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Life Arts    H4'ed 3/15/12

The New Jews of Cameroon

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Serge Etele
Serge Etele
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Serge Etele is a 31-year-old cocoa farmer and native African who lives in Sa'a, a small rural village in Cameroon, on the west coast of Africa. He and his family, as well as a thousand others in his village, were members of a Pentecostal Christian congregation. Today, though, Serge considers himself a Jew. He is the spiritual leader of the Beth Yeshourun Jewish Community of Cameroon.

 

What is most remarkable about Serge's transformation is that at the time of his self-proclaimed conversion he had not heard of any Jews in Cameroon (although there are reports of ancient connections   to Judaism), and he never met or had any contact with Jews. How then did this unlikely and puzzling conversion take place 13 years ago when he was still a teenager?

 

In a talk at the 92nd Street Y   in New York City on Feb. 23 -- his first excursion out of Cameroon -- Serge told his story in halting but adequate English (French and English are the official national languages of Cameroon, but 230 tribal languages are also spoken). The audience was captivated. After the presentation, I had the privilege of interviewing Serge for more details about his spiritual journey.

 

Serge was chaperoned on his visit to the U.S., which is part of an   East Coast tour   of speaking engagements with Jewish organizations and student groups, by Rabbi Gerald Sussman   and his wife Bonita. Two years ago   Kulanu, a Jewish organization that supports isolated and emerging Jewish communities around the world, sent the Sussmans to Cameroon to help Serge and his congregation of 50 self-converted Jews broaden their understanding of Judaism, obtain study materials and prayer books, and establish contact with other Jewish groups.

 

Serge's journey began when he studied the New Testament at his Pentecostal Church in Cameroon, where Christianity is the most popular religion. He said that the deeper he got into his readings the more he could not shake off disturbing contradictions. In particular, his perception that Jesus did not fulfill the Old Testament requirements for  the Jewish Messiah -- "Jesus did not bring in the golden Messianic age." The fact the Christians say that the "Second Coming" of Jesus will fulfill biblical messianic prophesies did not sit well with him. Also, he was troubled that Jesus was "not of the Davidic line," another requirement for the Messiah. Although Mary's husband, Joseph, he said, was shown to descend from David in the Gospel of Matthew, Joseph was not Jesus' biological father. Then Serge asked himself: "If Jesus was the dedicated Jew that he is portrayed to be in the New Testament, then to honor his teachings shouldn't I be living the life of a Jew, not the life of Jesus the Messiah, but the life of Jesus the practicing Jew?"

 

Perhaps the most compelling reason for Serge's conversion was revealed in what he said when asked what meaning conversion to Judaism had for him. In his poised, self assured and soulful manner, he said that he couldn't explain it in terms of words or logic but that as he explored Judaism he felt in the depth of his being that he was Jewish.

A moment of stunned silence consumed the lecture hall.

 

When Serge, along with several people in his family, and a number of members of the Pentecostal group decided to become Jews, they were at a loss about how to proceed. They didn't have Jewish prayer books nor did they know how to practice. Soon afterwards, though, the world of Judaism opened up to Serge when Internet access came to his area of Cameroon. Although just a high school graduate -- he couldn't afford college -- he had a thirst for learning. He became a regular at a local Internet cafà © where he dived into intense study. He swiftly improved his English, learned Hebrew, and was soon reading the Torah in Hebrew.

 

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Bernard Starr, PhD, is author of The Crucifixion of Truth, a drama set in 16th century Italy and Spain. Starr is a psychologist, journalist, and professor emeritus at CUNY, Brooklyn College. At Brooklyn College Starr taught developmental (more...)
 

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