Remnant Found 00 Samu

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LIBRARY
OF THE

Theological Semi nary,


PRINCETON, N. J.
3*-

Case, Division 1 _

Shelf. Section .

Book,. ___.N_og a,,a......... ..••■•••■••I


THE

REMNANT FOUND ;
OR,

THE PLACE OF ISRAEL’S HIDING


DISCOVERED.

BEING A SUMMARY OF PROOFS,

SHOWING THAT

THE JEWS OF DAGHISTAN ON THE CASPIAN SEA


ARE THE REMNANT OF THE TEN TRIBES.

THE RESULT OF PERSONAL INVESTIGATION DURING A MISSIONARY


TOUR OF EIGHT MONTHS IN GEORGIA,

BY PERMISSION OF THE RUSSIAN GOVERNMENT,

IN THE

YEARS 1837 AND 1838.

BY THE REV. JACOB SAMUEL,


SENIOR MISSIONARY TO THE JEWS FOR INDIA, PERSIA, AND ARABIA.

AUTHOR OF A “ HEBREW SERMON ON THE CHRISTIAN EVIDENCES,” AND

‘l A JOURNAL OF FIVE MONTHS’ RESIDENCE IN COCHIN."

Behold, I will bring them from the north country,


And gather them from the coasts of the earth :
I am a Father to Israel,
And Ephraim is my first-horn.!

LONDON:
J. HATCHARD AND SON, 187, PICCADILLY.
184E
LONDON:
PRINTED BY IBOTSON AND PALMER,

SAVOY STREET.
TO ROBERT WOODROW, ESQ.,

OF GLASGOW,

THIS VOLUME

IS DEDICATED,

AS A

TOKEN OF REGARD AND ESTEEM,

AS WELL AS

OF GRATEFUL ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF PAST FAVOURS,

BY

THE AUTHOR.

London, December ] 840.


CONTENTS.

Introduction - vii
The Kingdom of Israel 1
The Dispersion of the Ten Tribes 5
I he Dispersion (continued) If)
Conjectures concerning the Tribes :26
Personal Narrative 37

Proofs.

Observance of Feasts,—the Passover - 48


The Feast of Weeks - 54
-of Trumpets 56
The Day of Atonement
58
The Feast of Tabernacles (il

1 he Festival of Inauguration - 63
The Feast of Purim - 64
Fast days -
65
The Sabbath -
67
Funerals
73
Treatment of the corpse
74
VI CONTENTS.

Defilements - - - 78
Marriage .... - - 80
Circumcision - - - 82

General Proofs - „ - 87
Ablutions - - - 87
Slaughtering - - - 87
Priesthood - - - - - 89
Prayers - - - 89
Scriptures, Literature, &c. - - - 90
Mode of saluting the stranger - - 98
An Account of the Jews in Imiriti - _ - 100

Appendix.

British Society for promoting the spiritual welfare of


the Jews throughout India, Persia, and Arabia, in aid
of the Indian Association established in Bombay - 119
INTRODUCTION.

The subject of the return of the Jewish people


to the favour of the God of their fathers is one of
deep and surpassing- interest and moment. The
eye of faith, looking into the depth of the divine
records, perceives this peculiar people, under
the cloud of a frowning Providence, prepared
in the fulness of time to be led forward and
planted in the Lord their Righteousness, for a
name and a praise in every land : (Isaiah lxii. 7.)
It beholds them, not as the subjects of the
divine hatred, but the objects of God’s com¬
passionate love : (Isaiah xlix. 15, 16.) It dis¬
tinctly perceives that a regard for, and scrip¬
tural interest in this people, are co-ordinate with
the progress of evangelical truth and personal at¬
tainment in the divine life ; that neglect of them is
vm INTRODUCTION.

an evidence of a sickly, as persecution is a con¬


clusive testimony of a spurious and apostate
Christianity.
In all the churches of the Reformation, we find
an awakening interest to the condition and pros¬
pects of the ancient people of God one of the
most striking religious characteristics of the day :
yet the Jewish mission being confessedly one of
the most difficult labours of the Christian church,
and one which, in the estimation of those great
and good men who have been moved by the Holy
Ghost to send after the lost sheep of the house
of Israel, notwithstanding the exertions which
have been made during the last forty years to lift
up the testimony of Jesus amongst them, has
never been taken up on a scale commensurate
to its importance, or according to that plan likely
to bring down the unalloyed blessing of the Great
Head of the Church, in that fulness with which
he is both able and willing to crown the labours
of his faithful people.
With respect to the manner in which the an¬
cient people of God are to be approached, to con¬
ciliate their esteem, to overcome their prejudices,
to gain their confidence, and to lead them dispas¬
sionately to examine the credentials of the Chris¬
tian faith, experience proves, that not doctrinal
Christianity merely, but the manifestation of
INTRODUCTION.

Jesus in the members of his body, accompanying


the word of truth, is the simple, effectual testi¬
mony to the mind and spirit of the Jew. Christi-
anity, if it be anything, is a living principle. Its
tendency is to implant and nourish those gra¬
cious affections, which they who are strangers to
its truth, and radically unmoved by its power,
shall nevertheless behold and acknowledge in
the saints to the glory of God. But, alas ! not
only upon the head of apostate Christianity
does the guilt lie of putting stumbling-blocks
in the way of the people ; (Isaiah lxii. 10 ;) but
upon those whose faith is purer, and whose pro¬
fession is fairer, a heavy responsibility rests, for
requiring what God has not required, and with¬
holding what God has freely given.
The labours of Christians amongst the Jews
during the last forty years have tended, in many
respects, to deepen the prejudice of that people
against the Christian faith. And when we for a
moment reflect that, under that sacred name,
Israel in his dispersion has been most awfully in¬
jured and afflicted, need we wonder that the
Jewish prejudice is strong, fixed, and determined ?
Even by those whose motives it were not charity
to doubt, how acutely and irritatingly has the
Jew been wounded, and in the tenderest place !
The godly zeal which has impelled the servant
X INTRODUCTION.
0
of Christ to speak the words of truth and love to
the Jew, has been alloyed by a violation of one of
the strictest and most sacred principles of the law
of Christ, which enjoins, “ Let not the right hand
know what the left doeth.n The precincts of the
domestic circle, to which in confidence the Chris¬
tian missionary has been admitted, has been be¬
trayed frequently by partial, always by coloured
statements, and scarcely a conversation tran¬
spires but it is dragged forward and circulated
through Christendom, in a manner repugnant alike
to the principles and spirit of the Gospel, to feed
a diseased and depraved appetite in the church,
which requires these stimulants to impel it to do its
duty.
It is not my wish to dwell upon those principles
and proceedings with which I have no sympathy,
or to point out many evils which have tended to
present Christianity to the Jews as a sectarian
system. I would simply invite attentionto a Plan,
the foundations of which have been laid in deep
and laborious experience, with a knowledge of
the character and genius of Judaism, and which,
through successive years, has been approved by
the most signal marks of the divine favour. The
Indian Mission to the Jews, in the countries
which have not been included in any plan of mis¬
sionary labour until the present, presents a field
INTRODUCTION. XI

the fairest that can be imagined for a simple,


faithful testimony of the Gospel to the scattered
remnant inhabiting the deeply interesting lands
in question. From the Bay of Bengal to the Cas¬
pian Sea, from the Caspian to the Red Sea, in¬
cluding the Euphrates and the Persian Gulf ‘ and
the countries adjacent, up to Bokharra, there are
more than one million two hundred thousand

Jews, in whose synagogues I preached the word


of life, and amongst whom, commissioned by
the British and Foreign Bible Society, an ex¬
tensive distribution of the holy Scriptures was
made, although for the attempt former Mis¬
sionaries were compelled to evacuate the field,
and fly for their lives.
The following work I have considered the
most available mode (amidst the pressure of the
religious concerns committed to my charge by
the Association established in Bombay) of lay¬
ing before the Christian public the nature and ob¬
jects of “ the Complete History of Judaism, as at
“ present existing in various and remote quarters
tf as well as in Europe,” which I have pre¬
pared ; and which now requires but a few
months of leisure to complete for the press.
As, however, some delay was unavoidable to
obtain that degree of accuracy requisite for a
work of so very complicated and yet so desirable
Xll
INTRODUCTION,

a character, it seemed advisable to publish this


treatise as a precursor to the larger one. In the
larger work will be found an extensive view of
the historical circumstances relating to the ap¬
proaching fulfilment of the prophecies concerning
the future welfare of the Jews as a nation ; a
lull narrative of the discovery of the localities
inhabited by the Ten Tribes, together with ob¬
servations on the civil and religious state of that
very important portion of our people, as well as
on the other Jewish communities, of which we
already possess an inadequate knowledge.
To have ascertained the existence of the Ten
Tribes, as a collected mass of people, has been the
peculiar happiness of the writer, who, in these
pages, desires to impart his information to the
public. It is now manifest,that the longlost people
weie not among the multitudes who perished by the
ruthless swords of Genghis Khan and his conquer¬
ing family ; and that they have not been scattered
to the four winds of heaven, like the sands of the
African Syrtes that are driven before the over¬
whelming blast; but that these tribes of our con¬
sanguinity have been kept faithfully together as
a people separate to God.
These circumstances are no longer theoretical,
lor they now assume the character of ascertained
lacts. I shall not, therefore, recollecting the
INTRODUCTION. XIII

successful result of the Persian mission, and the


great hopes founded on this discovery of Israel,
regret those years of toil, spent in the investiga¬
tion throughout every quarter of the East as well
as of Europe. On the contrary, my visit to the
countries inhabited by the Ten Tribes, or such of
them as have outlived the disasters and political
agitations which our people have experienced since
they emigrated from the land of their captivity,
has become a subject of pleasing recollection, not¬
withstanding the sorrows and sicknesses which
usually accompany laborious missionary efforts,
It is now proved that God did preserve a great
portion of his elect children by removing them
to the foot of the lofty Caucasus, and settling
them on the shores of the Caspian. (Ezekiel
xi. 16.) “ Thus saith the Lord God ; Although
I have cast them far off among the heathen,
and although I have scattered them among
the countries, yet will I be to them as a little sanc¬
tuary in the countries where they shall come.”
fMicah ii. 12.) “ I will surely assemble, O
Jacob, all of thee : I will surely gather the rem¬
nant of Israel; I will put them together as the
sheep of Bozrah, as the flock in the midst of the
fold.” They shared not the fate of Judah and
Benjamin at the overthrow of the Holy City by
Vespasian’s army, when the sepulchre of the
Saviour came into the power of the Romans.
XIV INTRODUCTION.

It had long been a problem, whither the re¬


maining Israelites of the Ten Tribes betook them¬
selves when they were last emancipated by their
Persian, Median, and Babylonian masters. An¬
tiquarians, learned in the sacred lore of the
Scriptures, have long desired to recognise among
the various classes of Jews in exile throughout
the earth, the real representatives of the ancient
people; it mattered not whether the Jews known
to Europeans were afflicted by an abject poverty,
or enjoyed the comforts of envied riches, the
identity of any great portion of them as incon¬
testably the elect people of God would ever have
been hailed with the utmost joy ; and certainly
by none more cordially than by the dispersed
Jews of Europe. Yet the mystery admitted not
of a solution that could be acknowledged by all
the various claimants to that glorious appellation ;
and consequently the people, frittered away into
so many minor divisions, became more despised by
the Gentile nations than they would have been, if
any great body of people could have been gene¬
rally recognised as Israel. By the discovery of
this remnant of the Ten Tribes, Israel will
regain a name among the nations, and the
consideration due to an ancient people, approved
though chastened by the Most High.
The Hebrew character had been so much dis¬
guised in consequence of the ills to which the
INTRODUCTION. XV

Jews had been subjected, as well at the hand


of their Father as at that of man, that it was no
wonder if it could not be perfectly recognised.
Their rabbis and religious governors were as
well educated as most men of any creed ;
they sedulously laboured to preserve the an¬
cient institutions, to maintain the national cus¬
toms, to comply, together with the congrega¬
tion, in all the holy observances, to keep the
fasts and feasts, hand down the traditions, and
contribute by precept and example to identify
their people as the faithful servants of the God
of the Hebrews. The appellatives of German,
English, Spanish, French, Polish, or Russian
Greek and Armenian Jews confused too seriously
all the distinctive marks of the ancient nation,
and all the recognisable attributes of their cha¬
racteristic separation from the nations of the
earth. These Israelites became too much blended
with the divers nations among whom they dwelt,
which is sufficiently proved by the fact, that there
was and still is a great dissimilarity between any
one of the above recited communities of European
Jews and all the others. They had, moreover,
become chiefly commercial in their pursuits ; and
it is known that the ancient elect of God were
either martial, or addicted to agriculture. They
had generally lost the power of conversing, when
travelling or in their usual habitations, in He-
XVI INTRODUCTION.

brew, so that our ancient tongue was no lono;er


a spoken language, in any degree of purity.
Hebrew in matters of religion was a written
language, and formed the study of the rabbis,
and those learned in our law and ceremo¬
nies ; but with the people, there arose a de¬
grading intermixture of all the vernacular tongues
of modern Europe, as their only means of com¬
munication upon the objects of ordinary life; so
that the Jew from a distant land understood with
difficulty the speech of him who was resident in
the country that was visited on affairs of com¬
merce. German, I believe, forms the chief alloy
in the vernacular of the Jews, and is the best
understood mixed mode of speech by all classes
of our brethren.
The Jews, indeed, continue in many places to
wear long beards ; everywhere they assemble in
synagogues ; have rabbis and priests, with other
officers appointed by the congregations ; possess
some privileges of self-government, although the
rulers and governments of the lands in which
they have settled in their long exile, deny them
the civil rights of recognised citizens in a suffi¬
ciently generous degree. It would be wise of the
powers of the earth to do away with this injustice,
and to show a more liberal policy towards a people
who contribute so much to the convenience of the
fiscal concerns of the various governments which
INTRODUCTION. XVII

they so peaceably obey. No insurrections or re¬


bellions are recorded against them, but they every¬
where have gained the reputation of good and
loyal subjects; therefore they should not re¬
main unrewarded. They are ingenious and indus¬
trious,—“The labourer is worthy of his hire.”
Yet they suffer from nations to whom they are so
useful, and have ever suffered great persecutions,
and great abuse and contumely.
If they have been persecuted; if in England, in
the times of Richard I. and King John, they have
been tortured before a slow fire to extract from
them their gold; if in France they were falsely
belied and all massacred, that their gold might
be confiscated, — the infamy of the calumnies
against them being at the same time known; if
they have been banished from many kingdoms,
such as Spain, &c.; now is the “ appointed time”
to render justice to them, and make them some
retribution for all the evil that has been inflicted
on them.
It will be proved in the details, that notwith¬
standing all the difficulties in properly identifying
this people, the Jews are still everywhere to
be considered as the children of Israel; and that,
however disguised by the irresistible effect of their
multiplied persecutions they may be, the European
and other Jews will form themselves into a great
c
XVlll INTRODUCTION.

nation, when they know of the actual discovery


of the long lost remnant from Samaria. Blessed,
therefore, be the name of the Most High, who has
faithfully kept his holy word, preserved his peo¬
ple of Israel, and multiplied the seed of Abraham,
according to his gracious promises;—“And it
shall come to pass, when all these things are
come upon thee, the blessing and the curse,
which I have set before thee, and thou shalt call
them to mind among all the nations whither the
Lord thy God hath driven thee, and shalt return
unto the Lord thy God, and shalt obey his voice
according to all that I command thee this day,
thou and thy children, with all thine heart, and
with all thy soul, that then the Lord thy God
will turn thy captivity, and have compassion upon
thee, and will return and gather thee from all the
nations whither the Lord thy God hath scattered
thee. If any of thine be driven out unto the ut¬
most parts of heaven, from thence will the Lord
thy God gather thee, and from thence will he
fetch thee, and the Lord thy God will bring thee
into the land which thy fathers possessed, and
thou shalt possess it; and he will do thee good,
and multiply thee above thy fathers. Deut.
xxx. 1—5.
The discovery of the Remnant is of consequence
in the present posture of both religious and poli-
INTRODUCTION. XIX

tical interests, for it removes every discourage¬


ment, rebuts the odious shafts of sarcasm and of
contempt, and reinstates our people in the eyes of
the Christian world. It will infallibly give the
Jews a greater confidence among themselves, and
very possibly will be the immediate incitement
towards the commencement of that movement of
the elect people towards their home, that land of
which Jacob and Judah are the true heirs, which
has been promised unto them in Holy Writ.
“ And I will bring forth a seed out of Jacob,
and out of Judah an inheritor of my mountains
and mine elect shall inherit it, and my servants
shall dwell there.”—Isaiah lxv. 9.
It is not my present purpose to make many ob¬
servations on what shall ensue when the Israel¬
ites do re-occupy Jerusalem ; yet a few words may
be added on that particular subject, which has
engrossed the attention of Christian prelates and
divines more, perhaps, than any other of the
scriptural prophecies ; viz. the Millennium.
Of the nature of this Millennium I shall simply
state my opinion, that it is mystical; yet it is
assured by Scripture. Undoubtedly it will be a
golden age, when justice, charity, and faith shall
hold undivided sway, and when the Governor shall
be Christ Jesus, the Messiah.
Micah iv. 6—8.—“ In that day, saith the Lord,
* c 2
XX INTRODUCTION.

will I assemble her that halteth, and I will gather


her that is driven out, and her that I have afflicted .
and I will make her that halteth a remnant, and
her that was cast far off a strong nation : and the
Lord shall reign over them in mount Zion, from
henceforth, even for ever. And thou, O towel of
the flock, the stronghold of the daughter of Zion,
unto thee shall it come, even the first dominion ;
the kingdom shall come to the daughter of
Jerusalem.”
Certainly the disposition manifested by many
Protestant communities has been praiseworthy
and truly Christian in past times; they have not
hesitated to spread the genuine doctrines of the
New Testament, and they have gone among the
heathen without the aid of any executive power
to punish those whom they could not conveit.
But now a clearer dawn breaks upon the religious
horizon j there are prognostications that the ruling
power of the Almighty is in more immediate ac¬
tion, the kingdom of heaven is more sensibly at
hand, that the Millennium may be expected with
more proximate certainty than in the long cen¬
turies that have elapsed since John and the great
Saviour, of whom he was the harbinger, proclaimed
the “ Kingdom” to the nations of the Roman em¬
pire, and to the people of the land of Judsea.
The present is possibly not a blind generation
INTRODUCTION. XXI

of the Jews; they have, and I myself individually


have long professed to have, a just perception
of the times that are coming. The breath of
heaven is in the dayspring of the East. The winds
of salvation rise beneath the coming sun and the
new dawn.
Do not think that Jacob, who received the
blessing that by birthright belonged to Esau, will
choose to yield it up to the disciples of the
great preacher Paul, as the moment approaches
wherein Jacob shall vindicate his inheritance.
(Isaiah xlviii. 20.) “ With a voice of singing de¬
clare ye, tell this, utter it even to the end of the
earth ; say ye. The Lord hath redeemed his ser¬
vant Jacob.”
Who are the rivals of Jacob ? The fierce
Ishmaelites, and all the posterity of Agar,
begin to feel that Mahomet has been an insuffi¬
cient prophet in the eastern world. The Mus¬
sulman power is abridged and controlled ; the Ot¬
tomans quail and turn themselves towards the
Christians, lest they themselves should be sub¬
merged in the strife of political ambition ; the
Hebrews will not consent to be the last in the
race of salvation ; they already listen, and many of
them read the New Testament. The fulness
of the Revelation is about to be recognised,
and Christians must not be lukewarm and re-
XXll INTRODUCTION.

miss in their high vocation. Think not that


if Ishmael has failed to make good his claim to
be the heir of Abraham, the Gentiles are to ap¬
pear in the great day as the representatives of
Isaac. The posterity of Isaac represent the elder
children of the house of God ; and although the
Gentile shall accompany Jacob, he is not to have
precedence of him.
As I have endeavoured to show that the Jews
exist in a national body, although they have not
yet returned to Judaea, I shall proceed to speak of
the probability of their restoration, and of the
comparative facility of the surrender of Jerusalem
to their tribes. I have said that the descendants
of the Ten Tribes are forthcoming, and are ani¬
mated by a sufficient spirit ; that they letain a
nationality, and are possessed of great wealth.
Let us then entertain a belief that the Almighty
hand is again ready to reconduct them. “ And
the Lord went before them by day in a pillar of
a cloud, to lead them the way ; and by night in
a pillar of fire, to give them light; to go by day
and night: He took not away the pillar of the
cloud by day, nor the pillar of fire by night, from
before the people.” (Exodus xiii. 21, 22.)
As the commands of God are not to be dis¬
obeyed, and a prompt obedience is due to his
parental voice, their recall will be speedy, and
INTRODUCTION. XXlll

their restoration sudden ; whenever God shall cry,


Go ye and occupy your city of Sion and the land
of promise. Isaiah xxx. 19. “ The people shall
dwell in Zion at Jerusalem: thou shalt weep
no more.”
Jerusalem has long worn the attire of the
widow ; she has mourned, and ashes have covered
the brow of Sion. How soon may not the song
of joy be renewed, and the voice of the bride¬
groom be once more heard ! Jerusalem herself
claims Jacob in the freshness of renewed youth,
as the heir; she has long been a place of motley
occupants; the surrounding territory has for cen¬
turies been a waste under the Moslem and the
Turk, the Saracen and the Arab, the star of whose
ascendency has set; whilst a star in the East}
betokening the advance of civilisation, the proba¬
bility of agricultural renovation in wide-spread
fields, now arid for want of cultivation—this bril¬
liant star, as that seen by the magi who re¬
paired to the cradle in the manger at Bethlehem,
is but a figurative harbinger of the promised
return of Jesus, when he shall be acknowledged
as the Messiah.
I am not now addressing myself to Jews ; I
speak to Christians, and write in favour of the
Jews. I inquire then of Christians, celebrated
for candour, reason, and biblical learning, is
XXIV INTRODUCTION.

there not an imperative necessity in the consti¬


tution of ecclesiastical affairs, according to the
very essence of Christianity, that the promise
of the restoration of the Israelites should be
fulfilled ? Has not the Lord promised this ?
And will he not fulfil his high behest? Cer¬
tainly the Hebrew nation will be led to their
Holy City, and to the site of the beautiful sanc¬
tuary built by king Solomon ; they will assemble
upon Mount Moriah, and will crown the rock of
Sion with their multitudes.
“ Therefore, behold, the days come, saith the
Lord, that it shall no more be said, The Lord
liveth, that brought up the children of Israel out
of the land of Egypt. But the Lord liveth, that
brought up the children of Israel from the land
of the north, and from all the lands whither he
had driven them : And I will bring them again
into their land that I gave unto their fathers.”
(Jeremiah xvi. 14, 15.)
Hosea iii. 4, 5. “The children of Israel shall
abide many days without a king, and without a
prince, and without a sacrifice, and without an
image, and without an ephod, and without tera-
( phim : afterward shall the children of Israel re¬
turn, and seek the Lord their God, and David
their king; and shall fear the Lord and his good¬
ness in the latter days.”
INTRODUCTION. XXV

This people shall revisit the sepulchres of their


forefathers in the valley of Jehosaphat. The
dark ages of their long oppression and servitude
are fast elapsing; and that which is ordained may
take place in our time.
Christians, it is then essentially needful that
you be unremitting in your endeavours to effect
the return of the Jews. The miseries of a wicked
world, that are not to endure sempiternally, have
yet to last until the fulfilment of all things; until
that moment when God shall vouchsafe to ratify
his holy promise to the children of Israel by their
restoration to their inheritance. Wealth they
possess more than sufficient to purchase their
land of the ruler of Egypt. But the great pur¬
chase of Jerusalem is not to be made merely by
the trash of gold and silver, but by their turning
to their heavenly Father with repentance of all
that is recorded of them in the page of history,
and by their bowing before the holy name of
Jesus.
Do not let us for a moment think that the Jews
are not a patriotic race. Demand of them, if you
will, whether they do not fully expect that the
children of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob, shall
re-enter Jerusalem in triumph, and enjoy the
possessions of their forefathers in peace and
security. They will answer affirmatively; and
XXVI INTRODUCTION.

they expect the Messiah, as did Simeon, who,


having long awaited the advent, exclaimed when
he beheld the infant Jesus, “ Lord, now lettest thou
thy servant depart in peace, according to thy
word : for mine eyes have seen thy salvation.”
That the glorious Saviour should become a
sacrifice, and be led like a lamb to the slaughter,
was ordained ; and all that then took place, and
afterwards came to pass, was a matter of prophecy.
The announcements, ay, the menaces of both the
greater and the lesser prophets, were exactly ful¬
filled ; they were so minutely identified in their
completion with respect to the Jewish people,
that this precision of their fulfilment constitutes
an important branch of God’s own miracles, which
have been recognised as such by all the Christians
that have descended in countless multitudes into
the tomb, as well as all living Christians, and
form a chief evidence of the truth of the Christian
dispensation ; equally assuring us also that the
remaining predictions of Holy Writ shall be ac¬
complished. Of these the chief is the restoration
of the Jews; and we firmly believe in the same ;
so also do the Jews. United in the expectation
with us of so great a promise, think ye that they
will never unite amongst themselves in purpose ?
I assert that Jews and Christians, the elect of the
children of God, and the chosen of the Gentiles
INTRODUCTION. XXV11

are on the best terms of friendship. Conciliation


has proved the offspring of civilisation. Present
unto them their Messiah by the brilliant and
irrefragable evidences of the Gospel; and may
be, they will accept of your proofs, and will join
with John, the beloved of our Saviour, and with
us, in the exclamation, so replete with a sanctified
spirit, that concludes the Book of Revelation,
“ Come, Lord Jesus.”
This new prospect of the accomplishment of
what is so devoutly to be wished, is a result of
the zealous labours of the faithful. It is an im¬
portant feature also of the present face of affairs,
that the successful labourer in the vineyard, in
so far as the recent discovery of the stock of
Abraham, which has for ages vegetated in the
nearly unexplored regions of Georgia or
Circassia, and on the less known shores of the
Caspian sea, was himself a Jew who had em¬
barked in the service of the Captain of our
salvation. To him it has been a high privilege
to have been the envoy to the lost tribes of Israel,
and to have carried into effect the views of the
Indian Association on that point. From it may
be fairly entertained some renewed hopes of the
coming fulfilment of the prophecies of the res¬
toration ; for there is a purity of conservation in
the state of the Remnant now dwelling near the
XXVU1 INTRODUCTION.

Caspian, that the other remnants of the de¬


scendants of Abraham cannot equally boast of.
The route pursued on returning from exploring
the Caucasus to Bagdad is probably the route
that the Jews will pursue in their progress to¬
wards Judea; having to cross the great river
Phoat, which is to be dried up for their passage,
according to the prophecies. “ In returning and
rest shall ye be saved ; in quietness and in con¬
fidence shall be your strength ; and ye would
not.” (Isaiah xxx. 15.) “ And they shall come.
which were ready to perish in the land of Assyria,
and the outcasts in the land of Egypt, and shall
worship the Lord in the holy mount at Jeru¬
salem.” (Isaiah xxvii. 13.)
In conclusion, it is hoped that the public will
pardon the apparent delay which has occurred in
committing these Eastern Researches to the press,
being assured that the writer has been by no
means idle in the sacred cause, from the day in
which he first took it in hand till the present.
In the year (a. d. 1837) when he set out for
Georgia, the most active personal investigation
was instituted, to obtain local proofs of the result
of eighteen years previous study and meditation
on the history of the Jews, all which have re¬
quired to be digested into proper form, previous
to being presented to the public. As it was only
INTRODUCTION. XXIX

on the very scene of the biblical events that so


much could have been gained in the way of posi¬
tive information, it was found needful to repair
in person to all those regions that surround the
ancient territories of the Jews, and to trace their
establishments in many countries to which they
had resorted after their dispersion.
And finally, the present mission to England, from
the Christian brethren in India, for the purpose of
advocating these great interests, has accumulated
such manifold duties, and so harassing a share of
public business on the writer, that he must plead
with the indulgent public for some allowance as to
the time consumed in the preparation, and for the
mode of executing so considerable a task. A
mere author might probably have perfected such
a work in a more rhetorical and more elegant
style ; but that was not the thing needful.
Being aware that facts in all their naked truth,
devoid of extraneous embellishments, are ex¬
pected in a work of this description, such facts
and deductions, therefore, irresistible by their
truth and consistency, it is trusted will only be
found in these pages. The writer’s wish is, to
impress devout readers with all that zeal for the
welfare of the Jews that he has himself endea¬
voured to testify ; and having once put upon
record, in a faithful and simple narrative, all that
XXX INTRODUCTION.

he has learned with regard to those very in¬


teresting matters, he avows himself ready and
prepared to persevere in these labours, to lay
aside all thoughts of personal comfort, and to do
his duty to his brethren, both Christians and
Jews, in that sphere of life to which it has pleased
God to call him; not desirous of seeking a home
or resting-place from the severity of toil, until the
the infirmities of age shall come and leave only
the solace of travelling over in imagination and
silent reflection the past active scenes of public
life.
May then the attention of the friends of
Israel be attracted to the long-lost Remnant scat¬
tered beyond the Great River, to prepare them
by the testimony of the Gospel for that event
which is rapidly approaching, when the Deliverer
shall appear out of Zion to turn away ungodliness
from Jacob,—“ when the branch of the Lord
shall be beautiful and glorious, and the fruit of
the earth shall be excellent and comely for them
that are escaped of Israel.”
THE REMNANT FOUND ;
OR,

ISRAEL DISCOVERED.

