Miami Herald

Last Jew living in Kabul making his way to Israel

- BY JOSEF FEDERMAN

The man known as the last Jew of Kabul could soon be heading to Israel, after agreeing to grant his estranged wife a religious divorce in a Zoom call — a preconditi­on for smooth entry to the Holy Land.

Zebulon Simentov, who fled Afghanista­n last month after the Taliban takeover, landed Sunday in Turkey on what his rescuers say is a final stop before traveling to Israel, perhaps as soon as this week.

It caps a weekslong odyssey that included an escape from his homeland as well as a videoconfe­rence divorce procedure meant to ensure he will not run into trouble with Israeli authoritie­s.

Under Jewish religious law, a husband must agree to grant his wife a divorce, something he had refused to do for many years. Facing the prospect of legal action in Israel, where his ex-wife lives, Simentov, after resisting for years, finally agreed to the divorce last month in a special Zoom call supervised by Australian rabbinical authoritie­s.

The Associated Press viewed part of the proceeding. During the sometimes chaotic discussion, conducted through an interprete­r who struggled to explain the procedure, Simentov agrees to sign a divorce document known as a “get” after receiving assurances that he will not face trouble in Israel.

Rabbi Moshe Margarette­n, whose nonprofit group Tzedek Associatio­n funded the journey, said Simentov had spent the last few weeks living quietly in Pakistan, an Islamic country that does not have diplomatic relations with Israel.

He said his group had looked into bringing Simentov to the U.S. but decided that Israel was a better destinatio­n both because of difficulti­es in

arranging a U.S. entry visa and because Simentov has many relatives, including five siblings and two daughters, already in Israel.

“We are relieved we were successful in helping Zebulon Simentov escape from Afghanista­n and now into safety in Turkey,” said Margarette­n, whose group has helped evacuate several dozen other people from Afghanista­n. “Zebulon’s life was in danger in Afghanista­n.”

Rabbi Mendy Chitrik, chairman of the Alliance of Rabbis in Islamic States, greeted Simentov at the airport in Istanbul on Sunday.

He said he had an appointmen­t to take Simentov to the Israeli consulate on Monday to arrange his entry to Israel. Under Israel’s “Law of Return,” any Jew is entitled to Israeli citizenshi­p.

Chitrik said he had been working with Margarette­n and other volunteers for several months to get Simentov out of Afghanista­n. “I’m happy this issue is finally coming to rest,” he said.

How long that will take remains unclear. The Israeli Foreign Ministry said it was unaware of the request and Simentov could also be delayed by coronaviru­s protocols restrictin­g entry to Israel.

Simentov, who lived in a dilapidate­d synagogue in

Kabul, kept kosher and prayed in Hebrew, endured decades of war as the country’s centuries-old Jewish community rapidly dwindled. But the Taliban takeover in August seems to have been the last straw.

Moti Kahana, an IsraeliAme­rican businessma­n who runs a private firm that organized the evacuation on behalf of Margarette­n, told The Associated Press last month that Simentov was not worried about the Taliban because he had lived under their rule before. He said that threats of the more radical Islamic State group and pressure from neighbors who were rescued with him had helped persuade him to leave.

Hebrew manuscript­s found in caves in northern Afghanista­n indicate a thriving Jewish community existed there at least 1,000 years ago. In the late 19th century, Afghanista­n was home to some 40,000 Jews, many of them Persian Jews who had fled forced conversion in neighborin­g Iran. The community’s decline began with an exodus to Israel after its creation in 1948.

In an interview with The Associated Press in 2009, Simentov said the last Jewish families left after the 1979 Soviet invasion.

For several years he shared the synagogue building with the country’s only other Jew, Isaak Levi, but they despised each other and feuded during the Taliban’s previous rule from 1996 to 2001.

At one point, Levi accused Simentov of theft and spying and Simentov countered by accusing Levi of renting rooms to prostitute­s, an allegation he denied, The New York Times reported in 2002. The Taliban arrested both men and beat them, and they confiscate­d the synagogue’s ancient Torah scroll, which went missing after the Taliban were driven from power in the 2001 U.S.-led invasion.

When his 80-year-old housemate died in 2005,

Simentov said he was happy to be rid of him.

Reporters who visited Simentov over the years — and paid the exorbitant fees he charged for interviews — found a portly man fond of whiskey, who kept a pet partridge and watched Afghan TV. He observed Jewish dietary restrictio­ns and ran a kebab shop.

Born in the western city of Herat in 1959, he always insisted Afghanista­n was home.

The Taliban, like other Islamic militant groups, are hostile to Israel but tolerated the country’s miniscule Jewish community during their previous reign.

 ?? DAVID GOLDMAN AP file, 2009 ?? Zebulon Simentov, the last known Jew living in Afghanista­n, could soon be heading to Israel, after agreeing to grant his estranged wife a religious divorce. a preconditi­on for entry to the Holy Land.
DAVID GOLDMAN AP file, 2009 Zebulon Simentov, the last known Jew living in Afghanista­n, could soon be heading to Israel, after agreeing to grant his estranged wife a religious divorce. a preconditi­on for entry to the Holy Land.

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