Canada – Toronto Scientist Intriguing Findings Links Jews To Ancestors

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    Dr. Karl Skorecki Toronto, Canada – Dr. Karl Skorecki works on the cutting edge of molecular science, revolutionizing medicine through genetics and the use of stem cells to test anti-cancer therapies.

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    But as a sideline, the former University of Toronto professor has become world famous for applying genetics to genealogy and transforming history. He has found evidence to support traditional claims that modern-day Jewish priests, Cohanim, are descended from a single common male ancestor – biblically said to be Aaron, the older brother of Moses.

    Among the other intriguing findings he has uncovered: that 40% of Ashkenazi Jews can trace their descent to four “founding mothers” who lived in Europe 1,000 years ago, evidence that all Jewish communities share a common paternal origin in the Near East, and genetic evidence supporting claims southern Africa’s Lemba tribe may be Africa’s “Black Jews.”

    “It began as a hobby, but it took on a life of its own,” Dr. Skorecki says. “I didn’t think anyone would really be that interested. I’m a nephrologist and a physician but I’ve always been interested in the genetic predisposition to disease.”

    Fifteen years ago, as he attended Shabbat services at his Toronto synagogue, Dr. Skorecki says his mind wandered during the reading of the Torah.

    “A Cohen [Jewish priest] of North African, Sephardic, non-Ashkanazi origin was called up to read the Torah and it just got me to thinking what we have in common,” he says.

    “I myself am also a Cohen, but of recent European ancestry. It struck me as interesting that, on one hand, our paternal genealogies have been geographically separated for at least a thousand years. Yet, on the other hand, we share a Biblical oral tradition of common male ancestry dating back more than 100 generations.”

    According to tradition, the status of priest (Cohen) was conferred on Aaron and his sons, and has been passed on from father to son ever since the Exodus from Egypt.

    As he sat in his Toronto synagogue, Dr. Skorecki says, “I realized if that were true, then it was a scientific hypothesis that was testable.”

    He reasoned the Cohanim should all have a common set of genetic markers at a higher frequency than the general Jewish population. After consulting Dr. Michael Hammer, a geneticist at the University of Arizona and a pioneer in studying the Y chromosome, the two men developed an experiment to test his thesis.

    Besides determining maleness, the Y chromosome consists almost entirely of non-coding DNA, which is passed from father to son without recombination. Therefore the genetic information on a Y chromosome of a man living today is basically the same as that of his ancient male ancestors, with rare mutations that occur along hereditary lines.

    By tracking those neutral mutations or genetic markers scientists can come up with the genetic signature of a man’s male ancestry.

    Dr. Skorecki’s test found an array of six common chromosomal markers in 97 of the 106 Cohens he tested. Calculations based on variations of the mutations rooted the men’s shared ancestry 106 generations in the past – 3,300 years ago, or the approximate time of Exodus.

    He also discovered the common set of genetic markers in both Ashkenazi (European) and Sephardic (North African) Cohens, indicating they shared the same ancestry before their communities were separated more than 1,000 years ago.

    “It’s amazing,” Dr. Skorecki says. “It’s like an archeological finding. But instead of digging up in the sand, we dig in contemporary DNA.”

    His findings triggered a storm of interest in Jewish genealogy and the application of DNA analysis to the study of history.

    The only child of Holocaust survivors, Dr. Skorecki was born and raised in Toronto. He took his medical degree at the University of Toronto, where he taught for 11 years before moving to Israel in 1995.

    He is now director of the Rappaport Family Institute for Research in Medical Sciences and a researcher at the Rambam-Technion University Medical Center in Haifa, Israel’s largest medical centre. After moving to Israel, Dr. Skorecki continued to dabble in genetic genealogy and conducted studies that suggest there is genetic evidence to support a common paternal origin for all Jewish communities.

    In yet another study, Dr. Skorecki discovered an unusual genetic signature, thought to have originated in Central Asia, in more than half the Levites of Ashkenazi descent.

    “They seem to be the descendants of one man who lived about 1,000 years ago somewhere between the Caspian and the Black Sea,” he says. “Whether his ancestors originated there or he migrated from the Near East is unclear. We can’t tell. But that is also the time and location of the mythical Khazar kingdom.”

    Dr. Skorecki says one of the most surprising discoveries of his genetic analysis of Jewish genealogy involves claims by the Lemba tribe of southern Africa to have Jewish origins.

