O P E R A T ION SOLOMON From King Solomon To Operation Solomon Ethiopian Jews have lived Judaism only according to the Torah. ELLEN BERNSTEIN Special to The Jewish News N unemployment and low level of academic achievement. They tend to live together in ethnically segregated neighborhoods, and, unfor- tunately, it must be said that some towns and cities in Israel adamantly refused to settle them. As the result of a political bargain, their children are channeled into the state-run religious schools, but many are squeezed out at the high- school level due as much to prejudice as lagging scholastic standards. The earlier wave of Ethio- pian immigrants even had aspersions cast on their identity as bona fide Jews, and this otherwise soft- spoken community clashed with Israel's religious estab- lishment when the Chief Rabbinate demanded that they undergo a variation of religious conversion. "Absorption will be all the more difficult now," said Arnon Mantbar, head of the Jewish Agency's Immigra- tion and Absorption Department, "with all the Russian immigrants to take into account." Yet it cannot be denied that in a time of national overload, Israelis put all other considerations aside and rose to the challenge of mounting a daring rescue. They do that well, even with panache. And it is to their enduring credit that after all these years they still get high on doing what their country was founded to do: save Jews in distress. ❑ o one knows with any certainty about the origins of Ethiopia's Jews. They are black Africans who call them- selves Beta Yisrael, which in Hebrew means House of Israel. In Ethiopia, they are known as Falashas, a pe- jorative term meaning strangers. Some contemporary schol- ars believe Ethiopian Jews are descendants of Jews who fled the land of Israel after the Babylonian conquest and the fall of the First Temple 2,500 years ago. The controversy over their lineage and their status as Jews has never been settled. According to their own legend, they are descendants of King Solomon, who built the First Temple, and the Queen of Sheba, an Ethiopi- an princess. Other scholars believe they are part of the lost tribe of Dan. Anthropologists maintain that the Ethiopian Jews are descended from local tribes which converted to Judaism in the sixth century of the common era, under the in- fluence of the Jewish com- munity of upper Egypt. Because they were isolated from developing Judaism for at least two thousand years, their religious practices reflect pre-rabbinic tradi- tions. Until recent years they were unaware of Jew- ish practices derived from the Talmud or relatively modern rabbinic teachings. In Israel they have accepted the newly discovered tradi- tions and laws. The Beta Yisrael guard their Jewish identity which they express by strict adherence to the command- ments of the Torah, par- ticularly the dietary laws, the Sabbath observance, cir- Ellen Bernstein is a staff writer for the Atlanta Jewish Times. cumcision and ritual purification. They speak the Ethiopian Semitic language of Amharic, but read the Torah in Geez, an ancient Semitic tongue. The Jews of Ethiopia have no rabbinic tradition. They have a priesthood of Cohanim, who claim descent from Aaron, the brother of Moses. They sacrifice goats and lambs at Passover, and they observe the various Ethiopian Jews say they are descendants of King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba. biblical feasts and fasts, but have no Chanukah or Purim. Ethiopian Jews once numbered in the hundreds of thousands, but over the cen- turies they suffered persecu- tion and death at the hands of Christian Ethiopians. They were defeated in a 400- year war and reduced to slavery. They were for- bidden to own land, an edict in force until the overthrow of Emperor Haile Selassie in 1974. In the 1970s, drought and persecution brought their plight to the attention of Israel and world Jewry. In 1977, small groups of Ethio- pian Jews were brought to Israel, via the Sudan. There was much discussion as to whether these people were authentic Jews. The religious dispute was revived with the airlift of as many as 15,000 Ethiopian Jews to Israel in 1984, dur- ing Operation Moses, which came to an abrupt end after it was publicized in the press. Ashkenazi rabbis ask- ed that the new arrivals submit to symbolic circumci- sion and ritual immersion to convert them to the talmudic and halachic Judaism prac- ticed in Israel. The Ethiopi- an community considered it a degrading act and an ex- pression of doubt that they are authentic Jews. The rabbis' requests were even- tually withdrawn. ❑ Wearing traditional prayer shawls, Ethiopian Jews pray at an outdoor service in the province of Gondar. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 23