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Discovering Afghanistan’s 1,000-year-old Jewish life

Sher Malang

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The discovery of the Afghan Jewish documents also raises the timely question whether more treasure troves of Jewish historical items in the Middle East and Central Asia are waiting to be unearthed.
ShowImage.ashx

ONE OF the Afghan manuscripts.. (photo credit:COURTESY SARA AHARON)

Five years ago researchers were amazed to learn that hundreds of rare medieval Jewish documents from Afghanistan, dating from the 11th to 13th centuries, had been discovered. These documents pre-dated the Mongol invasion of the early 13th century and had potential to shed breathtaking new light on a time that we know very little about, precisely because the Mongols destroyed most traces of the communities they touched. Said to have been found in the caves of Bamiyan in northern central Afghanistan, an area that may sound familiar from the Taliban’s destruction of the great Buddhas of Bamiyan, the documents’ existence became known after they landed in the hands of antiquities dealers scattered across cities from Europe to Israel.

Now the most recent acquisition of 250 of these medieval Afghan texts by the National Library of Israel, made public in September 2016, promises to reveal tremendous new insights and information about Jewish life in the Middle East and Central Asia a thousand years ago. These items join the National Library’s existing collection of 29 documents, acquired in early 2013, from the same Afghan archive. Written in several languages, including Persian, Arabic, Judeo-Persian, Judeo-Arabic and Hebrew, the documents may reflect their authors’ journeys as they made their travels across the lands of the Middle East using the Silk Road.


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I had the great pleasure and opportunity of visiting the National Library and meeting its head Judaica curator, Dr. Yoel Finkelman, in September to learn about and view several of the documents. We spoke about how unique and fortunate discoveries like this are – fragments 1,000 years old, from remote areas of Afghanistan.

He explained that this medieval Jewish community, since almost certainly destroyed later by the Mongols, should therefore be considered as a separate population from the Jewish community of Afghanistan in the 19th and 20th centuries. In the modern period Afghanistan’s Jewish community numbered about five to six thousand people, with about a thousand living in the capital, Kabul, and the rest in Herat. Most emigrated in the decades after Israel’s founding to the new Jewish state or to New York. We have scant evidence, though, about the size or nature of Afghanistan’s Jewish population in the 11th to 13th centuries. If we’re very lucky, this collection may help reveal such details and unravel the puzzles about daily life at that time.

Viewing rare items from a millennium ago with one’s own eyes, from a remote part of the world extraordinarily difficult to access, is a surreal and moving experience. For starters, I had expected to see small fragments, thinking of the tiny pieces from the Cairo Geniza. I was stunned that many of the Afghan Jewish documents were very large – a full page or a half page – with mostly legible handwritten Hebrew, Arabic, or Persian letters. That means, I hope, that the potential for scholars to decipher the documents and uncover their stories is fairly high.

Interestingly, not all of the 250 documents from the new acquisition contain Jewish elements. About 150 pieces, written in Persian and Arabic, date from the 12th and early 13th century, and several of their authors seem to be Muslim traders. Some documents from this collection are legal in nature and focus on trade, but are not necessarily written by traders themselves.

The other 100 documents, researchers now believe, do not come from a Jewish communal geniza (repository of sacred documents) as originally surmised, but from the private collection of a Jewish family, led by one Abu Nassar Ben Daniel.

These documents date earlier, from the 11th century, and vary from letters and articles related to the family’s trading business to handwritten copies of religious and biblical texts. Notably the collection includes part of a Talmudic section from the Mishna in Avodah Zarah, significant because, reports Yediot Aharonot, this document is now “the earliest evidence of religious literature in the Persian-speaking east.”

This Ben Daniel archive can offer exciting new knowledge regarding the Jews’ socioeconomic and religious life in Afghanistan and, importantly, on the larger connections between the Afghan Jewish community and the wider Jewish world.

One of the documents we saw contained handwritten Shabbat prayers, perhaps originally part of a prayer book. A single page included the special blessing said on challah (hamotzi lehem min ha’aretz) and a section from the Amida portion specific to Shabbat day prayers (Yismach Moshe bematnat helkho ki eved ne’aman karata lo).

