Negrophile
Previously had only temporary resident status.

About 2,500 Black Hebrews based in the desolate desert town of Dimona will now be able to serve in Israel's military and vote in municipal elections. Under Israeli law, permanent residents can usually apply for citizenship after five years.

"We have been in talks with the government for years, so the decision is a nice surprise," sect spokeswoman Yaffa Bat-Gavriel said.

Under Israel's "law of return," people considered Jews according to rabbinical codes are eligible for immediate citizenship. The law does not cover those born to illegal or temporary residents in Israel.

Practising a strict version of kibbutz-style collectivism and Old Testament ethics -- including polygamy and veganism -- the Black Hebrews are not recognised as Jews by Israel's rabbinate.

The Black Hebrews believe they are descended from one of ancient Israel's 10 lost tribes by way of Africa and the slave routes to America, an account most scholars dismiss as myth.

Several sect members were deported as illegal residents in the 1970s, but authorities avoided a large-scale crackdown, citing concern the Jewish state would be accused internationally of racial discrimination.

A government initiative in the 1990s to settle the Black Hebrews' residency status lagged under interior ministers from ultra-Orthodox religious parties. But current Interior Minister Avraham Poraz of the secularist Shinui party has vowed to liberalise the country's naturalisation policies.

| MSNBC has Dan Williams' Reuters article "Israel grants ''Black Hebrews'' permanent residency"


posted in articles on July 29, 2003 10:14 AM | t (0)

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