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Crypto-Judaism

Crypto-Judaism is the secret adherence to Judaism while publicly professing to be of another faith; practitioners are referred to as "crypto-Jews" (origin from Greek kryptosκρυπτός, 'hidden').[1]

Judaica (clockwise from top): Shabbat candlesticks, handwashing cup, Chumash and Tanakh, Torah pointer, shofar, and etrog box.

The term is especially applied historically to Spanish Jews who outwardly professed Catholicism,[2][3][4][5][6] also known as Conversos, Marranos, or the Anusim. The phenomenon is especially associated with medieval Spain, following the Massacre of 1391 and the expulsion of the Jews in 1492.[7] After 1492 in Spain and 1497 in Portugal, officially they no longer existed. The Spanish Inquisition and the Portuguese Inquisition were established to monitor converted Jews and their descendants for their continued adherence to Christian faith and practice, with severe penalties for those convicted of secretly continuing to practice Judaism. Information about secretly observant Jews largely survives in Inquisition cases against individuals.[8]

Europe Edit

Officially, Jews who converted in Spain during the 14th and 15th centuries were known as Cristianos Nuevos (New Christians), but were commonly called conversos (converts [to Christianity]). Spain and Portugal issued edicts restricting their rights in the mother countries of Spain and Portugal and Spanish and Portuguese overseas territories in the Americas.

Although only Cristianos Viejos (Old Christians) who could prove limpieza de sangre ("cleanliness or purity of blood") descended from Christian Iberian European ancestry only, without "tainting" of any Jewish ancestry or Muslim Berber/Arab ancestry, were allowed to officially migrate to the New World Spanish possessions, manyChristian conversos with Jewish antecedents went to the Spanish possessions, using forged limpieza de sangre documents, or they entered the Spanish possessions via Portuguese Brazil, particularly 1580-1640 when Spain and Portugal were ruled by the same monarch. The entry requirements to the Portuguese colony of Brazil were more lax and also less rigorously enforced.

Despite the dangers of the Spanish Inquisition in Iberia and the Inquisitions established in Mexico City; Lima, Peru; and Cartagena de Indias in what is now Colombia, many conversos continued to secretly and discreetly practice Jewish rituals in the home,[7][9][10] such as the Festival of Santa Esterica, a disguised version of Purim to celebrate the Jewish Queen Esther with a fictional “Catholic” Saint Esterica.[citation needed]

After the Alhambra decree of March 1492, which mandated conversion to Christianity or exile for Jews, numerous conversos, also called Xueta (or Chueta) in the Balearic Islands ruled by Spain, publicly professed Roman Catholicism but privately adhered to Judaism, even through the Spanish Inquisition. They are among the most widely known and documented crypto-Jews.[citation needed]

Crypto-Judaism existed in earlier periods, whenever Jews were forced or pressured to convert to the majority religion by the rulers of places where they resided. Some of the Jewish followers of Sabbatai Zevi (Sabbateans) formally converted to Islam and were known as Dönmeh. Later followers of Jacob Frank (Frankists) formally converted to Christianity but maintained aspects of practice of their versions of Judaism.[citation needed]

Crypto-Jews persisted in Russia and Eastern European countries influenced by the Soviet Union after the rise of Communism with the Russian Revolution of 1917. The government, which included secular Communist Jews, did not force Jews to convert to the Russian Orthodox Church but regarded the practice of any religion as undesirable. Some faiths were allowed to continue under strict supervision by the regime. Since the end of Communism, many people in former Soviet states, including descendants of Jews, have publicly taken up the faith of their ancestors again.[citation needed]

The "Belmonte Jews" of Portugal, dating from the 12th century, maintained strong secret traditions for centuries. A whole community survived in secrecy by maintaining a tradition of endogamous marriage and hiding all external signs of their faith. They and their practices were discovered only in the 20th century. Their rich Sephardic tradition of crypto-Judaism is unique. Some now profess Orthodox Judaism, although many still retain their centuries-old traditions.[11]

Role of Maimonides Edit

As one of the towering figures in Judaism and the author of the Mishneh Torah commentary on the Talmud, Maimonides also issued a landmark doctrinal response to the forced conversions of Jews in the Iberian peninsula by the Almohads:

In his Epistle on Martyrdom, however, Maimonides suggested that the persecuted Jew should publicly adopt Islam while maintaining crypto-Judaism and not seek martyrdom unless forced to transgress Jewish commandments in public. He also excoriated one writer who advocated martyrdom for "long-winded foolish babbling and nonsense" and for misleading and hurting the Jews. In a sweeping view of the Jewish past, Maimonides marshals examples of heretics and sinners from the Bible to show that even oppressors of Israel were rewarded by God for a single act of piety or respect. How much greater then, he argues, will be the reward of the Jews "who despite the exigencies of forced conversion perform commandments secretly."[12]

Maimonides championed rationalism over the then-accepted practice of martyrdom when facing religious adversity. This consequently legitimized crypto-Judaism by the religion's standards and provided doctrinal backing for Jews during the centuries of the Spanish Inquisition (1478–1834).

Before the Spanish Inquisition Edit

According to the Encyclopaedia Judaica,[13] several incidents of forced conversions happened prior to 1492 and outside of Iberia. One of the earliest conversions happened a century after the Fall of Rome and was in Clermont-Ferrand. After a member of the Jewish community in Clermont-Ferrand became a Jewish Christian and was persecuted by other members of the community for doing so, the cavalcade in which he was marching persecuted his persecutors in turn:

The participants in the procession then made an attack "which destroyed [the synagogue] completely, razing it to the grounds." Subsequently, Bishop *Avitus directed a letter to the Jews in which he disclaimed the use of compulsion to make them adopt Christianity, but announced at the end of the missive: "Therefore if ye be ready to believe as I do, be one flock with us, and I shall be your pastor; but if ye be not ready, depart from this place." The community hesitated for three days before making a decision. Finally the majority, some 500, accepted Christianity. The Christians in Clermont greeted the event with rejoicing: "Candles were lit, the lamps shone, the whole city radiated with the light of the snow-white flock" (i.e., the forced converts). The Jews who preferred exile left for *Marseilles (Gregory of Tours, Histories, 5:11). The poet Venantius Fortunatus composed a poem to commemorate the occasion. In 582 the Frankish king Chilperic compelled numerous Jews to adopt Christianity. Again the anusim were not wholehearted in their conversion, for "some of them, cleansed in body but not in heart, denied God, and returned to their ancient perfidy, so that they were seen keeping the Sabbath, as well as Sunday" (ibid., 6:17).

The Clermont-Ferrand conversions preceded the first forced conversions in Iberia by 40 years. Forced baptisms of Jews took place in Iberia in 616 at the insistence of Visigoth monarch Sisibut:

Persistent attempts to enforce conversion were made in the seventh century by the Visigoths in Spain after they had adopted the Roman Catholic faith. Comparatively mild legal measures were followed by the harsh edict issued by King Sisibut in 616, ordering the compulsory baptism of all Jews. After conversion, however, the anusim evidently maintained their Jewish cohesion and religious life. It was undoubtedly this problem that continued to occupy Spanish sovereigns at the successive Councils of Toledo representing both the ecclesiastical and secular authorities...Thus, steps were taken to secure that the children of converts had a Christian religious education as well as to prevent the older generation from continuing to observe the Jewish rites or from failing to observe the Catholic ones. A system of strict supervision by the clergy over the way of life and movements of the anusim was imposed...