THE KINGDOM OF ISRAEL.

The Jews were elected and separated from the


rest of mankind to be the peculiar people of God,
and to be a blessing to all mankind. Their his¬
tory is a record of the strivings of the Spirit of
God to imbue them, and the nations from the
midst of whom they were taken, with a know¬
ledge of Jehovah, his attributes, his power, and
his will; to prepare a miserable and ruined
world for that exhibition of grace and glory,
which was to follow in the redemption of all
things by Jesus Christ, and the establishment

B
2 THE KINGDOM OF ISRAEL.

of the kingdom of God upon earth in the ap¬


pointed season.
The history of Judah and Israel, distinguished
in the word of God as “ Judah, and the children
of Israel, his companions,” and “ Joseph, the
stick of Ephraim, and all the house of Israel, his
companions,” (Ezek, xxxvii. 16,) is an interest¬
ing and deeply humbling one ;—humbling, be¬
cause of the fatal mistake of those unto whom
the word of God came, who certainly were des¬
tined for great honour and glory ; and interesting
because of the extensive purposes of God towards
the human race through the seed of Abraham,
who seemed to be ignorant that the grace of God
was destined for the benefit and advantage of all

mankind.
The sin of David and the apostasy of Solomon
soon manifested their bitter fruits; and that
kingdom which seemed settled in their house in
its entireness, was rent in twain. In the reign
of their successor Rehoboam, the rebel tribes
affirmed to that fatal principle, which, in these
days it is almost treason to gainsay, (the right of
the people to govern themselves,) which was fol¬
lowed with such fatal consequences, “ What
portion have we in David ? neither have we
THE KINGrOM OF ISRAEL. 3

inheritance in the son of Jesse : to your tents, 0


Israel; now see to thine own house, David !”
(1 Kings xii. 16.) In a. m. 3029, the revolt
took place, and the kingdom of Israel, esta¬
blished by Jeroboam, the son of Nebat, continued
two hundred and fifty-four years under nineteen
wicked sovereigns, of nine different families.
Notwithstanding the faithful warnings of the pro¬
phets, the Ten Tribes continued obstinate in their
iniquity, and particularly in worshipping the
calves in Dan and Bethel. And after every
means were resorted to, to win them back to their
allegiance to the God of their fathers, the predic¬
tion was pronounced, and carried into effect, that
Ephraim should no longer continue as a

NATION, AND THAT THE LAND OF THEIR ENEMIES

should consume them, (Isaiah vii. 8.) “ The


God of Israel stirred up the spirit of Pul king of
Assyria, and the spirit of Tilgath-pilneser king
of Assyria, and he carried them away, (even the
Reubenites, and the Gadites, and the half tribe
of Manasseh, and brought them unto Halah, and
Ilabor, and Hara, and to the river Gozan.” (1
Chron. v. 26.) This was the first deportation of
the rebellious tribes, which consisted of those
dwelling on the east of Jordan. About forty
b 2
4 THE KINGDOM OF ISRAEL.

years afterwards, the kingdom of Israel, thus


weakened and distressed, was completely broken
up and destroyed. In a. m. 3283, Shalmaneser
and Esar-haddon, his grandson, carried off the re¬
maining seven and a half tribes, planting them
in the same places whither their brethren had
been carried before them ; “ and,” it is added,
“ in the cities of the Medes.” (2 Kings xviii.

11.)
Strictly speaking, there were three deporta¬
tions of these tribes:
1st. Of the two and a half tribes, on the other
side of Jordan, by Pul and Tilgath-pilneser.
2nd, Of the bulk of the seven and a half tribes,
by Shalmaneser.
3rd. Of the remains of the latter, by Esar-
haddon, who swept the land of even the poor
lingerers on the mountains of Israel; so that
Israel could not by any means become a people ;
but remained broken as a nation, and broken as
a people too.
To make the riddance complete, Esar-haddon
“ brought men from Babylon, and from Cuthah
and from Ava, and from Hamath, and from
Sepharvaim, and placed them in the cities of
Samaria, instead of the children of Israel.” (Ezra
iv. 2, 10 ; 2 Kings xvii. 24.)
o

THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES.

From their captivity the Ten Tribes never re¬


turned. It has been urged that they returned
with Ezra, because that individual sacrificed
twelve victims for the aggregate tribes. This no
more proves the case, than the fact of St. James
addressing his epistle to the Twelve Tribes esta¬
blishes their distinct and corporate existence in
his day. This act of Ezra, simply testified his
faith in the purposes and promises of God; of the
unalterable love of God for his people, though
now broken, and dispersed, and swallowed up of
the Gentiles.
It is not to be doubted that individuals of
these tribes returned when Judah and Benja¬
min were restored ; for we have New Testament
evidence of the fact. To cite individual instances,
6 THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES.

we have Anna, who wjas of the tribe Asshur ; (St.


Luke ii. 36;) and the apostles were selected from
four different tribes in Galilee. For a collective
example, the day of Pentecost proves that many
of these tribes were distinguished in the days of
the apostles; for is it to be doubted, that of the
dwellers in Parthia, Media, Elam, &c., who, when
the Spirit was poured out, were assembled from
the very seats of the captives of the tribes,
none were of Ephraim. History informs us,
that “ Ezra sent a copy of the decree of Ar-
taxerxes to all of the same nation throughout
Media, where the Ten Tribes lived in captivity,
and many of them came with their effects to
Babylon, desiring to return to Jerusalem; but
the main body of the Israelites abode in that
region; and therefore it hath happened, (says Jo¬
sephus,) that there are two tribes in Asia and
Europe, living in subjection to the Romans; but
the ten tribes are beyond the Euphrates at this
time.”* Again, the Talmud, far from acknow¬
ledging the return of the tribes, affirms that only
the dregs of the people followed Ezra.
Ephraim no longer existed as a distinct part of
the nation. The genealogies of the Jews became

* Antiq. lib. ii. cap. 5, sect. 2, p. 482.


THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES. 7

irregular, and the tribes were blended together.


Persecution and the revolution of empires di¬
minished their numbers; in short, “the land
of their enemies consumed them.” The Ten
Tribes, however, never were nor can become
extinct: and for their existence, or rather for
the existence of the remnant, it is natural to
turn to those regions which were the acknow¬
ledged seats of their exile and captivity ; whilst,
for their identity, we must refer to other proofs
than the antiquary would furnish, and data
which perhaps the authority of history would be
prone to despise.
The captivity of Judah and Benjamin subse¬
quent to that of the Ten Tribes, and the diffusion
of the Jewish family throughout Chaldea, Meso¬
potamia, Parthia, and Media, (Esther ix. 30,)
contributed to further the judgment of God upon
rebellious Ephraim, in melting him with the mass
of his people, and destroying his existence inde¬
pendent of Judah and Benjamin. This amalga¬
mation, together with the revolution of empires,
and the vicissitudes of a hundred generations,
renders the identification difficult and almost im¬
possible. But the purposes of God are sure, and
who can annul when he decrees ?
8 THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES.

“ The remnant shall return, the remnant of Jacob unto


the mighty God. For though thy people Israel be as the
sand of the sea, a remnant of them shall return.” (Isaiah x.

, .)
21 22

Considering the myriads carried into captivity,


and the large proportion of the Ten over the Two
Tribes, it is not a matter of speculation to con¬
clude, that the great mass of the Persian Jews,
and those of adjacent countries, are of Ephraim,
or the Ten Tribes. In fact, the traditions of
the Jews of Salmas and the Koord countries
affirm this fact. The Jews of Babylon to this
day, preserve a distance from their brethren
in Persia and Georgia under this conviction.
But the identification must be irrespective of
tradition, and of those generalities which may
lead us to speculate to the end of the chapter, but
which would never conduct to any satisfactory
result.
The seven and a half tribes which were scat¬
tered and sold into Mesopotamia, Media, Parthia,
Ethiopia, India, and Assyria, are never likely to
return to the land of their forefathers, or to be
incorporated in the true stock of Israel, as it is
not clear from Scripture whether the return of
the whole tribes is foretold. We find in the time
THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES. 9

of Jeroboam, that the two and a half tribes


amounted to eighty thousand mighty men of
valour, and since that time must have increased
to an indefinite number. The seven and a half
tribes must have increased to an unaccountable
multitude. What has become of this mighty mass
of people, none have been able satisfactorily to
show. Every quarter of the world has been
traversed, and every region explored by travellers,
whose zeal and curiosity have scarcely left a tract
unnoticed ; and yet, notwithstanding the labour
bestowed and the works published, we are as
much in the dark as ever. The Indians, the
Scythians, the Tartars, have all in turn been put
forward as the long-lost tribes, because of some
identity in physiognomy, customs, and character.
But something else is required besides isolated
traits. The Scriptures, the Hebrew letters,
the sabbath, new moons, clean and unclean
animals, the expectation of a Messiah, and cir¬
cumcision, are the distinguishing circumstances
which are required to identify the family of Abra¬
ham ; and to place it beyond a doubt that they
are descended from him who was the promised
heir of the world, in whose seed all the nations of
the earth are to be blessed.
10 THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES.

It is to be regretted that the majority who


have treated this important subject for the last
two hundred years, have not paid sufficient at¬
tention to the declaration of the sacred Scrip¬
tures concerning the whole house of Israel.
Even in the present day, from the prevalence ol
speculative opinions, much confusion has re¬
sulted i and certain commentaries have made the
plain testimony of prophecy of none effect.
As was observed before, there is a clear dis¬
tinction between Israel and Judah in the his¬
torical parts of Scripture, which were written
subsequently to the revolt of the tribes. This
obtains equally in the prophetical books, where
the same distinction is preserved between the
house of Israel and the house of Judah. The
confusion has been caused by indiscriminately
using the names Jerusalem, Zion, Manasseh,
Ephraim, Israel, Judah, the Jews, the Church
of Christ, to signify the whole house of Israel.
These ought to be restricted to the places, and
to their immediate inhabitants ; their application
by the inspired penmen being definite. Refer
to the eleventh chapter of Isaiah (verse 12,)
where the prophet distinguishes Judah as “ dis¬
persed,” from Israel “ outcast.”
THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES. 1 l

“ And he shall set up an ensign for the nation,


And shall assemble the outcasts of Israel,
And gather together the dispersed of Judah
From the four corners of the earth.”

The prophet Ezekiel, who wrote after the cap-


tivity, foretells, in the twelfth chapter, the dis¬
persion of Judah, and seems to apply the same
terms to the whole house of Israel. By ex¬
amining the passage (verse 10) it will be seen,
however, to refer strictly to Judah, or to any of
the other tribes dwelling with Judah. The pro¬
phet Zephaniah (iii. 10—13) uses the same
term ; yet no instance is found in Scripture in
which the expression dispersed is applied to the
Ten Tribes alone. Israel is described as outcast,
Judah is termed dispersed. In 2 Kings xvii. 18,
we find concerning the Ten Tribes,—“ The Lord
was very angry with Israel, and removed them
out of his sight: there was none left but the
tribe of Judah only.” Jeremiah, at the third
chapter and seventh verse, says, “ When the
Lord had put backsliding Israel away, and given
her a bill of divorce, yet her treacherous sister
feared not.” The prophet Amos speaks ex¬
pressly (ix. 9) by the word of the Lord,—“ I
will sift the house of Israel among all nations,
12 THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES.

like as corn shall be sifted in a sieve,’'—meaning,


shall be mingled among the heathen. Hosea
declares that “ Ephraim hath mixed himself
among the people,” (vii. 8,) that Israel “ is
swallowed up) among the Gentiles, as a vessel in
which there is no pleasure.” (viii. 8.) God has
cast them away ; they are wanderers among the
nations,—I will no more have mercy on the
house of Israel ; I will utterly take them away,
(i. 6.) But I will have mercy on the house of
Judah, and save them.” (verse 7.) In the pro¬
phet Zechariah we find that they are to be sown
amongst the nations; and if we examine into
the present condition of the Jews throughout the
world, we shall find that Judah, who is dis¬
persed amongst all nations, his name and his

memorial abide.
But Israel is not only scattered and sifted among
the nations, but he is swallowed up amongst
the Gentiles ; he is as a people divorced from
God. He has lost the only sign of the covenant
which distinguishes the seed of Abraham, and
his name and memorial have perished. The
descendants of Judah and Benjamin, on the con¬
trary, are everywhere, and by all nations ac¬
knowledged as the Israel oi God, and will
THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES. 13

remain distinct till the day when the Deliverer


shall appear out of Zion to turn away ungodli¬
ness from Jacob. The majority of the Ten
Tribes, therefore, according to prophecy, have
been sown amongst the Gentiles as an outcast
of the Israel of God, and form a part of the
population in nearly every country under heaven,
which I hope to show in detail in my larger
work, in which that promise to Abraham, that
all nations should be blessed in his seed, is
minutely fulfilled.
If the Ten Tribes were to be found in a body,
as some writers have expected, the Scriptures
would be contradicted. The sacred penmen
foretold that the Ten Tribes should cease to "be
a nation, and no longer be reckoned as a people ;
for a mere remnant is promised, one of a city,
and two of a family, to be brought to Zion,
(Isaiah x. formerly quoted); and this remnant
is declared to be preserved, and to be brought
out of the land of the north :—

“ Go and proclaim these words towards the north,


And say, return thou, backsliding Israel, saith the Lord.
******

* * * * * #
Turn, O backsliding children, saith the Lord
For I am married to you.
]4 THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES.

And I will take you, one of a city, and two of a family,


And I will bring you to Zion!” (Jer. iii. 12—14.)

In the same prophet, in the thirty-first chapter,


and at the eighth verse, we have a confirmation
of this as relating to the remnant of the Ten

Tribes—

“ Behold, I will bring them from the north country,


And gather them from the coasts of the earth ;

and that it is restricted to these tribes is appa¬


rent by the verse which follows —
“ I am a father to Israel,
And Ephkaim is my first-born. ’
15

THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES.

(continued.)

Of the many modern writers upon the sub¬


ject of the lost tribes of the house of Israel,
none seem to have approached so near the

truth as Dr. Giles Fletcher, envoy from


Queen Elizabeth at Moscow. He supposed the
Tartars near the Caspian sea to belong to the
Ten Tribes. The reason he assigns is, that the
cities and places in that region are called by the
same names as those in the land of Canaan ;
and because the Tartars are divided into ten
tribes, as were those of the captives of Israel:
he supposes them to be the descendants of the
whole house of Israel. He mentions that Tamer-
16 THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES.

lane boasted that he was descended from the


tribe of Dan.*
Had Dr. Fletcher followed up his inquiries,
he would undoubtedly have succeeded in his re¬
search, in tracing the remnant to the very spot
of their present existence. But since it seems
from his dissertation that neither he nor his
informants were in that part of the world, nor
possessed personal knowledge of the customs and
manners of the people about whom he wrote, it
is to be regretted that a work of such import¬
ance was rendered useless, to other writers
and travellers.
The Tartars are the descendants of the Syrians
who were transplanted seven hundred years be¬
fore Christ, when Rezin king ot Syria made war,
in company with Pekah king of Israel, against
Judah. Tilgath-pilneser came, subdued Syria,
Galilee, and all the territory east of the Jordan,
and sent the inhabitants of Syria to the river
Kur, (into which the Araxes emptied itself.)

* The present deposed king of Georgia, who is a pen¬


sioner of Persia, and whose family is kept as hostages by
Russia, told me that he considered that he and his family
were descended from the Danites. The Jews in Persia be¬
lieve that Georgia was formerly governed by Jews.
THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES. 17

And these people, supposed by Dr. Fletcher to


belong to the Ten Tribes, are known in the
present day as the Usbeck Tartars. And except
among the Circassian tribes, which profess the
Mussulman religion, circumcision, that great seal
of the seed of Abraham, is nowhere practised.
The Cossacks have not the least vestige of Israel-
itish descent; nor are their features in the re¬
motest degree of Jewish character.
As for the similitude of the names with those
in the land of Israel,* their existence, which con¬
tinues to the present day, only serves to prove
that the remnant were formerly in possession of
these quarters; and is a collateral proof of their
existence in these regions, doubtless from a
period not long subsequent to their captivity and
dispersion.
The Jews of the town of Androva, which is
on the north-west of the Caspian, have informed
me that they were in possession of those coun¬
tries as late as the twelfth century, as described
by Benjamin of Tudela; and were only finally-
driven from them in the time of Nadir Shah, when
thousands were compelled to embrace the Maho-
rnedan faith. According to their traditions, those
* Yerico and Thabor.

C
18 THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES.

inhabiting the mountain regions, called by the


inhabitants Jeordico and Tubar, by the Jews
Yerico and Thabor, are the descendants of the
two and a half tribes, the first portion of the
captivity of the whole house of Israel.
Since the invasion of Nadir Shah, the Lesgyan
tribes have surrounded them more completely
than ever : and in their isolated condition they -
have remained distinct even from their brethren
in the adjacent provinces of Armenia and Geor¬
gia. The evidence on which I conclude them
to be in reality the remnant of the Ten Tribes,
will presently be stated. The Jews in Imiriti
and Gahatia I consider to bear a strong affinity
to the remnant; but in many respects, from
intercourse with their brethren elsewhere, have
lost that caste which would identify them with
the Jews of the mountain regions of Daghistan.
The Jews of Imiriti and Gahatia present the
singular spectacle, unknown elsewhere through¬
out the world, of being slaves; an article of
commodity to their masters in whose country
they dwell.
We will briefly refer to the countries of the cap¬
tivity of the Twelve Tribes. Assyria and Media
are among the places most familiar to the readers
THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES. 19

of modern and ancient history. Assyria lay north¬


east of the Holy Land; and Media still further,
in the same direction. In the maps, Media is
made to include the southern border of the Cas¬
pian, as far north-west as the Araxes. This part
of Media, however, whether from its mountainous
character, or its possession in ancient times, as
now, by intrepid and warlike hordes, was per¬
haps rather claimed by the Medes than actually at
all times possessed. It is striking, that almost
immediately on the deportation of the tribes into
the northern possessions of Assyria, those coun¬
tries, and especially Media, revolted from under
the Assyrians. At this very time, too, an im¬
mense migration poured into Asia, holding in
subjection the northern countries of that conti¬
nent ; and which would serve to arrest any power
which would have been exerted to prevent them
proceeding northward. I have always considered
the account contained in the apocryphal book
of Esdras to possess some historical truth, which
may perhaps be separated from it by the process
of discrimination and judgment. That account
is as follows :—“ And whereas thou sawest that
he gathered another peaceable multitude unto
him : These are the Ten Tribes which were
c 2
20 THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES.

carried away prisoners out of their own land, in


the time of Osea the king, whom Salmanaser the
king of Assyria led away captive, and he carried
them over the waters, and so came they into
another land. But they took this counsel among
themselves, that they would leave the multitude
of the heathen, and go forth into a further country,
where never mankind dwelt, that they might
there keep their statutes, which they never kept
in their own land. And they entered into Eu¬
phrates by the narrow passages of the river. For
the Most High then showed signs for them, and
held still the flood, till they were passed over.
\

For through that country there was a great way


to go ; namely, of a year and a half; and the
same region is called Arsareth (Ararath.) Then
dwelt they there until the latter time.” (2 Esdras
xiii. 39, 40.)

Whether, during the revolt of the Medians from


under the yoke of the .Assyrians, the above
migration took place ; and whether the far country
is the province which lies between the Caspian
and the Euxine, or beyond; and whether the
Araxes, which was the northern boundary of
Media, was the stream, or one of them, alluded to ;
I cannot say. Suffice it for our purpose that
THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES. 21

such a migration took place; that the mountain


regions between the Euxine and the Caspian
were most inviting districts for a people accus¬
tomed to freedom, and impatient of the conqueror’s
yoke; that in these very regions a body of
Jews exists, combining in their religious rites
and customs (the great distinguishing mark of
the seed of Abraham*) all the characteristics of
the elder captives of the house of Israel.
With respect to the other places mentioned in
Scripture, “ Halah and Habor, by the river
Gozan;” the river Chaboras, which is called by
the Arabian geographers Alchabor, rises among
the mountains, runs through Mesopotamia, and
falls into the Euphrates.'!'
The city of Halah, the Chalcite of Plotmez,
was situated on one bank of the Chaboras : and
Gozan (both province and city) on the other.
Thus the Ten Tribes located in Assyria, inhabited

* L. Holst de Sabbath. Flum. in Allat. p. 440.


-j- Cellarius Geog. Ant. lib. iii. cap. xv. p. 433, places the
river Chaboras, or Chalcitis, and Charran, or Haran, near
Edessa, and beyond it the Gauzan. Thus the Israelites in
their idolatry were returned to the country from which
their father Abraham was removed, that he might be sepa¬

rated.
22 THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES.

both banks of the river Chaboras, and were sepa¬


rated from each other only by the river which
flowed through their territories.
The other colony inhabited the cities of the
Medes.* Thus we must seek for the tribes, or
the remnant of them, in the neighbouring pro¬
vinces, which are indicated as the land of their
captivity, both in the Chaldean paraphrase and in
the original Hebrew. They spread into pro¬
vinces which are now known as Georgia and
Tabarastan. Orosius relates that the Jews who
inhabited the provinces near the Caspian, in¬
creased in numbers, and confidently expected to
return at some future day to the Holy Land. The
nation was numerous also at Nineveh and Baby¬
lon, after the captivity of the two tribes, Judah
and Benjamin ; but the number of Babylonian
Jews diminished considerably under the tyranny
of Antiochus. After the destruction of Jerusalem
by Titus, we may naturally suppose that those
Jews who fled from Judea would join their coun¬
trymen elsewhere. In proportion as the eastern
empire declined, that people became populous,

* In urbibus Mediorum. The Chaldaic paraphrase is the


cities of Media.—Buxtorf, 2127.
THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES. 23

and in some respects powerful. Under the pre¬


sidents of the captivity, they founded colleges
which were much celebrated for their learning.
Jewish courts of justice were established also in
many cities.
The best writers on Jewish antiquities freely
allow, that the distinction of tribes and families
can no longer be made out incontrovertibly. Thus
Maimonides affirms, they no longer existed from
the time of Sennacherib.* The Talmudists of Ba¬
bylon arrogate to themselves a peculiar nobility
of descent, at a depreciation of the whole Jewish
family elsewhere. “ Ezra carried with him,” say
they, “ the chaff of the nation, and kept the pure
wheat in Babylon.”']' These very Talmudists,
however, refer to Media as preserving families of

high descent. And my own impression always


was, that if we were likely at all to arrive at a
successful solution of the question, “ What has
become of the Ten Tribes ?” we must restrict our
attention to those immediate neighbourhoods
from whence the colonies of expatriated Jews

* Hinc familiae inter confusae sint, ita ut dignosci nequeant


inter se, nec e locis ipsarum cognosci.
-f- Maimon. □VT nh'IOJ de Lotione Manuum, cap. 4,

sec. iv. p. 49.


24 THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES.

went forth ; and if at all found, whether in larger


or smaller numbers, it must be in circumstances
of isolation, offering- few temptations to merge
themselves into the body of the Jews, or into the
nations of the Gentiles. In the revolutions of
kingdoms, the obscurity of localities from change
of name, the vicissitudes which have occurred in
the great Jewish family in the east, and the exag¬
gerated testimony of the modern Hebrew history
it would be more curious than profitable to follow
the changes, alleged and real, which occurred to
the various Jewish colonies of the dispersions and
captivities. The Jews of Persia are doubtless,
more or less, descended from the tribes. The
Affghans, Circassians, and others, may or may
not be related to the dispersion. But what is
wanted, and has long been sought, is a body en¬
titled from incontrovertible internal proof to be
considered as the nucleus and representatives of
those tribes. It remains to be proved whether
those proofs which follow, referring to the Jews
of Daghistan, fulfil the expectation in question.
They are satisfactory to my own mind ; and I
have no doubt they will prove so to those who
look beyond the surface, and who are not fettered
by prejudice and foregone conclusions.
THE DISPERSION OF THE TEN TRIBES. 25

In this brief sketch I have limited myself to a


simple statement of facts : nor can I afford time
at present to apply these to the demolition of
various theories which have been propounded by
successive writers on the subject; but shall leave
these facts to their legitimate effect on those who
have given attention to the subject one way or
another. Those who take an interest in the
Talmudic controversy, and in the efforts which are
making to detach the Jewish mind from the influ¬
ence of the rabbins, will immediately perceive, in
the perfect ignorance of the Jews of Daghistan of
the precepts and authority of that celebrated
code, the irresistible proof how much modern
Judaism is opposed to the views and practice of
the early Jewish church.
26

CONJECTURES CONCERNING THE TRIBES.

Bishop Newton # has remarked, “ that the diffi¬


cult)7 of finding out the habitations of the Ten
Tribes has induced some to maintain, that they
returned into their own country, with the other
two tribes, after the Babylonish captivity.” The
decree of Cyrus extended, it is true, “ to all the
people of God,” (Ezra i. 3,) and that of Artaxerxes
to all the people of Israel, (vii. 13;) and no doubt
many of the Israelites took advantage of these
decrees, and returned with Zerubbabel and Ezra
to their own cities; but still the main body of the
Ten Tribes remained behind. Ezra, who should
best know, says that “there rose up of the chief
of the fathers of Judah and Benjamin,” (i. 5;)
and he calls “ the Samaritans the adversaries of
Judah and Benjamin;” these two tribes were the
principals, the others were only accessories. And
if they did not return at this time, they cannot be
supposed to have returned in a body at any time

* On the Prophecies.
CONJECTURES CONCERNING THE TRIBES. 27

after this; for we read of no such adventure in


history; we know neither the time nor occasion of
their return, nor who were the generals and lead¬
ers of such an expedition. “ The entire body of the
people of Israel,” says Josephus, “ remained in
that country, where they were carried captive;
wherefore there are but two tribes in Asia and
Europe subject to the Romans, while the Ten
Tribes are beyond the Euphrates till now, and
are an immense multitude, and not to be esti¬
mated by numbers.”*
Indeed, it is natural to suppose, and what evi¬
dences history furnishes confirm it, that the Jews of
the various captivities spread themselves and took
root in the lands of their captivity, and through¬
out Media, Parthia, Mesopotamia, Ethiopia, and
India; indeed, throughout the whole east.f I think
it a question upon which it were vain to speculate,
whether the Jews of those regions are not largely
descended from the Ten Tribes. The point which
remains to be proved is, whether, amidst the amal¬
gamation of the tribes, and the destruction of
genealogies, any portion may be pointed out,
ineontrovertibly and exclusively a remnant of
those tribes,—the escaped of Israel. The evi-
* Autiq. b. xi. c. 5. \ Orosius, b. ii. c. 7.
28 CONJECTURES CONCERNING

dences are numerous and curious, which have


satisfied various travellers and inquirers of the
general existence of descendants of the missing
tribes. In the fifth century Jerome writes, “ Unto
this day the Ten Tribes are subject to the kings
of Persia, nor has their captivity been ever
loosed.”* He adds, “ The Ten Tribes inhabit
at this day the cities and the mountains of the
Medes.”j' “ In Samarcand,” says Benjamin of
Tudela, “ the city of Tamerlane, there are fifty
thousand Jews under the presidency of Rabbi
Obadiah; and in the mountains and cities of
Nubor, there are four tribes of Israel resident;
namely, Dan, Zebulon, Asher, Naphtali.”
A writer, who published his travels in the begin¬
ning of the last century, says, “ that many of the
Turks came from Tartary, and that the Tartars are
the descendants of the Ten Tribes, which tribes
were brought into Tartary by Shalmaneser.”
“ The capital of Tartary,” he adds, “ is called Sa-
margan, which is very little different from Samaria,
once the great capital of Israel’s monarch. They
have another town called Jericho, a mount named
Sion, and another mount distinguished by the
name of Tabor, with a river Yordan, (from the

* Vol. vi. p. 7. -f Vol. vi. p. 80.


