Encyclopaedia Judaica
Jews in Indonesia
Spice Islands - immigration from Asia and Europe - no Jewish
immigration since the independence
from: Indonesia; In: Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971, Vol. 8
presented by Michael Palomino (2008)
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<INDONESIA, republic of
Malay archipelago, S.E. Asia; former Netherlands East Indies (excluding
former Netherlands New Guinea, now West Irian).
[Spice Islands]
Dutch Jews contributed to the development of the "Spice Islands". An
early Jewish settlement existed in the Sunda Islands but its date and
extent are not known.
[Jewish immigration from Europe]
In the 1850s the Jerusalem emissary Jacob *Saphir, who visited Batavia
(Jakarta), Java, met an Amsterdam Jewish merchant who named 20 Jewish
families of Dutch or German origin there, including members of the
Dutch colonial forces, and some Jews living in Semarang and Surabaya.
They had few links with Judaism. At Saphir's request, the Amsterdam
community sent a rabbi who tried to organize congregations in Batavia
and Semarang.
[Jewish immigration from Baghdad -
1930: Jewish immigration from Central Europe and Soviet Russia]
A number of Jews from Baghdad, or of Baghdadi origin, and from Aden
also settled on the islands, and in 1921 the Zionist emissary Israel
Cohen estimated that nearly 2,000 Jews were living in Java. The
resident of Surabaya was a Dutch Jews; several held government posts;
and many engaged in commerce.
The Jews of Baghdadi origin formed the most Orthodox element. There
were also Jews from Central Europe and Soviet Russia, whose numbers
increased in the 1930s.
[1939-1945: Japanese rule]
In 1939 there were 2,000 Dutch Jewish inhabitants and a number of
stateless Jews who underwent the trials of the Japanese occupation.
[since 1950: Jewish population
going down]
Indonesian independence [[since 1950]] marked the decline of the Dutch
Jewish element, and the Jewish population subsequently dwindled for
political and economic reasons. There were 450 Jews in Indonesia in
1957, mainly Askhenazim in Jakarta and Sephardim in Surabaya, the
latter community maintaining a synagogue.
The community had dwindled to 50 in 1963. There were about 20 Jews
living in Jakarta and 25 in Surabaya in 1969. The community is
represented by the Board of Jewish communities of Indonesia with its
office in Jakarta.
Bibliography
-- I. Cohen: Journal of a Jewish Traveller (1925), 209ff.
-- M. Wischnitzer: Die Juden in der Welt (1935), 308-10
-- A. Tartakower: Shivtei Yisrael, 3 (1969), 290-1
[ED.]> (col. 1363)

Encyclopaedia Judaica 1971: Indonesia, Vol. 8, col. 1363
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