The origins of Kaifeng's Jewish community
are something of a mystery. A Song-dynasty
stele now in the town museum records that they
arrived here in the Zhou dynasty, nearly three
thousand years ago, though this seems
doubtful. It's more likely their ancestors
came here from central Asia around 1000 AD,
when trade links between the two areas were
strong, a supposition given some weight by the
characteristics they share with Persian Jews,
such as their use of 27 rather than 22 letters
of the Hebrew alphabet. The community was
never large, but it seems to have flourished
until the nineteenth century, when perhaps as
a result of disastrous floods, including one
in 1850 which destroyed the synagogue, the
Kaifeng Jews almost completely died out. The
synagogue, which stood at the corner of
Pingdeng Jie and Beixing Jie, on the site of
what is now a hospital, was never rebuilt, and
no trace of it remains today. A number of
families in Kaifeng trace their lineage back
to the Jews, and, following the atmosphere of
greater religious tolerance in contemporary
China, have begun practising again. You can
see a few relics from the synagogue in Kaifeng
Museum, including three steles that once stood
outside it, but most, such as a Torah in
Chinese now in the British Museum, are in
collections abroad.