THE TRIBES. 29

Hebrew Jordan,) and a thousand other names of


places, which plainly prove a Jewish etymology.”
They are divided into ten great tribes or parties,
bearing names not much unlike the ancient pa¬
triarchs. Another thing which serves to prove
the just validity of this opinion is, that all the
Tartars do not only circumcise, and use the ancient
Jewish rites in almost every point of worship, but
traditionally boast themselves of being descended
from the Israelites, who, conquering their con¬
querors, became possessed of all the territories
by the Caspian Sea; and hence it was that Ta¬
merlane, or Tam-her-lane the Great, who led the
Turkish Bajazet about the city in an iron cage,
would often take occasion to be vaunting of his
pedigree, affirming “ he was lineally descended
from the tribe of Dan in an uninterrupted genea-
logy.”#
The Afghans have been pointed to, and I
conceive with strong probability of the truth of
the conjecture, as the lineal descendants of the
Ten Tribes. “ If the first wonder,” observes a
writer in a celebrated periodical, “ if the first
wonder of the Hebrew nation be its existence,
national and religious, in its dispersion, such as

* Probable Conjectures on the Ten Tribes, by Aaron Hill.


30 CONJECTURES CONCERNING

we witness it; the second is that interment, as it


were, of the Ten Tribes for above 2500 years ;
from whence, if there be any faith in prophecy,
they are to arise as from the tomb, to share the
splendour of the revival of Israel. It is natural
that the eye should seek with anxious curiosity
for the hiding-place, in which these illustrious
exiles have so long lain buried. But hitherto
we have conjecture alone for our guide; such as
it is, it appears to point out preferably the
Afghans as their descendants.” Foster, in his
journey from India, overland, through their coun¬
try, was forcibly struck by their Jewish phy¬
siognomy. Sir William Jones subsequently sug¬
gested that they might be the children of the Ten
Tribes; and his supposition is countenanced by
the fact, that the neighbouring nations believe
them to have an Israelitish origin; and by a fact
still more material, namely, that they themselves
believe it too. For the Jewish name is in such
unfavourable repute through the world, that no
nation can be suspected of claiming such descent
gratuitously. Mr. Mountstuart Elphinstone, in
his very interesting account of his mission to
Cabul, throws much doubt on their Israelitish
descent; for he states, “ that no affinity exists be¬
tween their language and the Hebrew; while, on
THE TRIBES. 31

the other hand, the Serampore missionaries (who


have more recently, and far more fully, examined
the matter) declare that in no eastern language
have they discovered so many Hebrew roots as in
the Pushtoo or Afghan. All testimonies agree in
attributing to them the qualities befitting them
for mighty deeds. They are robust in their per¬
sons, and so brave, that they have long been
known in the armies of India, as their most va¬
liant soldiers, by the name of Patans.” If the
Afghans be the Ten Tribes, and the Ten Tribes
be “ the kings of the east,” whose way may be
even now preparing, that title may not be deemed
too lofty for a nation which has held the thrones
both of Persia and Hindostan.*
Bruce, the Abyssinian traveller, says, “ there are
Jews in Abyssinia, who are as black as the ori¬
ginal natives ; which Jews,” says he, “ must be the
descendants of the Ten Tribes.” He further adds,
“The motto of the king of Abyssinia is,—The Lion
of the race of Solomon and of the tribe of Judah
hath overcomeBruce adds, “ that the people
of Abyssinia consider that they are to bear a part in
the final restoration of the Jews "f Dr. Claudius
Buchanan’s Researches are well known; especially
* Quarterly Review. f Travels in Abyssinia.
32 CONJECTURES CONCERNING

what relates to the black Jews of Bombay and


Cochin. “ The black as well as white,” he ob¬
serves, “ still continue a distinct people, reading
the Hebrew scriptures, and practising all the rites
of the law of Moses which can be practised out
of Jerusalem.” The black Jews, he seems to
think, derive their origin from the Ten Tribes
which were carried away by Shalmaneser king of
Assyria, as the others derive theirs from the dis¬
persed Jews of Jerusalem.*

* Translation of an Inscription granted to the Jews on a


copper-plate, showing the time of their arrival.—Swasti Sri !
The King ot kings hath ordained it! When Raja Sri Bhas-
karah Iravah Varma, was wielding the sceptre of royalty in
an hundred thousand places, in the thirty-sixth year above
the second cycle, he vouchsafed, during the time that he so¬
journed in Moyil Kottah, to perform a deed, the subject of
which is as follows: From Yusuf Rabba and his people, in
five degrees of persons, we exact the tribute of due and de¬
ference to our high dignity, and of the usual present to our
royal person. To these we allow the privileges of bearing
five kinds of names ; of using day-lamps, of wearing long ap¬
parel ; of using palanquins and umbrellas ; copper vessels ;
trumpet and drums ; of garlands for the person ; and garlands
to be suspended over their roads ; and we have given in full,
seventy and two separate houses; and we have relinquished
all taxes and rates for these ; and also for all other houses
and churches in other cities ; and independent of this bond to
THE TRIBES. 33

To the above conjectures may be added that of


the celebrated William Penn, governor of Penn¬
sylvania, who was decidedly of opinion that the
Red Indians of North America were descendants
of the Ten Tribes. In his general description of
that country, he says, “ They agree in rites ,
they reckon by moons : they offer their first-fruits ;
they have a kind of feast of tabernacles ; they
are said to lay their altar upon twelve stones;

him, we have made and given a Copper Instrument for these


latter, separate and distinct. These are to be enjoyed after
these five modes of descent, viz. by Yusuf Rabba, himself and
his heirs in succession : thus, his male children, and his female
children, his nephews, and the nephews of his daughters, in
natural succession, an hereditary right to be enjoyed as long
as the earth and the moon remain. Sri; I, Govarddhana
Martandan, of Venadar, witness this deed; I, Kotaigiri,
Karrun, of Venapa-i-nada, witness this deed ; I, Mana Vepala
Manuviyan, of Eradu-nada, witness this deed; I, Irayan
Chattan, of Vallava-nada, witness this deed; I, Katai Iravah,
of Nedambataryar-nada, witness this deed ; I, Markan Chat-
tan, inhabitant of Kilpadui Nayukam, witness this deed.—
This is the hand writing of Pozanaya Kezavaya Kellapan,
engraved by Vandra Sherry Kandapa.
C. M. Whish.

The black Jews of Cochin are well known to be proselytes

from slaves and Portugese Christians. In 1834, when I was


there, two Portuguese were circumcised
D
34 CONJECTURES CONCERNING

their mourning a year ; the customs of women;


with many tilings that do not now occur.”
In a letter to a friend in London he gives the
following description of them. “ I found them
with the countenances of the Hebrew race ; and
their children of so lively a resemblance to
them, that a man would think himself in Duke’s
Place or Bury Street in London, when he sees
them.” *
Another writer, Adair, who lived as a trader
among those Indians for forty years, a man of
integrity and character, thus expresses himself:—
“ It is very difficult to divest ourselves of pre¬
judices and favourite opinions ; and I expect to
be censured for opposing commonly-received
statements. But truth is my object, and from
the most exact observation I could make in the
long time I traded among the Indian Americans,
I was forced to believe them to be lineally de¬
scended from the Israelites. Hence (he adds)
it is probable that the ‘ desert,’ or ‘ further
country,’ referred to by Esdras, ‘ where never
mankind dwelt,’ may be America ; which coun¬
try, indeed, would much better accord than any
contiguous one could do with that other repre-

* History of Pennsylvania.
THE TRIBES. 35

sentation which he makes of it, as a great way


to go, namely, of a year and a half. Esdras
farther says, ‘ The same region is called Ararash
or Ararat—and Dr. Boudinot says, ‘ A gentle¬
man of the first character of the city of New
York, well acquainted with the Indians from his
childhood, assured him, that when with them at
a place called Cohoch or Oulglah, yet well
known, they showed him a mountain to the west,
very high, and that appeared from Cohoch, much
as the Neversinks do from the sea, at first ap¬
proaching the American coast, and told him the
Indians call it Ararat”*
Another and more recent writer has advanced
the theory, that the whole of the nations which
occupy the platform of the Roman empire, the
modern nations of Europe, the English in par¬
ticular, are the tribes in question.f That, origi¬
nally located in Media and the sea-shores of the
Caspian, extending into the provinces and coun¬
tries north of that sea, they became those over¬
whelming floods, which the frozen north poured
from its populous loins into Europe, to the con-

* History of the American Indians,


-f* Lectures on Ancient Israel.

d 2
36 CONJECTURES CONCERNING THE TRIBES.

sternation of its former inhabitants, in the early


centuries of the Christian dispensation.
I mention all these views, facts, and theories,
that the reader may draw his own conclusions,
and form his own opinions. The object of this
little work is not to follow Israel in his wander¬
ings and dispersions, and to reckon the real and
probable fate of the various tribes. I have mv
own opinions on the dispersion of the seed of all
the house of Israel among the nations ; and I be¬
lieve that the vestiges of the primitive worship of
the Hebrews, which we find in various parts of
the world, amongst the various nations and tribes,
may serve to elucidate the truth of the prophecies
concerning Israel, and the fate of this people. I
am desirous simply to confine my attention to The
Remnant spoken of in Scripture, and to consider
whether, in or very near the seat of their original
captivity, such a remnant does not exist.
PERSONAL NARRATIVE.

Being at Tehran in the month of March, 1837,


prosecuting’ my missionary labours in Persia
amongst my brethren of the seed of Abraham,
I paid my respects to His Excellency Graf
Simoniech, ambassador extraordinary to the court
of Mohammed Shah. In conversation with the
ambassador concerning one of the objects of my
mission, His Excellency informed me that about
five years previously, the Russian government
had sent a commission into Georgia to investigate
the character and circumstances of the Caucasian
Jews. The individuals sent returned without
being able to give any satisfactory account of the
object they were sent to inquire into : their qua¬
lifications not being such as to enable them to
throw any light on a question of this character.
His Excellency, perceiving my ardent curiosity
and interest in what relates to the Jewish people,
38 PERSONAL NARRATIVE.

and in particular as to any facts which might illus¬


trate the fate of the long-lost tribes, spontaneously
offered me every assistance in his power, if I
would undertake to follow up these inquiries; —
laying no other obligation upon me, than to fur¬
nish him with a copy of my journal, when I
should publish it, containing investigations through
the East on this important subject.
Having consulted Her Britannic Majesty’s mi¬
nister at the court of Persia, and obtained his
sanction, I received from him a letter of protec¬
tion, on which I could depend, in the critical
circumstances of the country at that time. The
Anglo-Indian army was preparing to march to¬
wards Cabul, and all individuals in connexion
with England were under strong suspicion. This
letter of protection was of the utmost importance,
as it enabled me to resist and overcome the in¬
trigues and repugnance of the Russian govern¬
ment of the Trans-Caucasian provinces at my
presence during the military operations against
Khiva, at this crisis. And I shall not soon forget
the impressions left upon me at Tiflis, after I en¬
tered upon my investigations, when summoned
before the Governor-general of those provinces.
Every effort was made to daunt my courage
PERSONAL NARRATIVE. 39

by an array of military (consisting of Cossacks


and gens d? ar merle) drawn up in front of the
palace,—the object of which was to expel me
from the country, or to induce me to retire. I was
enabled, however, in the strength imparted to me
at that trying hour, to maintain an independence of
spirit, I trust not unbecoming a British subject;
and to read such a lesson to General Radifinicki,
(son of the celebrated diplomatist,) in the pre¬
sence of the Russo-Georgian court, which he will
not easily forget. What a state of things is
that which owes its support wholly to bristling-
bayonets ; where such a system of ramified es¬
pionage exists, that the very wife is an emissary
to report the actions and opinions of her husband
to an ever-suspicious and jealous government!
His Excellency (Graf Simoniech) furnished me
with letters to the Governor-general, Baron
Rosa, General Brechoft, commander-in-chief of
Georgia, and civil governor Palawandeof. All
these letters, though of importance, weighed as
nothing beside the simple pass of the British
ambassador.
I proceeded to Tabriz, and from thence to
Georgia, instituting inquiries in every place
where Jews resided, to Akhalsikhe, Gooriel,
40 PERSONAL NARRATIVE.

Kotals, Khartatanici, and so on to Tiflis, where I


remained for five months. The result of the in¬
quiries is contained in the summary of proofs
which follow, convincing’ my mind that if the
remnant is to be found anywhere, the Jews of
Daghistan, Kakhete, Imiriti, Gooriel, and Min-
grelia (including the whole of ancient Cotchei)
are these. Had this inquiry been instituted pre¬
vious to the invasion of Nadir Shah, in the middle
of the last century, the evidence which I shall
have to consider would have been of even a more
striking character. Since that time, owing to the
encroachments of Russia, whose policy has been
to narrow up the tribes dwelling between the Cas¬
pian and the Euxine, the Polish Jews and other
Hebrew emigrants, who have followed in the wake
of the aggressors, have infused their traditional
notions, and in some respects assimilated the re¬
ligious views of the people in these reg’ions to
the Judaism of Europe. The introduction of
modern manuals of Judaism has reduced, in some
measure, the characteristic antiquity of the peo¬
ple : but it still stands out to the perceptive eye,
broad, clear, and distinct,—a state of things, in
customs, rites, turn of thought, and manners,
leading the inquirer up to more primitive times.
PERSONAL NARRATIVE. 41

And although the Jews in the districts in ques¬


tion are a poor and a weak people, to those con¬
versant with Hebrew antiquities, and relishing
simplicity and unsophistication, especially on mat¬
ters of such importance as religion, the subject
opens up a field of inquiry and meditation, em¬
bracing the widest range possible of what is
gratifying to the mind and consoling to the
spirit. History, philosophy wisely tempered,
philology, biblical research, prophecy, may upon
this subject be brought to bear; and in the hands
of able and dispassionate men, a flood of light
may be thrown upon the question of the fate of
the tribes of Israel, much to the instruction and
comfort of the Christian Church. Circumstances,
however, compel me at the present time to be
brief: I would simply caution those who may be
led to investigate this subject, to come to it in
simplicity, and divested of the prejudices resulting
from foregone conclusions ; also to drink deeply
from a well which few scholars linger long at.
It is not that of learning merely, but of Hebrew
learning. In fact, there is an intellectual as well
as a spiritual necessity imposed upon the inquirer,
to become on this subject a Jew. Like the dialects
of a country, or the varied habits of the same
42 PERSONAL NARRATIVE.

people in the same kingdom, which only the


resident can appreciate, but which are lost upon
the visitor ; so in the Jewish world there are marks
and distinctions, habits and customs, social diver¬
sities and religious signs, which arrest the Hebrew,
but would pass for nothing with a Gentile.
It remains for me to say a few words on the
country in which my researches were pursued,
where this peculiar portion of the family of Israel
are located.

THE COUNTRY OF THE REMNANT.

Daghistan, on the west coast of the Caspian


Sea, lies between the rivers Koisin and Rubas.
It is about one hundred and thirty-four miles in
length, by between thirty and forty in breadth.
It is almost entirely mountainous, as its name,
Daghistan, implies, the plain that runs along the
shore being a narrow strip. It is usually divided
into the following small states, namely, Lesgestan,
Schamgal, the khanship of Derbund, and the
domain of Tabasseran. Lesgestan is a stupendous
PERSONAL NARRATIVE. 43

range of mountains running in a south-easterly


direction, of great length, but of inconsiderable
breadth, and forming the whole north-east frontier
of Georgia. The inhabitants are a wild savage
banditti, divided into different tribes, whose habi¬
tations are secluded in the depths of the mountains,
on the loftiest summits, or on the most frightful pre¬
cipices. The country is rugged and impracticable ;
the soil is scanty j and the level ground being
insufficient to enable the proprietor to raise the
means of subsistence, he increases the surface to
the very summit of the heights by graduated
terraces. These rude tribes of the mountains are
the terror and scourge of all the neighbouring-
countries, as they sally down from the mountains,
laying waste villages, and carrying off or murder¬
ing the inhabitants. The other districts are of the
same mountainous character; that of Tabasseran
is covered with wood ; but the valleys are beauti¬
ful and fertile. The greater part of the country
is still terra incognita to the traveller, especially
the region indicated as the abode of the remnant
in question. It has been the scene of the strife of
the three great empires, namely, Russia, Turkey,
and Persia, and is divided between them, and has
consequently received less attention than some
others equally little known.
44 PERSONAL NARRATIVE.

The Russians, as I remarked before, have con¬


tracted the limits of the independent tribes be¬
tween the Euxine and the Caspian ; and, accord¬
ing to the working of that colossal and dangerous
power, have largely succeeded in doing so. But
to reduce them to real subjection is beyond the
power even of Russia. Nearly half the country
of the Alkhar is marked as subject to Russia, on
the maps of these provinces ; but, in fact, the
garrison of Sookoom-kuluah live as in a besieged
city, and their authority is acknowledged no
further than their guns can reach. Swaneti, too,
has the same mark of subjection; though it is
well known that the Swani confine themselves to
the neighbourhood of the perpetual snows of
Elburg, in order not to compromise their liberty.
Two passes also, through the mountain, are
marked as Russian soil ; but not even the weekly
mail is sent through that of Dariel, without an
escort amounting sometimes to a hundred soldiers,
two field-pieces, and several Cossacks. If an oc¬
casional traveller wishes to try the pass of Der-
bund, which is in Daghistan, he is not considered
safe without a similar guard.
The length of Daghistan from north to south,
but more especially towards the south, is guarded
PERSONAL NARRATIVE. 45

by the fierce and sanguinary Lesghies. Seen


even upon the crowded thoroughfares of Tiflis,
(which presents a curious spectacle of mingled
nations,) the dark Lesghy, with his two-edged
kama, is an object of repugnance and terror.
But that fierce people, in their own precincts, are
the terror of the surrounding provinces. So per-
severingly did they resist the power of Persia,
that a proverb is current, “ If any king of Persia
is a fool, let him march against the Lesghies."
Such is their predatory and blood-thirsty disposi¬
tion, that the Russians, instead of residing and
having military posts amongst them, station
troops along their frontiers, to prevent them from
pillaging the adjacent territories. That the rem¬
nant in question, locked up in these solitudes,
should preserve the institutions of their fathers,
strikingly illustrates the inevitable necessity which
Divine Providence has laid upon this people to
be his witnesses in every land, even in exile and
dispersion. Lo, the people shall dwell alone, and
shall not he reckoned among the nations! When
we look at the character of the tribes by which
they are surrounded, and the hordes in the midst
of which they live, there is a convincing proof
of their preservation for some important end.
46 PERSONAL NARRATIVE.

The Lesghies are a bigoted Moslem race. The


mountaineers are a nondescript mixture, whose
religion is a compound of Mahommedanism,
Christianity, and Paganism.
The government of the Caucasus has its
capital at Tiflis, but extends to the north of the
mountain from which it takes its name; and
embraces there a tract extending from the Cas¬
pian to the Black Sea.
The Jews of Daghistan have lived there from
time immemorial, and are on the best terms with
the Nomadic hordes of the country. They tra¬
verse the country, and amongst these fierce
tribes, in peace and safety.
The other Jews, scattered in the regions be¬
tween the seas in question, may be considered,
both by phisiognomy and characteristics in their
worship, to belong to the same branch of the
family of Israel as the remnant in question.
To none of them, however, do the proofs which
follow exclusively apply, but to those Jews
found in Daghistan, and amongst the Lesghy
tribes.
The Lesghy tribes affirm themselves to be de¬
scended from the tribe of Dan: and certainly
their physiognomy and character assimilate in
PERSONAL NARRATIVE. 47

many respects to the Hebrew family. Yet more


than this, the characteristic feature of the tribe
to which they affiliate themselves, contained in
Jacob’s prophetic description, Dan shall be a
serpent by the way; an adder in the path, that
bitetli the horses’ heels, so that his rider shall fall
backwards, is strikingly illustrated in the habits
of this horde, who are the terror of the surround¬
ing provinces, and who exterminate the mounted
Cossacks exactly in the way specified in the
prophetic description of the tribe of Israel in
question.

The Lesghies acknowledge the Jews to be


the original inhabitants of the mountains; although
they themselves appear of the same stock, and
descended from one common parent, as far as
outward appearance goes.
48

MANNERS, CUSTOMS, AND RELIGIOUS CERE¬


MONIES OF THE JEWS OF DAGHISTAN.

OBSERVANCE OF FEASTS-THE PASSOVER.

Driven from their native land, dependent for


centuries on the caprice of nations having no
sympathy with them, force, persuasion, and op¬
pression, have been alike ineffectual in order to
compel the Jewish people to forego obedience to
the commands of the Law. The edict of Adrian
forbade the Jews from approaching within sight
of Jerusalem, which was cruelty indeed, but not
to be equalled to that of the laws# of Ricazed
in Spain, which forbade the Jews to celebrate
the passover on the fourteenth day of any month,

* 1 Lex Visigoth, lib. xii. tit. 5. Ne Jtidcei mone suo


celebrent paschu.
THE PASSOVER. 49

or to observe any of their feasts and holydays


at the stated times :—a law renewed and con¬
firmed by the council of Toledo.* The same
spirit dictated the law of Justinian, which for¬
bade the Jews to celebrate the passover before
the Christians. However, amidst the overwhelm¬
ing power of their Gentile conquerors, and the
teeming population of the lands where they have
been scattered, the feasts of the Jews have been
rigidly kept: and the season of the paschal lamb,
once slain in Egypt, is the time to arouse
from slumber all the natural feelings of the
Israelites.

The feast is generally called by the Jews


npDn jrr Hag Ha Pasack; the remnant in Dag-
histan call it NrrPD nDD Pas Ha Pscha; the ob¬
servance of which is commenced on the fourteenth
day of jd*3 Nisan, (the new moon of April,)
when they remove all leaven out of their houses;
and between sunset and twilight oany ja Ben
Ar-beim, the master of the house, takes a kid or
lamb, cuts it across the neck, receives the blood
into a basin, and sprinkles it on every door¬
post. (Exodus xii. 7.) The animal is then
roasted and eaten with bitter herbs, all the males
* Council Toledo, xii. Can. 9.

E
50 THE PASSOVER.

in the house sitting down to the feast, but no


Gentile is permitted that evening to come near
their dwelling. It is eaten in the most retired
part of their houses; those who are immediately
contiguous to the Mussulmans repair to celebrate
the feast in the mountains, or amongst uncultivated
places, where they are not likely to be intruded
upon. This would appear to have been the an¬
cient practice amongst the Jews before the cap¬
tivity, similar to that enjoined in Egypt, (Deute¬
ronomy xvi. 2—-6,) before the temple was built.
1 he Ten Tribes, after the revolt of Jeroboam, com¬
memorated this feast in their own houses or in
the high places, not resorting to Jerusalem, which
was the only place appointed in the Mosaic law
for sacrifices to be offered. It is remarkable that
during the Babylonish captivity we have no re¬
cord of the Jews eating the Paschal Lamb. And
since the destruction of Jerusalem the lamb is
substituted by a portion of meat roasted on the
coals by the Jews generally. The Caucasian
Jews are the only ones who observe this institu¬
tion in its primitive requirements, that is, in re¬
spect of actually and fully sacrificing the Paschal
Lamb. And their doing it in other than “ the
place which the Lord God” appointed, is a proof
THE PASSOVER. 51

conclusive to my mind of their affinity to, and


descent from, the revolted tribes.
The following day begins the feast of un¬
leavened bread, niJfon an Hag-Ha-Mats oth, which
they keep for six days. This seems to contradict
the following passages of Scripture, “ Seven
days shall ye eat unleavened bread,” Exodus xii.
15. (See alsoxiii. 6, 7 ; xxiii. 15. Leviticus xxiii.
6. Numbers xxviii. 17.) Josephus assigns eight
days for this feast. (See Antiquities, 2 vol. xv. I,)
and seven days to the feast of Passover. (Anti¬
quities, 3 vol. x. 59, xiii. 3.) This, however, is
perfectly reconcileable with Scripture. The eight
days which Josephus allows for this feast of un¬
leavened bread, includes the fourteenth day of the
month at its commencement, as mentioned in the
above references; and the six davs of the feast
of unleavened bread observed by the Jews of
Daghistan is according to the passage in Deute¬
ronomy xvi. 8, “ Six days shalt thou eat un¬
leavened bread, and on the seventh day shall be
a solemn assembly,” which of course does not in¬
clude the evening of the fourteenth day, when the
paschal lamb is eaten. To this part of Scripture
Josephus refers in the second book of his Antiqui-
e 2
THE PASSOVER.

ties : but the Jews in general not observing the


paschal feast in its primitive institution, as al¬
ready alluded to, make no distinction between
the first and last day of this solemn convocation ;
and therefore the differences arise chiefly on ac¬
count of the abolition of sacrifice.
In this feast the Jews of Daghistan do not ob¬
serve the ceremony of pnn Beur Chamatz, or
np>*n pnn the search after leavened bread the even¬
ing before the passover, like the Jews elsewhere.
They do not remove the utensils which they have
used throughout the year, nor do they immerse in
water for three days those which are to be used at
the feast. Elsewhere all domestic utensils undergo
a careful ablution ; not so among these.
The book nos bw m:n "idd is unknown to them,
which contains minute directions to be observed
in the eating of the paschal lamb. They have
no cup of benediction : but after supper all the
males stand up, turn their faces towards the east,
and commence chanting the 113th, 114th, and
116th Psalms. These psalms are particularly
used throughout the feast, except the 113th,
which is omitted during the six days; in which
they differ from their brethren scattered else¬

where, who use the great Hallel V?n-


THE PASSOVER. 63

They observe with great scrutiny the eating


of unleavened bread during the six days, con¬
sidering an infraction of this to merit death.
That sentence in the law j-ro translated in the
English version “ to be cut offnot being ex¬
pressive enough of the signification which they,
in common with their brethren elsewhere, under¬
stand to be conveyed by it. They abstain from
all labour on the first day of the feast and the
eighth day of the convocation ; but follow their
rural occupation in the intermediate time, (ex¬
cepting, of course, the Sabbath.) On the eighth
day they repair to some locality in the mountains,
near a small building, where they go through
the same religious ceremony recorded in the ac¬
count of their celebration of the Feast of Taber¬
nacles.*
* Reference regarding the customs and observances of
the passover amongst the Jews elsewhere: Hilchath
Chametz; Arbah Turim; Orach Chaim; Ball Aruch;
Hilchath Kiddush Hachodesh; Hilchath Jour Tov; Hil¬
chath Psachim ; En Jacob ; Berachath.
54

THE FEAST OF WEEKS.

rnjnntwi Jrr.

