David Ezekiel Rahabi (1694-1772) and Samuel Ezekiel…
1780 CE to 1791 CE
David Ezekiel Rahabi (1694-1772) and Samuel Ezekiel Divekar (1730-97), both of Cochin, are instrumental in revivifying Judaism among the Bene-Israel, as is also contact with Arabic-speaking Jews of Baghdad.
The first of numerous Bene-Israel synagogues, all following the Sephardic (Spanish) liturgy, is built in Bombay in 1796.
The Bene-Israel claim pure Jewish blood, although they speak Marathi rather than Hebrew, Arabaic, Aramaic, or Greek, and differ little from their Hindi neighbors in appearance.
DNA analyses of the Bene Israel community will begin in 1999, and researchers will discover that the Bene Israel, like the Cochin Jews further south, are indeed genetically distinct from other Indian communities, clustering with the indigenous populations of western India but having a clear paternal link to the populations of the Levant.
A recent more detailed study on Indian Jews will report that the paternal ancestry of Indian Jews is composed of Middle East specific haplogroups (E, G, J(xJ2) and I) as well as common South Asian haplogroups (R1a, H, L-M11, R2).
Genetic research shows that forty-one point three percent of Bene Israel descend from one female ancestor, who was of indigenous Indian origin.
Cochin Jews have genetic similarities with other Jewish populations, in particular with Yemenite Jews along with the indigenous populations of India.