If you thought the wonders of the Internet
were best characterized by videos of cats on treadmills and Words With Friends,
consider the experience of Shmuel Tikvah ben Yaacov. The web introduced him to
his heritage.
Shmuel,
an Igbo (pronounced Ebo) from Southeastern Nigeria, grew up understanding that
he was Jewish, but he knew little religious and cultural history. (Tradition has
it that the Igbo are descendants of Gad, founder of one of the lost tribes of
Israel.) But when the Internet came to Nigeria, Shmuel began researching, and
what he learned convinced him of his Jewish heritage and inspired him to help
build the country's small Jewish community.
Writer/director Jeff L. Lieberman's Re-Emerging: The Jews of Nigeria is a fascinating
portrait of a group that, until recently, had little contact with Jewish
communities around the world. Despite a lack of resources and the Israeli
government's disinclination to recognize the Igbo as Jews, Shmuel and his fellow
community members are committed. And after a visit from a sympathetic American
rabbi, Shmuel reveals his dream: to attend the Jewish Theological Seminary in
New York. Despite the visa difficulties that ensue, Shmuel is determined to
become a rabbi: "The community here needs my service."
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