    The Bantu-speaking tribe of roughly 70,000, now mostly Christians, are spread across South Africa, Mozambique, Malawi and Zimbabwe. But the tribe’s oral history claims Jewish ancestry, saying their founding fathers were Jews, led by a man named “Buba” who sailed to East Africa.

    Unlike any of their surrounding neighbours, the Lemba observe many Jewish traditions, such as kosher-like dietary restrictions and slaughter practices, male circumcision and one holy day a week.

    “Most historians were skeptical,” Dr. Skorecki says. “But the genetic evidence is one of the most surprising stories we’ve encountered.

    It is not clear whether the genetic origin was Jewish or Arab or a mixture. But a strikingly high number of Lemba males also carry the same genetic signature markers Dr. Skorecki discovered in modern-day Jewish Cohanim.

    More remains to be done, but Dr. Skorecki is convinced genetic research is a powerful tool for historical study.

    “It’s not perfect. It’s not physics. But it is not less reliable than lets say fossil records, archaeology, liturgy or oral histories,” he says.

    “In the larger context it adds further insight.”


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    53 Comments
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    lishma
    lishma
    14 years ago

    i took a dna test also its very interesting to see with whom you match especially if youre a kohen like me just a few weeks ago i read that there were more then one kohen besides aaron hakohen and some of us match the j2 haplogroup most kohanim are j1 fascinating all you kohens should take a dna test it only costs 100 dollars

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    If you believe in this DNA testing then by default you believe that the earth is more than 5,000 years old.

    Buba
    Buba
    14 years ago

    Buba is an unusual name for a Yid. Isn’t that what a stam guy in Mississippi called?

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    that is a intersting article thanks vos for posting. I am not a kohn but I would still do the test.

    yitzchok
    yitzchok
    14 years ago

    Where do you get a Kohen DNA test.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    If this marker is passed from father to son, why doesn’t it apply to leviim as weel? Why not to any of the Shvatim?

    cmk
    cmk
    14 years ago

    I believe the earth is in fact more than 5,000 years old – 770 years.
    A Cohen is a Cohen because his father told him he is. The DNA testing is interesting, but not a substitute for mesorah.

    Aryeh
    Aryeh
    14 years ago

    Two Cohen groups makes sense in terms of Pinhas, the granson of Aaron Ha Kohen’s appointment after Aaron’s prior election to the priesthood.

    Evolution
    Evolution
    14 years ago

    Why not trace & find the MONKEY we all come from ? (according to science) ?
    The Kohanim report came out in Israel about 2 years ago.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Science changes all the time. The only 100% proof truth is our Holy Torah. Agree with comment #6 and. Also to #13 , true that medicine is science but also not foolproof, as we all know. One day this is beneficial and the next it is literally poison. Science can only be correct when it corresponds to what our Torah tells us. There are many mysteries which will only come to light when Moshiach comes.

    As far as the Lemba – there might be many explanations, but also we don’t know if they come from a cohen who intermarried and somehow that whole tribe who stems from that source would have the same DNA. Most likely, these tribes marry within their own tribes, keeping the lineage the same.

    So, this whole DNA is also not foolproof like everything else that man thinks he knows it all!

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    His conclusions on Khazars and Lemba’s are suspect. He found a European marker for some of the Leviim – this marker could have been from a ger tzedek anywhere in central Europe or Eastern Europe – but he with no reason assumes that this relates to a group that lived thousands of miles away and that probably disappeared (according to historians). Hardly science. Same thing with the Lemba’s. The markers he found in the Lemba’s do not establish any connection with the Jews. But both theories give him some exciting way-out things to say, even if they are highly unlikely. Of course, the press and journalists simply quote him and his theories and make no attempt to get scientific opinion as to their truth.

    I agree with #20
    I agree with #20
    14 years ago

    Firstly, people think of science like it was the end-all. Science is just like any other subject and is changeable all the time, as most of it is not exact science. Changes in scientfic research happens all the time it’s man ‘s mind that theorizes – there is no truth except the truth of Torah. That’s a fact.

    To commenter #18 – you mentioned about the cohanim. There was a test taken a number of years ago which found that only 40% of Ashkenazi cohanim are pure and 70% of Sephardi cohanim are pure. (I imagine it’s the people they tested). There are many cohanim that are really a mish mash. Just look at the people with names of Cohen; journalists, or other more famous people and you will find about 1/2 are all intermarried. Could be that many of these are the ones that are not from the real cohanim.