The second feast observed by the Jews of the


mountains is the Feast of Weeks.
This they commence p>j EHin it/frO the new
moon of April, until the sixth day of the new
moon of June, ‘jvd, on which occasion the elders
in the various villages collect certain tithes of
the people. On the sixth day, in the morning,
the former assemble with the latter near a moun¬
tain, and after a salutation they ascend to the top,
and there deposit their gifts. The people then
gather round their elders, and burn incense pro¬
fusely ; after which the latter begin with a loud
voice to sing,—Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God
is one Lord. TrrN mrv mn>
When all the people respond nrrx inn. One !
one ! one ! an emphatic affirmation of the unity of
Jehovah. Several portions of the law are then
read, after which a fire is kindled, and a sheaf of
barley laid up from last harvest is thrown into it
and consumed. They then sit down to eat and
drink, crying out continually, nna mn> God is one,
FEAST OF WEEKS. 55

nrm pm Heaven and earth is one. btnw*


nnx Dy, All Israel is one people.
The Jews generally throughout the world ob¬
serve the feast for two days ; those of Daghistan
but one. The former was adopted upon the
opinion of the Rabbis. (See Talmud: Treatise,
folio 86,) in which we find mention made of the
controversies which the subject has excited (un¬
known to the Jews of the mountains.) Indeed it
is still an undecided question coucerning the
original observance of the new moon.
This feast is observed by the Jews elsewhere,
in commemoration of the giving of the law on
Mount Sinai.
In Daghistan it commemorates the reaping of
the harvest by the Israelites when in their own
land. How far the intention of the original in¬
stitution is preserved by the latter, reference to
Leviticus xxiii. will decide. Nor do they, as their
brethren elsewhere, introduce this feast by the ob¬
servance of a strict watch. (See Gemarrah, for the

feast of Pentecost.*)

* Prayers of Pentecost:—Talmud Shabbath ; Hilchath


Talmud Torah ; Hilchoth Shevnath ; Medrosh Rabba.
56

rwnn dv

FEAST OF TRUMPETS.

This feast is generally called by the Jews else¬


where natwi twn the beginning or the head of the
year. The Jews in Daghistan call it dv the
feast of Trumpets. It is observed on the first
day of the new moon in October ntrn (Num¬
bers xxiv.) On this day they assemble together
and blow a ram’s horn, recite allegories, read a
portion of the law of Moses, and abstain from
labour as on the Sabbath day.

By other Jews on the first day of the month


Elel, which is the new moon in September,
preparation is made for the new year, which is
considered a day of judgment, in which the des¬
tiny of each individual is fixed. The mountain
Jews of Daghistan simply regard it as a day of
the blowing of trumpets ; nor do they sound the
rams’ horns every day in the month like their
brethren, but only on the day of the feast itself.
They are ignorant of the book mn*?D from
which their biethren scattered abroad read every
morning, eight days before the feast of Trumpets.
FEAST OF TRUMPETS. 57

They do not, as the others, make an especial con¬


fession of sin at this season, and they are quite
ignorant of D'trm d*d> the days of terror observed
by their brethren. The practice of /tdk nnp
visiting the graves of their fathers is not followed
by them ; nor have they any •jiiT’S myo liturgy for
that purpose, as provided by the Gemarrah.
(Taanith, folio 16.) They have no prayers called
mn^D “iTD* Their dress exhibits no difference
from that used on other feast-days. The cere¬
mony called casting away their sins, so
strictly observed by other Jews, founded on that
passage in Micah, (vii. 19,) “ Thou wilt cast
all their sins into the depths of the sea,” is
not practised by the Jews of Daghistan. An¬
other observance is equally unknown, so common
elsewhere. This is rar^n mtyy the ten days of
repentance, rigidly observed by the Jews after the
new year until the day of atonement. They do
not call the sabbath preceding the day of atone¬
ment ruttf nor is any one sabbath dis¬
tinguished from the rest throughout the year.*

* Regarding the laws for the new year, and the obser¬
vances of the modern Jews, see Hilchath Rash Hashanah;
Hilchoth Teshunah ; Shulchan Aruck ; Prayers for the new
year.
58

THE DAY OF ATONEMENT.

“TID'D Dl>

This day is observed on the tenth of the seventh


month nwn which is in October. Males, females,
and even infants at the breast, abstain on this
solemn occasion from food of any kind, and even
the cattle are not fed. The fast commences at
sunset on the evening of the ninth, and termi¬
nates next day at the same time.
The rules laid down in the law of Moses are
followed in Daghistan. (.Leviticus xxiii. 27, xxv.
9.) They read portions of scripture from Levi¬
ticus xvi., Exodus xxiii., Numbers xxix.
There is a custom observed by the remnant in
these mountains, which I am not aware is ob¬
served anywhere else. On the morning of the
day of atonement, the males assemble together to
afflict themselves with various penances, and give
expression to their feelings in sighs, and lamenta¬
tions, and groans. After about two hours spent
in this discipline, they proceed to a well or cistern
and draw water, pouring it on their heads and
DAY OF ATONEMENT. 59

crying mn,!? mn^. This occupies from two to


three hours, when they cover themselves with dust
and ashes, and return to the place of convocation,
continuing their lamentations during the whole
day. At sunset they proceed to the well or cistern,
again draw water, and pour it on their heads
three times, crying, msa "HDD, forgiven! for¬
given! This finished, they dress in their best
apparel, instruments of music strike up cheerful
sounds, and running into each other’s arms, em¬
bracing and kissing, they cry out forgiven ! for¬
given ! They return to their families from whom
they have been separated, and the feast termi¬
nates in mirth and gladness.
What they understand by the outpouring of
the water, I was not able to learn. That it is an
ancient and scriptural custom, may be seen from the
first book of Samuel (vii. 6, 7,) where, on the oc¬
casion of a humiliation, something similar is prac¬
tised. “ And they gathered together in Mizpeh,
and drew water, and poured it out before the
Lord, and fasted on that day, and said there, We
have sinned against the Lord.” No doubt it is
a symbol, which, as it is twice repeated, signifies
in the one the overflowing of grief for sin, and of
60 DAY OF ATONEMENT.

gratitude in the heart for the pardon of it, to the


Lord.

They have no other ceremonies on that or on


the previous day. They do not observe the reli¬
gious custom of rinDD “HD atoning sacrifices,
considered of so much importance by their Jewish
brethren throughout the world : nor do they pay
nnDD |VTS the redemption of the atoning sacrifice.
They have no tribunal before which the Jews
elsewhere express their sorrow for offences against
their neighbours. The custom of eating before
the fast is unknown; as also the making of two
wax candles, one called notwn 13 candle for the
soul, the other “iiS'D dv i: candle for the day of

atonement; and they have no traditions what¬


ever generally connected with this great fast.*

* Reference regarding the observances of the Jews of


Europe, see Order of the Day of Atonement:—Orach
Chaim ; Shulchan Aruck. Prayer for the day of Atonement.
61

FEAST OF TABERNACLES.

mDDn an

The last and great feast is that of tabernacles,


rvDD which they begin on the fifteenth day ot
non October. This is a feast of great re¬
joicing with them. During seven days they
remove from their abodes and live in huts. The
first day is kept holy like the sabbath. They as¬
semble in the mountains and proceed in proces¬
sion with various fruits, branches of trees, &c.
During the feast they follow their several em¬
ployments. On the eve of the seventh day of
the festival, they resort again to their booths and
consecrate a new feast, constituting the eighth
day of the feast of Tabernacles. This is called
by them *pNn an the feast of the gathering of
harvest (See Exodus xxiii. 16; xxxiv. 22.) Early
in the morning of this day, every one strong
enough to carry a pitcher of water from the cis¬
tern in the village used for sacred purposes, fol¬
low the elders, with the people, to the mountains.
The former collect from the latter stalks of corn,
62 FEAST OF TABERNACLES.

which they bind and constitute into a sheaf.


They go in procession with great solemnity, and
deposit the sheaf in a building used for sacred
purposes. Music, allegories, and the reading of
the law succeed each other, the people then
gather round the elders and unite in a loud chant.
The latter proceed to take the water from the peo¬
ple, pouring it out, first in the direction of their
dwelling places, saying, “ Do thou pour out thy
blessing upon us!” then, turning towards those
places where their enemies or oppressors are
supposed to exist, they pour out again, crying to
the Lord, “ Pour out thine indignation upon all
the heathen, that they may know that thou art
the Gocl of Israel.”
What the ceremony of pouring out water may
here signify is to be ascertained from the Talmud.

3 oof rain, for the Jews throughout


the world use this day a prayer called Dtwn n^in
prayer for rain, which is a part of the liturgy, and
is repeated in the second section of the eighteen
prayers until Easter rmy The eighth day,
called by the Jews spNmrr, is strictly kept accord¬
ing to the divine command in Numbers xxix. 35.
They do not keep min nriDitf the feast of the
law, nor do they observe the sixth day of the feast
THE FESTIVAL OF INAUGURATION. G3

called Nnn rtjynsnni the great Hosanna, see 2nd


Maccabees x. 7. They have not the procession
with jnrm citron, and palm-leaves, nor the
ceremony of the which our great master
Aben Esri says are symbols of the relation be¬
tween the Deity and the universe. They observe
only one day at the beginning, and one day at
the end, whilst the Jews throughout the world
observe two days at the beginning and two at
the end. They have no processions of the law,
nor the ceremonies of bridegrooms, to close and
to commence the reading of the law.
See Avadah Zarah—Gemarrah Berachoth ; Hil-
chath Yam Tov ; Orach Chaim ; The Mishna.

ninin.

THE FESTIVAL OF INAUGURATION.

This festival, which commemorates the rebuild¬


ing of the ter?iple, is celebrated by the Jews
throughout the world, and commences on the
25th day of the month Chisle, ^dd, and is kept for
eight days. The remnant in Daghistan, however,
G4 THE FESTIVAL OF INAUGURATION.

are so much in ignorance concerning the past,


that they do not even know the meaning of the
word riDUn lights or inauguration. This is remark¬
able ; for the modern Jews affix to this feast ano¬
ther and very solemn origin ; namely, that it is
in commemoration of Jacob’s wrestling with the
angel, and of his passing over the brook Jabbok.
From the testimony of Josephus, however, we may
learn, that it has no remoter origin than the time
of the Maccabees, when the temple was inaugu¬
rated on the 25th day of the third month, pre¬
cisely three years after its profanation and pillage
by Antiochus.
The following is the account in the Talmud
on which this feast rests. (Treatise, Sabbath,

chap, ii.)
“ When every preparation for the inauguration
was completed, no consecrated oil could be found
for the sacred lights, and the scrupulous Judas
justly feared to contaminate the purity of the
temple by using oil which had been defiled by
idolaters. In this strait, a small jar of oil, with
the seal of a former high priest, still inviolate, was
found ; and though the quantity which it con¬
tained was barely sufficient once to light the
sacred lamps, yet, by the special blessing of the
FAST DAYS. 05

Deity, it proved sufficient for the consumption of


a whole week, during which period new oil was
obtained and consecrated.”

This fully proves the origin of this feast, and


explains the term lights by which it is sometimes
known. The ignorance of the Jews of Dagliistan
on the subject proves, in this as in other cases,
that their customs and religious ceremonies have
been handed down from a period prior, in this
instance at least, to the time of the Maccabees.

DniD

THE FEAST OF PURIM.

This festival is observed with great strictness


by the Jews on the fourteenth and fifteenth days
of Adar tin. It is also observed amongst the Jews
of Daghistan. It commemorates the deliverance of
that people from the sanguinary devices of
Haman. The decree of Ahasuerus, it will be
remembered, extended over one hundred and
twenty-seven provinces, and doubtless the de¬
struction contemplated by the Jews’ enemy was
not confined to those of the latter captivities, but
F
66 FAST DAYS.

to that nation wherever the seed of Jacob was


found. But great differences exist in the manner
of celebrating it between Jews generally and
those locked up in the mountains on the Caspian.
They do not observe the fast day -inoy rviyn> like
their brethren elsewhere. The spirit and intent
of it have been greatly departed from by the
former. By the latter the institution is observed.

FAST DAYS.

The following fast days are observed throughout


the world by the Hebrew nation; but form no
part of the religious observances of the remnant
in Daghistan. The seasons of humiliation pre¬
scribed by the law of Moses are the smallest con¬
stituent of the religious observances of the He¬
brew nation. In consequence of natural trans¬
gression the number of fast days increased. This
serves to show the delight which the Lord has in
the happiness and joy of his creatures. The
Mosaic economy was eminently social; and if it
has lost this characteristic in any degree, the
FAST DAYS. 67

fault is not in the dispensation but in those who


interpreted and altered it.

The following days are observed by the Jews


with the solemnity and strictness almost of the
day of atonement.

1st. mra nynttf, which is the seventeenth


of the fourth month, (viz. July,) instituted in com¬
memoration of the destruction of Jerusalem at
the period of the great captivity, recorded in the
book of the prophet Jeremiah Hi. 6, 7 ; Zechariah
viii. 19.

2ndly. nto rwn, which is the fourth day of the


fifth month, (viz. August,) appointed to com¬
memorate the burning of the Temple ; for which
refer to Zechariah vii. 3, viii. 19.
3rdly. dw, which is on the third day of the
seventh month, (or October,) a fast appointed,
in memory of Gedaliah whose death it com¬
memorates ; recorded in the prophet Jeremiah
xli. 4; Zechariah vii. 5.
4thly. rOD3 mttfy, which is the tenth day of
the tenth month, (January,) a fast instituted to
keep in remembrance the attack on Jerusalem, to
which there is reference in Zechariah’s prophecy
(viii. 19.)
None of the preceding fasts are known or ob-
f 2
68 THE SABBATH.

served in Daghistan. Nor have they any but the


great national one preserved in the law of Moses,
the day of atonement. I except, of course, those
occasional humiliations which they prescribe for
themselves on any casual affliction or calamity.
This they do. The absence, however, from the
roll, of the fasts observed by the Jews elsewhere,
is a striking proof of the habits of the Jewish
family previous to the captivity.*

THE SABBATH.

The Sabbath is the most remarkable observance


of the Jewish people ; one which distinguishes
and identifies them wherever they are found. If
the Jew, in his own person, fulfils his high calling
of witness of the existence and unity of Jehovah,
the return of the seventh day emphatically re¬
minds every nation in the midst of whom that
people are scattered, of their sacerdotal character.

* References concerning the laws of the fast days for


modern Jews, see Hilchath Taanioth; Hilchath Tishah
Baav Kinath, or prayers for fast days.
THE SABBATH. 69

—“ Verily my Sabbaths ye shall keep ; for it is a


sign between me and you, throughout your gene¬
rations, that ye may know that I am the Lord that
doth sanctify you” (Exodus xxxi. 13.) The sim¬
plicity and beauty of this institution is nowhere
better illustrated than in contemplating Israel in
his tents in the wilderness, gathering his manna,
and enjoying himself in his God. Much of this
simplicity has been destroyed by the consequences
resulting from putting the traditions of men in
'.he place of the commandments of God. In
Daghistan we have, as it were, a glimpse of what
the Sabbath was to the ancient Jews. It is not
commenced, as elsewhere, by ablutions, cutting
of nails, reading the Songs of Solomon and the
lessons usual for the seventh day, and preparation
of the food,—the routine usually followed. It is
simply begun at sunset of the sixth day by ex¬
tinguishing the fires and putting out the lights.
(Exodus, ch. xxxv. v. 3, Ye shall not kindle a
fire on the Sabbath.) They remain in the coldest
and darkest weather without these; and have no
recourse, as other Jews, to the services of Gen¬
tiles to supply them with these ; preserving in
their own persons the letter, and through stran¬
gers destroying the spirit of the law. The ce-
70 THE SABBATH.

remony of consecrating or blessing the light,


and taking a portion from the dough or bread
nbn to be used on the seventh day is not
known to them. Their sanctification of the
Sabbath may be said to be illustrated by
them, as in those words, “Therefore he giveth
you on the sixth day the bread of two
days : abide ye every man in his place on the
seventh day.” (Exodus xvi. 29.) “ If thou
turn away thy foot from doing thy pleasure
on my holy day, and call the Sabbath a delight,
the holy of the Lord, honourable; and shalt ho¬
nour him, not doing thine own ways, nor finding
thine own pleasure, nor speaking thine own words:
then shalt thou delight thyself in the Lord.”
(Isaiah lvii. 13, 14.)
It is remarkable, that as they are quite igno¬
rant of the oral law and traditions followed by
the Jews elsewhere, and which enumerates thirty-
nine different species of occupations, from which
they consider themselves prohibited, (vide Talmud,
Sabbath, or Treatise, folio 73,) the Jews of
Daghistan observe all these prohibitions except
the last. This last is called or nn>y;

which is a reservation of a permission to carry


loads from one house to another on the Sab-
THE SABBATH. 71

bath-day. It is allowed by the following cere¬


mony, practised by the Jews, being observed.
A cake which is called zirry is consecrated
and suspended in the synagogue. A string or
rope is extended from each corner of a street
where Jews live; and this is deemed to consti¬
tute those embraced within the extremities of
the nn>y one family ; thereby evading the penalty
resulting from the prohibitory injunction.
If we refer to the prophet Jeremiah, (xvii.
21—27,) we find this is in direct opposition to
the word of Jehovah—u Thus saith the Lord,
Take heed to yourselves, and bear no burden on
the Sabbath-day, nor bring it in by the gates of
Jerusalem : neither carry forth a burden out of
your houses on the Sabbath-day, neither do ye
any work, but hallow ye the Sabbath-day, as I
commanded your fathers/’ Thus, in this impor¬
tant respect, the Jews of Daghistan preserve
the institution according to its appointment before
the prophet in question was commanded to reprove
the Jewish people for infringing thus its sanctifica¬
tion, which was after the captivity of the lost tribes.
They further differ from the Talmudists in the
following observances. The Jews throughout the
72 THE SABBATH.

world abstain from those duties which necessity


and mercy justify,—such as feeding cattle, milk¬
ing, &c.

The day is to them a day of rest, and peace,


and cheerfulness,—they dance, sing, and play on
instruments. These are of a religious nature,
expressive of religious emotions; but are ex¬
pressly forbidden by the oral law or Talmud.
They spend the forenoon of the Sabbath in the
way described in the following scriptures, which
serve to illustrate their religious habits on that
day, better than any description of mine,— See
Exodus; also 2 Samuel vi. 15. Psalm lxviii.
25, 26 ; cxlix. 3 ; cl. 4.

The afternoon is spent in a very profitable way,


quite unlike the Jews elsewhere. They resort to
the dwellings of their elders and of religious men,
who sit in their places of abode to receive the
visits of those who come to them, and instruct
them in the doctrines of their scriptures, and make
allegories of the law of Moses. This custom of
resorting to holy men on the Sabbath-day is a
very ancient one, as may be gathered from 2 Kings
iv. 23, practised long before the great captivities.
They surround these good men until sunset, who
THE SABBATH. 73

pronounce the Sabbath to be ended the women


kiss the hem of their garments, and the men the
hands of the elders. They then disperse to their
own dwellings and resume their occupations.
They know of no n^*nn, which means conse¬
crating the weeks, as their brethren elsewhere
after the evening prayer in the synagogue.
The consecration of the Sabbath on the sixth day
evening, is another observance worthy of remark.
After sunset, the whole family meet together in
one room, when the head of the family, after a
short prayer, reads the following passages of
scripture the first chapter of Genesis, and the
first three verses of chapter the second; Exodus xx.
verses 3 and 11 ; and then concludes by reading
with great solemnity Exodus xvi. from the 22nd
to the 30th verses.
This proves the consecration of the Sabbath
prior to the time of Moses, and not as some would
affirm, that it is an institution merely commemo¬
rative of the deliverance from Egyptian bondage.
The Sabbath consecrated by the children of Israel
throughout the world, is that day sanctified from
the beginning of the creation ; the abrogation of

* Rabbinic System kilckoth Shabbatli.


74 FUNERALS.

which I have never been able to see. I refer the


reader to Josephus against Appian* for the ori¬
ginal institution of this holy day.f

FUNERALS.

A person when dying is visited by all his friends


and relations to take leave of him. The elders of
the place congratulate the dying man that his
journey is at an end, and his pilgrimage accom¬
plished on the face of the earth. They encourage
him by reciting allegories and playing upon in¬
struments, which they believe assist the spirit in
its migration from the body to the invisible world.
During the period of a last illness, they read to
those about to depart the fifteenth chapter of
Genesis, fifteenth verse, containing the Lord’s in¬
timation to Abraham of his dismission from the
body : Genesis xxxv. 25,—the mourning of Jacob
for his son Joseph; xlix.29,—the injunction of the

* Antiquities, b. 11, p. 39.


f Difference of observance of the Sabbath, see the Rabbi¬
nical Laws,—Arbab Turitn ; Orach Chaim ; Hilchoth Shab-
bath.
TREATMENT OF THE CORPSE. 75

same patriarch in anticipation of his decease;


also Numbers xx. 24—26, and Deut. xxxii. 50,
wherein Moses and Aaron are reminded of their
mortality, the object evidently being to impress
the dying man with the solemn truth that it is
appointed unto all men once to die; that his is no
extraordinary case,—“the fathers, where are they?
and the prophets, do they live for ever?” In the
hour of dissolution and in the very article of
death, they resound in the ears of the dying man,
—“ Hear, O Israel, The Lord thy God is

One Lord !” They cry aloud several times, “ Go,


sleep with thy fathers.” They have no confession,
no uncleanness, no lights, like their brethren else¬
where.

TREATMENT OF THE CORPSE.

The nearest male relations close the eyes of the


corpse with a bandage; they then wash it, dress
it in clean linen, and lay it in a dark room. They
then proceed to seek a place of sepulture. In
carrying the body to the grave, the children,
friends, relations, (male and female,) take the
76 TREATMENT OF THE CORPSE.

lead in the ceremony;—the corpse being borne


by the elders of the place. A woman and a
young man precede the body singing praises,
with the accompaniment of instrumental music,
until they arrive at the place of interment, when
at once the scene, hitherto animated, changes
into one of the deepest affliction and mourning;
this is a very ancient practice, and might be
traced as far back as the days of Jacob. (See
Genesis xlvi. 4.)

A great lamentation is made, during which the


women smite themselves with their right hand on
the breast. When this is over, they lower the body
into the grave, dug three or four feet deep, during
which time the female relatives of the deceased tear
their hair and wound their faces with their nails.
The applications thus practised are not peculiar
to the Jewish people elsewhere. They are derived
by those of Daghistan from early times, which
may be seen by consulting Genesis 1. 3 ; Deut.
xxxiv. 8 ; 1 Samuel xxxi. 13 ; Amos v. 16, where
mention is made of those skilful in lamentation
being called to wailing. Also in Jeremiah ix. 20,
where it is written, “ Hear the word of the Lord,
O ye women, and let your ear receive the word of
his mouth, and teach your daughters wailing, and
TREATMENT OF THE CORPSE. 77

every one her neighbour lamentation ; for death is


come up into our windows,” &c. Tiie corpse
being then interred without coffin or any other
ceremony, they depart to their houses. For
forty days (Sabbaths excepted) their neighbours
occasionally bring them food, which is called
Dtin on1? the bread of bitterness. During those
days the elders visit the mourners, to whom
the latter repeat, Alas, alas, my father, my
bj'other, my kinsman! They then indulge their
grief and sorrow.*
On the fortieth day, (excepting always Sab¬
baths and feast days,) all the relations and friends
of the deceased go to the sepulchre, and carry
thither a stone or piece of wood, which is set up
as a monument. They depart in silence to the
house of the deceased. Their neighbours and
friends being gathered together, each one pro¬
duces some provision, and they sit down to eat.
The elders of the place hand the mourners a cup of

* The modern Jews do not allow females to follow a


funeral or touch a male corpse, which they consider unclean,
nor do they permit women to visit the burial-ground during
their monthly period, of which custom the Jews in the Cas¬

pian are ignorant.


78 TREATMENT OF THE CORPSE.

wine or other liquor, which they call d*o mn did


the cup of consolation, saying, “ Take, drink,
and remember thy grief no more.”
For scripture illustrations of the antiquity of
these customs, reference may be made to 2 Samuel
iii. 35, and Jeremiah xvi. 4—7, where the pro¬
phet threatens that for the sins of the people,
“ Neither shall men tear themselves for them in
mourning, to comfort them for the dead; neither
shall men give them the cup of consolation to drink
for their father or for their mother.” Should
any young man die unmarried, the virgins put on
sackcloth, and ashes on their head, for forty days,
with great lamentation.
I was also informed, that the chiefs of the Jews,
when dying, command their bodies to be burnt.
This is held in great abhorrence by the Jews
throughout the world ; and yet it was practised
in the time of King Saul and King Asa; and for
great men not to be burned was considered a
sign of inferiority and disgrace. In proof of
which, I have only to refer the attentive reader to
the following scriptures: 2Chron. xvi. 14; xxi.19;
Jerem. xxxiv. 5; Amos vi. 10.
In respect of lamentation for the dead, they
are free from those ceremonies which characterise
DEFILEMENTS. 79

the modern Jews, from sitting seven days on the


ground, and burning a light in commemoration of
the death, as a fast observed by the children
throughout their lives. No daily prayers for
eleven months after the decease of a parent
called Dirv ttfnp, no cutting the garment called
J>np*

DEFILEMENTS.

After the birth of a son, the woman is unclean


for seven days ; and after the birth of a daughter,
for fourteen. This time is strictly observed with¬
out intercourse of the sexes.
In this respect they differ from the Jews else¬
where. The latter observe the days appointed
pi the law of Moses. Thus in Leviticus xii. 4, 5 :
“ And she shall then continue in the blood of her
purifying three-and-thirty days: she shall touch

* Regarding mourning and funerals among the Jews of


Europe, compare the Talmud—Hilchath Avel; Jorah Deah ;
Prayers for the Fasts; Rash Hashanah ; Daily Prayers;
Kaddish for the Deceased ; Prayers for the Feast of Taber¬
nacles ; Hilchath Chibbeth Hakever.
80 DEFILEMENTS

no hallowed thing, nor come unto the sanctuary,


until the days of her purifying be fulfilled. But if
she bear a maid child, then she shall be unclean
two weeks, as in her separation ; and she shall
continue in the blood of her purifying three score
and six days.” (Also Leviticus xv. 28.) This,
be it observed, however, is the time prescribed of
separation from holy things, from the sacrifices
of the Temple : nothing is said about matrimonial
connexion. The adoption of the lengthened
period, is one of those innovations which charac¬
terise the oral law; the contrast between which
and the written law, containing the primitive insti¬
tutions and customs, has this Popish mark upon
it,—that whereas the latter is moderate, wise, and
beneficent; the former is severe, ascetic, and dis¬
ciplinarian. (See the Book of Defilements.)
There is another proof that the Jews on
the Caspian are original observers. Women
during their monthly period, or when labouring
under the disease denominated an issue of
blood, are unclean, and are only separated
from their husbands for three instead of
seven days. They do not observe the ce¬
remonies attending the mpo customary amongst
the Jews throughout the world : nor are
MARRIAGE. 81

they so particular in attending the baths at the


proper time. They generally after three days
wash in their houses, and observe none of the for¬
mularies prescribed in the oral law.*

MARRIAGE.

Marriages are covenanted between the respec¬


tive parties desiring union, by their parents, or by
their guardians, or the elders of the place. Four
or five witnesses are assembled, before whom
everything is agreed and confirmed by oath ; after
which presents are given to the bride’s brother
or relations. For the scriptural antiquity of these
customs, reference may be made to the book of
Proverbs (ii. 17,) where the covenant is alluded
to ; also to 1 Samuel xviii. 2, 3, 6, where David is
required to present for the daughter of Saul to his
proposed father-in-law a certain dowry, or rather
a substitute for it.

* See Practice of Washing and Baptism of the Modern


Jews. Orach Chaim ; Hilchath Berachath ; Hilchath Maak-
haloth ; Hilchath Accum ; Talmud Satah ; Gomara Nidda.

G
82 MARRIAGE.

