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Africa Subsaharan
The lost Jews of Nigeria
2022-05-01
Very long, and may play into why the Igbo (Biafra) region of the country is suddenly being hit with Muslim attacks in the very Nigerian war of all against all. Herewith the background section:
[TheGuardian] Until the 1990s, there were almost no Jews in Nigeria. Now thousands have enthusiastically taken up the faith. Why?

Back in the 1970s, when Moshe Ben Avraham was growing up in Port Harcourt, in southern Nigeria, the town was small and fringed by bush villages, and there were no Jews in sight. Ben Avraham wasn’t yet Jewish himself; he wasn’t even "Ben Avraham", for that matter. His Anglican parents gave him the name Moses Walison — still his official name — and they raised him as a churchgoing boy. In this, they were no different from millions of others in their part of the country. One of the first demographic details anyone learns about Nigeria is that while people living up north are predominantly Moslem, those down south are just as overwhelmingly Christian. The minibuses sputtering up and down these southern highways bear slogans like "Jesus is Needful" on their back windows. On billboards, preachers hype their ministries; a prayer meeting is never just a prayer meeting — it is a "global mega powerquake" or a "harvest of miracles". Islam and Christianity have been in Nigeria for centuries, but Judaism has none of that conspicuous history or heritage. In his childhood, Ben Avraham knew nothing about Judaism, and he’d only encountered Israel as a biblical name: "Israel, Abraham, all those things," he recalled.

Then, in 1986, his father died, and a few years later, in the midst of a growing disaffection with his church, Ben Avraham fell ill: a cut on his tongue that set off a severe infection. At the time, he came across a Christian ministry called the White Garment Sabbath, and after one of its white-robed, barefooted priests healed him, he joined the group. In Nigeria, the White Garment Sabbath calls itself a church, and its prayer halls host icons of Christ on the cross. "But they told me that Saturday is the day of worship, the shabbat — not Sunday," Ben Avraham said. It was the first time he’d heard this, but when they offered him proof — careful readings of Genesis and Exodus — he wondered what else he’d been doing wrong. "On my own," he said, "I started to go deeper."
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