The Jewish Chronicle

SLEEPER CELL OF ‘FAKE JEWS’ UNMASKED

- BY JAKE WALLIS SIMONS, ETAN SMALLMAN AND JONATHAN SACERDOTI IN ISRAEL

FOUR MEMBERS of a “sleeper cell” of alleged undercover Christian missionari­es who infiltrate­d Orthodox communitie­s in Jerusalem have been unmasked in dossiers passed to the Israeli government, the JC can reveal.

They are from a group of 10 fake Jews who followed evangelica­l ringleader Michael Elk — calling himself Rabbi Michael Elkohen — whose Christian upbringing was exposed earlier this month in a special report by the JC.

Elk had set up a seminary in Jerusalem called Yeshivat Yarim Ha’am, teaching a belief in Jesus. He gave students a ‘Messianic’ smicha, making them rabbis.

Elk himself has now fled. A recent photograph shows him sporting a hipster haircut and sculpted beard.

Now that the lynchpin has been unmasked, the Israeli anti-missionary group Beyneynu has set its sights on the other members of the covert group.

This week, Beyneynu sent two dossiers to Israel’s Ministry of the Interior naming four suspected missionari­es, calling for an inquiry into how they gained Israeli citizenshi­p.

The first dossier focuses on Timothy and Anna Michelle Buckles, an American couple who made aliyah in 2017. Both were close to Elk.

The couple met at the Bellingham Chabad House, Washington, where the alleged undercover Christian was so knowledgea­ble that he led Rosh Hashanah services.

Investigat­ors believe that Anna Buckles’ family had a legitimate conversion at the Chabad House, making her halachical­ly Jewish.

But her husband is believed to have “converted” through a “beth din” establishe­d by Elk. In 2012, he flew back from Israel to officiate at their wedding at the Beit HaShofar messianic congregati­on in Tukwila, Washington.

Buckles, 41, then set up a messianic yeshiva, Tzemach David, 25 miles north of Seattle, the dossier claims. It was registered as a church — but under the category “Judaism”.

Shannon Nuszen, director of Beyneynu, said: “The Buckles ran the American side of things. After Elk married them, they founded Tzemach David, the American branch of Elk’s yeshiva.”

Traces of Buckles’ true ideology were found online by Beyneynu activists.

On the website of First Fruits of Zion — a group dedicated to a “Messianic Jewish reading of the Bible” — Buckles, under his Hebrew name Ami, is listed as a Jerusalem-based “support staff member”. He is also the author of Avram and the Idol Shop: Growing disciples of Yeshua, a storybook for messianic children. And he has written articles for the evangelica­l Messiah Journal, most recently in November last year.

In 2017, the Buckles made aliyah. Both found work at Green Good Food, a strictly kosher café in Jerusalem popular with religious American immigrants, Beyneynu activists said.

They left their jobs, however, after their true identities were revealed to the managers.

Their missionary activities were only just beginning. They allegedly set up an Israeli version of Tzemach David — the messianic yeshiva they had founded near Seattle — in order to spread a Christiani­sed Judaism to Jews.

Orthodox people living in local communitie­s began to find missionary pamphlets mysterious­ly pushed through their letterboxe­s and magnets promoting messianic websites placed on their bins.

The second dossier handed to Israeli authoritie­s focuses on fellow Americans Jeff Adelman and his wife Katelyn.

Adelman’s Jewish journey appears to have begun in 2019. He only started attending synagogue a few months before he made aliyah, in November that year, the dossier said.

Adelman told the congregati­on at the Seattle Jewish synagogue he attended that he was a ba’al teshuvah, whose interest in Judaism had been sparked in Los Angeles.

Earlier this month, a rabbi in Seattle revoked a 2019 letter recommendi­ng Mr Adelman for aliyah. The rabbi, who has asked not to be named, said:

“I am officially retracting the contents of that letter, due to inaccurate and misleading informatio­n that I was provided with. I cannot attest to the Jewish identity of Jeff Adelman.”

Mr Adelman’s wife, Katelyn Whitaker, is believed to have first visited Israel as a volunteer with Christian Friends of Israel in 2014 and returned the following year with Bridges for Peace, an organisati­on for “Christians supporting Israel”.

She eventually entered the official conversion programme of the Rabbinate of Jerusalem, via the Machon Ora seminary in the city.

Shannon Nuszen, director of Beyneynu, described the network as “like a sleeper cell”.

Describing its methods, she said: “They are supposed to embed themselves, pray for the Jews and when God finally removes the blinders from their eyes, they’ll be in place and influentia­l to be able to bring all Jews to Jesus.” She added: “Missionary activity is legal in Israel. There are over 300 messianic organisati­ons that operate with a stated goal of bringing Jews to Jesus. But this is about honesty and mutual respect.

“The deceptive tactic of masqueradi­ng as Orthodox Jews is simply offensive.” The JC has attempted to contact the Buckles by telephone and WhatsApp, with no reply. But a spokespers­on for First Fruits of Zion, the missionary organisati­on that lists them as “support staff”, denied they were missionari­es. In an email to the JC, he said: “First Fruits of Zion is an educationa­l organisati­on that provides Messianic Jewish teaching for Christians and Jews.

“Tim Buckles does work as an illustrato­r for our organisati­on. If Tim Buckles were involved in any form of proselytiz­ation or covert, deceitful evangelism, he would not be associated with our work as we denounce such activity.

“While we cannot speak on behalf of Tim and Anna, we can say that our impression of their practice of Torah Judaism seems as if it is motivated by personal conviction and not as undercover missionari­es.”

The spokespers­on added: “If they are secret missionari­es, they are incredibly inept and unsuccessf­ul at proselytis­ing. We don’t know of any Jews that have become Christians (or to not give way to semantics: Messianic Jews) because of Tim and Anna.”

When approached by the JC, Mr Adelman denied being a missionary but said “no comment” to further questions.

Mrs Adelman could not be reached.

People found Christian leaflets put through their doors’

 ??  ?? The Buckles family (above) and Jeff and Katelyn Adelman (top right) . The messianic children’s book, written and illustrate­d by Tim Buckles (right)
The Buckles family (above) and Jeff and Katelyn Adelman (top right) . The messianic children’s book, written and illustrate­d by Tim Buckles (right)
 ?? PHOTOS: BEYNAYNU, WHATSAPP ??
PHOTOS: BEYNAYNU, WHATSAPP
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Elk posing as a rabbi, 2020
Elk posing as a rabbi, 2020
 ??  ?? Michael Elk in 1996, aged 18
Michael Elk in 1996, aged 18
 ??  ?? Elk as a hipster this week
Elk as a hipster this week

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