On the day of nuptials the bride visits the


bath and adorns herself in the richest dress and
most costly ornaments she possesses. Accom¬
panied by her female relations, she goes to the
house of the bridegroom. The father, or elders of
the place, take the right hand of the bride and
put it into the right hand of the bridegroom.
The latter takes a silver ring and puts it upon her
finger. The nuptial blessing is then pronounced,
and a numerous offspring invoked. This is the
simple ceremony, and the husband and wife sit
down to a feast. Genesis xxiv. 60, is an illus¬
tration answerable to the manners of the Caspian
Jews.
Adultery nny is never heard of. After the
marriage rite, they are visited by all their
neighbours, who salute them in the following
manner :—
nin> yon. Thou blessed of Jehovah !
yby mn» nmn. The blessing of Jehovah be
upon thee !
>rtN mrr. Be prospered, my Lord.
The bridegroom is saluted,
mrv mn- The Lord prosper with thee.
These salutations are quite peculiar to the an¬
cient Jews.
MARRIAGE. 83

Divorce* is not known amongst the Jews of


Daghistan.
They have not the absurd notion of the doc¬
trine of liberation as prescribed in Massecheth
Tebamoth Talmud, Moses Alschceh. They ob¬
serve the Mosaic institution, that if one of two
brethren die, and have no child, the wife of the
dead shall not marry a stranger. Her husband’s
brother takes her to him to wife as prescribed
in the law. (Deut. xxv. 5.) In case of refusal,
the wife of the deceased loosens her husband’s
brother’s shoe, and spits in his face, saying,
“ So shall it be done to that man that will not
build up his brother’s house.” They have no par¬
ticular shoe for that purpose like the modern
Jews.']' See Talmudical laws for marriages,
Eben Haezer and Maimonides, Tract. Nesuen.

* Doctrine of divorce. (Deut. xxiv. ].)—Arbak Turim;


Ibilchoth Gettin.

f See Rabbinic Laws for Divorce :—Arbah Turim ; Hil-


chath Gittin; Jad Hachazaka; Hilchath Gerushin; Gemara
Jbamoth; Aben Haezer.
84

nVo nnn

CIRCUMCISION.

Circumcision is considered by the Jews of Da-


ghistan, as of those everywhere else, as a right of
the highest and most indispensable obligation,
that it cannot be delayed a single day beyond the
appointed time, were the child even sick to death.
This differs from the practice of the Talmudists.
The manner of practising the rite is, however,
very different from the custom of the Jews else¬
where. It is as follows :—
They cut simply the foreskin, which is called
rfro mela; they have not the nyns. This fact
alone is sufficient to prove the high antiquity
of their descent. The nynD was instituted at the
time of the Maccabees. See Yore Deali andMaimo-
nides, tract. Mela. The Jews who took part in
the Grecian games, and contended for prizes in the
gymnastic exercises of that people, had to appear
naked amongst them. The laws of those games
required the competitors to be perfect in bodily
parts; and their national rite was a hindrance to
the Hebrew. By a process, however, the defect
CIRCUMCISION. 85

was remedied, the prepuce was restored, at least


partially, and they were thus enabled to enter the
lists. See Celsus, vol. viii. chap. 25. The second
operation, therefore, was instituted, which effec¬
tually prevented the restoration of the prepuce,
and thereby an effectual barrier was put in the
way of the Jews to take part in the heathen
games. (See Talmud, Sanhedrim Gemarra Sab¬
bath.) It is enjoined in the Talmud that the second
process must be observed. “ By saying n^D
to tf? itoo nynD nVi circumcision without is as
much as if there were no circumcision at all.”
(Gemarra Sabbath, sec. 13.)
That the r6'D after circumcision has been
practised, may be renewed, is proved from the
book of Joshua, who was commanded to cir¬
cumcise the people in the wilderness a second
time. In Daghistan it is by no means an un¬
usual thing to submit to the rite a second time.
In the operation they differ alike from the Mus¬
sulman (who also circumcises) and the Talmudic
Jews. The former draws the skin over and
presses the flesh, cutting as short as possible. The
latter, in addition, after the skin is cut, tears it
downwards, which prevents the possibility of its
growth again. The Jews of Daghistan simply
86 CIRCUMCISION.

perform the rite agreeably to the word of God,


(Genesis xvii. 12,) by cutting the foreskin which
hangs over the fleshy part.
The operation is generally performed by the
father in the presence of the elders of the place;
when they read a portion of the above chapter
and name the child. A feast concludes the cere¬
mony, in which, however, the women cannot par¬
ticipate.
By the above explanation, the apparently
unnatural operation of the nyns is accounted
for: and though it is a departure from the sim¬
plicity of the original institution, considering that
the object was to preserve it from evasion or in¬
fraction, some allowance is to be made for the
solicitude of the Talmudists, whose zeal, if en¬
listed in the higher requirements of the justice
and mercy and the love of God, would contribute
to raise the religious character of the nation to
that pre-eminence for which, doubtless, through
a peculiar and trying discipline, they are being
prepared.
They do not observe the consecration of the
wine after the circumcision of a child, as do their
brethren throughout the world. In administer¬
ing this rite, strangers will observe a vacant chair
CIRCUMCISION. 87

set during the operation of cutting. This the Tal¬


mudists design for the prophet Elijah, who is
supposed to be visibly present during the observ¬
ance. The Jews of Daghistan have no such no¬
tion, consequently there is no chair. They do
not observe the ceremony of pn T»T3 usually
attended to by their brethren elsewhere four
weeks after the birth. They suckle their chil¬
dren from thirty to forty months, and they remain
under the charge of the mother till five years of
age ; afterwards the father assumes the authority
over the male children. A great feast is made
when the child is weaned ; an obviously ancient
and scriptural custom (Gen. xxi. 8 ; Exod. ii. 9 ;
1 Sam. i. 24,) not, however, common to the Jews
throughout the world.*

* They do not observe the custom of' confirmation like


their brethren elsewhere, who confirm every boy at thirteen
years old, nor do they permit any parent to bring their chil¬
dren with them on the holy convocation days, until they are
married, which they general are at an early age. Reference
to the Talmud: — Orach Chaim ; Hilchath Tefilin;
Joralx Deah; Hilchath Milah ; Bavah Metziah.
88

GENERAL PROOFS.

□>T /6'tM

ABLUTIONS.

Daily practice of Washing.

These Jews do not wash before meat. They


do so after eating, more on account of cleanliness
however, as they use their fingers like other
orientals.* See the ordinances of washing.

mow
SLAUGHTERING.

They observe none of the ceremonies minutely

* See Rabbinic laws for washingHilchoth Mikvaoth ;


Nilcot Berachoth; Talmud Berachoth ; Orach Chaim ; Sotah
Rab, Zerika; Daily Prayer.
SLAUGHTERING. 89

attended to by their brethren elsewhere, in slaying


animals for food. They have no examination of
the knife ; no scrutiny of the inside. They have
none of the prescriptions of the Talmud ; they
simply cut the throat of the animal, and let the
blood run on the ground. The fat covering the
intestines; the larger lobe of the liver, the kidneys,
and the fat upon them, are not eaten by them.
But they do eat the haunches of the animal,
from which their brethren throughout the world
abstain. They do not abstain from the whole
hinder part, like the Jews of Europe. (Gen. xxxii.
25, 32.) They do not observe the five essentials
in slaughtering animals. ♦ nbm PTE-On HDTT rPHItf
ip'on-
They do not wait until eight days for the kill¬
ing of a kid or of a lamb, like the Jews else¬
where : but they hold the killing of a calf in great
abhorrence. They do not know about the law rvD^n
n^>rD concerning the use of meat boiled with
milk. They have no scruple to boil or fry butcher’s
meat with butter ; but they strictly abstain from
boiling a kid with butter or milk. This I consider
to be the literal meaning of Exodus xxiii. 19.
“Thou shalt not seethe a kid in his mother’s
milk.” They use the same plates for all their
90 SLAUGHTERING.

food, whether fish or flesh. They boil milk


as well as butcher’s meat in the same pots ;
this being strictly prohibited by the rest of the
Jews throughout the world. They do not ob¬
serve the many absurdities connected with the
killing and preparation of meat, before it can
be used; such as soaking it for half an hour
in water, thrice pouring water over it, &c. &c.,
which I shall treat of hereafter. They have
no Shoccoh,* or special man to kill their
meat. The first-born in the house has great pri¬
vileges, and is looked upon as invested with
the priestly character. The scriptural antiquity
of this may be instanced by reference to the
book of Numbers iii. 12; xviii. 8—18. The
person who kills needs no special license ; all
these things are quite unknown to them; their
origin dating from the age of the Great Synagogue
after the return from Babylon. The Rabbinic
laws concerning them, ntOTUit.
They do not know the law concerning *|D3p> wine
of libation. They possess no vineyards ; and drink
the wine manufactured by the Armenians and

* (See Talmud Benacho.) Jad Hachazakah; Hilchath


Shechitah ; JorahDeah; Zevach Shemuel.
PRAYERS. 91

Tartars. On all these heads they follow the


literal direction of the law of Moses free from
any Talmudic laws.

PRIESTHOOD.

They h ave no priest, nor any levite amongst


them ; they say that all the priests deserted them
when Jeroboam ordained such indiscriminately
from the tribes. See Josephus, vol. i. p. 438;
vol. ii. p. 443.# See also Lam. iv. 16.t

nbsn robn
PRAYERS.

They do not constitute prayer-meetings often,


namely JTHrntf This shows the modern
character of this institution, and that the form of
prayer which is found in the present Jewish
Liturgy has its origin from Ezra and Josiah.
* When the priests left them, with whom the Sacred
Writings were deposited, they took all with them.
| Hilchoth ; Talmud Tarah ; Hilchoth Mattnath Dnum.
92 SCRIPTURES, LITERATURE, &C.

(See Myellah and Maimonides in Tafhellah.)


They have no particular prayers on Monday or
Thursday j* nor any rubric by which to regulate
their service. They use no phylacteries like those
woin by the Jews of Europe ; See 'Tl* But
they use slips of leather and parchment, on which
the same verses of Scripture are written, usually
inscribed on the phylacteries. These they gene¬
rally wear round the arm as a sort of charm.
They do not observe the Mishnical rule in the
training of their children,']' nor do they attach
importance to the wearing the phylactery during
the daily morning prayer, like their brethren else¬
where. See Talmud on Rabbi Abin; Rabbi
Zutra bar Tobiah.

SCRIPTURES, LITERATURE, &C.

They have not the Thirteen Articles of faith


like the Jews of Europe, nor anything like a
creed, or the oral law ns m\n, nor the

* See Morning Prayer.

t The time for the study of the Bible is at five years ; for
the Mishna ten. To be under the obligation of the law at
thirteen, and fifteen is the age for the study of the Talmud.
SCRIPTURES, LITERATURE, &C. 93

ri'Mft ■W, six hundred and thir¬


teen commandments. They are in possession
of several literary compositions, such as poems,
allegories, &c., but none that are common to their
brethren elsewhere. They are stricter in the
performance of their religious rites than the other
Jews of Asia. They have no synagogues, but
places such as we have mentioned under the head
of Sabbath. They wear fringes on the four
corners of their garments.
They do not call the Hebrew by the name
ttnpn the holy tongue, but pty? the language
of Israel; and some call it the Hebrew language,
nnnyn Nor do they attach any sanctity to it
like their brethren throughout the world ; who
hold it unlawful to teach a Gentile the Hebrew
characters. Their alphabetical characters bear
the impression of great antiquity, and these are
certainly the old or original Hebraic characters.
Grammar or pHp'-j, the capacity of distinguishing
elementary principles, is not known amongst
them : and it is evident that the rabbinical writers
who valued the sacred Scriptures saw the impor¬
tance of a grammar, and were certainly the in¬
ventors of the grammar on the Hebrew language.
They call the Armenian language the
94 SCRIPTURES, LITERATURE, &C.

language of the Kashdim, and the Chaldean lan¬


guage they call j-yD“iN Aramite. They have no
knowledge of Syriac, Greek, Arabic, or of any
other of the primitive languages.
They are in possession of a few manuscript
copies of the law of Moses which are divided
into five books like ours, which they call the
Book of the Covenant, rro -idd according to
Exodus xxiv. 7. They are written in the
original Hebrew character, without any division
of chapters, sentences, or points ; which manu¬
scripts they hold to be very ancient, and would
not part with them on any account.* No man
under thirty years of age is permitted to read
them, and I have been told by the individual
whom I sent expressly for the purpose of ex¬
amining them, that their copies do not differ from
the Hebrew copies in our possession except in
two places ; namely, in the book of Deut. ch.
xxxiii., where the last blessing of Moses places
Judah after Reuben in our copies, and Simeon
is omitted altogether, whilst in their copies
Simeon and Levi are placed together, as in
the blessing of Jacob in Gen. xlix. 2nd. The

* I commissioned a Jew in Andrewa to purchase them for


any price, and hope to succeed in getting one.
SCRIPTURES, LITERATURE, &C. 95

last chapter of Deuteronomy is omitted altogether,


and the book concludes with the prophetic bless¬
ing, “ Happy art thou, 0 Israel: who is like
unto thee, O people, saved by the Lord, the
shield of thy help, and who is the sword of thy
excellency ? and thine enemies shall be found
liars unto thee; and thou shalt tread upon their
high places.”

From this it appears that they are in possession


of the original text of the book of the law of
Moses, for it is certain that the last chapter of
Deuteronomy was added after the death of Moses;
but whether this chapter was added by Joshua,
or by the seventy elders, or by Ezra the scribe,
is a point which cannot be easily decided; but
when we consider the Talmudical insinuations
regarding the divine origin of the oral law, and
the points, as having been handed down by Moses
on Mount Sinai; we have reason to suspect that
the same authors who have introduced the di¬
visions, points, pauses, and sections in the He¬
brew Bible, have also written the last chapter in
Deuteronomy; for it will be acknowledged that
none of the authors of Jewish literature, from the
time of Ezra until the destruction of Jerusalem,
9G SCRIPTURES, LITERATURE, &C.

have manifested such a zeal for their own law, as


the Talmudists of the fourth and fifth centuries
have done; and lam therefore inclined to conclude
that the great authors of that stupendous and
laborious work called the Massorah Finalis, are
also the authors of the addition of the last chapter
of Deuteronomy, and if not of the whole chapter,
at least of the last three verses. This is corro¬
borated by the facts that many of the old editions
of the Hebrew Bible amongst the Jew's in Georgia
come short in the calculation of the number of
letters it contains. That the copies of our Pen¬
tateuch must have undergone a change by the
authors of the Massorah, is almost an incontro¬
vertible fact, since it is evident that Josephus
must have read a copy of the law wherein all the
tribes were mentioned. See Josephus, vol. i.
book iv.; Genesis xlix; Deut. xxxiii.
They are not in possession of onttfiO own the
first prophets, which consist of Joshua, Judges,
1 Samuel and 2 Samuel, 1 Kings and 2 Kings,
and the last prophets, Isaiah, Jere¬
miah, Ezekiel, and the minor prophets.
They have not onim the Psalms, Proverbs,
Job, Ruth, the Song of Solomon, Ecclesiastes,
SCRIPTURES, LITERATURE, &C. 97

Daniel, Ezra, Nehemiah, and the two Books of


Chronicles ; but are in possession of a part of the
Book of Esther.*

They are in entire ignorance, with the rest of


their brethren elsewhere, of the existence of the
Apocryphal Books.

All the rest of their writings are in manu¬


script ; and until the Russians took possession
of Georgia, they had no knowledge whatever of
any printed or pointed book ; and even in the
year 1838, those with whom I associated, who
were considered to be the most intelligent among
the Jews in Daghistan, possessed an imperfect
knowledge of the vowels and points in our He¬
brew Bible. This is another proof that the
Massorah, and the divers critical remarks upon
the punctuation, have not originally been accom¬
panied with the text from Mount Sina ; nor can
they have been invented in the time of Ezra, for

* They are very anxious to get the Psalms of David ; and so


ignorant are they of the New Testament, that in the year
1837-8, when two of the Jews from Andrewa visited me and
saw the volume, they put it three times to their forehead
and three times to their mouth, and kissed it. I sold forty-
six New Testaments for a high price.—See Bombay Auxi¬
liary Bible Society’s Report for 1839. They are free from the
hatred and superstitions of their brethren towards Christianity.

H
98 PLACES OF ASSEMBLY

the Jews in Kurdistan, who have been in com¬


munication with their brethren in Babylon and
Syria ever since the return from the captivity,
are still in a great measure ignorant of the points :
this fact is sufficient to show that they were not
invented by Ezra or even the Great Synagogue.
And, from the fact that all the traditions and
compositions that are found in the possession of
the Jews throughout the world are without the
points, we may safely conclude that the Masoretic
notes were first introduced by the doctors of the
school of Tiberias, and were perfected between the
ninth and eleventh centuries of the Christian eera,
which we shall prove hereafter in the fourth vo¬
lume on the History and Origin of the Jews in
Spain.

PLACES OF ASSEMBLY FOE RELIGIOUS PURPOSES.

Their sacred places are called no the


‘ House of Prayers,’ which is the Araman phrase
for synagogue: they are not buildings set apart
for divine worship like our churches, but are used
as schools for children, places of conversation, or
any sort of assembly; as well as lodgings for
strangers. To these places they resort on festival
FOR RELIGIOUS PURPOSES. 99

days, to receive religious instruction from the


elders; and they may be traced to be the iden¬
tical schools of the prophets and seers, where the
people assembled for religious worship and in¬
struction. References, l Samuel x. 5—11;
xix. 18—24; 2 Kings iv. 23.
These buildings somewhat resemble the ancient
Proseuchai, Trpoawyal, which were in existence at
the time of the Tabernacle and the Temple of So¬
lomon, in the land of Israel. They are without any
door, and have an outer inclosure consisting of
four walls, which is entered by a stone gate. The
building consists of several apartments for stran¬
gers, and one in which an earthen pitcher is
placed where their books are preserved, and Mus¬
sulmans as well as other tribes are permitted to
lodge, and join in religious exercises with them.
After prayer they generally embrace each other
as friends: this is a very ancient custom, and
might be referred to Isaiah lvi. 7, 8—'“ Even

them will I bring to my holy mountain, and make


them joyful in my house of prayer: their burnt
offerings and their sacrifices shall be accepted
upon mine altar; for mine house shall be called
an house of prayer for all people.” “ The Lord
God which gathereth the outcasts of Israel saith,

n 2
100 SCRIPTURES, LITERATURE, &C.

yet will I gather others to him, beside those that


are gathered unto him.”
Another place of assembly, in w'hich the Jews
in the mountains at the head of Andrewa as¬
semble, is called the Tabernacle of Nab. 33 pttfD.

This is the name of the tabernacle which was


formerly erected in the tribe of Dan, and in which
the prophets assembled, and held schools. This
place is a small building, generally surrounded by
a few trees, and built on a hill. At this place the
people of the villages assemble for music and
dancing; perhaps it has the same origin as the
school mentioned, 1 Samuel xix. 18.
A third place of assembly is found north of
Andrewa, situated on the Koisoo river, which
takes its rise in the Caucasian mountains, flows
into the Atala river, and empties itself into the
Caspian Sea. The place is called 2100, the
tabernacle Shiloh. To this place Jews from all
quarters of Daghistan resort on the three great
festivals; and it is very remarkable that this is
the only place from which females are prohibited.
May this not be a representation of the national
sanctuary or tabernacle which was erected in
Shiloh in the tribe of Ephraim, where all the
male population assembled three times a year ?
MODES OF SALUTING STRANGERS, &C. 101

Here prayers are offered up, the cornet is blown,


and allegories are recited ; and the congregation
are blessed with the benediction prescribed by
Moses, (Numbers xxiv. 26 ; Deut, xxvi. 10—15.)
The Jews of Daghistan are in general very
hospitable ; and if any stranger of their own sect,

whom they call neighbours, jn, approaches them,


he is immediately invited and sumptuously treated,
and may remain as long as he likes; and if any
other happens to come at the time when the
house of an elder is thus occupied, they will lodge
him who had first arrived, in the place of as¬
sembly above-mentioned ; where the village will
send him plenty of provisions.

MODE OF SALUTING THE STRANGER, AMONG

THE JEWS IN DAGHISTAN.

The words used in salutations differ from those


of the rest of their brethren throughout the world.
On meeting the stranger they salute him by say¬
ing, mrv TDD, “ thou be blessed of Jehovah.” To
which the stranger replies, yty rnn> rp*n, “ the
blessing of Jehovah be upon thee.”
102 MODES OF SALUTING STRANGERS, &C.

They do not refrain from work during the four


days of the Feast of the Tabernacles and the
Passover, and the two days in the Feast of Weeks,
and two days in the feast of the seventh month,
which is acknowledged to be a rabbinical institu¬
tion. Reference to the above you will find in
Hilchoth Youn Tov.
All differences between them are decided by
the rnnx >m, “ father of the house and if any
matter of importance occurs which the father of
the house cannot settle, they bring it before the
my wtw, “ chiefs of the community,” who decide
everything in the congregation. This appears
to be exactly the Hebrew republic instituted by
Moses. (See Numbers i. 2 ; xvi. 2.) This seems
also to have been the mode of administering
justice, and arranging matters, even during the
time of the kings. For we find that war was
carried on by certain tribes both before and after
the establishment of the regal authority. (See
Joshua xvii. 15, 18; Judges iv. 10; xviii. 20;
1 Chron. v. 18, 22.)
They believe in, and are positive of, their
future restoration to the land of their forefathers
they expect a temple in Jerusalem and the resto-
OF THE JEWS IN IMIRITI. 103

ration of the sacrifices according to the order of


r

the law of Moses.


The above, I trust, will be sufficient to es¬
tablish our claims to the discovery of the remnant
of the lost Ten Tribes which were carried away
into captivity by the king of Assyria, and planted
in Halah and Habur by the river of Gozen and
into the cities of the Medes. (See 2 Kings xviii.
11.)

AN ACCOUNT OF THE JEWS IN IMIRITI.

The Jews of Imiriti come next under our obser¬


vation, and are placed in the list next to their
brethren of Daghistan. They are scattered all
over the country in abject slavery. Their lives,
their persons, and their property, have hitherto
been at the absolute disposal of their masters, for
whom they have to labour during their lifetime.
Formerly their masters sold their daughters to
the Persians for slaves,# but since the Russians

* To prevent their daughters being taken for concubines


104 AN ACCOUNT OF

took possession of that country, their condition


has been somewhat improved. The power of
capital punishment is taken from their masters,
and they enjoy at present the same rights as the
rest of the serfs in Russia, with the exception that
the master can sell a Jew, his slave, at any time
he pleases, but not out of the country. They
are in general very ignorant, and have no means
of educating their children. They do abstain
from all labour on the Saturday, except when
they are compelled to work by their taskmasters,
which is very seldom the case, as they are in
general very profitable to their masters in trade,
which they carry on by a license from their mas¬
ters for a specified time, in the province of their
captivity.
In the capital of Imiriti (which is Kotais,) there
are about nine hundred families of Jews; some of
them are free, but the most of them are slaves, and
belong to the noblemen about the province; they
have no written history nor printed books of any
great age, except such as they have received from
the Russian Jews. Their oral tradition says
that they have come there by ships from the land

by their masters, they have adopted early marriages, and


unite their children between eight and ten years of age.
THE JEWS IN IMIR1TI. 105

of Judea, and have been sold as slaves to the an¬


cestors of their present masters. They have one
place of worship, and two rules of the laws of
Moses, and some parts of the liturgy and hymns
common amongst the Jews in Poland, which was
introduced into Kotais about twenty years ago
by the Russian Polish Jews, who penetrated into
that country with the Russian army. They have
no traditions of any kind, and are as strict in
their observance of the Sabbath as their brethren
in the mountains near the Caspian. They have
no other place of worship in all Imiriti, and are
as ignorant of the laws, ceremonies, and obser¬
vances prescribed in the Talmud, as their bre¬

thren above mentioned. Their women do, how¬


ever, observe minutely the time for purification
prescribed by the law of Moses, and are as scru¬
pulous regarding ablution, &c., as the rest of their
sisters in Poland. I have been told as a certain
fact, that the Jewish women in Imiriti would, in the
coldest winter day, go to bathe in the river,
though covered with ice at the time. There are
altogether about fifteen or sixteen thousand fami¬
lies in Imiriti.
The Jews in Akhaltsikhe are similar to those of
Imiriti, but are somewhat more enlightened. In
106 AN ACCOUNT OF

their observances they do not differ from them.


Their physiognomy and features prove them to
be of the same oricnn.
O

The Jews of Kakheti and Shaky are not so ig¬


norant as their brethren in Imiriti: they are gene¬
rally merchants, and live in towns in great num¬
bers : they have their own places of merchandise,
where they carry on a trade in silks. There
are many villages inhabited by Jews, who share
with their Mussulman neighbours the profits of
the sale, which can at any time be but very little
under the Russian government. They have a
few schools, but books are very scarce; they pos¬
sess a few traditions common amongst the Jews
in Persia : they are not serfs like their brethren
in Imiriti, and often leave their place of abode for
the towns : they are reputed an honest, but poor
class of people. Their women are proverbial for
chastity; and I have been credibly informed by
a Russian general, and an Armenian bishop, that
some of them, when taken captives by the Per¬
sians, have precipitated themselves headlong into
the river, rather than submit to their captors.*

* We ought here to contrast the conduct of some of the Lu¬


theran females during the time of the Persian war: some of
the wives of those colonists were taken captive, and though
THE JEWS IN IMIRITI. 107

Except goldsmiths, there are no artificers


among the native Jews; and in the whole country
of Kartaline, Somaketia, and Ganja, there are
about nine thousand families of native Jews, who,
with the exception of a few traditions which they
have gathered from Jews of Persia, and a few
whole copies of the Bible from the Jews of Russian
Poland, are as ignorant, and in as abject a state
of slavery, as the Jews of Imiriti.

This discovery of the Ten Tribes at the


present important crisis must appear a won¬
derful event. The preservation of them through
so many ages, in the very heart of their ene¬
mies, must be acknowledged as a most signal act
of Divine Providence; and we need no stronger
or more convincing proof of the time of their
restoration being at hand, when they shall be
taken from the place of their interment for near
two thousand five hundred years, and be restored
to their own land, to share with their brethren of

they had an offer from the Russian authority in Tabreez to


return to their homes, yet they preferred to be the wives
of poor Mussulman gardeners, than of their own Christian
husbands. The one with whom I spoke lived out of town,
and has three children by her Mussulman husband.
108 AN ACCOUNT OF

the house of Judah the splendour of the Messiah’s


kingdom. No people on earth have been scat¬
tered, like rain in an immense body of waters,
amongst the nations like them ; and yet they still
live distinct : and though the distinction of the
tribes and families is in a great measure lost
among them, yet they have preserved their na¬
tional character as the Israel of God.
Whatever difficulty and perplexity there may
exist in the chronological records of their tribes,
one thing is sure, they have been preserved for
the great day, which is now fast approaching,
when the Lord shall stretch forth his hand, to re¬
deem his people a second time. “ And say unto
them, Thus saith the Lord God, Behold, I will
take the children of Israel from among the hea¬
then whither they be gone, and will gather them
on every side, and bring them into their own land.
And they shall dwell in the land that I have given
unto Jacob my servant, wherein your fathers have
dwelt, and they shall dwell therein, even they, and
their children, and their children’s children for
ever, and my servant David shall be their prince
for ever.”—(Ezekiel xxxvii. 21, 25.) “Then
shall they know that I am the Lord their God,
which caused them to be led into captivity among
the heathen : but I have gathered them into their
THE JEWS IN IMIRITI. 109

own land, and have left none of them any more


there. Neither will 1 hide my face any more
from them: for I have poured out my spirit upon
the house of Israel, saith the Lord God.”—(Ezekiel
xxxix. 28, 29.)

I trust that all conjectures regarding the Ten


Tribes are at an end, for we have found their
hiding-place, and shall give their history at large,
if the Lord permits it.

Comfort for Israel.

1. Comfort—, Comfort ye my people, saith your God:


2. Speak ye kindty to Jerusalem, and declare unto her,—
That her warfare is completed—that her iniquily is par¬
doned—
That she shall receive from the hand of Jehovah,
Double after all her offences.
3. A voice proclairaeth in the Wilderness ! —
Prepare ye a way for Jehovah :
Make straight in the desert a highway for our God!
4. Let every valley be upraised; and every mountain and

hill made low:


Let the crooked become straight; and the rough places
plain !
5. Then shall the glory of Jehovah be discovered;
And all flesh shall see it together,
For the mouth of Jehovah speaketh.
G. A voice sayeth : Proclaim !
110 AN ACCOUNT OF

And I said : What shall I proclaim ?