Neofiti Edit

The Neofiti were a group of crypto-Jews living in the Kingdom of Sicily, which included all of Southern Italy from the 13th to the 16th centuries.[14]

Susiti Edit

The ancestral line Sus, Süßkind and Lindauer was a crypto-Jewish susitic ancestral line that settled in the Holy Roman Empire and lived as Catholic or Protestant crypto-Jews.[15] Secondary lineages of the Lindauer are: Lindauere, Lindouer, Lindaer, Linduaer, Lindeaur, Lindeauer, Lindhauer, Linndauer, Lindayer as well as Lindaurr.[16]

Mediterranean and Asia Edit

There have been several communities of crypto-Jews in Muslim lands. The ancestors of the Daggatuns in Morocco are thought to have kept up their Jewish practices a long time after their nominal adoption of Islam. In Iran, a large community of crypto-Jews lived in Mashhad, near Khorassan, where they were known as "Jedid al-Islam"; they were mass-converted to Islam around 1839 after the Allahdad events. Most of this community left for Israel in 1946. Some converted to Islam and remained in Iran.[17][18]

India Edit

In 1494, after the signing of the Treaty of Tordesillas, authorized by Pope Alexander VI, Portugal was given the right to found colonies in the Eastern Hemisphere. In his lecture at the Library of Congress, Professor Sanjay Subrahmanyam, Chair in Social Sciences at University of California, Los Angeles, explains that crypto-Jews were especially attracted to India because not only was it a center of trade, but India had established an ancient Jewish settlements along its Western coast. The presence of these communities meant that crypto-Jews, who had been forced to accept Catholicism but did not want to emigrate to tolerant countries (e.g. Morocco, Poland, Ottoman Empire, etc.), could operate within the Portuguese Empire with the full freedom of Catholic subjects but away from the Inquisition while collaborating with existing Jewish communities to hide their true beliefs.[19]

The presence of crypto-Jews in Goa angered the Archbishop of Goa, Dom Gaspar Jorge de Leão Pereira, and other Europeans like Francis Xavier who wrote polemics and letters to Lisbon urging that the Inquisition be brought to Goa.[20] Crypto-Jews presented a security threat to the Kingdom of Portugal, because Sephardic Jews had an established reputation in Iberia for joining forces with Moors to overthrow Christian rulers.[21] The Goan Inquisition commenced in 1560 and ended in 1812. It targeted crypto-Jews, crypto-Muslims, and crypto-Hindus. Of the 1,582 persons convicted between 1560 and 1623, 45.2% were convicted for offenses related to Judaism and Islam.[22] A compilation of the auto-da-fé statistics of the Goa Inquisition reveal that a total of 57 persons were burnt in the flesh and 64 in effigy (i.e. a statue resembling the person). All the burnt were convicted as relapsed heretics or for sodomy.[23]

Spanish America Edit

Crypto-Judaism was documented chiefly in Spanish-held colonial territories in northern Mexico. Numerous conversos joined Spanish and Portuguese expeditions, believing there was an economic opportunity in the new lands, and that they would have more freedom at a distance far from Iberia. Different situations developed in the early colonial period of Mexico, the frontier province of Nuevo León, the later northern frontier provinces, and the colonial experience of the Mexican Inquisition The crypto-Jewish traditions have complex histories and are typically embedded in an amalgam of syncretic Roman Catholic and Judaic traditions. In many ways resurgent Judaic practices mirrored indigenous peoples' maintaining their traditions practiced loosely under a Roman Catholic veil. In addition, Catholicism was syncretic, absorbing other traditions and creating a new creole religion.

The traditional Festival of Santa Esterica was preserved among the Conversos who migrated to the New World and is still practiced today among their descendants.

Early colonial period – 16th century Edit

Some of the Sephardic Jews expelled from Spain went to Portugal, but in 1497 that country effectively converted all remaining Jewish children, making them wards of the state unless the parents also converted. Therefore, many of the early crypto-Jewish migrants to Mexico in the early colonial days were technically first to second-generation Portuguese with Spanish roots before that. The number of such Portuguese migrants was significant enough that Spanish colonists began to use "Portuguese" as a synonym for "Jewish" for their settlers. Immigration to Mexico offered lucrative trade possibilities in a well-populated colony with nascent Spanish culture. Some migrants believed that this region would be more tolerant since the lands were overwhelmingly populated by non-Christian indigenous peoples and it was far removed from the metropole.[24]

Colonial officials believed that many crypto-Jews were going to Mexico during the 16th century and complained in written documents to Spain that Spanish society in Mexico would become significantly Jewish. Officials found and condemned clandestine synagogues in Mexico City. At this point, colonial administrators instituted the Law of the Pure Blood, which prohibited migration to Mexico for New Christians (Cristiano Nuevo), i.e. anyone who could not prove to be Old Christians for at least the last three generations. In addition, the administration initiated the Mexican Inquisition to ensure the Catholic orthodoxy of all migrants to Mexico. The Mexico Inquisition was also deployed in the traditional manner to ensure orthodoxy of converted indigenous peoples. The first victims of burnings (or autos de fé) of the Mexican Inquisition were indigenous converts convicted of heresy or crypto-Jews convicted of relapsing into their ancestral faith.[citation needed]

Except for those allowed to settle the province of Nuevo Leon under an exemption from the Blood Purity Laws, the number of conversos migrating to the New World was reduced.

Nuevo León (1590s to early 17th century) Edit

The colonization of New Spain took place as a northward expansion over increasingly harsh geography, in regions that were occupied by tribes angered at the encroachment; they formed loose confederations of indigenous peoples to resist the settlers. Spain financed the expansion by exploiting mineral wealth, enslaving, or forcing indigenous peoples to labor in mines. It established encomiendas for raising livestock, thereby displacing the local people. The indigenous peoples of the North-Eastern quadrant of New Spain (Nueva España) proved particularly resistant to colonial pressures. The Chichimec, Apache, and other tribes resisted conversion to Christianity and avoided being impressed as laborers or slaves on Spanish ranches and in mines. The Spanish believed such peoples made the frontier (frontera) a lawless region.

Luis Carvajal y de la Cueva, a royal accountant, was a Portuguese New Christian. He received a royal charter from the Spanish Crown to settle Nuevo León, a large expanse of land in the hostile frontier. Because of the dangers and difficulties of this region, Carvajal y de la Cueva received an exemption in his charter from the usual requirement that he prove that all new settlers were "Old Christians" (of at least three generations) rather than recently converted Jews or Muslims. This exemption allowed people to go to Nuevo León who were legally barred from entering New Spain elsewhere.[25] Carvajal was authorized to bring 100 soldiers and 60 laborers to New Spain; many have been documented as crypto-Jews.[26]

 
Jewish religious items at the Metropolitan Museum of Monterrey.

