Israel

Israel

MembersAwaiting the Messiah and Embarking for Israel

How Russian Christians thrilled at the Jews’ return to the Land in the late 1800s, joined in and helped restore the Galilee.

The author holding photos together with her siblings while visiting the church bell tower of the prophetic call in Russia. Courtesy Esther Shmueli-Stefman

“In the 1880s, Torah-observant Astrachans [in southwest Russia] … waited day by day for the coming of the Messiah. They discussed it in the markets. Gathered en masse and drew the map of Palestine straight on the ground…”

 

Editor’s introduction:

In the 1800s, in the days when the Muslim Ottoman/Turkish empire still ruled over the Holy Land, even before the British Mandate of 1917-1948; the God of Israel stirred in the hearts of Russian Orthodox Christians. In the midst of czarist repressions and quasi-idolatrous influences in the church, thousands of families experienced an early “Hebrew roots” impulse.

Some began to observe the Sabbath, the seventh day of rest. Others decided they would fully join themselves to the fate of the Jewish people in conversion under rabbis.

Ironically, these very Russians who had so recently been part of the larger Russian culture, henceforth became targets of Russian antisemitism along with natural born Jews.

Dozens of these families so new to Judaism, immigrated to the Holy Land around the year 1900, and there they taught natural-born...

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About the author

Patrick Callahan

This is an example of author bio/description. Beard fashion axe trust fund, post-ironic listicle scenester. Uniquely mesh maintainable users rather than plug-and-play testing procedures.

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