Every flesh grass! Yea, all its goodness like a flower of
the field!
7. Grass withereth ! A flower fadeth away 1
When the breath of Jehovah bloweth upon it.
Verily the people are grass !
8. Grass may wither! A flower may fade awav!
But the word of our God will stand for ever.
9. On a lofty mountain get thee up, O messenger of Sion!
Elevate thy voice with strength, O messenger of Jeru¬
salem !
Lift it up !—Be not afraid !
Declare to the cities of Judah : Behold your God !
10. Behold, the Lord Jehovah against a strong one shall
come;
And his arm shall prevail over him.
Behold his reward with him ; and his work before him !
11. Like a shepherd he will feed his flock;
In his arm he will gather up the lambs.
And in his bosom carry them :—the nursing ewes he
will gently lead.

12. Who hath measured seas in the hollow of his hand :


Or meted out Heaven by a span ?
Or comprehended with a measure the dust of the earth?
Or weighed mountains in scales : or hills in balances ?
13. W7ho hath directed the spirit of Jehovah ;
Or one of his council, hath given him knowledge ?
14. Whom consulteth He, that he should instruct Him :
That he should teach Him in the way of judgment:
That he should cause Him to learn knowledge ;
THE JEWS IN IMIRITIf 111

Or make him to know the way of understanding ?


15. Behold ! nations are like the drop of a bucket:

Even as the small dust of balances are they reckoned !


Behold ! islands he taketh up as an atom !
16. Even Lebanon is not enough for a fire ;
Nor its beasts sufficient for a burnt offering I
17. All the nations are like nothing before Him :
They are esteemed by Him less than nothing and vanity !
18. To whom therefore will ye liken God :
Or what resemblance will ye prepare for him ?
19. The workman casteth an image,
And the smith overlayeth it with gold,
He also forgeth chains of silver.
20. He that is frugal in oblation, chooseth wood that will
not rot,
A skilful artist he procureth for himself.
To erect an image that may not be moved ?
21. Will ye not know ? Will you not hear ?
Hath it not been told you from the beginning:

Have ye not understood from the foundations of the


earth ?

22. Who sitteth upon the circle of the earth :


And the inhabitants of it are as grasshoppers ?
Who stretcheth out the heavens as a curtain :
And extendeth them like a tent to dwell in ?
23. Who reduceth princes to nothing:

Judges of the earth he maketh as emptiness !


24. Yea, they are not planted—they are not even sown :
Indeed their stock does not take root in the earth :
For if He blow upon them they instantly wither,
112 AN ACCOUNT OF

And a whirlwind bears them away like stubble !


25. To whom then will ye liken Me :
Or shall I be equalled, saith the Holy One ?
2G. Lift up on high your eyes—
And see who hath created these ?
Who bringeth forth their armies by number:
Who calleth to them all by name :
Through the greatness of strength and might of power,

Not one can be separated !


27. Wherefore wilt thou say, O Jacob, or speak, O Israel:
My way is hidden from Jehovah:
And my judgment is passed over from my God ?
28. Hast thou not known ? Or, hast thou not heard ?
The God of eternity—Jehovah —
The Creator of the extremities of the earth—
Can neither faint, nor even be weary :
And that his understanding is unsearchable !
29. He giveth strength unto the fainting ;
And to those not strong he increaseth strength.
30. Yea, young men may become faint and wearied;
And chosen ones stumble and fall.
31. But those trusting in Jehovah shall obtain new strength ;
They shall ascend the wing like eagles ;
Run shall they, and never be wearied ;
They shall march onward hnd not faint.
Critica Biblica, vol. iv.
113

THE JEWS IN BOMBAY.

As so much has of late been said regarding the


Black Jews of Cochin and the Beni Israel of Bom¬
bay, I ought to say something on this subject;
and having page to spare, the following result
of my investigation on that head, I trust will not
be out of place.

1st. The Beni Israel in Bombay I believe to


be the original descendants of Fatur, the son of
Ishmael, who belong to the class of proselytes
called p*Tjf >*u and were admitted into the
Jewish church by the rite of circumcision only,
during the reign of Aristobylas when he made war
on them, and left them no choice but either to
leave the country or to submit to the ceremony of
circumcision: they have nothing in common
with the ceremonies of the Jewish proselytes in
Cochin; their observances, besides circumcision,
may be comprised in what is called the precepts
of Noah, viz. m mo.
1st. They abstain from idolatry.
2nd. They teach the worship of one true God.
3rd. They hold incest in great abhorrence.
4th. They never have been known to commit
homicide.
i
J14 AN ACCOUNT OF

5th. They never have been known to be thieves


or robbers.
6th. They hold a murderer punishable with
death.
7tho They abhor the eating of blood, and any¬
thing that is strangled.
This statement shows plainly that their assertion
that they are of the Ten Tribes is unfounded,
since their circumcision is not that of the Jews, but
of the Mussulmans ; and the non-observance of the
Sabbath according to the Mosaic law would lead
me to reckon them amongst the class of prose¬
lytes, who in the time of Moses worshipped the
one true God, while at the same time they alto¬
gether refused to observe the laws of Moses.
Numbers x. 29 ; Judges i. 16, iv. 11 ; 1 Sa¬
muel xv. 6; Jer. xxx. 6.
They do not observe any of the Mosaic ordi¬
nances, such as are commanded in Levit. xii. 4,
5, and are strictly observed by every Jew. Nor
do they observe any ordinance either of the oral
or the written law. Their women are natives of
the country, and keep the ordinances and statutes
during their monthly period.* Every family
* They did not originally observe the Mosaic ceremony,
and even now they do not undergo ablution with water,

rtVzitD.
THE JEWS IN BOMBAY, &c. 115

has a private place where an image of a serpent


is preserved. Travellers, or single men who
have no private room for themselves, have
the image of the serpent pasted upon the in¬
side of the lid of their chest. The respect¬
able families have a little image of a serpent
placed over the door in their private apartments,
and a lamp is burning before it continually.
They will bow towards it before and after
meat. They are very anxious to conceal from
Europeans the worship of this image, and
try to persuade such casual visiters as might
be inclined to favour their assertion, that they
are a remnant of the Ten Tribes. Their com¬
plete history will appear under the heads of the
history of the Ethiopian and Abyssinian prose¬
lytes to Judaism.
2nd. The Jews of Cochin emigrated after
he destruction of the second temple, be¬
tween the second and third century of the Chris¬
tian era.

3rd. The Black Jews are none other than the


proselytes made from their slaves, by virtue of
their privileges under the Malabar kings, which
they possessed as late as the year 1834; for
during my stay at Cochin, I witnessed the cere-
i 2
116 AN ACCOUNT OF

mony of circumcision of two adult Portuguese,


and the baptism of two native females. Farther
information regarding them will appear in the
complete History of the Jews.
4th. The Jews of China are none other but
the descendants of the Jews in Cochin, who
emigrated after the destruction of the second
temple, and have been separated from their
brethren in Cochin since the year 1600 of the
Christian era.
5th. The Jews of Yemen are the descendants
of the numerous robbers dispersed under the reign
of Herod the Great, and who took possession of
the country between the fourth and fifth centuries
of the Christian era.
6th. The Jews of Abyssinia are the descend¬
ants of the numerous slaves who were proselytes
at the court of Solomon, and presented to Queen
Sheba ; emigrated to that country long before the
Babylonish captivity.
7th. The Jews of Hadjirah, or near the moun¬
tains, are the descendants of the Rechabites, who
have their origin from Habub, the father-in-law of
Moses.
8th. The Jews in Persia are a mixture of all
tribes, but the majority belong to the Ten Tribes.
THE JEWS IN BOMBAY, &C. 117

9th. The Jews of Georgia are the remnant of


the half tribe of Manasseh.

10th. The Jews near the Caspian are the de¬


scendants of the tribes of Gad and Dan.
11th. The Jews of Bockara and Turkistan are
the remnant of the mixed multitude, that came
with Queen Helena and her son from Jerusalem.
The rest of the Jews in Asia, including Syria,
Mesopotamia; and in Europe, viz. Italy, Spain,
&c., are all descendants of the two tribes of Judah
and Benjamin. I shall trace the time of their
arrival in each country, with their present posi¬
tion, their customs, and manner, &c., in the com¬
plete history of the Jews.
The Author begs to draw attention to the following Notices
respecting the Society referred to in the annexed Appendix.

Notice.—This Society has been formed in London, not to


have control over the Missionaries, or the affairs of the In¬
dian Association, but merely to identity the credentials of
their Agents to the British public ; and to collect subscrip¬
tions for the furtherance of the cause.

Note.—To prevent many disorders, troubles, and expenses, to which


Institutions are subject, the agent of the Indian Association will not
recognise any societies with a standing committee; except treasurers
or collectors, in the chief places of England, and who will remit the
subscriptions, when such shall have accumulated to five pounds, to
Messrs. Smith, Payne, Smith, and Co., Bankers.
A collector or subscriber of five pounds annually will be considered
a member of the Indian Association ; and a secretary appointed as the
medium of communication between England and India, shall have
power to call a committee of any of the members, in the place which
he may happen to visit.
APPENDIX

British Society for -promoting the Spiritual Welfare of the

Jews throughout India, Persia, and Arabia, in aid of

the Indian Association, established in Bombay.

®reagum.
Henry Cremer, Esq., 40, Lime Street, Fenchurch Street.

Messrs. Smith, Payne, Smith & Co., Lombard Street.

P?onoravg j&ttretarg.
L. H. J. Tonna, Esq., United Service Institution
(Fro tern.)

©ommtttfc.
The Rev. John Cumming, Henry Cremer, Esq.
M.A. S. Dennis, Esq., Bank of
The Rev. T. Boys. England.
The Rev. — Monro, M.A. Richard King, Esq., Pay¬
Henry Blanshard, Esq. master General’s Office.
Captain Cotton, R.A. E. J. Longley, Esq.
Captain La yard, late 97 th. L. H. J. Tonna, Esq.
A. Turnbull, M.D. James Mondeau, Esq.
George Bogue, Esq.
120 APPENDIX.

MINUTES OF PRELIMINARY MEETINGS,

AND

FORMATION OF THE SOCIETY.

At a Meeting of Gentlemen interested in behalf of Israel,


held in the Committee Room, Exeter Hall, on the Evening
of Wednesday, September 16th, 1840.

Henry Pownall, Esq. in the Chair.

The Meeting opened with prayer by the Rev. Mr. Simpson.


The Rev. Jacob Samuel, having laid on the table several
documents and credentials, [vide page 1*24,) addressed the
meeting at some length, giving an account of his labours in
the East, and of the mode of procedure adopted by the Society
in Bombay, in connexion with which he had hitherto laboured ;
and concluded by stating that the object of his present visit
to England, in compliance with the wishes of the Bombay
Society, was to endeavour to extend the operations amongst
his Jewish brethren in the East, by sending out more mission¬
aries to occupy the large field in the Lord’s vineyard now
waiting for labourers.
The Meeting were occupied until a late hour, and adjourned
without passing any resolutions.
APPENDIX. 121

At a Meeting held in the Committee Room, Exeter Hall, on


the Evening of Friday, October 9th.

Captain H. L. Layard in the Chair.

The Chairman opened the Meeting with prayer.


After some discussion on the principles of the Society in
Bombay, it was resolved—
“ That Dr. Hodgkins, Dr. Fisher, Capt. H. L. Layard,
and Lewis Tonna, Esq., be requested to act as a Sub-com¬
mittee, for the purpose of drawing up a Report, explanatory of
the objects and the principles of the ‘ Indian Association. for
Promoting the Welfare of the Jews in India, Persia, and
Arabia,’ to be submitted to a future meeting of the friends of
this cause.”
Capt. Cotton, R. A., having asked for a blessing on their
labours, and those of the Sub-committee,
The Meeting then adjourned.

At a Meeting held at No. 5, Beaufort Buildings, on the


Evening of Wednesday, October 21st.

The Rev. T. Boys in the Chair.

The Chairman opened the Meeting with prayer.


The Report of the Sub-committee appointed at the last
Meeting was read, vide 'page 124:—

Upon which it was Resolved—


First. “ That this Meeting, having heard the Report of
the Sub committee, do hereby express the strong sense they
entertain of the importance of the field of labour now opened
for the first time to the Missionary of the Gospel, and that
the Meeting do hereby pledge themselves, by divine help, to
122 APPENDIX.

do all in their power to aid in carrying forward the glorious


and blessed work of spreading the knowledge of the true
Messiah amongst these sons of Abraham, outcast and scat¬
tered, throughout India, Persia, and Arabia.”
Second. It was resolved,
“That this Meeting, desiring to take part in this work of
faith and love, and to walk hand in hand with their brethren
in India, do hereby form themselves into a Society, to be de¬
nominated ‘The British Society for Promoting the
Spiritual Welfare of the Jews in India, Persia, and
Arabia, in aid of the Indian Association.'’ ”
Third. It was resolved,
“ That this Meeting, in conveying their congratulations
to the Members of the Indian Association for their past
exertions, desire, in the first place, to lift up their hearts
in devout gratitude and thankfulness to the God of Israel,
for the seal he has been pleased to put upon their work;
and as they feel the fullest confidence in their brethren
in India, to whom, under the Lord, the honour is due of
having first commenced this glorious undertaking, they are
of opinion that, in organizing themselves into a Society, they
will most effectively further the work by leaving the manage¬
ment of the Mission in the hands of the Indian Association,
who have given evidence that, from their local knowledge and
experience, they are well qualified to conduct its affairs.
The sole object, therefore, of the Society now formed will be
to obtain funds for the furtherance of the work, and to form a
medium of communication between their brethren in India
and the Christian public in England.
Fourth. It was resolved,
“ That this Meeting do entertain the highest confidence in
the zeal and devotion of the Rev. J. Samuel in the cause in
which he has taken so active and so disinterested a part since
the year 1831; and do humbly yet gratefully acknowledge
the abundant success which, by the grace of God working
with him, has attended his mission; and do hereby engage to
be earnest in remembering him at the throne of grace, that
he may be preserved and strengthened in the discharge of the
APPENDIX. 123

great duties to which the Lord has been pleased to call


him.”
Fifth. It was resolved,
“ That the following gentlemen, who have accepted the
office, be a Committee for carrying out the objects of the
Society, with power to make regulations for the conduct of
their proceedings, and to add to their numbers; and that five
members do form a quorum.
Henry Blanshard, Esq., 37, Great Ormond Street.
The Rev. T. Boys, Middleton Square, Pentonville.
The Rev. John Cumming, M.A.
Captain Cotton, R.A.
Henry Cremer, Esq., Oakley Square, Chelsea.
S. Dennis, Esq., Bank of England.
Richard King, Esq., Paymaster General’s Office, Whitehall.
George Bogue, Esq., Holly Grove.
Captain H. L. Layard, late Ninety-seventh Regiment.
E. J. Longley, Esq., Vale Cottage, Chelsea.
The Rev. — Monro, Harrow.
James Mondeau, Esq., Manor House, Enfield.
Lewis H. J. Tonna, Esq., United Service Institution.
The Agent of the Indian Association, ex officio.”
A. Turnbull, M.D., 48, Russell Square.

The Rev. Jacob Samuel closed the meeting with prayer.

Subscriptions and Donations in behalf of this Mission will


be received by the Treasurer or Banhers.
Those only are requested to subscribe, whose hearts are fully
impressed with the importance of this work, and who fully
approve of the simple plan of operations pursued by the Rev.
J. Samuel.
124 APPENDIX.

REPORT OF THE SUB-COMMITTEE.

“ In the discharge of the duty entrusted to them, your


Committee have acted on the principle that their business was
simply to examine into facts, and to lay the result of their ex¬
aminations before you, in a brief and condensed form; and
they beg to express their acknowledgments to the Rev. Jacob
Samuel for the assistance which he has afforded them both by
his own explanations and the original documents, including
his own private journal, which he submitted to their exami¬
nation.
“ Your Committee felt it to be their duty, in the first place,
to examine into Mr. Samuel’s own credentials, in order that
they might be enabled to recognize him officially as the agent
of the Bombay Society. In answer to their inquiries on this
point, Mr. Samuel laid before the Committee,—

“ First. An ‘ Extract from the Minutes of the Committee of


the Association in aid of the Rev. Jacob Samuel’s Mission to
the Asiatic Jews, held in St. Andrew’s Church, Bombay,
November 22d, 1839.
(Signed) Major F. P. Lester, Chairman.
Dr. J. Stevenson, Secretary.’

“ Secondly. ‘ An original letter, addressed to Mr. Samuel,


by the above-named chairman and secretary, authorizing him
to proceed to England, and endeavour to induce the friends of
Israel to co-operate with the Indian Society. Both these do¬
cuments have been printed, and will be found in the Appendix
to Mr. Samuel’s Appeal, page 23—25/

“ Mr. Samuel further laid before the Committee a letter


from the Rev. A. Brandram, Secretary to the British and
Foreign Bible Society, appointing him their agent in Persia
and the adjacent countries, and authorizing him to take pos¬
session of the Society’s books wherever he might find them,
and might have means of circulating them. The letter bears
date, November 1, 1837, and is addressed to tne Rev. Jacob
APPENDIX. J 25

Samuel, care of H. B. M., Envoy Extraordinary at the Court


of Persia, Tabreez.

“ It likewise appears (from a copy of them previously


printed at Bombay) that the testimonials which have ap¬
peared before the public in England were printed at the re¬
quest and under the sanction of the ‘ Bombay Committee,1
at a meeting held at Calabah, March 24, 1839. For honour¬
able mention of Mr. Samuel, your Committee would also
refer to the ‘Jewish Intelligence,’ for the year 1832, page 113.
“ Upon the evidence of the foregoing letters and printed
documents, your Committee are of opinion that the Rev.
Jacob Samuel is the accredited agent of the Bombay Asso¬
ciation.
“ Your Committee next proceeded to examine into the prin¬
ciples and object of the Bombay Association.
“ This Society appears to have always acted on a principle
of mutual confidence between the Committee, its officers, and
the missionary employed, and has not bound itself to any de¬
fined code of regulation. Its principles will, therefore, be
best understood by the following extract from the letter above
mentioned, addressed to Mr. Samuel, by the chairman and
secretary.

Extract.

“ * You are well aware that the grand principle on which our
connexion for the last five years has subsisted, and on which
our harmonious intercourse has been based, is, that in the
conduct of your mission, in all spiritual affairs, we refrain
from the assumption of all authority over you. While we
have to acknowledge that you have always been ready to listen
to our advice, and follow it as far as you thought you could
do so with propriety, we have ever acted on the assumption,
that the man who goes forth in dependence on Divine Provi¬
dence, not counting his life dear to him, that he may fulfil
the ministry of the word, is, to say the least, as likely to
know the path of duty as any other, and has as good a right
to suppose that divine directions will be afforded directly to
126 APPENDIX.

himself, as that it will be given to another to be imparted to


him. At any rate, we deem it most important that he should
be fully convinced that the course he is pursuing is the one in
which his energies will be most exerted in promoting the Re¬
deemer’s cause; and that all the responsibility, in reference
to it, rests with himself, which can hardly be the case if he is
merely pursuing a plan laid down by others, of which his own
mind does not fully approve.’
“ ‘ The object of the Society may be gathered from a series
of resolutions passed at the period of the first formation of
the Society, in which it was resolved, ‘ That Mr. Samuel be
sent forth as a missionary to the Jews, to preach among them
the Gospel, unfettered by us, as God shall give him grace
and direction.’

“ Thus it appears that our brethren in India acted on the


principle of committing their missionary entirely to the guid¬
ance and direction of God, and the object of their sending him
forth was to preach the Gospel.
« Your Committee are of opinion that they will best dis¬
charge their duty by laying before you, before they conclude,
a short sketch of the plan on which Mr. Samuel proceeded,
and by which he has been so eminently successful in gaining
and preserving the confidence of his Jewish brethren, while
bearing testimony to Him c of whom Moses in the law; and
the prophets did writefor which purpose they will first quote
an extract from ‘ Mr. Samuel’s Appeal on behalf of the Jews,’
lately published; after which they will select a few extracts
from the private journal, which Mr. Samuel has confiden¬
tially allowed them to examine.

Extract from Mr. SamueCs printed “Appeal.”

“ c And how, it may be inquired, have I, in the testimony


of a crucified Messiah, gone in and out amongst my brethren
of the circumcision; how freely entered the sacred precincts
of their house of prayer, and from the seat of Moses borne
witness in my ministry ? How, it may be asked, am I fur-
APPENDIX. 127

nished with testimonies and recommendations from their elders


and teachers, from place to place, from one quarter of the
world to the other ? I have not looked upon them as an ac¬
cursed and alien people, but a beloved, (Rom. xi. 28;) and I
have sought to sympathize with the mind of God, who has
said, “ ‘ I have delivered the well-beloved of my soul into the
hand of her enemies.’ ”

“ making the following extracts from the Rev. J. Sa¬


muel s journals, the Committee have merely selected a fewr
passages, which they think calculated to decide the following
important points, viz. that the favourable reception given to
Mr. Samuel was obtained by no compromise of the great
truths of the Gospel, but by a judicious use of his own inti¬
mate acquaintance with the peculiarities, the prejudices, and
the sympathies of his brethren according to the flesh; that he
never attempted to lay any other foundation-stone than ‘that
which has been laid; that he never avoided the offence of
the cross; that he preached to them 4 Christ Jesus, and him
crucified,’ and remission of sins by the shedding of his blood;
and that he plainly asserted the co-equality of three persons
in the Divine Unity.
“ Your Committee, in making their selection, have passed
over many interesting narratives, extracting only passages
which gave evidence on the above-named points, which they
hold to be of the highest moment.

Extract from the liev. J. Samuel's Journals.

“‘October, 1831.—After this, I visited several families,


with whom I became acquainted at the house I have men¬
tioned ; and my intimacy with its owner also became closer,
from his having discovered, by a sign known amongst our¬
selves, that I was of the family of Aaron, from which he also
was descended. He questioned me upon the ceremonies of
the Mosaic dispensation, when I explained to him that in my
opinion they were no longer of any consequence. He im¬
mediately observed, that he was sorry a brother of the holy
priesthood should disregard all that had been esteemed by his
128 APPENDIX.

forefathers. From this very day I perceived that his affec¬


tions towards me became colder and colder, and that when I
went into the synagogue every one else received me with
brotherly love; he alone went aside, to avoid all intercourse
with me.
44 4 In the first four months, the only additional circumstance
I shall notice is, that in August, during a fortnight before
the Jewish feast, several Jews called upon me daily; and as I
knew that Jews seldom like to call at a place such as that where
I resided, I was anxious to discover what might be the motive
of such a proceeding. Instead of conversing with them upon
the Old Testament, as I had done before, I changed the sub¬
ject to the Hebrew New Testament, and thus I found that
they were offended, like the Pharisees of old; so that, after a
short time, all, except two or three, left me. From this I
have reason to believe that the plan which I first followed
seems to be the best for spreading the Gospel amongst them;
that is, not to preach Christ crucified in the first instance,
without stating beforehand what had been said of Christ by
Moses and the Prophets. In order to persuade them, w7e
must attend to the word of God, and do as the apostle did:
4 Unto the Jews I became as a Jew, that I might gain the
Jews, to them that are under the law, as under the law,’ &c.
# # # # *

“ 4 The subject of my discourse had been the dream of Jacob,


concerning the ladder which reached from earth to heaven, in
which I showed them that it wras not possible to reach heaven
without, as it were, the steps of a ladder; I meant without
some means of communication—a mediator between God and
man; and this could in no way offend them. Their answer
was—4 How shall we come to hear you, who cast to the dust
the holy garment of priesthood with which your heavenly
Father clothed our ancestors,’—meaning that I did not appear
in my Jewish dress; others said—4 If you will refer more to
the Mishna, and will use the law written on parchment, we will
all come and attend to youand accordingly I promised them
that I would procure a suit of garments in time. So there
were thirty Jews on the next Sabbath. The above will show
APPENDIX. 129

that I must do as the apostle did, and ‘ count all things but
loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Jesus Christ my
Lord; and therefore, if I would gain my kinsmen after the
flesh, I must go to this expense for their sakes.’

‘ December 1, 1831.—1 visited three Jewish families in


Doomtollah, Poultry Lane. I began my conversation with
them about the miserable situation I found them in. After
having expressed my anxiety to know the reason, they replied
that the cause of it was, that they did not know the country,
neither had they any friends that would support them in busi¬
ness; that their situation might be better, and expressed their
gratitude to me if I would be that friend, and place them in a
better situation. I told them I should feel much pleasure
if I could be in any way serviceable to them for the welfare of
their souls, and recommend them to a friend who will be their
support both in body and soul. They asked me—‘ Where is
this friend? O show him to us.’—I replied, 4 The friend is
Jesus Christ, who came into the world to seek poor and
miseiable lost sinners. After they had attentively heard me
for two hours, I ended my discourse with a prayer, and
leaving them, I recommended them to the Bible, and passages
which I quoted to them in my conversation.’

“ ‘ December 12, 1831.—I visited some families in Doom¬


tollah. In the corner of the street I met with sixteen Jews ;
I began to preach to them in the words of our Lord: ‘ I am
the way, the truth, and the life; no man can come to the
Father except by me. And after having shown them that no
man could be justified in the sight of God by the law of Moses,
they all spoke one with another, and I heard one of them say
with a loud voice; ‘ Sadek, Sadek, zeh hadeverim emet, kai
Thorah Mohe emetj which signifies, 4 Verily, verily, these
words are true as the law of Moses is true.’ After hearing
this, I thanked God for giving me a new supply of faith.”

“ ‘December 17,1831.—I met thirty-three Jews at the river


side. I conversed with them about the deliverance from
K
130 APPENDIX.

Egypt. In the afternoon I went to the chapel, and found


there two Jews. I commenced with prayer, and preached to
them from Exodus xxiii. 21—‘Behold, I send an angel be¬
fore thee, to keep thee in the way.’ From thence I went to
Smyth’s Ghaut, and found thirty-six Jews. I began my dis¬
course as before, but immediately they rose up and began to
mock me, and as I could not succeed with my preaching, I
left them. One, who seemed to be the greatest hypocrite, fol¬
lowed me with vain flattery, saying that it was not suitable for
a man as I was to be mocked and ill-used by the Jews; to
which I replied, that this mockery is only a grief to me when
I feel that One who endured the same will soon come to bring
you to judgment; and how you will tremble when you see
Him whom you have mocked, and whose words you have
despised and rejected, come to be the very judge, and pass
sentence over you. An Armenian was present, whom I met
afterwards opposite the chapel. When he found out that I
was a Jew, he asked me, ‘ Do you believe in the Trinity?
I replied : ‘Else I would not preach to my brethren that Jesus
is the Son of God.’ He said, ‘ I cannot believe in the Trinity.’
I said, ‘Are you a Christian?’ He answered, ‘Yes.1 I said,
‘ It is an awful thing to be a Christian, and not to believe in
Christ as the divine Saviour.1 He replied, ‘ Where can you
prove it from, that he is the Son of God ?’ I replied, ‘If you
believe in this book, where I will prove his divine character,
then I should feel great pleasure to converse with you ; if not, I
think it is not worth wasting time in conversation.1 He said,
‘ I believe the Scriptures to be true, and when you can show
me in the Scriptures the Trinity, I shall believe.’ I quoted
fifty or sixty passages, but he seemed to have strong prejudices
against it. When 1 repeated the passage, ‘ My name is in
him,’ and what our Lord’s character must be when the sign
and the promise was, ‘A virgin shall conceive,1 &c., after two
hours’ argument he said, ‘ I can say nothing against this ex¬
planation,’ and it would appear flattery to repeat what he said ;
but I shall indeed flatter myself that God has used me as His
feeble instrument in convincing him of the divine character of
our Lord.’
««April, 1832. Good Friday.—In the evening I visited the
APPENDIX. 131

synagogue, two hours before their service commenced, which


was that of their passover feast, when I found a good number of
Jews assembled in the room with the Chacham. I soon had
an opportunity respecting the Passover, and I commenced from
the second to the eighth verse, when I questioned them how
they could now keep that feast, where the chief thing is the
paschal lamb. After receiving several rough answers, I laid
before them the fifty-third chapter of Isaiah, where Jews and
Gentiles agree that it relates to the Messiah. I placed before
them the importance of rightly understanding that chapter*
and proceeded to prove by the most convincing arguments,
that the person spoken of by the prophet must have been of¬
fered in the place of this paschal lamb, which has been abo¬
lished these 1800 years, and that their observance of the rites
and ceremonies of the Mosaic dispensation were unprofitable.
After I had been speaking for about three quarters of an hour,
the Chacham endeavoured to refute my arguments, and quoted
a passage from Abarbanel, by which he endeavoured to prove
that the person alluded to by the prophet had no reference to
the Messiah. I replied, ‘ To whom then does it refer? and
what is to be understood when it says, Surely He hath borne
our griefs, and carried our sorrows; He was smitten and
afflicted; He was wounded for our transgressions, bruised
for our iniquities, and the chastisement of our peace was laid
upon him, and with his stripes are we healed ? Now 1 think,
Chacham, and all that are here present, if you have well con¬
sidered what I have laid before you, and you will not shut
your eyes against the truth which you and your fathers believe,
viz. that this chapter is the word of God, you must testify
that the person spoken of by the prophet must be Jesus, the
Son of David, by whose sufferings, death, and resurrection,
all the prophecies have been fulfilled, and, through the vain ex¬
pectation of a temporal king, our forefathers have rejected
him ; and the clearest proof that he must have been offered as
the paschal lamb, when God commanded the offering of the pas¬
chal lamb should last for ever. How can you otherwise ac¬
count for the circumstance that, since the day when Christ
was crucified, our fathers have ceased to offer this paschal
lamb, and all the former sacrifices from that day have been
132 APPENDIX.

abolished, according to the prophecies ? Your rites of atone¬


ment have become ineffectual, and on the same footing those
of other nations, for you yourselves profess that without shed¬
ding of blood there is no remission of sins; and if you would
acknowledge this Lamb of God, you would enjoy the blessing
which God promised to our forefathers, Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob; for in Christ all the nations of the earth shall be blessed.’