With Carvajal as governor, Monterrey was established as the center (now in the state of Nuevo León). Within a few years, some people reported to authorities in Mexico City that Jewish rites were being performed in the Northern Province and efforts to convert heathen indigenous peoples were lax.[27] The principal economic activity of Carvajal and his associates seems to have been capturing Indians and selling them into slavery.[27] Carvajal's Lieutenant Governor, Gaspar Castaño de Sosa, led a large expedition to New Mexico in 1591 in an effort to establish a colony. Castaño was arrested for this unauthorized expedition and sentenced to exile in the Philippines. The sentence was later reversed, but he had already been killed in the Molucca Islands when the Chinese slaves on his ship mutinied.[28]

Governor Carvajal, his immediate family members, and others of his entourage were called to appear before the Inquisition in Mexico City. They were arrested and jailed. The governor subsequently died in jail, prior to a sentence of exile. His niece Isabel Carvajal had been tortured and implicated all the family in so-called charges. They were all executed by burning at the stake for relapsing into Judaism, except for one nephew who escaped arrest by fleeing to Italy, and one nephew who was a Dominican friar.[29] His nephew, also named Luis, wrote the earliest-known writings by a Jew in the Americas.[30]

When Carvajal was in office, the city of Monterrey became a destination for other crypto-Jews who wanted to escape the Mexican Inquisition in the south of the territory. Thus, Nuevo León and the founding of Monterrey are significant as they attracted crypto-Jewish migrants from all parts of New Spain. They created one of the earliest Jewish-related communities in Mexico. (The Jewish communities in modern Mexico, which practice their Judaism openly, were not established until the late 19th and early 20th centuries, after considerable immigration of Ashkenazi Jews from eastern Europe, and Mizrahi Jews from Turkey and Syria.)

Former New Spain territories in the United States, 17th–18th centuries Edit

Due to the Inquisition activities in Nuevo León, many crypto-Jewish descendants migrated to frontier colonies further west, using the trade routes passing through the towns of the Sierra Madre Occidental and Chihuahua, Hermosillo and Cananea, and to the north on the trade route to Paso del Norte and Santa Fe (both cities in the colonial Santa Fe de Nuevo Mexico). Some even traveled to Alta California on the Pacific Coast.

In the late 20th century, in modern-day Southwestern United States specifically New Mexico, which was a former territory of New Spain, several Hispanos of New Mexico have stated a belief that they are descended from crypto-Jews of the colonial period. While most maintain their Roman Catholic and Christian faiths, they often cite as evidence memories of older relatives practicing Jewish traditions. Since the 1990s, the crypto-Jews of New Mexico have been extensively studied and documented by several research scholars, including Stanley M. Hordes,[31] Janet Liebman Jacobs,[32] Schulamith Halevy,[33] and Seth D. Kunin, who calls them Hispanos.[34] Kunin noted that most of this group in New Mexico has not formally embraced Judaism nor joined the organized Jewish community.[35] Though some have been sceptical, such as Folklorist Judith Neulander arguing that people could be referring to traditions of modern Ashkenazi Jews migrants and Evangelical Protestant Christians who purposely acquired and employed Jewish traditions.[36] More recently, Evangelical Protestant Christians have opened missionary groups aimed at cultivating evangelical doctrine in Southwestern American communities where crypto-Judaism had survived. The highly influential Hordes has been charged with "single-minded speculation based on largely ephemeral or highly ambiguous evidence" for his conclusion that modern-day Hispanos who claim crypto-Jewish roots are heirs to an unbroken chain of transmission.[37] Kunin responded to some of this criticism in his book Juggling Identities: Identity and Authenticity Among the Crypto-Jews, in the response Kunin iterated that these scholars were misunderstanding New Mexican identity which, while authentically tied to Christian and Pueblo historicity, is in line with other Spanish converso histories.

Peru Edit

In Peru, conversos arrived at the time of the Spanish Conquest. At first, they had lived without restrictions because the Inquisition was not active there at the beginning of the Viceroyalty. With the advent of the Inquisition, New Christians began to be persecuted, and in some cases executed. The descendants of these colonial Sephardic Jewish descent converts to Christianity settled mainly in the north of the Andes and of the high jungle of Peru, where they married local women and became assimilated.

Colombia Edit

In the department of Antioquia, Colombia, as well as in the greater Paisa region, some families also hold traditions and oral accounts of Jewish descent. In this population, Y-DNA genetic analysis has shown an origin of male founders predominantly from "southern Spain but also suggest that a fraction came from northern Iberia and that some possibly had a Sephardic origin".[38] Medellín has a tradition of the marranada, where a pig is slaughtered, butchered and consumed on the streets of every neighborhood each Christmas. This custom has been interpreted as an annual affirmation of the rejection of Jewish law.[39]

Bolivia Edit

A safe haven destination for Sephardic Conversos during the Spanish colonial era was Santa Cruz de la Sierra.[40] In 1557 many crypto-Jews joined Ñuflo de Chávez and were among the pioneers who founded the city.[41] During the 16th century more crypto-Jews that faced persecution from the Inquisition and local authorities in nearby Potosí, La Paz and La Plata moved to Santa Cruz, as it was the most isolated urban settlement and because the Inquisition did not bother the Conversos there;[42] Some settled in the city of Santa Cruz and its adjacent towns, including Vallegrande, Postrervalle, Portachuelo, Terevinto, Pucará, and Cotoca.[43]

Several of the oldest Catholic families in Santa Cruz are of Jewish ancestry; some families still practice certain traditions of Judaism. As recently as the 1920s, several families preserved seven-branched candlesticks and served dishes cooked with kosher practices.[42] It is still customary among certain old families to light candles on Friday at sunset and to mourn the deaths of close relatives by sitting on the floor.[41] After almost five centuries, some of the descendants of these families acknowledge having some Jewish ancestry, but practice Catholicism.

Costa Rica Edit

Some crypto-Jews established themselves in the outskirts of San José, Costa Rica in the 16th century. They passed as Catholics in public and practiced their Jewish rituals in privacy. In the town of Itzkazú (modern day Escazú), some crypto-Jewish families did not maintain secrecy. Locals started to associate their rituals and unintelligible prayers in Hebrew with witchcraft. Since then, Escazú has been known in Costa Rican folklore as the "city of the witches".[citation needed]

Elsewhere in Latin America Edit

In addition to these communities, Roman Catholic-professing communities descended from male and female crypto-Jews are said to exist in the Dominican Republic, Cuba, Jamaica, Puerto Rico[44] and in various other countries of South America, such as Brazil(see Synagogue Kahal Zur Israel in Recife), Argentina, Uruguay, Venezuela, Chile, Peru and Ecuador. From these communities comes the proverb, "Catholic by faith, Jewish by blood".[citation needed]

