Religions Around The World

In the early morning hours, monks can be seen walking on their alms round in Kanchanaburi, Thailand
Showing humility and detachment from worldly goods, the monk walks slowly and only stops if he is called. Standing quietly, with his bowl open, the local Buddhists give him rice, or flowers, or an envelope containing money.  In return, the monks bless the local Buddhists and wish them a long and fruitful life.
Christians Celebrate Good Friday
Enacting the crucifixion of Jesus Christ in St. Mary's Church in Secunderabad, India. Only 2.3% of India's population is Christian. 
Ancient interior mosaic in the Church of the Holy Saviour in Chora
The Church of the Holy Saviour in Istanbul, Turkey is a medieval Byzantine Greek Orthodox church.
Dome of the Rock located in the Old City of Jerusalem
The site's great significance for Muslims derives from traditions connecting it to the creation of the world and to the belief that the Prophet Muhammad's Night Journey to heaven started from the rock at the center of the structure.
Holi Festival in Mathura, India
Holi is a Hindu festival that marks the end of winter. Also known as the “festival of colors”,  Holi is primarily observed in South Asia but has spread across the world in celebration of love and the changing of the seasons.
Jewish father and daughter pray at the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem, Israel.
Known in Hebrew as the Western Wall, it is one of the holiest sites in the world. The description, "place of weeping", originated from the Jewish practice of mourning the destruction of the Temple and praying for its rebuilding at the site of the Western Wall.
People praying in Mengjia Longshan Temple in Taipei, Taiwan
The temple is dedicated to both Taoism and Buddhism.
People praying in the Grand Mosque in Ulu Cami
This is the most important mosque in Bursa, Turkey and a landmark of early Ottoman architecture built in 1399.
Savior Transfiguration Cathedral of the Savior Monastery of St. Euthymius
Located in Suzdal, Russia, this is a church rite of sanctification of apples and grapes in honor of the Feast of the Transfiguration of the Lord.
Fushimi Inari Shrine is located in Kyoto, Japan
It is famous for its thousands of vermilion torii gates, which straddle a network of trails behind its main buildings. Fushimi Inari is the most important Shinto shrine dedicated to Inari, the Shinto god of rice.
Ladles at the purification fountain in the Hakone Shrine
Located in Hakone, Japan, this shrine is a Japanese Shinto shrine.  At the purification fountain, ritual washings are performed by individuals when they visit a shrine. This ritual symbolizes the inner purity necessary for a truly human and spiritual life.
Hanging Gardens of Haifa are garden terraces around the Shrine of the Báb on Mount Carmel in Haifa, Israel
They are one of the most visited tourist attractions in Israel. The Shrine of the Báb is where the remains of the Báb, founder of the Bábí Faith and forerunner of Bahá'u'lláh in the Bahá'í Faith, have been buried; it is considered to be the second holiest place on Earth for Bahá'ís.
Pilgrims praying at the Pool of the Nectar of Immortality and Golden Temple
Located in Amritsar, India, the Golden Temple is one of the most revered spiritual sites of Sikhism. It is a place of worship for men and women from all walks of life and all religions to worship God equally. Over 100,000 people visit the shrine daily.
Entrance gateway of Sik Sik Yuen Wong Tai Sin Temple Kowloon
Located in Hong Kong, China, the temple is dedicated to Wong Tai Sin, or the Great Immortal Wong. The Taoist temple is famed for the many prayers answered: "What you request is what you get" via a practice called kau cim.
Christian women worship at a church in Bois Neus, Haiti.
Haiti's population is 94.8 percent Christian, primarily Catholic. This makes them one of the most heavily Christian countries in the world.

Indian ‘lost tribe’ believes it is fulfilling prophecy by moving to Israel

(RNS) — Last year, Jeremiah Hnamte closed the family’s manufacturing business in the city of Aizawl, in northeastern India. The family moved into a rented apartment and sold their land and possessions, all in preparation for moving to Israel in the near future.

The Hnamtes are members of the Bnei Menashe community, a few thousand people concentrated mostly in two hilly northeastern India states, Mizoram and Manipur, near the Myanmar border, who believe they’re descendants of a 2,700-year-old biblical lost tribe.

Making aliyah, Hebrew for migrating to Israel, has been the Bnei Menashe’s dream for decades, but they do not qualify under the Israeli law of return, which requires people to have at least one Jewish grandparent in order to be considered for citizenship. Since 1989, though, through special government permissions, about 4,000 Bnei Menashe have been able to make aliyah, but just as many people have spent years, in some cases generations, attempting to move to Israel. 

In November this year, however, the Israeli government announced that the entire Bnei Menashe community — estimated to be 5,800 people — would be allowed to immigrate by 2030. The new immigrants will be settled in Nof HaGalil and other northern cities, where other Bnei Menashe have already set down roots.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the move “an important and Zionist decision that will also strengthen the North and the Galilee.” The country’s far-right finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich, said it would strengthen “our hold of the north and the future of the state of Israel.” About 1,200 people are expected to make aliyah next year.

A few weeks after the Israeli government’s announcement, an Israeli delegation, including at least eight rabbis from the Israeli Rabbinate, which governs the country’s Jewish public life, visited Aizawl. In the course of a week, they conducted background checks on more than 1,500 people, quizzing families on their practice of Judaism.

