Mikhail Salita

Signs of the Mashiach: Chinese Jews Returning and the Story of the Mashiach Cat

Chinese Jews, the revival of the Kanaani cat, and the quiet signs of redemption

Signs of the Mashiach: From the Land of Sinim to the Kanaani Cat

The history of the Jewish people stretches far beyond the familiar geography of the Middle East and Europe. Traces of Israel can be found in the most unexpected corners of the world.

Even in China.

In the city of Kaifeng, a Jewish community existed for many centuries. Today their descendants look Chinese, speak Chinese, and live fully within Chinese culture. Yet in some families the memory has remained that their ancestors were part of the people of Israel.

In recent decades, some of them have begun returning to their roots. They study Torah, learn Hebrew, and move to Israel.

For many rabbis, this brings to mind the words of the prophet Isaiah:

“Behold, these shall come from afar…

and these from the north and from the west,

and these from the land of Sinim.”

(Book of Isaiah 49:12)

The word Sinim remains mysterious. Some commentators suggest it refers to distant eastern lands. For that reason, the return of descendants of Chinese Jews can sound like a striking echo of an ancient prophecy.

Tekuma — Renewal

Modern Israel is often described with the Hebrew word Tekuma — renewal or rebirth.

This word is frequently used by Benjamin Netanyahu.

Tekuma means rising after destruction. Life after collapse.

For a religious person, the word echoes the language of the prophets — those who spoke about a time when Israel would rise again and gather its children from the ends of the earth.

Cats in Jewish Tradition

Cats have been known in Jewish tradition since the Talmudic era.

In the Talmud, cats are mentioned as useful animals that protect homes from pests.

In tractate Pesachim 112b, advice connected with the sage Rav Pappa warns that a person should be cautious at night and avoid entering a dark house where there is no cat, lest one accidentally step on a snake.

Elsewhere the Talmud states:

“In a house where there is a cat, a snake will not enter.”

(Bava Kamma 80a)

Here the cat appears as a protector of the home.

The Talmud also teaches that even if the Torah had not been given, people could still learn certain virtues from animals — including modesty from the cat (Eruvin 100b).

Cats in Jewish History

Cats accompanied Jewish life in many historical periods.

In ancient Egypt they helped protect homes from snakes and scorpions.

In Babylonia they guarded grain and food from mice and rats.

For this reason the cat became one of the animals humans deliberately kept close. Its usefulness was obvious, and over time it took its place beside people as a guardian of the household.

Even today cats play a visible role in Israel.

More than two million cats live in the country. They can be seen in courtyards, streets, parks, and near homes. Israel’s warm climate, together with the generosity of many people who feed stray animals, has allowed their population to grow.

Cats are protected by law and have become part of the Israeli urban landscape.

The Lion of Jerusalem and the Cat of the Home

In Jewish symbolism the lion occupies a special place.

The lion is a symbol of Jerusalem and of the tribe of Judah.

From that tribe came King David.

The lion represents power and kingship.

The cat belongs to the same feline family as the lion.

But if the lion stands on the banner of the nation,

the cat stands at the doorway of the home.

The lion guards the kingdom.

The cat guards the house.

The Song of the Cat

In the ancient text Perek Shirah, every creature is said to have its own song before the Creator.

The cat is associated with words from the Book of Psalms:

“I pursued my enemies and overtook them,

and I did not turn back until they were destroyed.”

(Psalm 18:38)

The verse evokes determination and persistence — like a cat pursuing its prey without retreat.

The Kanaani Cat

A special cat breed is associated with the land of Israel: the Kanaani cat.

This breed was developed in Jerusalem by Dorothea Polachek, a woman who survived the Holocaust. Her work sought to preserve an ancient Middle Eastern type of cat descended from the African wildcat, Felis lybica.

Many Kanaani cats have a marking on their forehead that resembles the letter M.

Historically, the letter M traces back to the ancient Semitic letter mem.

It begins several important Hebrew words:

Moshe

Malchut

Mitzvah

Mashiach

Moshe led Israel out of Egypt.

King David established the kingdom.

And Mashiach will complete the story of redemption.

Signs of Our Time

Remarkable things are happening today.

Jews are returning to Israel from every corner of the world — even from China.

Israel endures challenges and rises again — Tekuma.

At the same time, the ancient Israeli cat breed — the Kanaani — is being revived.

For someone who views the world through the lens of Torah, such developments can appear as signs.

Signs that remind us that the story of Israel continues to move forward.

We simply need the ability to see them.

From Moshe —

to David —

and toward the hope of Mashiach.

And perhaps even quiet creatures — like the Kanaani cat guarding a home — gently remind us that the time of redemption may be drawing nearer.

About the Author
Rabbi Moshe (Mikhail) Salita is a Brooklyn-based rabbi, legal scholar, and emerging animal chaplain whose work unites Jewish spirituality, international law, and compassion for all living beings. He holds a Master’s in International Law (with honors) from the National University “Odesa Law Academy,” where he is currently a PhD student researching the restitution of unlawfully confiscated Jewish communal property in Soviet Ukraine. He also earned a Master’s in Library and Information Science from Pratt Institute (New York) and a Master’s in Education and Special Education from Touro University, with graduate certificates in Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) and Bilingual Education. Rabbi Salita is an ordained rabbi of the Jewish Spiritual Leaders Institute (JSLI), a Doctor of Ministry student in Jewish Spirituality at the Graduate Theological Foundation, and an Animal Chaplain-in-Training with the Compassion Consortium in New York. His mission is to weave together justice, mercy, and creation care into one sacred path of Tikkun Olam — healing the moral and spiritual wounds of the world. He serves as Executive Director of the Salita Foundation, originally founded by his brother, Dmitriy Salita — former WBF World Champion boxer, and inductee of both the New York Boxing Hall of Fame and the Jewish Sports Hall of Fame. Today, Rabbi Salita leads the Foundation toward a broader vision — uniting humanitarian ethics, environmental awareness, and cultural restitution. Through the Foundation, he has launched the “Eco-Kosher Initiative,” a global program encouraging support for businesses and individuals who respect the environment, animals, and their communities. For him, “eco-kosher” is not limited to food — it is a moral philosophy of living in balance with creation, where sustainability and holiness walk hand in hand. He is also devoted to preserving and gaining international recognition for the rare Israeli cat breed Kanaani — a living symbol of harmony between Jewish heritage and the natural world. A descendant of Sruel ben Aharon Lekhtman, a Ruzhiner Hasid and brick-factory owner in Kitai-Gorod, Kamianets-Podilskyi — once a spiritual heart of the Ruzhin Hasidic movement in Tsarist-era Ukraine — Rabbi Salita continues his ancestor’s legacy of faith, integrity, and bridge-building. Sruel Lekhtman served as a close friend and estate manager for Pan Dembitsky, a Polish landowner remembered with respect in both Jewish and Ukrainian memory. Their friendship, crossing lines of faith and culture, remains a profound symbol of coexistence — especially meaningful for Ukraine today. Although Rabbi Salita received Reform rabbinic education in the spirit of Jewish Universalism, he maintains a deep spiritual connection with Chabad, whose living Hasidic tradition unites intellect, compassion, and joy. Following the example of the prophets — from Adam, the first caretaker of creation, to King Solomon, who understood the language of animals, and to Rav Papa, the sage who spoke kindly of cats — Rabbi Salita teaches that true holiness is revealed through compassion for all living beings. His life’s work is to show that caring for animals and serving God are one and the same sacred breath.
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