Notable crypto-Jews Edit

  • Antonio Fernandez Carvajal was a Portuguese merchant in London; "like other Marranos in London, Carvajal prayed at the Catholic chapel of the Spanish ambassador, while simultaneously playing a leading role in the secret Jewish community, which met at the clandestine synagogue at Creechurch Lane."[45]
  • Isaac Cardoso was a Jewish physician, philosopher, and polemic writer, who was born in Portugal but ultimately settled in Italy. For a time he went by the name Fernando to evade the Inquisition. After finding safe haven in Verona he openly embraced Judaism, becoming a leading scholar in Italy.
  • Benjamin Melendez was a Nuyorican activist, musician and gang leader. He is best known for brokering the New York City gang truce in 1971, while President of the South Bronx gang (and musical group) the Ghetto Brothers.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Berlin, Adele, ed. (2011). "Cripto-Jews". The Oxford Dictionary of the Jewish Religion (2nd ed.). Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 195–96. ISBN 978-0-19-975927-9.
  2. ^ Jacobs, J (2002). Hidden Heritage: The Legacy of the Crypto-Jews. University of California Press. p. [page needed]. ISBN 978-0-520-23517-5. OCLC 48920842.
  3. ^ Tobias, HJ (1992). A History of the Jews in New Mexico. University of New Mexico Press. p. [page needed]. ISBN 978-0-8263-1390-4. OCLC 36645510.
  4. ^ Alexy, T (2003). The Marrano Legacy: A Contemporary Crypto-Jewish Priest Reveals Secrets of His Double Life. University of New Mexico Press. p. [page needed]. ISBN 978-0-8263-3055-0. OCLC 51059087.
  5. ^ Benbassa, Esther; Rodrique, A (2000). Sephardi Jewry: A History of the Judeo-Spanish Community, 14th–20th Centuries (Jewish Communities in the Modern World). University of Californida Press. p. [page needed]. ISBN 978-0-520-21822-2. OCLC 154877054.
  6. ^ Gerber, JS (1994). Jews of Spain: A History of the Sephardic Experience. Free Press. p. [page needed]. ISBN 978-0-02-911574-9. OCLC 30339044.
  7. ^ a b Levine Melammed, Renee. "Women in Medieval Jewish Societies," in Women and Judaism: New Insights and Scholarship. Ed. Frederick E. Greenspahn. New York: New York University Press, 2009. 105–106.
  8. ^ Rowland, Robert."New Christian, Marrano, Jew" in The Jews and the Expansion of Europe to the West, 1450-1800. Paolo Bernardini and Norman Fiering, eds. New York: Berghalm Books 2001
  9. ^ See David M. Gitlitz, Secrecy and Deceit: The Religion of the Crypto-Jews (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2002).
  10. ^ For the Portuguese conversos in Rome see James Novoa, Being the Nação in the Eternal City: New Christian Lives in Sixteenth-Century Rome (Peterborough: Baywolf Press, 2014).
  11. ^ Socolovsky, J (2003). . Our Jerusalem. Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-04-16.
  12. ^ Gerber, Jane S (1994). The Jews of Spain: A History of the Sephardic Experience. New York: The Free Press. p. 81. ISBN 978-0029115749.
  13. ^ "Anusim".
  14. ^ Zeldes, N. (2003). The former Jews of this kingdom : Sicilian converts after the expulsion, 1492–1516. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 9004128980. OCLC 51088133.
  15. ^ Robert Brockmann: The Crypto-Jewish Revelation; the jews-susite root line of the Lindauer (tribe Man, Sus, Suskind and Lindauer); Epubli, 2021, ISBN 978-3754104088
  16. ^ as of 04/04/2021
  17. ^ Pirnazar, Jaleh. . Iran Nameh. Bethesda, MD: Foundation for Iranian Studies. XIX. Archived from the original on 2021-02-24. Retrieved 2009-03-25.
  18. ^ Hilda Nissimi (2006). . ISBN 978-1845191603. Archived from the original on 2011-07-28. Retrieved 2009-03-25.
  19. ^ LibraryOfCongress (2013-12-06), Jews & New Christians in Portuguese Asia 1500–1700, retrieved 2016-02-22
  20. ^ Limor, Ora; Stroumsa, Guy G. (1996). Contra Iudaeos: Ancient and Medieval Polemics Between Christians and Jews. Mohr Siebeck. p. 249. ISBN 978-3161464829.
  21. ^ Roth, Norman (1994), Jews, Visigoths and Muslims in medieval Spain : cooperation and conflict, Leiden: Brill, pp. 79–90, ISBN 978-9004099715
  22. ^ Delgado Figueira, João (1623). Listas da Inquisição de Goa (1560–1623). Lisbon: Biblioteca Nacional.
  23. ^ de Almeida, Fortunato (1923). História da Igreja em Portugal, vol. IV. Porto: Portucalense Editora.
  24. ^ Presencia portuguesa en el México Colonial 2018-09-29 at the Wayback Machine León Portilla, Miguel. UNAM; 2005.
  25. ^ (in Spanish). June 2007. Archived from the original on January 30, 2020. Retrieved March 4, 2011.
  26. ^ "Carabajal", Jewish Encyclopedia, Accessed Mar 5, 2011.
  27. ^ a b Flint, Richard; Cushing, Shirley. . New Mexico Office of the State Historian. Archived from the original on July 27, 2011. Retrieved March 4, 2011.
  28. ^ Hammond, George P. and Rey, Apapito, The Rediscovery of New Mexico, 1580–1594, Albuquerque: U of NM Press, 1966, pp. 48, 245–301
  29. ^ Wiznitzer, Arnold (1962). "Crypto-Jews in Mexico during the Sixteenth Century". American Jewish Historical Quarterly. 51 (3): 168–214. ISSN 0002-9068. JSTOR 23873766. Retrieved 6 September 2023.
  30. ^ "Earliest Jewish manuscript in New World to return to Mexico". Reuters. 4 March 2017. Retrieved 6 September 2023.
  31. ^ Hordes, Stanley M. (2005). To The End of The Earth: A History of the Crypto-Jews of New Mexico. Columbia University Press. p. 376. ISBN 978-0231129374.
  32. ^ Liebman Jacobs, Janet (2002). Hidden Heritage: The Legacy of the Crypto Jews. University of California. p. 212. ISBN 978-0520235175.
  33. ^ Halevy, Schulamith C. (2009). Descendants of the Anusim (Crypto-Jews) in Contemporary Mexico (PDF). Hebrew University.
  34. ^ Kunin, Seth D. (2009). Juggling Identities: Identity and Authenticity Among the Crypto-Jews. Columbia University Press. p. 288. ISBN 978-0231142182.
  35. ^ Kunin (2009), p. 207
  36. ^ Barbara Ferry and Debbie Nathan (December 2000). "Mistaken Identity? The Case of New Mexico's 'Hidden Jews'". The Atlantic.
  37. ^ Ben-Ur, Aviva (2007). "[review] To the End of the Earth: A History of the Crypto-Jews of New Mexico" (PDF). American Jewish History. 93 (2): 266. doi:10.1353/ajh.2007.0033. S2CID 162357177. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
  38. ^ Carvajal-Carmona, LG; Soto ID; Pineda N; Ortiz-Barrientos D; Duque C; Ospina-Duque J; McCarthy M; Montoya P; Alvarez VM; Bedoya G; Ruiz-Linares A (2000). "Strong Amerind/White Sex Bias and a Possible Sephardic Contribution among the Founders of a Population in Northwest Colombia". American Journal of Human Genetics. 67 (5): 1062–1066. doi:10.1016/S0002-9297(07)62956-5. PMC 1288568. PMID 11032790.
  39. ^ Rodas, Albeiro (2007). "Medellín resplandece en diciembre". Retrieved 2009-10-16.
  40. ^ "Farewell España, The World The Sephardim Remembered", written by Howard Sachar
  41. ^ a b "History of the Jewish People", written by Eli Birnbaum
  42. ^ a b "Storm Clouds over the Bolivian Refuge", written by Sherry Mangan
  43. ^ "Los Judíos de Vallegrande", El Deber, written by Mario Rueda Peña, November 23, 1995
  44. ^ Steinberg-Spitz, Clara (1999). "The Inquisition in the New World". Retrieved 2007-04-14.
  45. ^ Matthew, HCG; Harrison, B, eds. (2004). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0198614111. OCLC 166700558.

