(JEWISH GROUP) Untangling False Claims About Ashkenazi Jews, Khazars and Israel
Research from ADL has documented in detail the rise in antisemitism and anti-Zionism in the weeks and months following Hamass brutal assault on Israel on October 7, 2023. One of the most insidious claims used to discredit both Jews and Israel is that Ashkenazi Jews (i.e., Jews who trace their ancestry to Northern and Eastern Europe) have no historical or genetic relationship to Jewish antiquity in the land of Israelmaking Jews colonizers with no legitimate claim to the land that makes up the Jewish state.
Some proponents of these claims invoke the so-called Khazar theory, which posits that modern Ashkenazi Jews are descended from a Turkic population of converts to Judaism from the Caucasus area of Central and Eastern Asia (known as the Khazars) during the early Middle Ages.
Although legends about the Khazars have circulated in Jewish and non-Jewish literature for centuries, and there is some evidence of Jewish influence or presence among the Khazars over a thousand years ago, anti-Israel activists often seize upon a 2012 study by Eran Elhaik, which claimed to find genetic evidence for this theory. His study was harshly criticized in a 2013 article with more than 20 co-authors, published in Human Biology, which argued that Elhaik inappropriately used modern-day Armenians and Georgians as proxies for Khazars. The authors of this more comprehensive study acknowledge that they cannot rule out the possibility that Ashkenazi Jews have any Khazar ancestry, but that because no living people claim direct descent from Khazars, Elhaiks methodology was flawed from the start.
Peer-reviewed journals such as Science conclude that evidence firmly establishes that Ashkenazi Jews stem from a common Middle Eastern origin and heritage. The 20 co-authors of the study in Human Biology confirm that Ashkenazi Jews derive [shared Jewish genetic markers] primarily from populations of the Middle East and Europe.
In addition, people who weaponize this hypothesis to discredit the Jewish claim to the land of Israel should note that Ashkenazi Jews do not make up the majority of Israels Jewish population. According to a 2016 Pew Research report, only about 45% of Israeli Jews identify as Ashkenazi, while 48% identify as Sephardic or Mizrahi.
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