“These are the same words that we say every Shabbat,” said Dr. Finkelman, referring to the Amida lines, “but this is from Afghanistan a thousand years ago.”

It appears then that this Shabbat prayer already had been standardized, and spread far across the Jewish world.

Since the collection in its entirety includes Jewish and Muslim writers and many languages, it also has substantial potential to show us what life meant for the greater region’s numerous Jewish communities, local Muslim communities, and the relationships between the two. The documents convey, said Dr. Finkelman, that Bamiyan’s Jews and Muslims lived relatively well together. We have receipts written between Jews and Muslims showing that they traded and conducted business with one another.

He further pointed out that all the Afghan documents, surprisingly, were made from paper, not parchment. Paper was available in this region even 10 centuries ago but many other nations had to rely on parchment due to paper’s scarcity.

Thinking about the delicacy of paper and how these thin documents, records of forgotten Jewish history, survived all those years to make their way to an independent Jewish state was another of many inspiring moments during the visit.

The National Library of Israel says it plans to digitize the new collection and make them accessible for scholars and the public. About 500 more documents from the Ben Daniel collection are rumored to still be in the possession of antiquities dealers, promising more revelations.

Discoveries of this scale often raise as many questions as answers. Will we get to see responsa, the classic form of questions-and-answers from Jewish communities to leading rabbis and yeshivas of the day, about their personal, professional, socio-economic, religious and family lives? Did the Ben Daniel archive and the other 150 documents written by Muslim traders belong to that one family, or rather two – perhaps many more – owners? Will we catch even a glimpse of mentions of women and children? Thus far, said Dr. Finkelman, we do not have marriage contracts (ketubot) or divorce documents. But considering the hundreds of medieval Afghan Jewish documents still with antiquities dealers, who knows what surprises lie in wait.

The astounding discovery of the Afghan Jewish documents also raises the timely question whether more treasure troves of Jewish historical items in the Middle East and Central Asia are waiting to be unearthed or else face being destroyed, or simply lost to history forever, given the region’s instability. We already know about the Iraqi Jewish archive, the collection of centuries-old Jewish items stolen by Saddam Hussein’s Mukhabarat, the feared secret police, that the American army stumbled upon and recovered from a Mukhabarat basement in 2003.

The Iraqi Jewish collection now lives in the National Archives in Washington, DC. It’s likely that similar archives, collections, and genizas still remain in Syria, Iran, Egypt, Iraq and many other cities and countries in the Middle East and Central Asia that had a Jewish presence for hundreds of – and, as demonstrated with the Afghanistan collection, even a thousand – years. Afghanistan’s medieval Jewish documents and the ongoing valiant work by the Jewish community and the National Library of Israel to recover them highlights the meaning of salvaging our own history, all the while making us wonder: what else is waiting to be found?

The writer is the author of From Kabul to Queens: The Jews of Afghanistan and Their Move to the United States.

http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Discovering-Afghanistans-1000-year-old-Jewish-life-471767
 
. .
The discovery of the Afghan Jewish documents also raises the timely question whether more treasure troves of Jewish historical items in the Middle East and Central Asia are waiting to be unearthed.
ShowImage.ashx

ONE OF the Afghan manuscripts.. (photo credit:COURTESY SARA AHARON)

Five years ago researchers were amazed to learn that hundreds of rare medieval Jewish documents from Afghanistan, dating from the 11th to 13th centuries, had been discovered. These documents pre-dated the Mongol invasion of the early 13th century and had potential to shed breathtaking new light on a time that we know very little about, precisely because the Mongols destroyed most traces of the communities they touched. Said to have been found in the caves of Bamiyan in northern central Afghanistan, an area that may sound familiar from the Taliban’s destruction of the great Buddhas of Bamiyan, the documents’ existence became known after they landed in the hands of antiquities dealers scattered across cities from Europe to Israel.

Now the most recent acquisition of 250 of these medieval Afghan texts by the National Library of Israel, made public in September 2016, promises to reveal tremendous new insights and information about Jewish life in the Middle East and Central Asia a thousand years ago. These items join the National Library’s existing collection of 29 documents, acquired in early 2013, from the same Afghan archive. Written in several languages, including Persian, Arabic, Judeo-Persian, Judeo-Arabic and Hebrew, the documents may reflect their authors’ journeys as they made their travels across the lands of the Middle East using the Silk Road.