Further reading Edit

  • Acevedo-Field, Rafaela. "Denunciation of Faith and Family: Crypto-Jews and the Inquisition in Seventeenth-Century Mexico." PhD diss. University of California, Santa Barbara, 2012.
  • Alberro, Solange. Inquisición y sociedad en México, 1571–1700. Mexico City: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1993.
  • Alberro, Solange. "Crypto-Jews and the Mexican Holy Office in the Seventeenth Century," in The Jews and the Expansion of Europe to the West, 1450–1800, eds. Paolo Bernardini and Norman Fiering. New York: Berghahn Books, 2001.
  • Arbell, Mordechai. The Jewish Nation of the Caribbean: The Spanish-Portuguese Jewish Settlements in the Caribbean and the Guianas. Jerusalem: Gefen Publishing House, 2002.
  • Beinart, Haim. Conversos ante la inquisición. Jerusalem: Hebrew University, 1965.
  • Bocanegra, Matias de and Seymour Liebman, Jews and the Inquisition of Mexico: The Great Auto de Fe of 1649. Lawrence, Kansas: Coronado Press, 1974.
  • Bodian, Miriam. Dying the Law of Moses: Crypto-Jewish Martyrdom in the Iberian World. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2007.
  • Böhm, Günter. "Crypto-Jews and New Christians in Colonial Peru and Chile." In The Jews and the Expansion of Europe to the West, 1450–1800, edited by Paolo Bernardini and Norman Fiering, 203–212. New York: Berghahn Books, 2001.
  • Cohen, Martin A. "The Letters and Last Will and Testament of Luis De Carvajal, the Younger." American Jewish Historical Quarterly, vol. 55, no. 4, 1966, pp. 451–520. JSTOR 23873285.
  • Cohen, Martin A. "The Autobiography of Luis De Carvajal, the Younger." American Jewish Historical Quarterly, vol. 55, no. 3, 1966, pp. 277–318, JSTOR 23875621.
  • Cohen, Martin A. The Martyr Luis de Carvajal: A Secret Jew in Sixteenth-century Mexico. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
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External links Edit

  • Resources > Medieval Jewish History > Expulsion from Spain and The Anusim The Jewish History Resource Center, Project of the Dinur Center for Research in Jewish History, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
  • The Story of Secret and Forcibly Converted Jews
  • Society for Crypto Judaic Studies
  • History of the Jews in Greece
  • Crypto Jews/Anusim Resources
  • Shavei Israel – a group that helps our lost brethren return
  • Crypto Jewish Education
  • , written by António Nunes Ribeiro Sanches, in 1748, in Portuguese
  • , by Cecil Roth
  • Dramatic episodes of the Portuguese Inquisition, volume 1, by Antonio Baião, in Portuguese
  • Dramatic episodes of the Portuguese Inquisition, volume 2, by Antonio Baião, in Portuguese
  • Trial of Gabriel de Granada by the Inquisition in Mexico, 1642–1645, according to Cecil Roth, 'it gives a remarkably graphic impression of a typical Inquisitional case'
  • Who Are the Crypto-Jews? by Dr. Henry Abramson