“ The following extract from a journal written at the com¬


mencement of Mr. Samuel’s labours is also important: ‘ I
wish it to be understood that the object of my coming out here
is not to convert the Jews, but to deliver to them the Gospel
in their own language, and to prepare a way in the wilderness,
which is one day to be like Eden, and in a desert which is to
become at last like the garden of the Lord.’

“ Your Committee are of opinion that these few extracts


from a journal written on the spot will afford sufficient proof
that the Gospel, without compromise, was preached to the
Jews by the Rev. J. Samuel, and will also give an insight into
his mode of proceeding among them.
“ The Committee also beg leave to refer to the arduous
and extensive labours of Mr. Samuel, in distributing copies of
the Sacred Writings. He has, with his own hand, circulated
upwards of 9,000 copies of the whole or of parts of the Holy
Scriptures, not only amongst Jews, but in still greater num¬
bers among Mussulmans. For an attestation of his labours in
regard to this object, your Committee would refer to the Re¬
port of the British and Foreign Bible Society for 1838.
“ They will now bring their report to a conclusion, trusting
that the blessing of the Lord may rest on their labours, for
which, at each of their meetings, they have offered their earnest
prayers. The more they have examined into the documents
laid before them, the more they have been impressed with the
importance of the work now brought before the Christian
public; and they humbly yet confidently hope that it is the
Lord who has issued his command to ‘ prophesy to these dry
bones, which are now’ lying in the open valley, very many
and very dry.’ May it please him in his own good time to
APPENDIX. 133

breathe upon them, that the bones may come together, bone to
his bone, and that the sinews and the flesh may come upon
them, and that they may live and stand up upon their feet, an
exceeding great army. The work indeed is great, the fields,
white for the harvest, are wide and measureless, and the weak
heart of man may at first be discouraged, and doubtingly ask,
4 Where shall the labourers be found ?’ But here we may
claim a precious promise. We may pray to the Lord of the
harvest to send forth labourers; and though we seem but a
little and a feeble band, yet let us remember that it is not by
might, nor by power, but by my Spirit, saith the Lord.
“ To His name be all power and honour and praise
ascribed, henceforth and for evermore. Amen.
“ H. L. Layard.
Thomas Fisher.
Lewis H. J. Tonna.”
“Having been prevented from attending the meetings of the
Sub-committee, I wish, after repeated conferences with Jacob
Samuel, and examination of data which he placed before the
Committee, to mark my unison with the above Report, and to
express my approval of the principle adopted by the Bombay
Society, which, whilst it gives to those who are engaged in the
work that “ Liberty of prophesying ” which every rightly
qualified minister should enjoy inviolate, retains in its hands a
necessary and wholesome check to errors, both in doctrine and
practice.
“Thomas Hodgkin, M.D.
« Lower Brook Street, Grosvenor Square,
2!2nd October, 1840.”

At a subsequent Meeting of the Committee, the preceding


Minutes, Report, and Resolutions were ordered to be printed
for circulation.

By Order of the Committee. London, Oct. 30, 1840.

Lewis H. J. Tonna,
Hon. Sec. pro tem.
LONDON :
PRINTED BY IBOTSON AND PALMER, SAVOY STREET.
THE FOLLOWING WORKS
WILL BE PUBLISHED IN A FEW MONTHS

j&ubgcripttoit,

BY THE REV. JACOB SAMUEL,


MISSIONARY TO THE JEWS FOR INDIA, PERSIA, AND ARABIA,

AUTHOR OF “THE REMNANT FOUND,” &C.

I.
A COMPLETE

HISTORY OF THE JEWS


THROUGHOUT THE WORLD.

2 vols. Price 25s.

II.

A JOURNAL
OF

iL MISSIONiLH/ST TOUR TO BAGDAD;

Containing Missionary Labours among the Jews, Mussulmans,


and Armenians; with Ecclesiastical, Political, and Geographical
Remarks on the Ruins of Ancient Babylon.

Price 6 s.

III.

TWO YEARS SOJOURN IN PERSIA.

Containing a full Account of the Labours amongst the Jews, the


Distribution of Bibles, the British Embassy in Tyrone, the Visit
of Nicolas, the Emperor of Russia, to Georgia, Dialogues between
the Author and the Remnant of the Ten Tribes, Interview with
the Synod of Armenia at Echmiadzin, &c.

Complete in 1 vol. Price 8s.


A N APPEAL

ON

BEHALF OF THE JEWS


SCATTERED IN

INDIA, PERSIA, AND ARABIA.

BY THE REV. J. SAMUEL,


BOMBAY.

“ For Zion’s sake I will not hold my peace, and for Jerusalem’s
sake I will not rest, until the righteousness thereof go forth as
brightness, and the salvation thereof as a lamp that burneth.”_
Isaiah lxii. 1.

PUBLISHED BY DESIRE OF THE INDIAN SOCIETY FOR PROMOTING


THE WELFARE OF THE JEWS THROUGHOUT INDIA,
PERSIA, AND ARABIA.

LONDON:

PUBLISHED BY J. HATCHARD AND SON, 187, PICCADILLY ; J. NISBET

AND-CO., 21, BERNERS STREET; AND W. II. DALTON,

28, COCKSPUR STREET.

1840.
Communications regarding the Indian Society for pro¬
moting the welfare of the Jews in India, Persia, and Arabia,
may be addressed to the Rev. Mr. Samuel, or to the Secre¬
tary of the Society, care of Messrs. Manning, Anderton,
and Co., 3, New Bank Buildings, London.

Subscriptions on behalf of the Mission will be received by


Messrs. Smith, Payne, Smith, and Co., 1, Lombard Street.

LONDON :
PRINTED BY JBOTSON AND PAI.MER, SAVOY STREET, STRAND.
TO CHRISTIANS
OF ALL DENOMINATIONS,
BUT ESPECIALLY

TO HIS GRACE THE ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY,

THE RIGHT REVEREND AND REVEREND

THE BISHOPS AND MINISTERS,

AND TO THE LAITY

OF THE CHURCH OF ENGLAND.

Right Rev. and Rev. Fathers and Brethren—


Grace be unto you, and peace from God our Father, and
from the Lord Jesus Christ.
If any apology were needed for taking this simple and per¬
haps unusual course, to bring before you a subject which con¬
cerns the interests and prospects of the Redeemer’s church and
coming kingdom, that apology must spring from the facts and
reasons annexed; which have induced me, on arriving in this
great and Christian land, to bring under your notice the condi¬
tion and circumstances of my poor brethren of the seed of
Abraham, the friend of God, scattered in the lands of their
original captivity in the East, and along the banks of the great
Asiatic streams, presented for the evangelical philanthropy of
4

those who, in spirit and in truth, seek the God of Israel.


Brethren, it is no private cause nor partial interest that I come
forward to advocate; but one confessedly of universal moment;
as it is in its relations and results imposing and sublime.
For in the midst of those darkly lowering clouds which dim
the Church’s path, and the shaking of all things so manifest in
the present day, the lamp of God, in his sacred temple upon
earth, derives no brighter lustre, than in combining all the rays
which spring from the promises of God to the Jewish nation,
which are “ yea and amen” in Him, who was given from the
Father’s bosom to be “ alight to lighten the Gentiles,” but yet
to be manifested as the glory of his people Israel.” Let me
add, too, the Church’s state requires it!
I stand not before you to plead an abstract principle in
theology, nor to enforce a peculiar doctrine. It is on behalf
of a million and a half of Jews that I appeal. For that num¬
ber of suffering brethren, dear by many high and sacred ties—
let me add, too, by many tender and sorrowful associations—I
lift up my voice. It is an advocacy generated, not in the
seclusion of the closet and in the security of a friendly land,
where, under the vine and fig tree, there is none to make the
inquirer afraid; but in the midst of fierce and hostile tribes,
under burning suns, and in the wild and inhospitable desert:
in lands where the followers of the false prophet spurn the
presence of the son of Abraham ; over a continent which is a
waste-howling wilderness, both to the Christian and the Jew;
where both would unite in hanging their harps upon the wil¬
lows, and join in saying, « How shall we sing the Lord’s song
in a strange land ?”
I am not here to speak of those things which I have not
known, but to present the result of ten years’ perilous expe¬
rience in the field of labour, in which I may say I have not
counted my life dear to me, that I might make proof of my
ministry, and in some measure vindicate my calling as a mes¬
senger of Christ. From the Ganges to the Araxes ; from the
Caspian to the Persian Gulf and the Red Sea; by the
“ waters of Babylon,” and in the mountain dwellings of the
Caucasus, I have, by the grace of God, laboured: and I sur¬
vive to bring the result of my experience to the Church’s
door; and it will be for your consideration, brethren, whether
this costly fruit shall become a power in your hand to build
up the walls of Sion, or whether it shall be a record against
Gentile indifference and pride in that day when the Lord
himself shall “ plead the cause of his people,” when “ Zion
shall be redeemed with judgment, and her converts with right¬
eousness when he will bind up the breach of his people, and
heal the stroke of their wound.” It has been purchased, I
may almost say, with blood : “ in journeyings often, in perils of
waters, in perils of robbers, in perils by the heathen, in perils
in the city, in perils in the wilderness, in perils through false
brethren ; in weariness and painfulness, in watchings often,
in hunger and thirst, in fastings often, in cold and nakedness
and let me add, in sober sadness, as many will attest, K by
honour and dishonour, by evil report and good report; as a
deceiver, and yet true; as unknown, and yet well known,”
The striking interest pervading the Christian world, which
began to be manifested forty years ago, and which has stea¬
dily progressed, until the leading Churches of the Reformation
are beginning to devolve upon themselves the solemn respon¬
sibility of taking up the daughter of Zion from the dust, and
presenting the children of this people at a throne of grace,
encourages me to roll before you the great burthen which
presses on my spirit. As a son of Abraham, I trust my heart
is in some measure suitably affected in the results of Christian
piety, and the efforts of Christian benevolence. But I should
dishonour that sacred calling, which emboldens me to speak
the truth to Jew and Gentile ; and I should fall short of my
privileges as an elder brother in the Church, did I compro¬
mise my principles as a Hebrew—as one of that nation to
whom pertains the promises—and acknowledge with affected
gratitude, and without discrimination, as if all that has been
done on behalf of Israel, were calculated to promote God’s
glory and the welfare of the holy people. Thanks be to the
Lord, since the glorious era of the Reformation shone upon
these lands, persecution hath stayed her ruthless warfare ; the
dreary tale of woe has ceased, which chronicles the history of
Judah in Britain in barbarous times: and no longer does the
6

jurisprudence of England enact, as in the laws of the Confes¬


sor Edward—“ The Jew and all that he possesses belong to
the King.” But in ceasing to be a daughter of that great
whore which sits upon the surface of many waters, the Church
of England was called to a high and sacred place, and the
realm of England became the great seat of the Christian
Church. If to one more than another the poor dispersed and
despised people of the Jews had a right to look for a vindica¬
tion of the promises and national hopes which are theirs, and
which have sustained them through a dismal captivity amidst
the nations of near 2000 years, it was to the Christian Church
of this land. Need I remind to reproach you of the studied
injustice with which you snatched away the children’s bread,
making empty the hungry soul? And this whilst you were
enjoying by substitution those blessings, temporal and spi¬
ritual, which pertained to them as the First-born. Had you
remembered that blessed word—ct The liberal deviseth liberal
things, and by liberal things shall he stand,”—your weakened
theology, your silent pulpits, and your slumbering priesthood,
(the spectacle presented last century, and which you hum-
blingly confess,) would not have struck the panic which exists
into the bosom of your children in the present day, bestirring
them to labour, lest, in the overflowing of rebellion and wicked¬
ness which deluges the land, your name and your memorial
should be swept away.
Brethren, bear with me, and consider that faithful are the
wounds of a friend : for in a day, and in a state of society in
which the refinements of what are called civilization and
humanity, have swept away the little of the leaven of sin¬
cerity which pertains to our fallen nature, that even what is
known as the Christian world is almost wholly swallowed up
in worldly dissimulation and insincerity ; bear with me, if
from the rude dweller of the desert I have learned sincerity,
though it be at the risk of giving offence; for I am constrained
not merely to revert to times of persecution, succeeded by
days of sullen indifference to the cause, and of niggard jea¬
lousy as concerns the hopes and promises of Israel, but to
question the acts and deeds of later date, in which the spirits
7

of this poor people have been galled and chafed by mis¬


directed efforts of Christian piety and love. An accusing
spirit I hate: I deprecate all allusions to the faults of bre¬
thren. But, witness as I have been to the divisions and
heart-burnings caused by the partial and narrow views of
those who have approached the Jewish people, I, for one at
least, will be a witness that our Lord Jesus Christ came not
to destroy, but to fulfil; not to disperse, but to gather; not
to disunite, but to bind; not to denationalize, but to restore
the kingdom to Israel in its appointed time.*
In my labours in the East amongst my brethren,—during
which time I have preached from Moses’ chab*, in the Syna¬
gogue, more than three hundred times, and proclaimed the
ever-blessed Gospel to upwards of one hundred thousand of
the seed of Abraham, and to Christians,—I have not been
at all solicitous to swell the numbers of the professing
church by ministering the sacred rite of baptism to half-con¬
vinced proselytes, to glory in the flesh of the Jew. My chief
aim and object has been to scatter the seed of the word of
eternal life, in full assurance of the latter day rain, when my
labour shall be proved to have been not in vain in the Lord.
With my own hand I have circulated upwards of eight thousand
copies of that word; and I make mention of these results, and
refer to others,J- that my brethren in the Lord may see the
fruits of one feeble man’s exertions. And as I appeal for
more labourers to that field, white to harvest, what may not
seven missionaries, immediately sent out, by the same grace
achieve ? And what fruits there are in store against the
ingathering of the harvest, when the stations proposed to be
occupied in India, Persia, and Arabia, and requiring twenty-
one missionaries, shall be planted, as I trust they will be,
with faithful labourers in this peculiar work !
And how, it may be inquired, have I, in the testimony of
a crucified Messiah, gone in and out amongst my brethren of
the circumcision ; how freely entered the sacred precincts of
their house of prayer, and from the seat of Moses borne
witness in my ministry ? How, it may be asked, am I fur-

* See Appendix, p. 21. t Ibid. p. 23.


8

nished with testimonies and recommendations from their


elders and teachers, from place to place, from one quarter of
the world to the other?* Precisely by following another
course than that which has been pursued by others. I have
not looked upon them as an accursed and alien people, but a
beloved (Rom. xi. 28); and I have sought to sympathize
with the mind of God, who has said, “ I have delivered the
well-beloved of my soul into the hand of her enemies.'"
The centre of this great field of missionary labour amongst
the seed of Abraham is Persia. The boundaries comprise
all that country included between the Caspian and the Indian
Ocean,—India, Persia, and Arabia.
But Persia is the favourable centre for missionary ope¬
rations, and I proceed to point out some circumstances which
may serve to illustrate the importance of this field. It is one
of the striking features of the present day that those nations,
which constituted the Great Empires of antiquity,' seem to
be resuscitated to act a part in the great concluding drama
of the world. Egypt, though a shadow, consolidated by an
adventurous vassal, distinguishes itself as a power again.
Greece aspires to a rank amongst the nations; and Persia
awakens anxiety on the interests of other states, as a fore¬
ground of political contention and strife. But it is as a
foreground for warfare of another sort that it is peculiarly
fitted. And in the missionary enterprises in the East, atten¬
tion has not been paid to its resources and facilities. Looking
to the facts of the case, having an eye to the promises, and
wisely marking the unfolding providences of God, the reflect¬
ing Christian will perceive that the Jewish Mission is the
mighty lever with which the nations of the earth will be sub¬
jected to the obedience of the Gospel, either in judgment or
in mercy, even as Israel is the Lord’s battle axe, ‘‘/or
with thee will I break in pieces the nations of the earth f
saith the prophet.
’I here is in Persia a population of many hundred thou¬
sand Jews, descendants of the twelve tribes, located in these
lands, the seats of their original captivity and dispersion.

* See Appendix, p. 28.


9

These are a body admirably adapted for the labours of


Christian faith and philanthrophy. .They are a very poor and
a very despised people. The meanest Moslem may compel
the chiefest and most revered of them to the most degrading
offices. They are not, as in the adjacent lands,—Arabia,
Turkey, &c., the money-changers and monopolizers of all
offices of trust and traffic. The Persian Jews are weavers,
dyers, engravers, &c. They are in circumstances to estimate,
most gratefully, offices of kindness and compassion ; and my
medicine chest, and the means I could spare in my missionary
expenditure, has caused many a throb of gratitude to the
poor son of Abraham in that country. The Persian govern¬
ment would gladly welcome missionaries engaged in the duty
of raising the condition of the Jewish people in Persia, which
the following circumstance will prove. I was in 1836 at
Shiraz, paying my respects to the Prince of Shiraz, (brother
of Mahommed Shah,) who applied to me for medicine, which
I administered to him. He invited me to take tea, which he
made with his own hands, and during the refreshment, he, in
conversation, asked me what object I had in visiting Persia.
After explaining the object of my missionary labours amongst
the Jews, he begged of me to settle permanently in the
country. He observed that the Jews were so bad, (degraded
and depressed,) that it would be a good thing for them to
become anything than continue as they were. I pointed out
to him how that people might be elevated by education and
religion. He inquired, who w'ould defray the expense of
these exertions. Finding from my answer that the English
are the great friends of the Jews, and would support any
judicious measures for the welfare of a people of such sacred
origin and associations, he bade me “ Go on,” promising “ to
assist me to the utmost of his power.” The courtiers in the
divan, perceiving the interest thus awakened on behalf of a
people whom they considered unworthy to be spoken of,
crowded round me. The influence I thus acquired, and
which was exercised in acts of kindness to the Jews, and in
the distribution of the Scriptures, was gratefully appreciated
by them, little accustomed to anything else than indignity and
contempt.
10

It is not only in the limits of Persia that the effects of an


efficient and judicious mission will be felt. There are no
pioneers like the Jews. Linked together by a bond of union,
intense and universal, the “ tribe of the wandering foot,”
whom the late conqueror of Europe found so useful as emis¬
saries in every capital and city of the West, may be turned to
admirable advantage as the colporteurs, to carry the word of
life, and the itinerant missionaries, to their brethren, and the
dwellers of the far regions of the vast and almost unpenetrated
continent of the East. Without contravening the law's of
states, without the investiture of the missionary office, the
Jew trader may become a mighty instrument to pull down the
strong-holds of the enemy. And what I now speak, I speak
from experience. How was it but by this agency that I pro¬
cured circulation for the word of God amongt the barbarous
Caucasian hordes, of one of whom, (the Lesghy tribe,) it is a
proverb, that “ he is a madman or a fool who would venture
a foot amongst them /” By this agency I lodged and received
money for forty-six copies of the New Testament, purchased
at Androva in Daghistan on the Caspian, amongst Jews who
had never seen or scarce heard of such a book.* This was
effected by my poor Jewish brethren at a trying and perilous
time. I was, in 1838, by permission of the Russian govern¬
ment at liflis, pursuing my investigations concerning the
remnant of the ten tribes. The Anglo-Indian army was on
its march to Cabul. Ihe jealousy of the government of
Russia in Georgia was awakened against me, lest I should
give information to the English government of what I saw
and heard: and it being quite unusual for a foreign missionary
to travel within the Russian frontiers, I had no easy task, it
may be supposed. Nevertheless, with this simple, cheap, and
faithful agency, I accomplished all I desired; and I derived
from every quarter of that perilous region, information to con¬
vince me that the Jews dwelling in the mountains of Daghis¬
tan, and scattered along its narrow shores, are none other
than the long-sought “ remnant.”

* See Report of the Auxiliary Bible Society, Bombay, 1839, anil


eport of the Bombay Jewish Society.
11

The same agency will be effectual for the other frontiers of


Persia, namely, Cabul, Herat, Turcomania, &c., where the
Jewish people are largely scattered. The mission includes
the whole of Arabia, and a most important station has been
taken up at Aden, where also a school has been established
for Jewish children, to which the authorities and residents of
the place have generally subscribed, which place commands
the province of Yemen.* This occupation is an instance of
the pace which missionary effort may keep with the opportu¬
nities resulting from the ambition and strivings of men ; and
even with the progress of the monster of war. The success
of the British arms lately in Cabul has of necessity diffused
an influence on the British name, which it is your opportunity
to improve for the best interests of mankind. The tenure by
which possession of the Indian empire is held in the East, is
so manifestly a result of Divine interposition, that no remon¬
strance can be too urgent, no persuasions too intense, to stir
up the Christian Church to be up and doing, to send forth
those whose feet shall be beautiful upon the mountains, pro¬
claiming the advent of Him whose coming is compared to
the shining of the lightning from the east to the west, from,
the one part under the heaven to the other. Besides this tran¬
sitory but important event, there are other causes at work,
and other facts which manifest the value of the field and
labour. This is a day of change. This is manifest in all the
polities of the West. The laws of the Medes and Persians,
it was an ancient saying, change not. Not so, however,
with the mind of those who are the denizens of that beautiful
and effeminate country. For generations the Jewish mind
has, it is true, been frozen up; their customs and turn of
thought seemed to know no change. A pervading influence,
however, has excited them to inquire, and is preparing them
as the clods of the ground, which the genial influence of the
season softens for the labourer’s hand. There is a change at
work, though it be but as the motion of the bones in a
charnel-house. And not, as in Europe, where the awakening

* See Appendix, p. 18.


12

spirit of inquiry has led forth this people, in too many eases,
into neology and infidelity, there is an inquiry amongst the
Eastern Jews, which can only be substantially satisfied by the
faithful tidings of a free and full salvation by the blood of
the Cross. The Talmud does not prevail there as in
Europe. And, except in the case of a few thousand Jews
through India and Arabia, who have embraced Mahom-
medanism, (and who, to missionaries disposed to glory in the
flesh of a Jew, would, without much difficulty, be forward
subjects for baptism,) the Eastern Jews are a simple, devout
people, walking circumspectly in their law, and in submission
to their elders. A conquest amongst these achieves much
in its influence on the Jewish mind. I have rarely found a
lax Jew turn out a creditable Christian. And what a need
there is of simple, faithful missionaries amongst them to ma¬
nifest Christianity in its truth and power ! The Armenian
Church, with its corruptions and hostility to the seed of
Abraham, is the only institution from which the Jew derives
his notion of the Church of Christ. At Oormia, it is true,
where a few American missionaries labour amongst the Nes-
torians there, the sound of the Gospel is heard; but it is a
striking fact, that with all the excellence of the Nestorian
Christians, they bear a bitter hatred to the Jews.
Annexed to this is a table of the Jewish population, and of
missionaries required for the field of labour ;* men of God,
self-denying, laborious, counting not their lives dear to them,
upon whom not only the Cross, but the advent of Messiah in
power and glory, exerts its proper influence; leading them,
tor the love they bear their Saviour, to care for the lost sheep
who wander without a shepherd ! having in this cause, and
for this people, a love stronger than death,—an undying affec¬
tion which many waters cannot quench.
The limits of this address necessitate me to be brief: I
will, therefore, summarily make my appeal in an especial
manner to three classes in your native land, exerting, espe¬
cially the first and the last, a powerful and peculiar influence,
which I would fain engage, in some measure at least, on behalf

* See Appendix, p. 31.


13

of this field of labour which I have arrived in this country to


cast upon the Christian world.
To the National Church of this country I look, the boast
of whose sons it is, that her foundations are in the holy hills,
and what hill like that of Zion, for whose dust I plead,—
that the wall thereof may be built up, though it be in troublous
times. The sacred link of church and state, which in times
of scoffing and error is still contended for, and which has
called down upon this land such blessings from the Almighty,
remember, you derived from them who are now broken, with¬
out power, but who were selected as the model on which you
have framed your institutions, which have diffused a lustre
and a glory on England peculiarly her own. Your Church,
the most evangelical and scriptural in the whole world, and
the great beacon amongst the nations, forget not, has its
foundations sunk in the solid depths of Old Testament truth,
whilst it is clothed upon with the glory of the New. Your
Liturgy, whose services bring in array that cloud of witnesses,
the goodly fellowship of the prophets, the noble army of
martyrs,—the doctrine, life, and sufferings of Him who was,
after the flesh, of the seed of Abraham, a Jew—in every office
reminds you of the claims of those, who, as a nation of priests,
were, and still are, holy to the Lord.
You, who are the shepherds of this goodly flock, the bishops
of the Church, let me as an elder brother plead with you.
You, whose garments are the same which clad the holy Aaron
as he went up to the altar of God : your crook, the patriarchal
staff of our father Jacob, and the rod of power wherewith the
lawgiver called down destruction on the foes of Israel: your
mitre, that holy emblem, the glory of the Aaronic race,
though cleft through the divisions of the Church, shall yet be¬
come one in that day when the Lord shall be King over all
the earth, and his name One,—by these and every considera¬
tion suggested by the Levitical associations, as well as evan¬
gelical grace, united in your holy Mother Church, I, an Hebrew
of the Hebrews, and of the line of Aaron, claim, though it be
but a tithe, for this poor people, from whom, through the
Saviour who came forth of them, you have derived all! It
was by the hands of a beloved and respected prelate, the late
Bishop (at that time Archdeacon) Corrie, that the first stone
14

of this mission was laid; whose principles were defined by


himself on a plan which he highly approved.*
There are brethren, however, the Non-conformists of this
land, whose boast and liberty it is, to walk apart from the form
and pressure of episcopal authority and power. Though on
the former grounds I may not urge, upon the higher, which
they exclusively assume, I appeal. Remember that word,
“ beginning at Jerusalem and to whom was the Gospel
commanded to be preached? was it not “ to the Jew firstV'
What, brethren, in a day of trouble, in which, in the very
house of his friends, the Saviour is wounded by the unseemly
strife which arrays the two great parties of Protestant Chris¬
tendom against each other, shall it be taken up against you
as a token of apostasy and backsliding, that you commission
not one missionary from your various sections to the lost sheep
of the house of Israel ? Shall it be quoted as a proof, by those
whom you oppose, of declension and darkness in your ranks,
that not a fibre in the whole corporation of dissent is moved
on behalf of those, “ whose receivingas the apostle shows,
“ shall be life from the dead ?” Contradict the charge, and
imitate the conduct of the non-conforming fathers, who, in
days of peril and of darkness, blew the trumpet in Zion, and
strengthened themselves on that declared mystery, the re¬
union of the Jewish branch to its own olive again. One of
these revered fathers urges this duty, that a result may be
brought about which we have even more reason to desire than
he. Matthew Mead of Stepney urges the duty of labouring
* Extract from the Calcutta Christian Observer.
A meeting was held at the old Church Parsonage. President, the
Venerable Archdeacon Corrie.
No. 1 . ,
July 1 1831.
The following Sub-Committee were appointed to inquire into the
moral character and general fitness of Mr. Samuel, for the purpose
of employing him as the agent for the Society.
The Rev. Mr. Duff, Missionary to the General Assembly of Scot¬
land ; the Rev. Mr. Greenwood, Acting Chaplain, Old Church; the
Rev. T. Dealtry, L.L.B.; Major Powney, Captain Dalby, and A.
Beatie, Esq.
No. 2. November 1831.
Resolution—The Directors of the Society for Promoting Chris¬
tianity among the Jews in Calcutta, beg to solicit the attention of
their Christian brethren to the above abstract of the minutes of
15

for Israel, because, he says, “ At the Jewish restoration shall


be a time of great love and affection. Never such a world of
love as shall be in the days of the Jews’ conversion, for there
shall be great effusion of the^Spirit, and one of whose fruits is
love. Not only love to God, and Christ, and the truth, but to
all saints. 1 he apostle,” he continues, “ makes a defect of
this grace in the church an evident character of a carnal
frame. 1 Ye are yet carnal, whereas there is envying, and
strife, and division amongst you ; are ye not carnal f ” He
appeals to their own consciences, who knew that these were
the manifest works of the flesh. But in that day,” he con¬
cludes, {< these shall cease. No hurting or destroying in all
the holy mountain. The devil with his cloven foot is got into
the churches of Christ, and he makes sad work there, and
that is the reason there is so little love. But then all this
shall cease.”*
When 1 look to the extensive charities, the godly zeal, and
the high character of my non-conforming brethren; when I
behold their abundant labours in the dark places of the earth,
and the faithful and intrepid missionaries who are engaged
amongst the heathen, surely my appeal on behalf of Israel
will not be in vain: the principle of the Mission being such
as accords with that liberty for which they with such earnest¬
ness contend. The Jews are a people of God’s own planting,
and are destined “ not to be reckoned among the nations.”
All that I ask is, by your prayers and means to water the
ground, and hasten on that consummation when the branch of
the Lord shall be beautiful and glorious, and its fruits comely
and pleasant.

their first meeting. They have now been constituted five months,
and after a careful examination of the qualifications and character
of Mr. Samuel, they have resolved to employ him as their agent to
lead the Jews at this Presidency to a knowledge of the truths of
our holy religion; by which alone they can receive remission of sins,
and become partakers of the kingdom of heaven.
President. The Rev. Archdeacon Corrie.
Treasurer. The Rev. T. Dealtry.
Secretary. Alexander Beatie, Esq., No. 8, Esplanade Row.

