HaKUZARI (Verdeutscht und Verbessert) or The Khazars – Redux
"Ben Zoma said:" Who
is wise? He who learns from all people, as it is said (in Psalms 119:99): 'From all those who taught me I gained understanding'". - Ethics of the Fathers IV:1
The translation of the Hebrew description of Shlomo HaMelelkh (King Solomon)
is usually rendered the wisest of all, but the Hebrew çëí
îëì also
says that he was wise *from* all. All includes our detractors, and even our
enemies. Sometimes we have to listen to our enemies to get at the truth.
I listened to the anti-Semitic accusation that Ashkenazi
Jews are not real Jews and asked myself if I can find a kernel of truth in it
if I correct for the spin, filter out the distortion and fill in the blanks of
their ignorance with what I know about Judaism.
I arrived at the following conclusions:
First, it is the Jews and only the Jews, most specifically
the Jews who are knowledgeable in Jewish Law, who decided if someone is Jewish
or not. It should be eminently clear that is not the place of any person
outside any given culture to decide who belongs to that culture and who does
not and anyone who attempts to do so is a fool and a knave. We need not regard
their criteria as to whether one is Jewish or not as valid at all. Jewish Law
defines who is a Jew quite categorically and clearly.
The Jewish world accepts the Ashkenazi Jews as no less, or
more, Jewish than the Jews of other streams: The Sephardim, the Mizrahim, the Temanim, the Jews
of India, and the Ethiopian Jews.
The following considerations in no wise shed doubt upon
the Jewishness of the Ashkenazi Jews. That is a
given, absolute, and there is no Jewish group who has any hesitations
whatsoever about marrying Ashkenazi Jews or including them in a prayer quorum
or any religious commandment or activity whatsoever. Neither
will there ever be any hesitations concerning the Jewishness
of the Ashkenazis and no one will succeed in
sowing a seed of doubt considering this matter in our hearts.
That said unequivocally, it must also be said that the
story of the conversion of HaKuzarim (the Khazars) reads more like fable than fact and a reconsideration
of the story as told is in order.
All those who have a standard Jewish education have read SEFER
HAKUZARI (THE BOOK OF THE KUZARI, sometimes translated into English as THE
DISPUTATION) , as relayed by Rabbi Yehuda HaLevi. In the story we read of the King of the Khazars who, having had a dream in which he is told that
his intentions are acceptable in the eyes of Heaven, but his practices are not,
decides to hold a debate among a Jewish representative, a Muslim representative
and a Christian representative to the purpose of deciding to which religion to
convert he, himself, and his entire idol-worshipping kingdom.
The representative of the Jewish faith wins the debate, as
we all know, and the Khazars convert to Judaism. The
details of that conversion are not related to us in the book.
The anti-Semites would have it that all Ashkenazi Jews,
who are of light complexion and often have light hair
and/or eyes as well, are so because they are all descendants of the Khazars. This is arrant nonsense, of course. More Jews who
are fair are that way because the barbarians of
That being said and behooved I was to say it; I was, in
reconsidering this story, now as an adult, forced to ask myself if, when the
Christian cleric who lost the debate returned to Rome and told his superiors
that the Jews had won fair and square and that the Khazars
had decided to convert to Judaism if the response of his superiors was: 'If
that is God's will, then so be it. Blessings all around!'
Not bloody likely. It is far more likely that either the Church encouraged the
conversion of the Khazars to Judaism, because they
knew that they were idol worshippers and they knew full well how hard it is to
convert an idol worshipper, or, knowing that these newly converted heathens
would bring us only sorrow, sat back and let the idol worship work its own
special magic as it seeped into Jewish ritual practice.
We Jews had had ample experience with the effects on
Judaism when large numbers of heathens are integrated into Judaism. We
experienced it in the
I believe that the Khazars,
well-meaning as they might have been, brought with them their old and
entrenched heathen ways and integrated many foreign, pagan practices, and ways
of thinking, into Judaism. And I believe that that affected a large percentage
of the Jews in
That is one of the reasons why we see, to this day, that
among the Ashkenazi community there are "customs" and
"stringencies" and "interpretations" of Torah that are
clearly pagan. Another reason why Ashkenazi Jewish practice is profoundly compromised
is that the Jesuits found it easier to infiltrate and distort Jewish practice
among the Ashkenazis because they are most similar to
their phenotype (the result of being forced to be similar to their genotype,
for the reasons described above that Gentiles of European extraction don't feel
comfortable recalling).
An Ashkenazi Rabbi once told me quite candidly that
Sephardim to not have to take on as much stringency as do Ashkenazis
because they are genetically closer to the original Jews and thus experience
less bodily and psychic resistance to serving God than do Ashkenazi Jews. While
he was correct about that; the irony of the fact that the very stringencies and
customs that Ashkenazi Jews practice as part and parcel of their observance are
foreign pagan influences and thus hinder, rather than serve and expedite,
service of God did not dawn on him.
Yet, the Ashkenazi Jews are completely accepted as Jews
and there can be no questioning their Jewishness
whatsoever.
We do, however, have to see to it that their practice does
not remain the dominant one in Judaism, as the Jesuits would have it precisely
because it is distorted and impure. Their customs, stringencies and Biblical
interpretations must be examined one by one to make sure they accord with true
Judaism, absolute monotheism, with no traces whatsoever of pagan practice and
idol worship and that includes the eudaemonism of the
various Rebbe cults of the "Chassidim".
The next part of the quote I opened this piece with reads:
"Who is strong? He who conquers his evil inclination."
My sincere thanks and gratitude are extended to all my
anti-Semitic adversaries who compelled me think deeply about this matter and be
able to pinpoint this problem, so that it may be rectified, and, in so doing,
benefit my People and allow me to contribute one small portion to the Jewish
People's continued march on to moral/spiritual perfection. The evil of
anti-Semitism exists to strengthen us by overcoming it. We are taught that we
must bless the unpleasant, which we associate with bad, even as we bless the
pleasant, which we associate with good – and as we have all experienced,
sometimes our detractors and enemies teach us more than our friends and
certainly more than our flatters.
Doreen Ellen Bell-Dotan,