crypto, judaism, secret, adherence, judaism, while, publicly, professing, another, faith, practitioners, referred, crypto, jews, origin, from, greek, kryptos, κρυπτός, hidden, judaica, clockwise, from, shabbat, candlesticks, handwashing, chumash, tanakh, torah. Crypto Judaism is the secret adherence to Judaism while publicly professing to be of another faith practitioners are referred to as crypto Jews origin from Greek kryptos kryptos hidden 1 Judaica clockwise from top Shabbat candlesticks handwashing cup Chumash and Tanakh Torah pointer shofar and etrog box The term is especially applied historically to Spanish Jews who outwardly professed Catholicism 2 3 4 5 6 also known as Conversos Marranos or the Anusim The phenomenon is especially associated with medieval Spain following the Massacre of 1391 and the expulsion of the Jews in 1492 7 After 1492 in Spain and 1497 in Portugal officially they no longer existed The Spanish Inquisition and the Portuguese Inquisition were established to monitor converted Jews and their descendants for their continued adherence to Christian faith and practice with severe penalties for those convicted of secretly continuing to practice Judaism Information about secretly observant Jews largely survives in Inquisition cases against individuals 8 Contents 1 Europe 1 1 Role of Maimonides 1 2 Before the Spanish Inquisition 1 3 Neofiti 1 4 Susiti 2 Mediterranean and Asia 2 1 India 3 Spanish America 3 1 Early colonial period 16th century 3 2 Nuevo Leon 1590s to early 17th century 3 3 Former New Spain territories in the United States 17th 18th centuries 3 4 Peru 3 5 Colombia 3 6 Bolivia 3 7 Costa Rica 3 8 Elsewhere in Latin America 4 Notable crypto Jews 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEurope EditOfficially Jews who converted in Spain during the 14th and 15th centuries were known as Cristianos Nuevos New Christians but were commonly called conversos converts to Christianity Spain and Portugal issued edicts restricting their rights in the mother countries of Spain and Portugal and Spanish and Portuguese overseas territories in the Americas Although only Cristianos Viejos Old Christians who could prove limpieza de sangre cleanliness or purity of blood descended from Christian Iberian European ancestry only without tainting of any Jewish ancestry or Muslim Berber Arab ancestry were allowed to officially migrate to the New World Spanish possessions manyChristian conversos with Jewish antecedents went to the Spanish possessions using forged limpieza de sangre documents or they entered the Spanish possessions via Portuguese Brazil particularly 1580 1640 when Spain and Portugal were ruled by the same monarch The entry requirements to the Portuguese colony of Brazil were more lax and also less rigorously enforced Despite the dangers of the Spanish Inquisition in Iberia and the Inquisitions established in Mexico City Lima Peru and Cartagena de Indias in what is now Colombia many conversos continued to secretly and discreetly practice Jewish rituals in the home 7 9 10 such as the Festival of Santa Esterica a disguised version of Purim to celebrate the Jewish Queen Esther with a fictional Catholic Saint Esterica citation needed After the Alhambra decree of March 1492 which mandated conversion to Christianity or exile for Jews numerous conversos also called Xueta or Chueta in the Balearic Islands ruled by Spain publicly professed Roman Catholicism but privately adhered to Judaism even through the Spanish Inquisition They are among the most widely known and documented crypto Jews citation needed Crypto Judaism existed in earlier periods whenever Jews were forced or pressured to convert to the majority religion by the rulers of places where they resided Some of the Jewish followers of Sabbatai Zevi Sabbateans formally converted to Islam and were known as Donmeh Later followers of Jacob Frank Frankists formally converted to Christianity but maintained aspects of practice of their versions of Judaism citation needed Crypto Jews persisted in Russia and Eastern European countries influenced by the Soviet Union after the rise of Communism with the Russian Revolution of 1917 The government which included secular Communist Jews did not force Jews to convert to the Russian Orthodox Church but regarded the practice of any religion as undesirable Some faiths were allowed to continue under strict supervision by the regime Since the end of Communism many people in former Soviet states including descendants of Jews have publicly taken up the faith of their ancestors again citation needed The Belmonte Jews of Portugal dating from the 12th century maintained strong secret traditions for centuries A whole community survived in secrecy by maintaining a tradition of endogamous marriage and hiding all external signs of their faith They and their practices were discovered only in the 20th century Their rich Sephardic tradition of crypto Judaism is unique Some now profess Orthodox Judaism although many still retain their centuries old traditions 11 Role of Maimonides Edit As one of the towering figures in Judaism and the author of the Mishneh Torah commentary on the Talmud Maimonides also issued a landmark doctrinal response to the forced conversions of Jews in the Iberian peninsula by the Almohads In his Epistle on Martyrdom however Maimonides suggested that the persecuted Jew should publicly adopt Islam while maintaining crypto Judaism and not seek martyrdom unless forced to transgress Jewish commandments in public He also excoriated one writer who advocated martyrdom for long winded foolish babbling and nonsense and for misleading and hurting the Jews In a sweeping view of the Jewish past Maimonides marshals examples of heretics and sinners from the Bible to show that even oppressors of Israel were rewarded by God for a single act of piety or respect How much greater then he argues will be the reward of the Jews who despite the exigencies of forced conversion perform commandments secretly 12 Maimonides championed rationalism over the then accepted practice of martyrdom when facing religious adversity This consequently legitimized crypto Judaism by the religion s standards and provided doctrinal backing for Jews during the centuries of the Spanish Inquisition 1478 1834 Before the Spanish Inquisition Edit According to the Encyclopaedia Judaica 13 several incidents of forced conversions happened prior to 1492 and outside of Iberia One of the earliest conversions happened a century after the Fall of Rome and was in Clermont Ferrand After a member of the Jewish community in Clermont Ferrand became a Jewish Christian and was persecuted by other members of the community for doing so the cavalcade in which he was marching persecuted his persecutors in turn The participants in the procession then made an attack which destroyed the synagogue completely razing it to the grounds Subsequently Bishop Avitus directed a letter to the Jews in which he disclaimed the use of compulsion to make them adopt Christianity but announced at the end of the missive Therefore if ye be ready to believe as I do be one flock with us and I shall be your pastor but if ye be not ready depart from this place The community hesitated for three days before making a decision Finally the majority some 500 accepted Christianity The Christians in Clermont greeted the event with rejoicing Candles were lit the lamps shone the whole city radiated with the light of the snow white flock i e the forced converts The Jews who preferred exile left for Marseilles Gregory of Tours Histories 5 11 The poet Venantius Fortunatus composed a poem to commemorate the occasion In 582 the Frankish king Chilperic compelled numerous Jews to adopt Christianity Again the anusim were not wholehearted in their conversion for some of them cleansed in body but not in heart denied God and returned to their ancient perfidy so that they were seen keeping the Sabbath as well as Sunday ibid 6 17 The Clermont Ferrand conversions preceded the first forced conversions in Iberia by 40 years Forced baptisms of Jews took place in Iberia in 616 at the insistence of Visigoth monarch Sisibut Persistent attempts to enforce conversion were made in the seventh century by the Visigoths in Spain after they had adopted the Roman Catholic faith Comparatively mild legal measures were followed by the harsh edict issued by King Sisibut in 616 ordering the compulsory baptism of all Jews After conversion however the anusim evidently maintained their Jewish cohesion and religious life It was undoubtedly this problem that continued to occupy Spanish sovereigns at the successive Councils of Toledo representing both the ecclesiastical and secular authorities Thus steps were taken to secure that the children of converts had a Christian religious education as well as to prevent the older generation from continuing to observe the Jewish rites or from failing to observe the Catholic ones A system of strict supervision by the clergy over the way of life and movements of the anusim was imposed Neofiti Edit The Neofiti were a group of crypto Jews living in the Kingdom of Sicily which included all of Southern Italy from the 13th to the 16th centuries 14 Susiti Edit The ancestral line Sus Susskind and Lindauer was a crypto Jewish susitic ancestral line that settled in the Holy Roman Empire and