'Jews a Race' Genetic Theory Comes Under Fierce Attack by DNA Expert
Scientists usually don’t call each other “liars” and “frauds.”
But that’s how Johns Hopkins University post-doctoral
researcher Eran Elhaik describes a group of widely respected
geneticists, including Harry Ostrer, professor of pathology and genetics at Yeshiva University’s Albert Einstein College of Medicine and author of the 2012 book “Legacy: A Genetic History of the Jewish People.”
For years now, the findings of Ostrer and several other
scientists have stood virtually unchallenged on the genetics of Jews
and the story they tell of the common Middle East origins shared by many
Jewish populations worldwide. Jews — and Ashkenazim in particular — are
indeed one people, Ostrer’s research finds.
It’s a theory that more or less affirms the
understanding that many Jews themselves hold of who they are in the
world: a people who, though scattered, share an ethnic-racial bond
rooted in their common ancestral descent from the indigenous Jews of
ancient Judea or Palestine, as the Romans called it after they conquered
the Jewish homeland.
But now, Elhaik, an Israeli molecular geneticist, has
published research that he says debunks this claim. And that has set off
a predictable clash.
“He’s just wrong,” said Marcus Feldman of Stanford University, a leading researcher in Jewish genetics, referring to Elhaik.
The sometimes strong emotions generated by this
scientific dispute stem from a politically loaded question that
scientists and others have pondered for decades: Where in the world did
Ashkenazi Jews come from?
The debate touches upon such sensitive issues as
whether the Jewish people is a race or a religion, and whether Jews or
Palestinians are descended from the original inhabitants of what is now
the State of Israel.
Ostrer’s theory is sometimes marshaled to lend the
authority of science to the Zionist narrative, which views the migration
of modern-day Jews to what is now Israel, and their rule over that
land, as a simple act of repossession by the descendants of the land’s
original residents. Ostrer declined to be interviewed for this story.
But in his writings, Ostrer points out the dangers of such reductionism;
some of the same genetic markers common among Jews, he finds, can be
found in Palestinians, as well.
By using sophisticated molecular tools, Feldman, Ostrer
and most other scientists in the field have found that Jews are
genetically homogeneous. No matter where they live, these scientists
say, Jews are genetically more similar to each other than to their
non-Jewish neighbors, and they have a shared Middle Eastern ancestry.
Wednesday, 8 May 2013
Are Jews Really a Race? Israeli Scientist Challenges Hypothesis of Middle East Origins
Posted @ 18:40
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment