Historical Jewish migrations out of the Middle East about 2,000 years
ago can also be traced in the DNA of people living in Africa and
Southwest Asia today.
These distinctive genetic signatures bolster historical accounts that
there were waves of Jewish migration out of the Middle East into
neighboring regions. Human geneticist Harry Ostrer of Albert Einstein
College of Medicine in New York City and colleagues report their
analysis of 509 people from 15 Jewish populations online August 6 in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, focusing their attention on communities in North Africa, Ethiopia, Yemen and the Caucasus.
Geneticists have previously traced movements of Jewish groups in Europe and the Middle East (SN: 7/3/10, p. 13; SN: 1/3/09, p. 12), but few studies have focused on Diaspora groups in other regions.
Jews settled in Tunisia more than 2,000 years ago, and genetic
signatures carried from the Middle East are still evident in Tunisian
Jews today, the researchers found. Together with Djerban and Libyan
Jews, the Tunisian Jews form a separate genetic branch from Moroccan and
Algerian Jews.
Jews in Morocco and Algeria bear genetic signatures characteristic of
Sephardic Jews, who once lived in Spain and Portugal. The Spanish
Inquisition caused the expulsion of Sephardic Jews from the Iberian
Peninsula and many went to North Africa, carrying their genetic heritage
with them.
DNA signatures found in Ethiopian Jews indicate that they are
genetically different from Middle Eastern Jews and from the other people
living in Ethiopia. The genetic evidence can’t confirm the origin tale
that Ethiopian Jews are descendants of King Solomon and the Queen of
Sheba, but the findings are consistent with historical accounts that
local people were converted to Judaism, then spent more than 2,000 years
in cultural and genetic isolation.
Yemenite Jewish people also form a separate genetic group from other
Jews, consistent with conversions. “I like to think of it as both the
flow of ideas as well as genes that contribute to Jewishness,” Ostrer
says.
In the Caucasus, Georgian Jews are an offshoot of groups that first
moved from Palestine to present-day Iran and Iraq, the new analysis
shows.
Although the new study is the most in-depth of its kind, it certainly
doesn’t determine who is a Jew, says Francesc Calafell, a population
geneticist at the Institute of Evolutionary Biology in Barcelona.
Palestinians have a similar genetic makeup to Jewish people, he points
out. “Genetics is only a facet of identity.”
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