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Rare Lantern Slide of Kaifeng Chinese Jews & Torah Scroll
circa 1910

height: 10.1cm; width: 8.2cm

This rare image in the form of a magic lantern slide shows two members of the now largely
extinct community of Chinese Jews in Kaifeng in Henan Province. They are reading a torah
scroll which stands on an unmistakably Chinese-style table.

Most likely, Kaifeng’s Jews had their origins in the Jewish communities of central Asia and
came to Kaifeng along the various trade routes, collectively known as the Silk Road. The
community is believed to have survived in Kaifeng for more than 700 years during which
time its moral beliefs and cultural practices remained largely intact.

The existence of a local Jewish community in China was first informed to the outside world
by the Italian Jesuit Matteo Ricci at the beginning of the sixteenth century. Matteo tells of
meeting in Beijing a Kaifeng Jew called Ai Ti’en who because of their shared belief n one
god assumed that Ricci must also be a Jew.

Bishop William Charles White of the Canadian Church of England sought to systematically
chronicle the community’s practices. He headed the church mission in Kaifeng between
1910 to 1933. Early on he collected information and artifacts relating to the community. In
1912 he obtained several steles dating from the fifteenth and seventeenth centuries.
These have remained in Kaifeng. However other items did not, including stone bowls for
ritual washing, a temple chime, and a wooden cylindrical torah case – quite possibly the
one shown in this lantern slide. These items are now in Toronto’s Royal Ontario Museum.
(White also collected non-Jewish items which also are now in the Museum. One of its
gallery’s is named the Bishop White Gallery of Chinese Temple Art.) White also collected
several or more of the community’s torah scrolls which are believed to have been
distributed to libraries and museums worldwide.

In 1942, White’s three volume book,
The Chinese Jews, was published. The image in this
lantern slide appeared in the first volume and is a copy of that image. It appeared with the
caption ‘Reading the Torah: Three persons took part in this ceremony. The reader wore
robes prescribed for dress occasions, and had a cloth wound round his cap to simulate a
turban, and hanging down behind like that of the Mohammedan use of today.’ Probably,
White took the photograph himself, and would have done so soon after he arrived in
Kaifeng when his collecting of the community’s artifacts was at its peak.

White later became Chinese curator at the Royal Ontario Museum and director of the
University of Toronto’s School of Chinese Studies.

Lantern slides were used during the 19th century up to the 1930s.  Most slides are 3.25
inches square (English Format) or as in the example here, 3.25 by 4 inches (American
Format).  Slides consist of two pieces of glass bound together with gummed paper strips
so that the photographic emulsion is protected between the two plates of glass.  

References: Xu X., The Jews of Kaifeng, China: History, Culture and Religion, KTAV
Publishing House, 2003.

Inventory no.: 542

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