*
Sermons on the Jews, 1686—8.
16

Now let me, in conclusion, address a few lines to the Chris¬


tian sisterhood of Great Britain, those elect ladies of this land,
whose influence may be so powerfully enlisted on behalf of our
suffering race throughout the world. The attention of some
of these has been directed to the condition of eastern females,
and some steps have been taken to elevate their degraded
sisters in the lands through which for ten years I have jour¬
neyed. This is a noble and truly wise enterprise, for the
females of the East are the nursing mothers of future genera¬
tions; and a seed well sown may come up a thousand. To
these, I say, turn also your attention to the Jewish mothers and
daughters of those lands; and, in faith in the purposes and
promises of God to the seed of Abraham, come forward to
raise up these; and in that day when the Lord shall purge
away the filth of the daughters of Zion, may many of these
rise up in witness, that in their afflictions you were afflicted ;
that you have entered into the sufferings of Jesus to raise the
captives of Jerusalem from the dust, and have led them forth
in holy sisterhood to be adorned for the presence-chamber of
the great King ! O ! it is a solemn responsibility which rests
upon women professing godliness ! The influence of the sex,
tor weal or for woe, is a proverb in every age and country.
And often in the sultry desert, and in the deaths to which I
have been subject, have I experienced the soothing influence
of woman; and have resolved, for the treatment I received, to
bear witness and to requite, by the help of God, the blessings
I received. In the desert, when smitten down with the spear
of the wild Arab, I have proved the heroism of woman, who
has sucked the deadly poison from my wounds, and soothed
my spirit with the tender assiduities of benevolence and love.
What more shall I say ? Accustomed to many tongues, I
feel my deficiency to plead with words of man’s wisdom this
mighty and momentous cause, especially after an absence of
ten years from this Christian land. Blessed are they who
hear the word of God, and do May these words
it.

prove a source of life to all whom I may be brought into in¬


tercourse w'ith, to plead the cause of Israel; nor may I be
compelled to shake the dust off my feet as a testimony against
any ! Brethren, strive with me for the inbringing of that day
17

when in the land of Judah this song shall be sung,—We have

A STRONG CITY", SALVATION WILL God APPOINT FOR WALLS

AND BULWARKS. OPEN YE THE GATES, THAT THE RIGHTEOUS

NATION, WHICH KEEPETH THE TRUTH, MAY ENTER IN. TRUST

ye in the Lord Jehovah, for in the Lord Jehovah is


EVERLASTING STRENGTH !

J he grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with your spirit.


Amen.

I am, Right Reverend Fathers,

Brethren, and Sisters,

Your elder Brother in the Church of Christ,

JACOB SAMUEL,
Senior Missionary of the Indian
Association for Promoting the Welfare of
the Jews in India, Persia, and Arabia.
London, Oct. 1st, 1840.

c
APPENDIX.

PLAN OF A SCHOOL
ESTABLISHED BY

THE REV. J. SAMUEL,

AMONGST THE JEWS IN ADEN,

In connexion with the Indian Society for Promoting the Temporal


and Spiritual Welfare of the Jewish People in India, Persia, and
Arabia.

1st. The revealed religion being the basis of this Institution, the
Bible is to be considered as its school-book, reserving, however, the
New Testament until the intellect of the pupils is sufficiently ad¬
vanced to understand the prophecies relating to the coming of the
Messiah, For that purpose they will be examined in the Old
Testament concerning the character, offices, miracles, and all the testi¬
monies the prophets give of the divine nature of the expected Messiah,
it being considered that an earlier introduction of the New Testament
amongst the Jews would not only be labour lost, but mischief done.
2nd. Besides the Scriptures, which are to be taught in their native
languages, namely, Hebrew and Arabic, arithmetic, penmanship,
civil and natural history, geography, the use of the globes, the ele¬
ments of chemistry, some practical knowledge of man as a physical,
moral, and intellectual being, and English literature, to be commu¬
nicated in the English language.
3rd. Scholars who have attained the ninth year shall attend, for one
year before their removal from the School, to lectures on the funda-
19

mental doctrines of Christianity, which will be delivered three times a


week by the Missionary of the Association.
4th. Children not to be admitted until they are two years and six
months old, and not to be removed until they have passed their tenth
year.

5th. The Scholars of this Institution are to attend to cleanliness,


an none can be admitted to any class except he appears with hands,
ace, and neck washed, and their hair cut short,—their clothek clean,
and as decent as possible.
6th. The poorer class to receive, on their first entrance, two suits of
cotton clothing, and one suit to be repeated every six months during the
year they attend the School. The school hours are to be decided by
t ie Teachers who shall be appointed to superintend the School.
7th. The School is to be opened on all days except the Jewish
Sabbath and festivals.
8th. Children being absent from the School without leave from the
Master shall be reprimanded or punished, which is left to the discre¬
tion of the head Teacher. But in case of any pupil being found
guilty of any serious violation of morality, he shall be expelled, and
never afterwards be admitted again on any account.
9th. Three Teachers will be appointed for the instruction of the
Hebrew language, with a salary of five reals per month ; a fourth, with
fifteen reals per month, for the Arabic class.
10. A servant to be appointed for the School, whose duty will be
to sweep the place twice a day, and to attend the children wherever
they go during the School hours.
11th. The spiritual and temporal affairs of the School shall be
under the management of the Agent sent by the Association, who are
bound for its permanent support.
12th. The Subscribers in Aden shall be entitled to form a Com¬
mittee for the purpose, to form any provisional regulations that mav
be found requisite ; but such regulations cannot be considered perma¬
nent until they have received the sanction of the parent Committee.
13th. All matters in dispute shall be referred to the parent Com¬
mittee in Bombay, whose decision shall be final.
14th. Hie Agent in charge of the School shall lecture once a week
on such subjects as his prudence and discretion shall dictate.
15th. All Subscriptions to be paid in advance to any individual
subscriber whom the Subscribers may appoint.
16th. The Missionary to the Jews to be stationed at Aden, in
connexion with the Indian Association, shall hold half-yearly exami¬
nations, when he is to give notice to all Subscribers and well-wishers
c 2
20

to the Institution. He shall also report the progress of the children


in their education ; the expenditure of the School; the subscriptions
and donations received, at least once a year, to the parent Committee,
who will furnish him with printed reports to distribute amongst the
Europeans in and visiting Aden.

SUBSCRIPTION LIST
In aid of the School Establishment for the Benefit of the Jews in
Aden.

Monthly Annual
NAMES OF SUBSCRIBERS. Subscrip¬ Subscrip¬ Donations.
tions. tions.

Rupees. Rupees. Rupees.

Lieut.-Col. Capon 10 100

Commandant Yeadell - 30
R. Diggles, esq., Governor of
21 11 10
Batavia -
Rev. G. Arbuthnot 20 8

Lieut. Christopher, Indian navy 32 9 9

Lieut. Ayrtyn, Artillery 2 20

Lieut. Bailey, Artillery - 2 10

Capt. Willoughby, Bombay army 20 for 2


years
Dr. Collier, Bombay army 15

Lieut. Stack, Bombay army - 10


21

LITERAL TRANSLATION OF A HEBREW LETTER

DEPOSITED WITH

THE INDIAN COMMITTEE OF THE MISSION


TO THE JEWS.

BY A CONVERTED JEW.

Peace be unto the beloved elder. Rabbi Jacob, son of Rabbi Samuel,
priest of the living God. Be it known unto my lord, that I, who
am of dust and ashes, Samuel, the son of Rabbi Isaac, servant to
my lord, came to this city last year, and heard that you arrived
here. The first thing I did was to find out your place of residence,
and came to find grace in your sight, that I might disclose to
you the secrets of my heart, that you might have mercy on me,
and teach me where my soul might find rest, even in Jesus the
Messiah.
It is now four years since I first came to Calcutta, when I heard
of your preaching from the law and the prophets, and proving to our
brethren that Jesus is the Messiah; and from the many New Tes¬
taments you had given to the Jews, I procured one, and gave my
heart to inquire into the truth of this doctrine, wherein I read and
found many passages which agree with the law and the prophets
concerning the Messiah. I prayed then to God (blessed be He !)
that he would give me a spirit of understanding, that I might know
and receive the truth as it is in Jesus the Messiah. Blessed be he,
and blessed be bis holy name, who has now heard my prayers, taken
away my stony heart, and given me a heart of flesh ; and by this I
know that Jesus is the Messiah my Lord. I now come to my master
for instruction, that I may learn which is the good way, that I may
walk therein; but before this, it is needful that I, Samuel, the son
of Rabbi Isaac, from Bagdad, testify that I believe Jesus is the
Messiah, who came the first time. I believe that he will come a
second lime to redeem all Israel. I believe that there is no other
22

remission of sins but through the blood of Jesus the Messiah,—as


it was foretold by the prophet Isaiah, “ He was wounded for our
transgressions, and bruised for our iniquities.” I believe that Jesus
the Messiah has not given himself as a saci-ifice for the Jews, but for
the sins of the whole world. I believe that all who have faith in the
Messiah have a portion in the future world. I do not believe the
Christian doctrine, that the law of Moses is abolished, but that it
remains in full force as regards our nation ; for the beloved Messiah
said, “ I came not to destroy the law, but strengthen it —this the
Christians translate “fulfil.” I come, therefore, to my teacher.
Rabbi Samuel, the angel of the Church, to beg baptism in the
name of Jesus the Messiah, that I may fulfil the commands which
he has commanded, saying, “ He that believeth shall be saved, and
he that believeth not shall dry away.” For this purpose I come as
a child to receive your instructions, and to beg of you to place me
under the wings of the Messiah. By your doing so, the Lord will
be gracious unto, and crown your efforts, that you may grow from
one degree to another until you reach the bliss of heaven.
I beg that you will not indulge a thought that I seek any worldly
benefit from you or any other man. God forbid ! Nor even the
smallest coin. "What is this world but a shadow? It comes and
vanishes away. Blessed be he who has given me an honourable em¬
ployment, whereby I gain a respectable livelihood ; and I have no
need of gifts from flesh and blood. In the exercise of the charity
which my lord practises in his holy calling, calculate upon me to
the last farthing. Freely will I deposit with you what property I
have; also my usefulness, if you have any opportunity to do good
either to Jew or to Gentile. I do not pray for baptism for myself
only, but for my wife also, who was instructed by you when in Cal¬
cutta. May these things be for the welfare of Israel ! Peace be
unto you, and to all our brethren who call upon the name of the
Messiah ben David. So say I, the servant of my Lord, Rabbi
Jacob, the son of Rabbi Samuel, priest of the living God.
(Signed) Samuel,
The Son of Rabbi Isaac.
Bagdad, July 4th, 1839.

(
Extract from the Minutes of the Committee of the Associa¬
tion in aid of the Rev. Jacob Samuel's Mission to the
Asiatic Jews, held in St. Andrew's Church, Bombay,
November 22nd, 1839.

INTER ALIA,

Resolved,—

1. That the committee, in taking leave of the Rev. Mr. Samuel,


previous to his departure for Arabia, desire heartily to commend him
to the care of that gracious Providence which has hitherto watched
over him in all the trials to which he has been exposed, and carried
him through all the labours he has undergone in preaching the
gospel to his countrymen, and in circulating the word of God.
2. That after Mr. Samuel has spent some time in preaching to his
countrymen, and distributing the Scriptures in Arabia, if he deems it
expedient to pass over to England to make further arrangements
relative to labours amongst the Asiatic Jews, this committee will
cheerfully acquiesce in such a plan, on the understanding that he is
not absent from the sphere of his labours for more than one year.
3. That should Mr. Samuel, while in England, meet with friends
of Israel who are desirous of co-operating with us according to the
plan laid down in the Oriental Christian Spectator for March, 1835,
the committee will hail such an event as another instance of the
countenance of a gracious Providence to missionary labours among
the Jews, and shall be most happy if he can induce others to co¬
operate in such a work; and further resolve, that a letter be written
him explanatory of the resolution, which he may use in England, if
he deems it expedient.
4. That while Mr. Samuel is in England, this committee recom¬
mend that he put himself in communication with the committee of
the British and Foreign Bible Society, and lay before them a copy
24

of the testimonials in his favour, which have been printed; and a


letter of introduction, with which this committee will furnish him, in
the hope that the difficulties which have sometimes prevented him of
getting an adequate supply of scriptures may be obviated, and the
committee of the British and Foreign Bible Society induced to aid
him with pecuniary grants for the conveyance of scriptures into the
interior of Arabia and Persia.
(Signed) F. P. Lester, Major Artillery,
Chairman of the Committee.
J. Stevenson, D.D.,
St. Andrews, Bombay.
Secretary,

To the Rev. Jacob Samuel, Missionary to the Jews in Persia


and Arabia.

Bombay, November 25th, 1839.


My dear Mr. Samuel,
I have the pleasure to communicate to you the resolution of our
committee of Friday last. In doing so, allow me, as particularly
directed, to make a few observations on the subject of the additional
aid to the Jewish cause you hope to procure in England.
You are well aware that the grand principle on which our con¬
nexion for the last five years has subsisted, and on which our harmo¬
nious intercourse has been based, is, that in the conduct of your
mission in all spiritual affairs, we refrain from the assumption of all
authority over you. While we have to acknowledge that you have
always been ready to listen to our advice, and follow it as far as you
thought you could do so with propriety, we have ever acted on the
assumption that the man who goes forth in dependence on divine
Providence, not counting his life dear to him, that he may fulfil the
ministry of the word, is, to say the least, as likely to know the path
of duty as any other, and has as good a right to suppose that divine
directions will be afforded directly to himself, as that it will be
given to another to be imparted to him. At any rate we deem it
most important that he should be fully convinced that the course he
is pursuing is the one in which his energies will be most exerted in
promoting the Redeemer’s cause ; and that all the responsibility, in
reference to it, rests with himself, which can hardly be the case if he
is merely pursuing a plan laid down by others, of which his own
mind does not fully approve.
25

Should it please divine Providence to prosper your efforts to raise


up more labourers for this wide field, white already to the harvest, you
will, we doubt not, take care that those you may associate with you
be men of a right spirit,—men who have experienced the power of
Divine grace in their own hearts, and are eagerly desirous that others
should partake in this unspeakable benefit.
Labourers in the field must be willing to follow you in the exercise
of that self-denial which lor the last five years you have been gene¬
rally called upon to practise. You must explain to them the nature
of those privations which you, as a missionary in Arabia and Persia,
have had to encounter, that there may be no mistake on this bead.
Your associates must have, above all, a love for the Jewish nation
which many waters of trial and tribulation cannot quench, which will
bear them up and lead them to persevere in this good cause, not¬
withstanding manifold discouragements to which they will be exposed,
and with the nature of which you are sufficiently acquainted from
your own experience to explain to them.
Whether you will consider that those who are to labour among the
Jews should be men who have prudence and wisdom to address them¬
selves to the peculiar state and prejudices of God’s ancient people,
is a point of much importance. The doctrine of the restoration of
Israel is interwoven into the whole mind of the Jew. To regard with
coldness the hope of this nation, is not the way to gain access to thd
heart of an Israelite.
On this subject your own feelings can suggest, better than any
words of mine, the conduct which should be pursued. In fine, they
should be men of Christian charity, loving all who love the Lord
Jesus Christ in sincerity, and actuated but by one motive, that of
bringing sinners into the sheepfold of the Redeemer ; not looking to
the praise or flattery of men as their reward, but seeking the appro¬
bation of him who sees in secret, and will openly reward his faithful
followers, when he comes to be glorified in his saints, and admired in
all them that believe. To his guidance we commit you. May you
go forth under his care, having your loins girt and your lamp burning,
and like a servant watching for his Lord.
I am your affectionate brother in the Lord,
(Signed) J. Stevenson, Secretary.
F. P. Lester, Chairman.
26

SUMMARY OF LABOURS

OF THE REV. J. SAMUEL.

(Extracted from public and private Documents.)

MINISTRY AMONGST THE JEWS IN BENGAL.

Times. Persons.
Preached from Moses’ Chair, and on the various
Gotts, an average audience 60, 110 6600
Visited families for private preaching, average 50, - 300 15000
Meetings for reading the Scriptures with adult Jews,
average 10, - 34 340
IN COCHIN.

Lectured to an average of 50, .... 15 750


Visited private families, average 50, - 31 1550

BOMBAY PRESIDENCY.

Preached from Moses’ Chair, average 110, 5 550


Private visits, average 50, - 300 15000

IN ARABIA.

From Moses’ Chair in Bussora, average 500, 5 2500


Private visits, average 50, - 18 900
Preached from Moses’ Chair, Bagdad, 1 4000
IN PERSIA.

From Moses’Chair, average 300, ... 82 24600


Private visits to families, 9459, _ 5 47295

IN YEMEN.

Preached in the Synagogue, Aden, average 500, - 3 1500


Private visits, average 30, - . 16 480

Total, 925 121,065


27

PUBLIC MINISTRY AMONGST CHRISTIANS.

(From the Church Register of the Marine Chapel, Calcutta, <3fc.)


Times. Persons.
In Calcutta and country churches, to an average of 60 205 12300
In the Madras Presidency — military stations.
average of 100, - 29 2900
Private meetings, average 30, - 60 1800
In the Bombay Presidency, in churches, chapels,
schools, average 80, - 38 3040
Divine Service in the various embassies, average 30, 40 1200

Tota 1, 372 21240

DISTRIBUTION OF SCRIPTURES.
Copies.
Hebrew New Testaments,

1
1500
Old Testaments, To Jews, 500
Parts of Scripture, 1300
Scrij)tures, Old and New,
To Mussulmen, 6486
and parts.

Total, 9786

GENERAL LABOURS.

Administered medicine to 2300 persons.


Number.
Assisted Jewish schools, - - - . g
Established and supported schools, - - 2

Relieved poor Jews, - 500


Pensioned respectable Jewish families, - - - 13
Poor Armenian Christians and Mussulmen relieved, - 80
Jewish converts throughout the Mission, - - - 72
Baptized, - 2

Children baptized, (Christian) .... 3

Roman Catholic converts, - - - - 3

European soldiers (Roman Catholic) converted, - - 18


Audiences with Mussulmen princes and chiefs, - - 30
Funeral, ------ 1

* With the exception of the Bibles granted by the British and Foreign Bible
Society, these labours were effected without the smallest assistance from the
parent country. The Scriptures were carried on mules and camels over an ex¬
tent of country averaging 10,000 miles.
28

TESTIMONIALS AND LETTERS FROM JEWS AND


JEWISH COMMUNITIES.

November, 1838.

,
Extract of a Letter from Ezekiel Mazlech the Company's
Indigo Broker, Calcutta, to Daniel Cokin, Merchant,
Cochin.

I rejoice to have it in my power to show some kindness to one whom


I love and esteem, and this is the Haham Samuel, a Talmud Haham of
the first order, whom I introduce to you. He is a great lover of our
brethren the Jews, and he goes about doing and wishing to do them
good. For three years he was a constant attendant in our house of
prayer, and often introduced very learned discourses; his desire is
to point out to us the true Messiah, but we do not hate him for that,
as we found him to be the peace and consolation to Israel.

November, 1833.

Extract of a Letter from Faresk Hajmi, a very respectable


Jew in Calcutta, to the Governor of the Jews in Bussorak.

Be pleased to account the bearer of this as one of our own family,


and show him forbearance when he should attempt to molest you with
his doctrines, for he is otherwise a man which every Jew ought to
honour and esteem. He has supported the poor of our synagogue
with a great support, and is now going to leave us. I hope that you
will welcome him, should he arrive at your, tents; be not afraid of
him, for he is not such a madman as the one which visited you when
I was there.

March, 1835.

Extract of a Letter from Ezekiel Atdul Noby, (a very respect¬


able merchant in Bombay,) to Joseph Ezra, Treasurer to
the British Establishment at Bussorak.

1 recommend to you my friend Jacob Samuel Collin, who deliveis


this letter to you ; Re has a head full of learning, and from his
words all who are thirsty may be refreshed. Receive him as one of
ours, but take care that he does not overcome your faith. Love him,
not because he is a Jew, for he does not walk in the way of Israel,
but we must love him because he is very charitable, and loves our
brethren.
29

March, 1835.
Extract of a Letter from David Sasun {an Elder and a
respectable merchant in Bombay) to his brother in Bussorah .
Receive, my brother, the bearer of this, Chaham Samuel Cohin,
who, though a Christian, is a very good and learned man.

March, 1835.
Extract from a Letter of Recommendation from the Nase of
Bussorah to Hacham Moses, Judge of the Jews in Bagdad.
Rabbi Samuel Cohin has requested me to give him an introduc¬
tion, which I could not refuse, for he had the power of bringing
great evils upon my head, and yet, contrary to what we expected,
he did me great favours, and honour to all the Jews here. He is a
great Talmud caham, and I hope you will be able to contradict his
arguments in favour of the Nazarene doctrines, for our Haam from
Jerusalem as well as ourselves are too weak scholars for him.

March, 1837.
Extract of a Letter from Rabbi Benjamin to the Rev. J.
Samuel.
Your discourses have caused great commotion amongst the Jews
here, and scarcely do we find two or three together without disputing
about the Christian doctrines; some approve and others disapprove
of them; but though many believe that Jesus is the Messiah, yet
none is more ready to you than myself.
If you permit me, I will follow you during the rest of my days,
and preach faithfully as you did last Saturday.

Extracts from a Letter of Recommendation from the Chief


Synagogue of the Fort in Bombay, to the great Doctors and
Chief Rabbis of the Holy Land and City of Jerusalem.
Our desire this time is to bring to your notice, and to the notice
of our great Doctors, the friend Samuel Jacob, priest, now defiled.
When he first came to us, he brought with him great recommenda¬
tions from the holy congregation of the Captivity in Calcutta, and
they testified that he is good and faithful to the people of Israel;
that they have not found in him the least prejudice towards Israel.
And since he came here, we also have heard nor seen anything that
could be said against him, except that he is anxious for the peace
and prosperity of Israel. He never hates us, nor any Jew, as
30

others do. He speaks good to the Gentiles concerning us, and


though he walks in the way of the Gentiles, yet we cannot hate
him, for God knows the secret thoughts of the heart, and therefore
God knows him also. And as he is now going to your city, to the
land of Israel, we pray that you do not look down upon him, but
receive him with all his errors ; perhaps you may be an instrument
to him in removing them. And for his sake you may draw the
blessing upon you all, that you may be worthy to abide until the day
of the coming of our Messiah, which may we see with our eyes
speedily, and rejoice in with our hearts. Written and signed in the
city of Bombay, by permission, in the year according to the inter¬
pretation, that it may he His will to deliver us out of their hands,
and bring us to the land of our fathers. Peace and prosperity be
multiplied unto you, is the wish from your elders, who await your
command.
(Signed) David Sassoon Salay. Hyam Isaac.
Moses Mordecai. David Hey.
Ezekiel Gabay. Abraham Matzleach.
Elijah Raphael. Moses Ezra Nisam.
21st of the month Chisleu, in the year 5600.

Certificate of the Elders in Aden, in a Letter sent by the


Eev. J. Samuel to the Jews in Yemen, for the p>urpose of
gathering one hundred labourers for the Honourable Com¬
pany's Service. Signed by D. Capon, Lieut-Col. Com¬
mandant.
Brethren and Children of the Captivity,
We of the Court of Justice in the holy congregation of Aden
have examined all that Rabbi Samuel has written, and bear testi¬
mony to the truth of his desire to raise Israel. And we believe him
to be a faithful mediator, who meditates good for the house of Israel,
and his objects are just and honest. Therefore fear not, but come
and listen to all that he commands you. And so may Zion increase
in judgment, and her captives in righteousness.
Written and sealed with the seal of the Court of Justice of the
holy congregation at Aden.
Mynaghan Monsoor,
Moses Morea,
Shua Samuel,
Isaac Jacob Cohen,
Judyes of Aden
31

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PLAN OF THE ASSOCIATION
FOR PROMOTING THE WELFARE OF THE JEWS IN INDIA, PERSIA, AND ARABIA ;

A dmitting the co-operation of all persons who are disposed to concur


in its support.

I. The Indian Society shall continue to conduct the affairs of the


Mission as hitherto.
II. Societies, whether composed of Churchmen or Dissenters,
formed in Great Britain, in support of this Mission, may adopt such
local resolutions as may he expedient for their own guidance.
III. A Secretary in London, appointed by the Indian Society,
will receive and answer all communications relating to the objects of
the Mission.
IV. Subscriptions for the Mission to be paid to Messrs. Smith,
Payne, and Smith, Bankers, Lombard-street, or their Agents
throughout the country. The Secretary being apprised of the same,
will forward a receipt of the amount received, signed by the Treasurer.
V. Every year a statement of moneys received and expended to he
sent to the Subscribers; but no names of the Subscribers to be pub¬
lished. A written list, however, to be kept at the office for those
desirous of inspecting it.
VI. Subscriptions for Schools, charities to poor Jews, or designed
for Specific Missions, to he stated when the amount is lodged, that the
funds may he so applied.

MISSIONARIES WANTED.
Seven Missionaries are wanted immediately, in connexion with the
foregoing Mission. Communications to be addressed to Mr. Samuel,
as aforesaid.

LONDON:
PRINTED BY IBOTSON AND PALMER, SAVOY STREET, STRAND.
DATE DUE

ntm*m 5

GAYLORD PRINTED IN U S A.

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