Be the first to know - Join our Facebook page.


I had the great pleasure and opportunity of visiting the National Library and meeting its head Judaica curator, Dr. Yoel Finkelman, in September to learn about and view several of the documents. We spoke about how unique and fortunate discoveries like this are – fragments 1,000 years old, from remote areas of Afghanistan.

He explained that this medieval Jewish community, since almost certainly destroyed later by the Mongols, should therefore be considered as a separate population from the Jewish community of Afghanistan in the 19th and 20th centuries. In the modern period Afghanistan’s Jewish community numbered about five to six thousand people, with about a thousand living in the capital, Kabul, and the rest in Herat. Most emigrated in the decades after Israel’s founding to the new Jewish state or to New York. We have scant evidence, though, about the size or nature of Afghanistan’s Jewish population in the 11th to 13th centuries. If we’re very lucky, this collection may help reveal such details and unravel the puzzles about daily life at that time.

Viewing rare items from a millennium ago with one’s own eyes, from a remote part of the world extraordinarily difficult to access, is a surreal and moving experience. For starters, I had expected to see small fragments, thinking of the tiny pieces from the Cairo Geniza. I was stunned that many of the Afghan Jewish documents were very large – a full page or a half page – with mostly legible handwritten Hebrew, Arabic, or Persian letters. That means, I hope, that the potential for scholars to decipher the documents and uncover their stories is fairly high.

Interestingly, not all of the 250 documents from the new acquisition contain Jewish elements. About 150 pieces, written in Persian and Arabic, date from the 12th and early 13th century, and several of their authors seem to be Muslim traders. Some documents from this collection are legal in nature and focus on trade, but are not necessarily written by traders themselves.

The other 100 documents, researchers now believe, do not come from a Jewish communal geniza (repository of sacred documents) as originally surmised, but from the private collection of a Jewish family, led by one Abu Nassar Ben Daniel.

These documents date earlier, from the 11th century, and vary from letters and articles related to the family’s trading business to handwritten copies of religious and biblical texts. Notably the collection includes part of a Talmudic section from the Mishna in Avodah Zarah, significant because, reports Yediot Aharonot, this document is now “the earliest evidence of religious literature in the Persian-speaking east.”

This Ben Daniel archive can offer exciting new knowledge regarding the Jews’ socioeconomic and religious life in Afghanistan and, importantly, on the larger connections between the Afghan Jewish community and the wider Jewish world.

One of the documents we saw contained handwritten Shabbat prayers, perhaps originally part of a prayer book. A single page included the special blessing said on challah (hamotzi lehem min ha’aretz) and a section from the Amida portion specific to Shabbat day prayers (Yismach Moshe bematnat helkho ki eved ne’aman karata lo).

“These are the same words that we say every Shabbat,” said Dr. Finkelman, referring to the Amida lines, “but this is from Afghanistan a thousand years ago.”

It appears then that this Shabbat prayer already had been standardized, and spread far across the Jewish world.

Since the collection in its entirety includes Jewish and Muslim writers and many languages, it also has substantial potential to show us what life meant for the greater region’s numerous Jewish communities, local Muslim communities, and the relationships between the two. The documents convey, said Dr. Finkelman, that Bamiyan’s Jews and Muslims lived relatively well together. We have receipts written between Jews and Muslims showing that they traded and conducted business with one another.

He further pointed out that all the Afghan documents, surprisingly, were made from paper, not parchment. Paper was available in this region even 10 centuries ago but many other nations had to rely on parchment due to paper’s scarcity.

Thinking about the delicacy of paper and how these thin documents, records of forgotten Jewish history, survived all those years to make their way to an independent Jewish state was another of many inspiring moments during the visit.

The National Library of Israel says it plans to digitize the new collection and make them accessible for scholars and the public. About 500 more documents from the Ben Daniel collection are rumored to still be in the possession of antiquities dealers, promising more revelations.

