- Shinlung
Shinlung was originally the collective name for a group of people from the Mizo-Kuki-Chin tribes of the North Eastern
India n state ofMizoram , who think of themselves as one of theLost Tribes of Israel . They are now calledBnei Menashe .Identification with Judaism
In recent decades a number of tribespeople from
Mizoram ,Assam andManipur , who are Southeast Asian by appearance, have begun identifying themselves asJews . They are known collectively as Shinlung, and include Chin,Lusha , Kuki andMizo . "Several hundred have formally converted toOrthodox Judaism , while many thousands more who have not formally converted also openly practice an Orthodox type of Judaism".Fact|date=May 2008 The Shinlung do not see themselves as converts, but believe themselves to be ethnically Jewish, descendants of one of theLost Tribes of Israel (seeBnei Menashe ).The self-identification of some Mizos and others with Judaism owes its origin to the activities of Christian
Evangelical missionaries in the area, beginning in 1813 but not reaching its full intensity until the decades after 1870. The missions were massively successful, and the 1981census recorded that 83% of the population of Mizoram (and 30% of Manipur) were Christian, by which time the original culture of the Mizo and other hill tribes had been almost totally destroyed. The religious ferment, the disappearance of traditional culture, plus the sudden and overwhelming impact of modern commercial relations and cultural values, produced in turn a reaction in some quarters against Christianity. In the 1930s the Mizo revivalist Saichhunga began preaching that the Mizo were the lost tribes of Israel. Saichhunga's preachings had a limited impact, but the Shinlung movement really developed impetus after 1951, when Challianthanga, head deacon of theUnited Pentecostal Church in the village of Buallawn, had a vision in which it was revealed to him that the Mizo were one of the Lost Tribes and consequently must follow the laws given for Jews in theBook of Deuteronomy and make their way to Israel.Shinlung might thus be defined as a Jewish Christian movement with strong
nativist elements, combining a belief in the imminent coming of the Messiah, the imperative need to return toIsrael , the observance of strict Jewish law, and a belief that this is not an innovation, but the recovery of an ancient identity. The movement received a strong impulse from the 'Mizo Unrest', an independence movement which raged from 1966 to 1986, and which convinced many Mizo that the End Times were at hand. New prophets and leaders continued to spring up, reinforcing the message that the Mizo were in reality descendants of Israel, and by the final years of the 20th century the belief had emerged that they were specifically descended from the Tribe ofManasseh .The cause of the Shinlung - or the Benei Menashe, their own preferred name - has been taken up in
Israel by, among others, Rabbi Eliyahu Avichail andAmishav ("My People Returns", an organisation dedicated to finding the Lost Tribes) and byGush Emunim ("Block of the Faithful", a nationalistic, Messianic group in Israel). Several dozen young Benei Menashe formally converted to Judaism and were allowed to move to Israel, and in 1991 Avichail visited the Benei Menashe in Mizoram. In 1993 Avichail received a request from settlers in theGush Katif Jewish settlements in theGaza Strip for Benei Menashe to replace Palestinian workers. On 1 April 2005, the Chief Rabbi ofSephardic Jews in Israel,Shlomo Amar , recognized the Benei Menashe as authentic descendants of the Lost Tribes of Israel, and a contingent of Rabbis was sent to India to perform formal Orthodox Jewish conversions, allowing the Mizo Jews to move to Israel under the Law of Return.DNA testing has found that although the male side of the group does not have genetic Jewish ancestry (seeY-chromosomal Aaron ), the female side of the tribe has distinctMiddle Eastern features. The difference between the masculine and feminine sides may be explained by the marriage of one of the mothers of the tribe, who came from the Middle East, to a local native.References
* "The Lost Tribes of Israel", "Tudor Parfitt, Phoenix, 2002". ISBN 1-84212-665-2
External links
* http://www.bnei-menashe.org
* http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/3228054.stm
* http://newswww.bbc.net.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/3575716.stm
* http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/4400957.stm
* http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/559669.html
* http://www.chhinlungisrael.org
* http://www.shavei.org/article.php?id=185
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