    Also, I agree with commenter #20 , about this doctor who has done the research. Today, we find many people making up their answers to fit whatever agenda they might personally hold. Most of all this research is one big phony shtick!

    Ardi
    Ardi
    14 years ago

    DNA is not 100% perfect in establishing descent. DNA evidence can be faked. Our understanding of DNA is based on only about 30 years of sequencing and research and can never prove what happened in the past, but the uninterrupted continuance of an eyewitness account in the desert 3,300 years ago is not refutable by any amount of science, no matter how mystical. Our Torah doesn’t mutate.

    Raphael Kaufman
    Raphael Kaufman
    14 years ago

    I’ve posted this before but it bears repeating. My Rebbi, Rav Shmuel Yaakov Weinberg, ZTL, said many times that “There can be no contradiction between science and Torah, and, if there is an apparent contradiction, It is because we don’t understand the science well enough or we don’t understand the Torah well enough or we don’t understand either of them well enough.”

    Shlomo
    Shlomo
    14 years ago

    “Science” is a very broad topic and it is more a process than a discrete area of study. Science is a tool and nothing more. However, it is a very good tool that has added greatly to our knowledge. To simply state “science always changes” and therefore question all scientific knowledge is ignorant of how science operates.
    To accuse Dr. Skorecki of having an agenda based only on a news account is not fair. “The press and journalists simply quote him and his theories and make no attempt to get scientific opinion as to their truth” reflects the problem. Don’t believe the press. Dr. Skorecki needs to publish his results in a proper scientific, peer reviewed journal. Then his assertations can be challenged, his theories and methods examined, and (maybe) we will learn something. And when we learn it, science will have added to our knowledge.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Could someone explain how these genes from aharon supposedly stayed for hundreds of generations, when all jews come from Yaakov, aharons great granfather but have different genes.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Reply to #39 : Your statement that the Lemba are ‘definitely” descendants of Aharon HaCohen is a very naive and infantile statement, as there is nothing else but the same dna marker that they and the real cohanim have. As many of these comments here have already shown that that is not real proof, as science is not always an exact science and is quite changeable when man learns more and more facts. After a number of years, there have been scientific facts which have been disproved, because new data was found to prove otherwise. The only facts you can truly rely on is what HaShem, through our holy Torah, states. When science will be 100% completely compatible with Torah – then you can be ‘definitely’ sure. Not before! As one of the commenters here show that there the same DNA markings in different viruses, etc. We have not reached the point where we, as man, know everything. We still know probably just a few percent out of 100 what HaShem wants us to know. If there is any connection between a foreign people with the same DNA as the cohanim (such as Lemba) one explanation can be that a cohen intermarried with one of their women and these tribes through the centuries, most likely, intermarried only within their own tribe. Thus, the connection. And as stated before, there could probably be many other explanations which have no connection to the Cohanim because we do not know enough!

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    To #41 – Shlomo
    As you, yourself, state that the Professor’s “theory” – and that is just what it is a “theory”! There has been the ‘theory’ of evolution for all these last 100 or so years and yet we, as Jews, know better. Man was created in the image of G-D and not, chas v’sholom, descended from apes! But so much of the civilized world still accepts the evolutionary “theory”! Does that make it so? Of course, science has been of tremendous help to man – everyday something new is discovered, or invented. We have technology today which is of great help in many areas – but these things as as all sciences, technology, whatever, are not fool-proof!

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    To #48 : As stated before, there is NO conclusive evidence to prove that another people have the same marker for the reason of being related to or descending from the cohanim. The DNA markings have been proven that they are not 100% accurate and there is so much that science does not know! Even this professor admits to it being a “theory”. Theories are just that and not actualities! As far as the Lemba go – as stated in another comment here, there might have been a real cohen who intermarried with one of their tribes woman many years, decades or centuries ago where the probability of them marrying only within their own tribes produced sons with that gene! That can be one explanation! There is much to learn in science. We don’t even have an idea of a fraction of what there is to know, in any field!

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Obnoxious#51: If the professor himself uses the word theory, because he is not certain – you are! Are you wanting of this to be so true that you are blinded by your own stubborness? Really!
    Where’s the sechel?