lived as Catholic or Protestant crypto Jews 15 Secondary lineages of the Lindauer are Lindauere Lindouer Lindaer Linduaer Lindeaur Lindeauer Lindhauer Linndauer Lindayer as well as Lindaurr 16 Mediterranean and Asia EditThere have been several communities of crypto Jews in Muslim lands The ancestors of the Daggatuns in Morocco are thought to have kept up their Jewish practices a long time after their nominal adoption of Islam In Iran a large community of crypto Jews lived in Mashhad near Khorassan where they were known as Jedid al Islam they were mass converted to Islam around 1839 after the Allahdad events Most of this community left for Israel in 1946 Some converted to Islam and remained in Iran 17 18 India Edit In 1494 after the signing of the Treaty of Tordesillas authorized by Pope Alexander VI Portugal was given the right to found colonies in the Eastern Hemisphere In his lecture at the Library of Congress Professor Sanjay Subrahmanyam Chair in Social Sciences at University of California Los Angeles explains that crypto Jews were especially attracted to India because not only was it a center of trade but India had established an ancient Jewish settlements along its Western coast The presence of these communities meant that crypto Jews who had been forced to accept Catholicism but did not want to emigrate to tolerant countries e g Morocco Poland Ottoman Empire etc could operate within the Portuguese Empire with the full freedom of Catholic subjects but away from the Inquisition while collaborating with existing Jewish communities to hide their true beliefs 19 The presence of crypto Jews in Goa angered the Archbishop of Goa Dom Gaspar Jorge de Leao Pereira and other Europeans like Francis Xavier who wrote polemics and letters to Lisbon urging that the Inquisition be brought to Goa 20 Crypto Jews presented a security threat to the Kingdom of Portugal because Sephardic Jews had an established reputation in Iberia for joining forces with Moors to overthrow Christian rulers 21 The Goan Inquisition commenced in 1560 and ended in 1812 It targeted crypto Jews crypto Muslims and crypto Hindus Of the 1 582 persons convicted between 1560 and 1623 45 2 were convicted for offenses related to Judaism and Islam 22 A compilation of the auto da fe statistics of the Goa Inquisition reveal that a total of 57 persons were burnt in the flesh and 64 in effigy i e a statue resembling the person All the burnt were convicted as relapsed heretics or for sodomy 23 Spanish America EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Crypto Judaism was documented chiefly in Spanish held colonial territories in northern Mexico Numerous conversos joined Spanish and Portuguese expeditions believing there was an economic opportunity in the new lands and that they would have more freedom at a distance far from Iberia Different situations developed in the early colonial period of Mexico the frontier province of Nuevo Leon the later northern frontier provinces and the colonial experience of the Mexican Inquisition The crypto Jewish traditions have complex histories and are typically embedded in an amalgam of syncretic Roman Catholic and Judaic traditions In many ways resurgent Judaic practices mirrored indigenous peoples maintaining their traditions practiced loosely under a Roman Catholic veil In addition Catholicism was syncretic absorbing other traditions and creating a new creole religion The traditional Festival of Santa Esterica was preserved among the Conversos who migrated to the New World and is still practiced today among their descendants Early colonial period 16th century Edit Some of the Sephardic Jews expelled from Spain went to Portugal but in 1497 that country effectively converted all remaining Jewish children making them wards of the state unless the parents also converted Therefore many of the early crypto Jewish migrants to Mexico in the early colonial days were technically first to second generation Portuguese with Spanish roots before that The number of such Portuguese migrants was significant enough that Spanish colonists began to use Portuguese as a synonym for Jewish for their settlers Immigration to Mexico offered lucrative trade possibilities in a well populated colony with nascent Spanish culture Some migrants believed that this region would be more tolerant since the lands were overwhelmingly populated by non Christian indigenous peoples and it was far removed from the metropole 24 Colonial officials believed that many crypto Jews were going to Mexico during the 16th century and complained in written documents to Spain that Spanish society in Mexico would become significantly Jewish Officials found and condemned clandestine synagogues in Mexico City At this point colonial administrators instituted the Law of the Pure Blood which prohibited migration to Mexico for New Christians Cristiano Nuevo i e anyone who could not prove to be Old Christians for at least the last three generations In addition the administration initiated the Mexican Inquisition to ensure the Catholic orthodoxy of all migrants to Mexico The Mexico Inquisition was also deployed in the traditional manner to ensure orthodoxy of converted indigenous peoples The first victims of burnings or autos de fe of the Mexican Inquisition were indigenous converts convicted of heresy or crypto Jews convicted of relapsing into their ancestral faith citation needed Except for those allowed to settle the province of Nuevo Leon under an exemption from the Blood Purity Laws the number of conversos migrating to the New World was reduced Nuevo Leon 1590s to early 17th century Edit The colonization of New Spain took place as a northward expansion over increasingly harsh geography in regions that were occupied by tribes angered at the encroachment they formed loose confederations of indigenous peoples to resist the settlers Spain financed the expansion by exploiting mineral wealth enslaving or forcing indigenous peoples to labor in mines It established encomiendas for raising livestock thereby displacing the local people The indigenous peoples of the North Eastern quadrant of New Spain Nueva Espana proved particularly resistant to colonial pressures The Chichimec Apache and other tribes resisted conversion to Christianity and avoided being impressed as laborers or slaves on Spanish ranches and in mines The Spanish believed such peoples made the frontier frontera a lawless region Luis Carvajal y de la Cueva a royal accountant was a Portuguese New Christian He received a royal charter from the Spanish Crown to settle Nuevo Leon a large expanse of land in the hostile frontier Because of the dangers and difficulties of this region Carvajal y de la Cueva received an exemption in his charter from the usual requirement that he prove that all new settlers were Old Christians of at least three generations rather than recently converted Jews or Muslims This exemption allowed people to go to Nuevo Leon who were legally barred from entering New Spain elsewhere 25 Carvajal was authorized to bring 100 soldiers and 60 laborers to New Spain many have been documented as crypto Jews 26 nbsp Jewish religious items at the Metropolitan Museum of Monterrey With Carvajal as governor Monterrey was established as the center now in the state of Nuevo Leon Within a few years some people reported to authorities in Mexico City that Jewish rites were being performed in the Northern Province and efforts to convert heathen indigenous peoples were lax 27 The principal economic activity of Carvajal and his associates seems to have been capturing Indians and selling them into slavery 27 Carvajal s Lieutenant Governor Gaspar Castano de Sosa led a large expedition to New Mexico in 1591 in an effort to establish a colony Castano was arrested for this unauthorized expedition and sentenced to exile in the Philippines The sentence was later reversed but he had already been killed in the Molucca Islands when the Chinese slaves on his ship mutinied 28 Governor Carvajal his immediate family members and others of his entourage were called to appear before the Inquisition in Mexico City They were arrested and jailed The governor subsequently died in jail prior to a sentence of exile His niece Isabel Carvajal had been tortured and implicated all the family in so called charges They were all executed by burning at the stake for relapsing into Judaism except for one nephew who escaped arrest by fleeing to Italy and one nephew who was a Dominican friar 29 His nephew also named Luis wrote the earliest known writings by a Jew in the Americas 30 When Carvajal was in office the city of Monterrey became a destination for other crypto Jews who wanted to escape the Mexican Inquisition in the south of the territory Thus Nuevo Leon and the founding of Monterrey are significant as they attracted crypto Jewish migrants from all parts of New Spain They created one of the earliest Jewish related communities in Mexico The Jewish communities in modern Mexico which practice their Judaism openly were not established until the late 19th and early 20th centuries after considerable immigration of Ashkenazi Jews from eastern Europe and Mizrahi Jews from Turkey and Syria Former New Spain territories in the United States 17th 18th centuries Edit Due to the Inquisition activities in Nuevo Leon many crypto Jewish descendants