Chinese Jews of Ancient Lineage Huddle Under Pressure.
KAIFENG, China The rooms where ruddy-faced Chinese men and women once assembled to pray in Hebrew and Mandarin are silent. Signs and exhibits that celebrated centuries of Jewish life have disappeared. An ancient well, believed to be the last visible remnant of a long-demolished synagogue, was recently buried under concrete and a pile of earth..
After locking down Buddhist monasteries in Tibet and tearing down church crosses in eastern China, President Xi Jinpings campaign against unapproved religion and foreign influence has turned to an unlikely adversary: a small group of Jews whose ancestors settled in this now faded imperial city near the banks of the Yellow River more than 1,000 years ago.
A few hundred residents had staged a lively, sometimes contentious rebirth of Kaifengs Jewish heritage in recent decades, with classes, services and proposals to rebuild the lost synagogue as a museum. Some residents even migrated to Israel. For years, the city government tolerated their activities, seeing the Jewish link as a magnet for tourism and investment.
But since last year, the authorities have come down hard on the revival, in an example of how even the smallest spiritual groups can fall under the pall of the Communist Partys suspicion. The government has shut down organizations that helped foster Jewish rediscovery, prohibited residents from gathering to worship for Passover and other holidays, and removed signs and relics of the citys Jewish past from public places. . .
Judaism is not one of Chinas five state-licensed religions: Buddhism, Catholicism, Islam, Protestantism and Taoism.'>>>
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/25/world/asia/china-kaifeng-jews.html?