Prayer Profile
The Jewish of Latvia

[IMAGE] The Baltic nation of Latvia contains a Jewish population of 15,000. Riga, the capital, is home to 11,000 of these Jews and is the most important center of Jewish life in the countries of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania.

Jews have lived in Latvia for centuries. Before World War I, Jews played a major role in the development of the country's industries, commerce, and banking. Discrimination by the government, however, brought ruin to many Jews in the country. The majority were forced into small trade in the suburbs of Riga and in the provincial towns.

Local Latvians began to persecute the Jews immediately after the German invasion of 1940. By the time World War II was over, more than 90% of Latvia's Jewish population had been exterminated in the Holocaust. Today, Latvia's Jewish population consists of the descendants of Jews who came to Latvia after the war from various parts of the Soviet Union.

What are their lives like?
The family structure of the Latvian Jew is monogamous (one wife, one husband), and the line of descent is matrilineal (lineage traced through the female). All marriages in Latvia are official civil ceremonies. A couple who wishes to have a religious ceremony in the synagogue is required to have an official civil ceremony afterward.

In the past, Jews in Latvia were particularly active in various industries such as timber, beer brewing, tobacco, hides, textiles, canned foods, and flour milling. About 50% of the Jews were engaged in commerce, the great majority of them in medium or small sized trades. There were no Jews in government positions, but today Latvia has one Jewish member of parliament.

Because the majority of Jews in Latvia are from other former Soviet nations, Russian is the primary language spoken. Bread and boiled potatoes are the staples of their diet. They also eat apples, beef, cheese, and cucumbers, when available.

Latvian Jews wear typical European clothing, although the style of the clothing might already be dated. The majority of the Jews in Latvia live in apartments built with bricks and cement. However, the quality of the building materials varies. The Latvian Jew are permitted to own property.

Today, the Latvian Society for Jewish Culture is the leading communal organization in Latvia. There is a Jewish school in Riga with 500 children who are learning Hebrew and Yiddish. The Jewish community also runs a children's theater and choir. A Jewish hospital is also in operation.

What are their beliefs?
During the era of Soviet rule, expression of religion was harshly repressed. After the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, religious freedom was reestablished.

As a whole, the Jews in Latvia today do not observe the religious tenets of their Jewish faith, but there is a movement active in promoting the observances of Judaism. This Chabad movement has established the Lubavitcher sect, a very traditional branch of Hasidic Judaism that stresses outreach to other Jews. This sect follows and observes the teachings of a particular rabbi and his sons after him. They have once again begun to observe Jewish festivals and traditions. For example, they have begun to hold bar mitzvahs for teenage boys. Often, a bar mitzvah marks the first time that a young man and his family have ever entered a synagogue.

What are their needs?
The majority of Latvian Jews today are not able to enjoy full civil rights, having lived in Latvia for only a few decades. There have been a number of incidents of anti-Semitism against the Jews, including acts of violence.

Religious freedom has brought many people of Latvia into the churches. Evangelical denominations are rapidly growing. However, the Latvian Jew have remained largely untouched by the revival of Christianity. Even so, there is a small, but thriving, group of Messianic Jews in Riga.

Prayer Points

  • Ask the Lord of the harvest to send forth laborers to the Jews of Latvia.
  • Ask God to anoint the Gospel as it goes forth via radio in their area.
  • Pray that God will reveal Himself to the Jews of Latvia through dreams and visions.
  • Pray that God will give the Messianic Jews of Riga boldness to share the Gospel with their own people.
  • Take authority over the spiritual principalities and powers that have kept the Latvian Jew bound for many generations.
  • Ask God to raise up prayer teams who will begin breaking up the soil through worship and intercession.
  • Ask the Lord to save key leaders among the Latvian Jew who will boldly declare the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
  • Pray for a triumphant Latvian Jew church, to the glory of God's name!
[MAP]

See also:
The Jews of Europe


Statistics
Latest estimates from the World Evangelization Research Center.

THE PEOPLE

  • People name: Jewish
  • Country: Latvia
  • Their language: Yidish
  • Population: (1990) 22,900
    (1995) 22,000
    (2000) 21,200
  • Largest religion: Jew 95%
    Nonreligious 4.9%
  • Christians: <1%
  • Church members: 7
  • Scriptures in their own language: Bible
  • Jesus Film in their own language: None
  • Christian broadcasts in their own language: Available
  • Mission agencies working among this people: 0
  • Persons who have heard the Gospel: 9,000 (40%) Those evangelized by local Christians: 700 (3%)
    Those evangelized from the outside: 8,300 (37%)
  • Persons who have never heard the Gospel: 13,000 (60%)
THEIR COUNTRY
  • Country: Latvia
  • Population: (1990) 2,670,700
    (1995) 2,557,400
    (2000) 2,471,100
  • Major peoples in size order: Russian 33.9%
    Latvian 31.4%
    Latgalian 20.6%
    Byelorussian 4.4%
    Ukrainian 3.4%
  • Major religions: Christian 58.7%
    Nonreligious 27.4%
    Atheist 12.5%

© Copyright 1997
Bethany World Prayer Center

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