Discoveries of this scale often raise as many questions as answers. Will we get to see responsa, the classic form of questions-and-answers from Jewish communities to leading rabbis and yeshivas of the day, about their personal, professional, socio-economic, religious and family lives? Did the Ben Daniel archive and the other 150 documents written by Muslim traders belong to that one family, or rather two – perhaps many more – owners? Will we catch even a glimpse of mentions of women and children? Thus far, said Dr. Finkelman, we do not have marriage contracts (ketubot) or divorce documents. But considering the hundreds of medieval Afghan Jewish documents still with antiquities dealers, who knows what surprises lie in wait.

The astounding discovery of the Afghan Jewish documents also raises the timely question whether more treasure troves of Jewish historical items in the Middle East and Central Asia are waiting to be unearthed or else face being destroyed, or simply lost to history forever, given the region’s instability. We already know about the Iraqi Jewish archive, the collection of centuries-old Jewish items stolen by Saddam Hussein’s Mukhabarat, the feared secret police, that the American army stumbled upon and recovered from a Mukhabarat basement in 2003.

The Iraqi Jewish collection now lives in the National Archives in Washington, DC. It’s likely that similar archives, collections, and genizas still remain in Syria, Iran, Egypt, Iraq and many other cities and countries in the Middle East and Central Asia that had a Jewish presence for hundreds of – and, as demonstrated with the Afghanistan collection, even a thousand – years. Afghanistan’s medieval Jewish documents and the ongoing valiant work by the Jewish community and the National Library of Israel to recover them highlights the meaning of salvaging our own history, all the while making us wonder: what else is waiting to be found?

The writer is the author of From Kabul to Queens: The Jews of Afghanistan and Their Move to the United States.

http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Discovering-Afghanistans-1000-year-old-Jewish-life-471767

Afghans are proud of their history and any linkages we may have. Great read.
Time to coordinate strong relationship with Israel and send our students for studies there.
 
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Afghans are proud of their history and any linkages we may have. Great read.
Time to coordinate strong relationship with Israel and send our students for studies there.

Sounds like a pipe dream when you have legitimate Jihadis sitting in your parliament.
 
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Interesting but at the same time looks like documents dealing with marriage and trade.
 
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I remember watching a documentary about Afghan Jews who now live in Israel. I was quiet amazed by their story and to find out the deep Jewish roots in Afghanistan. I'll try and find the video, you guys might find it an interesting one too.
 
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Afghans are proud of their history and any linkages we may have. Great read.
Time to coordinate strong relationship with Israel and send our students for studies there.

Proud of its history is all fine but its time to look into the present and future for Afghanistan . For too long it's people have been stuck in the past . Does Afghanistan recognise Israel ?
 
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Afghans are proud of their history and any linkages we may have. Great read.
Time to coordinate strong relationship with Israel and send our students for studies there.
Whereas you bros are TNTing that history and linkages
 
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u're most welcome

There is a lot of areas your country can assist Afghanistan and we can also learn on how to survive as a country when surrounded by wolves.

Cybersecurity is one areas that Afghans may benefit from Israeli know-how.

Sounds like a pipe dream when you have legitimate Jihadis sitting in your parliament.

Have you seen your parliament? I am talking about the new generation of Afghans who are educated, tech savy and understand how the world works, and these folks that you are refering to does not represent those that are decision makers.

Remember the wife of the Afghan president is a christian, something unheard off in surrounded countries.

I personally know of Afghan jews in Afghanistan who lived and mingled with local populous with no discrimination at all, actually they were treated far better than anyone else.

Whereas you bros are TNTing that history and linkages

Something carried out by your proxies, the same proxies that the Afghan gov is fighting.

Proud of its history is all fine but its time to look into the present and future for Afghanistan . For too long it's people have been stuck in the past . Does Afghanistan recognise Israel ?

In case you missed my post, I pointed our strength in the past, and also concrete relationship right now and the future.

What does this tell you, being stuck in the past? On the contrary we are far advanced in understanding our the world works and thus advocating working with Israel and learning from them.
 
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What does this tell you, being stuck in the past? On the contrary we are far advanced in understanding our the world works and thus advocating working with Israel and learning from them.

