thousands of Jewish refugees
arrived in Shanghai between 1937 and 1941, millions of
Shanghai residents themselves became refugees after the
Japanese occupation of Shanghai. However, in spite of
this, the natives of Shanghai tried their best to help
Jewish refugees in various ways. In the hardest days in
Hongkew from 1943 to 1945, Jewish refugees and their
Chinese neighbors enjoyed mutual help and shared weal
and woe. They, though largely separated by linguistic
and cultural barriers, found themselves bound together
by mutual suffering.
It should be emphasized here that Jews in China
also did their best to support the Chinese
national-democratic movement and resistance against
Japanese aggression. Some Jewish friends joined the
anti-Japanese war or
cooperated with the Chinese Underground, even
gave their lives for the cause
of the
liberation of the Chinese people. Many examples could be
given here with deep respect. The well-known Morris
"Two- Gun" Cohen, was aide-de-camp to Dr. Sun
Yat- sen, 1922-1925. Following Sun's death, he worked
for a series of Chinese leaders and rose to become a
Jewish general in the Chinese Army.
Mr. Hans Shippe, a writer and reporter from Germany, was
the first Jewish volunteer
to fall in battle on
China's soil during her war against Japanese
aggression. He left Shanghai and joined Chinese Army in
1939. On November 30, 1941, several days before Pearl
Harbor, He died with a gun in his hand
in an
engagement with
Japanese troops in
Shandong province.
Chinese people erected a monument for
him near the battlefield. Also, Dr.Jacob
Rosenfeld should be mentioned here.
He came to Shanghai
from Austria
as a Jewish
refugee in
1939 and
left Shanghai to join the anti-Japanese war in
1941. He served
in the ranks
of the Chinese army for ten years, obtaining the
highest rank
of Commander of the
Medical Corps as a foreigner.
Had he not died of a heart attack abruptly in Tel Aviv
in 1952, it was speculated he would have been appointed
high-level officer of Ministry of Health of the PRC.
“Jews from
China” and Jews in today’s China
After the Second World War, China descended into
civil war, and, for a variety of reasons, a number of
Jews left China. Following the establishment of the
People’s Republic of China, many Jews continued to
live and work in peace on Chinese soil, and it was not
until the outbreak of the “Cultural Revolution” that
they were forced to leave. Jewish communities have continuously thrived in Hong Kong and
Taiwan as part of China.
Today, “Chinese Jews” live throughout the
world. While
their natures, pursuits, and occupations differ, they
nevertheless have a common point—recalling China as
their “home” and consider themselves “old China
hands.” In
order not to forget the memorable years they spent in
China, they have established associations that
frequently hold events and issue various publications.
Since the introduction of China’s policies of
reform and openness, they have returned with their
children to their “homecity” in order to seek their
roots, visit old friends and travel.
Some have come to China to invest and do
business, participating in their former-home’s new
upsurge of development.
After his revisit to China in 1978 after an
absence of thirty years, Lord Lawrence Kadoorie wrote:
"We are grateful to the country where we grew
up."
He met Mr.Deng Xiaoping during his visit to Beijing in
1985. When Michael Blumenthal, U.S. Secretary of the
Treasury, returned to Shanghai in 1979, he showed off
his old Shanghai haunts in Hongkou to the press. One
change he noted since he arrived in Shanghai from
Germany in 1939: "There are now no people dying in
the street."
Ambassador Yosef Tekoah (Tukachinsky) said at a banquet
when he revisited China in 1989: "The most
wonderful time of the life is youth. I spent the time in
China. Now I am back with the purpose of looking for
something that is the best." The late Shaul Eisenberg
came to China as a refugee during the Second World War
and later went on to become a noted businessman.
He actively invested in Shanghai enterprises,
establishing, for example, the Y.P. Glass Factory. During
his life, he energetically supported the project for
establishing Pudong Diamond Exchange Center in Shanghai
which is now coming true .
In
1992, China and Israel established diplomatic relations,
further encouraging the return flow of Jews to China.
