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What a surprise....
Illustrious
Jewish roots of Tory leader revealed
David Cameron’s Jewish history goes back
hundreds – if not thousands - of years, according to a University of
Manchester historian.
Dr Yaakov Wise, who specialises
in Jewish history, says the Tory leader is descended from a
German-born Jewish scholar whose writings furthered the study of Hebrew
in European Christendom at a time of widespread hostility toward its
Jews.
And according to Dr Wise,
who has been using archival material to examine the Cameron family
tree, the Tory leader could also be a direct descendent of the greatest
ever Hebrew prophet, Moses.
Cameron is a descendent
of banker Emile Levita, who came to Britain as a German immigrant in
the 1850s. Emile Levita was himself a descendent of Elijah Levita, who
lived from 1469-1549.
During the last years of
his life Elijah Levita produced, among other works, two major books: the 1541
Translator’s Book, the first dictionary of the Targums or Aramaic
commentaries on the Hebrew Bible.
His lexicon of 1542
explained much of the Mishnaic Hebrew language and was a supplement to
two important earlier dictionaries.
Elijah Levita also wrote
what is thought to be the first ever Yiddish novel - called the
Bove-bukh (The Book of Bove) written in 1507 and printed in 1541.
The book is based on an
Italian version of an Anglo-Norman tale about a queen who betrays her
husband and causes his death.
Emile Levita, who was
granted citizenship in 1871, is Cameron’s great great grandfather.
Levita ,says Dr Wise, is
the Latin form of the name Levite, a Jew descended from the Tribe of
Levi, the son of Jacob and one of the original twelve tribes of Israel.
“The leader of the
Levites at the time of the exodus from Egypt was Moses, who was married
with two sons named in the Bible,” said Dr Wise - who is based at the
University’s Centre for Jewish Studies.
“However, later
descendents of Moses are unknown and many of today’s Levites - often
carrying the surnames such as Levy, Levine, Levitan or
Levita - could in fact be his descendants.”
Emile Levita enjoyed
considerable financial success, becoming a director of the Chartered
Bank of India, Australia and China, which had offices in Threadneedle
Street in the City of London.
He took on all the
trappings of an English gentleman - he hunted, owned a grouse moor in
Wales, and started an educational tradition which has continued through
to today's Tory leader, by sending his four sons to Eton.
Emile’s eldest son,
Arthur, a stockbroker, married Steffie Cooper, a cousin of the Royal
Family providing Cameron with a link to King George III, an ancestor he
shares with the Queen - his fifth cousin once removed.
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