The Bnei Menashe are ethnically part of the Kuki-Mizo-Chin tribes, a Tibeto-Burman group of about 2 million to 3 million people concentrated in Mizoram and Manipur, and across the border in Myanmar, with a tiny population in Bangladesh. As the British penetrated the hills in the late 19th century, Welsh and American Christian missionaries converted most in the region over the next few decades.

The idea that Mizos have a biblical connection with Israel began in 1951, when a Pentecostal minister from the Mizo population had a vision: All Mizos, he said, were Israeli and must return to the Israeli homeland. Close readings of the Bible led the group to think of themselves as Israeli, said Hnamte, whose grandfather was one of many who tried to make their way to Israel on foot. “But they did not know how or where the land of the Israel is. They just wanted to go,” he said.

The Bnei Menashe movement was formalized only in the 1980s, with the arrival of Eliyahu Avichail, an Orthodox Israeli rabbi who dedicated his life to looking for the “10 lost tribes” of the biblical kingdom of Israel who had been exiled by the Assyrians in 720 BCE. Drawing on biblical prophecies, some Jewish traditions see the return of the lost tribes as a harbinger of the messiah. It was Avichail who made arrangements to take the first few members of the community in 1989.

Since the 2000s, a nonprofit called Shavei Israel began facilitating the migration of Bnei Menashe in batches of hundreds. The immigration was reportedly made possible in part due to a 2005 ruling by Shlomo Amar, then the Sephardic chief rabbi of Israel, who according to news reports at the time recognized the Bnei Menashe as a “seed of Israel,” a term for those who are considered Jewish not by religious law but by ancestry. (A 2015 report in Haaretz, however, said “no such ruling had ever been explicitly made.”)

Proselytizing is illegal in India, so when a delegation of Israeli rabbis arrived in Aizawl in 2005 to convert the Bnei Menashe, their operation was halted. The Bnei Menashe — the name means “sons of Menashe or Manasseh,” as they believe they are descendants of the lost tribe of Menashe/Manasseh, Jacob’s grandson — now undergo an Orthodox “reconversion” process after they emigrate.

The Bnei Menashe’s Jewish ancestry has been controversial in India. According to most historical accounts, the Kuki-Mizo-Chin tribes migrated from the Tibeto-Burman regions of southwest China thousands of years ago and gradually moved to the Indo-Burman hill ranges along the eastern end of the Himalayas. After the British left, the hills and their populations were split among the post-colonial nation states, and these interrelated tribes became minorities in their respective countries, often treated as outsiders. 

Since 2023 the Kukis have been embroiled in ethnic clashes with the mostly Hindu Meitei community in Manipur, resulting in the deaths of more than 200 people and the displacement of more than 50,000. While large-scale fighting has subsided, tensions and sporadic incidents continue, giving emigration a deeper urgency. Many of the Kuki Bnei Menashe from Manipur have been living in camps for the internally displaced.

Several Mizo and Kuki leaders have endorsed the idea of their Israeli ancestry but remain staunch Christians.

In 2005, PC Biaksiama, a Mizo scholar who studies Christianity, told a local newspaper that the rabbinical decision “is an instrument of our greatest enemy, Satan, to burst asunder Mizo society and its religion. Christianity is at stake here and we should never take what is happening now lightly.” 

Biaksiama now believes that their communities must have migrated to China from ancient Israel, but he sees the move to Israel as outrageous. “Christianity is so well entrenched in the Mizo mind that Mizo nationalism and Christianity cannot be separated,” he said. “And Judaizing is anti-Christian. … What the Menashe people are doing is not right. I pity them because they are of the same blood as we are.”

The approval of the Bnei Menashe migration has come as the Knesset held a special session in October to address “the tsunami of Israelis choosing to leave the country.” In the previous decade, an average of 40,500 Israelis left the country each year. But, according to Israel’s central bureau of statistics, the number doubled, with more than 80,000 of the country’s 10 million citizens leaving in 2023. Preliminary estimates show that this level of emigration has continued into 2024 and 2025.

According to The Washington Post, “Israeli sociologists and demographers say that most of those in this growing cadre of émigrés are well educated, high-earning, secular, left-leaning and deeply critical of the direction leaders have been taking the country.” The numbers spiked, the Post said, “amid tumultuous protests against the policies of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s right-wing government and even before the Hamas attack and subsequent Israeli offensive in Gaza.”

The plan will require a special budget of 90 million shekels ($27 million) to cover the costs of the flights of these immigrants, their conversion classes, housing, Hebrew lessons and other special benefits.

In Churachandpur, a Kuki stronghold in Manipur and the center of the Bnei Menashe community where most of its members live, Hatnem Haokip, a young English schoolteacher, said there is a sense of anxiety about the upcoming aliyah. “Right now, no one has sold anything. If they are selected, they will be selling their properties.”

“We’ve stopped everything,” said Loz Hnamte, Jeremiah’s 39-year-old son, who works as a moto vlogger. “I have partnerships with three motorcycle brands right now, but I haven’t taken any sponsorships beyond January,” he said, because that is when he hopes to hear from Israeli officials when they would be allowed to migrate. His family is prepared to leave any day, but until then, he said, they are somewhat “still doing our everyday, normal work.”

Original Source:

https://religionnews.com/2026/01/08/indian-lost-tribe-believes-it-is-fulfilling-prophecy-by-moving-to-israel/