The Kohen hypothesis was first
tested through DNA analysis in 1997 by Karl Skorecki and collaborators from
Haifa, Israel. In their study, "Y chromosomes of Jewish priests", published in the journal
Nature, they found that the Kohanim appeared to share a different
probability distribution compared to the rest of the Jewish population for the two Y-chromosome markers they tested (
YAP and DYS19). They also found that the probabilities appeared to be shared by both
Sephardic and
Ashkenazi Kohens, pointing to a common Kohen population origin before the
Jewish diaspora at the
destruction of the Second Temple. However, this study also indicated that only 48% of Ashkenazi Kohens and 58% of Sephardic Kohens have the J1 Cohen Modal Haplotype. Such genetic markers were also found in approximately 5% of Jews who did not believe themselves to be kohanim.); CMH.1 means "within one marker of the CMH-6"; and CMH is the proportion with a 6/6 match. The final two columns show the conditional proportions for CMH.1 and CMH, given membership of Haplogroup J. The data show that the Kohanim were more than twice as likely to belong to Haplogroup J than the average non-Cohen Jew. Of those who did belong to Haplogroup J, the Kohanim were more than twice as likely to have an STR pattern close to the CMH-6, suggesting a much more recent common ancestry for most of them compared to an average non-Kohen Jew of Haplogroup J.
Dating Thomas,
et al. dated the origin of the shared DNA to approximately 3,000 years ago (with variance arising from different generation lengths). The techniques used to find Y-chromosomal Aaron were first popularized in relation to the search for the patrilineal ancestor of all contemporary living humans,
Y-chromosomal Adam. Subsequent calculations under the coalescent model for J1 haplotypes bearing the Cohanim motif gave time estimates that place the origin of this genealogy around 6,200 years ago (95% CI: 4.5–8.6 Kybp), earlier than previously thought, and well before the origin of Judaism (
David Kingdom, ~2.0 Kybp).
Responses The finding led to excitement in religious circles, with some seeing it as providing some proof of the historical veracity of the
priestly covenant or other religious convictions. Following the discovery of the very high prevalence of 6/6 CMH matches amongst Kohanim, other researchers and analysts were quick to look for it. Some groups have taken the presence of this haplotype as indicating possible Jewish ancestry, although the chromosome is not exclusive to Jews. It is widely found among other
Semitic peoples of the Middle East. Later research has been unable to confirm this (due to the fact that CMH was widely found among other Semitic peoples of the Middle East) although it has shown that some male Lemba have Middle Eastern ancestry. Critics such as Avshalom Zoossmann-Diskin suggested that the paper's evidence was being overstated in terms of showing Jewish descent among these distant populations. ==Limitations==