>>1338219Kike mods are at it again.
The Kaifeng Jews are the most well-known of the Jewish diaspora in China, having lived in Kaifeng since the Song Dynasty (c. 900). By the Ming Dynasty, Jewish influence had already became prominent - the Jewish clans had been appointed a set of surnames, most notably Gao, Li, Zhang, and Zhao, by which the remaining Jews are still identified to this day. Matteo Ricci was a famous Jesuit missionary to China during the Ming era, and his rise to become an adviser to the emperor was not an opportunity to be missed by the Jews. He came into contact with the Kaifeng Jews, whose Chief Rabbi attempted to groom Ricci into Jewry by offering to cede his power to Ricci so long as Ricci stopped eating pork and other non-Kosher practices. Ricci had also been acquainted with Yi (Lee, Li) Su-gwang, a major political figure in the Joseon (Korean) government and a descendent of the Li Jews, Yi attempted to influence Ricci and was a key figure in the introduction of Jewry to Korea. This wouldn't be the last time we see the plots of the Jewish Li clan. During the Qing conquest of the Ming, a traitor by the name of Li Zicheng fractured the Ming Dynasty during its most desperate hours by establishing the rebel Shun Dynasty, which an inevitably futile attempt to topple the Ming Dynasty and only helped the oncoming Manchu forces (formed mostly of Han defectors), likely on purpose. The Ming Dynasty itself had Jewish forces pulling its strings from the inside, and the ascension of the weak and ineffective Chongzhen Emperor was clear evidence of Jewry behind the curtains. Empress Zhang was a key figure in his ascension to the throne, and soon after the emperor had made clear manoeuvres to sabotage the defence efforts of the Ming against the Manchus, one such example of this was his execution of Yuan Chonghuan, a patriotic general responsible for the defence of the Great Wall and had killed Nurhaci - the unifying figure of the Manchu tribes...