At present, Beijing and Shanghai have begun to
see the emergence of new Jewish communities made up of
businesspeople, technical experts, diplomats, and
foreign students. Since
Hong Kong’s return to China, the Jewish community
there has once more come to life.
Jews
in China: A Hot Topic of Academic Research and Public
Interest
Since the mid-20th century there has been a
steady increase of books on Jews in China, and during
the 1980s and 1990s this subject became an international
“hot topic.” Particularly since the establishment of Sino-Israeli
diplomatic relations in 1992, academic conferences have
regularly been devoted to the subject and a large number
of books on the topic have appeared.
This enthusiasm for the subject is not limited to
academic circles but extends to the mass media,
television and movies.
To a certain degree, interest in the subject
carries social and political connotations.
First, this “Oriental” page in the history of
the Jewish people has academic value in the fields of
Jewish studies, sinology, history, religious studies,
ethnic studies, cultural anthropology, and philosophy.
Moreover, this topic has important practical
significance in opposing racism and fascism, furthering
friendly relations and cultural harmony between all
peoples, and preserving peace in the world.
Since the subtext of this topic is the special
friendship between Chinese and Jews, it also plays a
unique role in furthering the continued opening-up of
China and developing relations between China and nations
like Israel and the United States.
On behalf of the Israeli people, late Yitzhak
Rabin, when he visited Shanghai in l993 expressed his
heartfelt thanks to Shanghai for providing a haven for
Jewisl1 refugees from Nazi Europe. During his visit to
Shanghai in 1995, the Austrian President Thomas Klestil
paid a special visit to Hongkew (today’s Hongkou ) to
lay a wreath in memory of the Holocaust victims from
Austria. In 1998, U.S. First Lady Hilary Clinton and
U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright visited
Shanghai’s Ohel Rachel Synagogue. Israeli President
Ezer Weizmann paid a 1999 visit to a photo exhibit at
Shanghai’s Ohel Rachel Synagogue, where he once again
thanked the Chinese people for rescuing Jewish refugees.
In 1999, German Chancellor Gerhard Schroder visited
Shanghai’s Ohel Rachel Synagogue. In 2003, German President Johannes Rau also paid a visit to
former Hongkew ghetto. Their visits are specially
significant, because the majority of Jewish refugees in
Shanghai during wartime came from the Nazi Germany and
its occupied area. When the short visit was coming to an
end, Mr.Schroder wrote in the distinguished visitor’s
book: “A poet once wrote ‘death is envoy coming from
Germany’. We know that many persecutees found a haven
in Shanghai. We never forget this history. Today, we are
here to show our appreciation and praise to those who
provided every possible relief for the persecutees.”
These pages in history, composed on Chinese soil
by many ordinary Chinese and Jews and cataloging the
traditions of Sino-Jewish friendship, form a chapter in
the history of human progress that will forever shine.
(
Dr. PAN Guang is the Director and Professor of Shanghai
Center of International Studies and Institute of
European & Asian Studies in Shanghai,
Dean of Center of Jewish Studies Shanghai (CJSS),
and Vice Chairman of Chinese Society of Middle East
Studies. He is Professor of History & Political
Science, and Walter & Seena Fair Professor for
Jewish Studies. He has traveled and lectured widely as a
visiting scholar in North America, East Asia, Russia,
Europe, Middle East and Australia. He holds a number of
prestigious posts in Chinese institutions on
International Studies, Asian Studies, Middle East
Studies and Jewish Studies, and published books and
articles on a variety of topics such as “The
Jews in China”, “The Jews in Shanghai”, “The
Revitalization of the Jewish People”, “The Jewish
Civilization”, “Shanghai Jews Memoirs”,
“Shanghai Jews since 1840”, “China--Central
Asia--Russia Relations”, “China’s Role in the War
on Terrorism”, "Contemporary International
Crises”, and
“China’s Success in the Middle East”.)
For a
general picture, see Sidney Shapiro (ed.) Jews
in Old China. New York, 1984, and Jonathan
Goldstein (ed.) The
Jews of China , M.E.Sharpe, 1999.
Alex Grobman and Daniel Landes (ed.) Genocide, Critical Issues of the Holocaust. Los Angeles, 1983, p. 299.
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