'Lost tribe' members migrate from India to Israel

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Fifty members of an Indian community believed to be descendants of one of the lost tribes of Israel arrived on Monday in the Jewish state, completing their immigration, AFP reports. Linking up with family members who have already settled in Israel, they are among the first wave of the 7,200-strong Bnei Menashe community's mass immigration to the Jewish state. The Indians say they are the descendants of the 10 tribes who lived in the kingdom of Israel in Biblical times and who were dispersed, according to the Bible, after the invasion of the Assyrians in 721 BC. "After thousands of years of exile, we have returned home at last," said Nachshon Gangte, 47, waiting for an older sister he has not seen for 12 years. After hours of patiently waiting in the arrival hall of Tel Aviv's Ben Gurion airport, he could no longer hold back his tears when she appeared. "It's great, God is great. He has allowed me to meet my family on holy land," he said. His niece, Zimra, said he was "happy to see my family and my land". Michael Freund of the Shavei Israel group (meaning "those who return to Israel" in Hebrew), which arranged their journey, said more than 7,000 people have sought help from the Israeli government to emigrate from India. "The members of this tribe have never forgotten where they came from and we are excited to be able to help them come back," he told AFP, adding that hundreds of others were expected to arrive in coming weeks. They were welcomed at the airport by dozens of family members, amid a festive atmosphere. More than 1,700 members of the Bnei Menashe community already live in Israel, the majority of whom were already practicising Judaism in India. The Israeli government had approved in October the arrival of some 275 members of the tribe, for the first time since 2007. Newcomers, who will also convert, will stay at an integration facility in central Israel for a period of three months, after which they will live in the north of the country. They received temporary residency to be processed after conversion to Israeli identity cards. The Bnei Menashe are members of the Kuki-Chin-Mizo tribe who live in the northeastern Indian states of Mizoram and Manipur near the border with Myanmar. Their oral history tells of a centuries-long exodus through Persia, Afghanistan, Tibet and China, all the while adhering to certain Jewish religious practices, like circumcision. In India, they were converted to Christianity by 19th-century missionaries and, in reading the Bible, recognised stories from their own traditions that convinced them they actually belonged to the Jewish faith.

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Fifty members of an Indian community believed to be descendants of one of the lost tribes of Israel arrived on Monday in the Jewish state, completing their immigration, AFP reports. Linking up with family members who have already settled in Israel, they are among the first wave of the 7,200-strong Bnei Menashe community's mass immigration to the Jewish state. The Indians say they are the descendants of the 10 tribes who lived in the kingdom of Israel in Biblical times and who were dispersed, according to the Bible, after the invasion of the Assyrians in 721 BC. "After thousands of years of exile, we have returned home at last," said Nachshon Gangte, 47, waiting for an older sister he has not seen for 12 years. After hours of patiently waiting in the arrival hall of Tel Aviv's Ben Gurion airport, he could no longer hold back his tears when she appeared. "It's great, God is great. He has allowed me to meet my family on holy land," he said. His niece, Zimra, said he was "happy to see my family and my land". Michael Freund of the Shavei Israel group (meaning "those who return to Israel" in Hebrew), which arranged their journey, said more than 7,000 people have sought help from the Israeli government to emigrate from India. "The members of this tribe have never forgotten where they came from and we are excited to be able to help them come back," he told AFP, adding that hundreds of others were expected to arrive in coming weeks. They were welcomed at the airport by dozens of family members, amid a festive atmosphere. More than 1,700 members of the Bnei Menashe community already live in Israel, the majority of whom were already practicising Judaism in India. The Israeli government had approved in October the arrival of some 275 members of the tribe, for the first time since 2007. Newcomers, who will also convert, will stay at an integration facility in central Israel for a period of three months, after which they will live in the north of the country. They received temporary residency to be processed after conversion to Israeli identity cards. The Bnei Menashe are members of the Kuki-Chin-Mizo tribe who live in the northeastern Indian states of Mizoram and Manipur near the border with Myanmar. Their oral history tells of a centuries-long exodus through Persia, Afghanistan, Tibet and China, all the while adhering to certain Jewish religious practices, like circumcision. In India, they were converted to Christianity by 19th-century missionaries and, in reading the Bible, recognised stories from their own traditions that convinced them they actually belonged to the Jewish faith.
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