Its a good idea for sure. India can be your bridge to Israel in whichever path you choose to ramp up relations with them (behind scenes first, official relations later etc)....given this is a path trodden by India for more than half a century hehe.

For now the focus must be on strengthening Afghanistan socio-economically.
 
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Have you seen your parliament? I am talking about the new generation of Afghans who are educated, tech savy and understand how the world works, and these folks that you are refering to does not represent those that are decision makers.

I don't think Afghan youth living in the West would have much traction in Afghanistan. And I doubt most Afghan youth currently living in Afghanistan are educated and tech savvy. I'd need some figures to back that claim up.
 
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In case you missed my post, I pointed our strength in the past, and also concrete relationship right now and the future.

What does this tell you, being stuck in the past? On the contrary we are far advanced in understanding our the world works and thus advocating working with Israel and learning from them.

Well what you think and what afghan government thinks are two different things. You dont have formal relations with israel . An article about a jew in Afghanistan doesnt mean the government is ready to form relations with israel yet .

Your government is not in sync with its people and hence such contrast between what you want and what your government actually does. For example you claim Afghanistan wants regional connectivity and trade but which country apart from India do you have free trade agreement with? None . Pakistan on the other hand you claim sabbotages regional trade but has FTA's with Malaysia , Indonesia , China , Srilanka , Korea , Mauritius and so many more . Iran today invited us for Free trade Agreements . We have GSP plus for our products to UK and Europe . US has low tariffs on our products . Notice the difference? You may want great things for Afghanistan but thats not how your government works .
 
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Well what you think and what afghan government thinks are two different things. You dont have formal relations with israel . An article about a jew in Afghanistan doesnt mean the government is ready to form relations with israel yet .

Your government is not in sync with its people and hence such contrast between what you want and what your government actually does. For example you claim Afghanistan wants regional connectivity and trade but which country apart from India do you have free trade agreement with? None . Pakistan on the other hand you claim sabbotages regional trade but has FTA's with Malaysia , Indonesia , China , Srilanka , Korea , Mauritius and so many more . Iran today invited us for Free trade Agreements . We have GSP plus for our products to UK and Europe . US has low tariffs on our products . Notice the difference? You may want great things for Afghanistan but thats not how your government works .

Considering that your undeclared war is becoming a declared war this year ( quoting Ashraf Ghani ) we still have done reasonably well. You entire machinery is busy trying to dismantle the current setup in Afghanistan, so considering all this, the NUG still stands and functions pretty well. There are no significant trade issues with any, and as day passes we strengthen whatever trade mechanism that are in place, good case point can be the trilateral Iran, India Afghanistan agreement, you can get the list of the recent agreements from the ministry of commerce site. The only exception is Pakistan, blocking transit routes which of course is in a state of war with Afghanistan.

Again ( Ashraf Ghani has been on the record on these ) so these are not my shenanigans ;)
 
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Considering that your undeclared war is becoming a declared war this year ( quoting Ashraf Ghani ) we still have done reasonably well. You entire machinery is busy trying to dismantle the current setup in Afghanistan, so considering all this, the NUG still stands and functions pretty well. There are no significant trade issues with any, and as day passes we strengthen whatever trade mechanism that are in place, good case point can be the trilateral Iran, India Afghanistan agreement, you can get the list of the recent agreements from the ministry of commerce site. The only exception is Pakistan, blocking transit routes which of course is in a state of war with Afghanistan.

Again ( Ashraf Ghani has been on the record on these ) so these are not my shenanigans ;)

Pakistan/Afghanistan are in the same boat as Saudi Arabia/Yemen and Turkey/Syria . A regional power who borders a very unstable country . Considering that Turkey and Saudi are actually bombing them for their own strategic gains , Pakistan has been lenient with Afghanistan considering our F-16's are not bombing you ;) . Funding the talis is not a declared war . BTW do you know Pakistan has been invading your bordering provinces and building check posts on your land ?;)

Pakistan exports to Afghanistan total $ 2.2 billion . That's almost twice of your total exports . We provide important products like Cement , Steel , Wheat , Rice , Medicines . I don't think I find any barriers there .
 
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