migrated to frontier colonies further west using the trade routes passing through the towns of the Sierra Madre Occidental and Chihuahua Hermosillo and Cananea and to the north on the trade route to Paso del Norte and Santa Fe both cities in the colonial Santa Fe de Nuevo Mexico Some even traveled to Alta California on the Pacific Coast In the late 20th century in modern day Southwestern United States specifically New Mexico which was a former territory of New Spain several Hispanos of New Mexico have stated a belief that they are descended from crypto Jews of the colonial period While most maintain their Roman Catholic and Christian faiths they often cite as evidence memories of older relatives practicing Jewish traditions Since the 1990s the crypto Jews of New Mexico have been extensively studied and documented by several research scholars including Stanley M Hordes 31 Janet Liebman Jacobs 32 Schulamith Halevy 33 and Seth D Kunin who calls them Hispanos 34 Kunin noted that most of this group in New Mexico has not formally embraced Judaism nor joined the organized Jewish community 35 Though some have been sceptical such as Folklorist Judith Neulander arguing that people could be referring to traditions of modern Ashkenazi Jews migrants and Evangelical Protestant Christians who purposely acquired and employed Jewish traditions 36 More recently Evangelical Protestant Christians have opened missionary groups aimed at cultivating evangelical doctrine in Southwestern American communities where crypto Judaism had survived The highly influential Hordes has been charged with single minded speculation based on largely ephemeral or highly ambiguous evidence for his conclusion that modern day Hispanos who claim crypto Jewish roots are heirs to an unbroken chain of transmission 37 Kunin responded to some of this criticism in his book Juggling Identities Identity and Authenticity Among the Crypto Jews in the response Kunin iterated that these scholars were misunderstanding New Mexican identity which while authentically tied to Christian and Pueblo historicity is in line with other Spanish converso histories Peru Edit In Peru conversos arrived at the time of the Spanish Conquest At first they had lived without restrictions because the Inquisition was not active there at the beginning of the Viceroyalty With the advent of the Inquisition New Christians began to be persecuted and in some cases executed The descendants of these colonial Sephardic Jewish descent converts to Christianity settled mainly in the north of the Andes and of the high jungle of Peru where they married local women and became assimilated Colombia Edit In the department of Antioquia Colombia as well as in the greater Paisa region some families also hold traditions and oral accounts of Jewish descent In this population Y DNA genetic analysis has shown an origin of male founders predominantly from southern Spain but also suggest that a fraction came from northern Iberia and that some possibly had a Sephardic origin 38 Medellin has a tradition of the marranada where a pig is slaughtered butchered and consumed on the streets of every neighborhood each Christmas This custom has been interpreted as an annual affirmation of the rejection of Jewish law 39 Bolivia Edit A safe haven destination for Sephardic Conversos during the Spanish colonial era was Santa Cruz de la Sierra 40 In 1557 many crypto Jews joined Nuflo de Chavez and were among the pioneers who founded the city 41 During the 16th century more crypto Jews that faced persecution from the Inquisition and local authorities in nearby Potosi La Paz and La Plata moved to Santa Cruz as it was the most isolated urban settlement and because the Inquisition did not bother the Conversos there 42 Some settled in the city of Santa Cruz and its adjacent towns including Vallegrande Postrervalle Portachuelo Terevinto Pucara and Cotoca 43 Several of the oldest Catholic families in Santa Cruz are of Jewish ancestry some families still practice certain traditions of Judaism As recently as the 1920s several families preserved seven branched candlesticks and served dishes cooked with kosher practices 42 It is still customary among certain old families to light candles on Friday at sunset and to mourn the deaths of close relatives by sitting on the floor 41 After almost five centuries some of the descendants of these families acknowledge having some Jewish ancestry but practice Catholicism Costa Rica Edit Some crypto Jews established themselves in the outskirts of San Jose Costa Rica in the 16th century They passed as Catholics in public and practiced their Jewish rituals in privacy In the town of Itzkazu modern day Escazu some crypto Jewish families did not maintain secrecy Locals started to associate their rituals and unintelligible prayers in Hebrew with witchcraft Since then Escazu has been known in Costa Rican folklore as the city of the witches citation needed Elsewhere in Latin America Edit In addition to these communities Roman Catholic professing communities descended from male and female crypto Jews are said to exist in the Dominican Republic Cuba Jamaica Puerto Rico 44 and in various other countries of South America such as Brazil see Synagogue Kahal Zur Israel in Recife Argentina Uruguay Venezuela Chile Peru and Ecuador From these communities comes the proverb Catholic by faith Jewish by blood citation needed Notable crypto Jews EditAntonio Fernandez Carvajal was a Portuguese merchant in London like other Marranos in London Carvajal prayed at the Catholic chapel of the Spanish ambassador while simultaneously playing a leading role in the secret Jewish community which met at the clandestine synagogue at Creechurch Lane 45 Isaac Cardoso was a Jewish physician philosopher and polemic writer who was born in Portugal but ultimately settled in Italy For a time he went by the name Fernando to evade the Inquisition After finding safe haven in Verona he openly embraced Judaism becoming a leading scholar in Italy Benjamin Melendez was a Nuyorican activist musician and gang leader He is best known for brokering the New York City gang truce in 1971 while President of the South Bronx gang and musical group the Ghetto Brothers See also EditAllahdad Anusim Beta Abraham Chala Conversos Crypto Christianity Crypto paganism Crypto Hinduism Doctrine of mental reservation Domus Conversorum Donmeh Hidden Armenians Jewish history Jewish visibility Judaizers Limpieza de sangre Marrano Morisco New Christian Relapso Sephardic Jews in India Who Is A Jew Kakure KirishitanReferences Edit Berlin Adele ed 2011 Cripto Jews The Oxford Dictionary of the Jewish Religion 2nd ed Oxford New York Oxford University Press pp 195 96 ISBN 978 0 19 975927 9 Jacobs J 2002 Hidden Heritage The Legacy of the Crypto Jews University of California Press p page needed ISBN 978 0 520 23517 5 OCLC 48920842 Tobias HJ 1992 A History of the Jews in New Mexico University of New Mexico Press p page needed ISBN 978 0 8263 1390 4 OCLC 36645510 Alexy T 2003 The Marrano Legacy A Contemporary Crypto Jewish Priest Reveals Secrets of His Double Life University of New Mexico Press p page needed ISBN 978 0 8263 3055 0 OCLC 51059087 Benbassa Esther Rodrique A 2000 Sephardi Jewry A History of the Judeo Spanish Community 14th 20th Centuries Jewish Communities in the Modern World University of Californida Press p page needed ISBN 978 0 520 21822 2 OCLC 154877054 Gerber JS 1994 Jews of Spain A History of the Sephardic Experience Free Press p page needed ISBN 978 0 02 911574 9 OCLC 30339044 a b Levine Melammed Renee Women in Medieval Jewish Societies in Women and Judaism New Insights and Scholarship Ed Frederick E Greenspahn New York New York University Press 2009 105 106 Rowland Robert New Christian Marrano Jew in The Jews and the Expansion of Europe to the West 1450 1800 Paolo Bernardini and Norman Fiering eds New York Berghalm Books 2001 See David M Gitlitz Secrecy and Deceit The Religion of the Crypto Jews Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 2002 For the Portuguese conversos in Rome see James Novoa Being the Nacao in the Eternal City New Christian Lives in Sixteenth Century Rome Peterborough Baywolf Press 2014 Socolovsky J 2003 For Portugal s crypto Jews new rabbi tries to blend tradition with local custom Our Jerusalem Archived from the original on 2007 09 27 Retrieved 2007 04 16 Gerber Jane S 1994 The Jews of Spain A History of the Sephardic Experience New York The Free Press p 81 ISBN 978 0029115749 Anusim Zeldes N 2003 The former Jews of this kingdom Sicilian converts after the expulsion 1492 1516 Leiden Brill ISBN 9004128980 OCLC 51088133 Robert Brockmann The Crypto Jewish Revelation the jews susite root line of the Lindauer tribe Man Sus Suskind and Lindauer Epubli 2021 ISBN 978 3754104088 as of 04 04 2021 Pirnazar Jaleh The Jadid Al Islams of Mashhad Iran Nameh Bethesda MD Foundation for Iranian Studies XIX Archived from the original on 2021 02 24 Retrieved 2009 03 25 Hilda Nissimi 2006 The Crypto Jewish Mashhadis ISBN 978 1845191603 Archived from the original on 2011 07 28 Retrieved 2009 03 25 LibraryOfCongress 2013 12 06 Jews amp New Christians in Portuguese Asia 1500 1700 retrieved 2016 02 22 Limor Ora Stroumsa Guy G 1996 Contra Iudaeos Ancient and Medieval Polemics Between Christians and Jews Mohr Siebeck p 249 ISBN 978 3161464829 Roth Norman 1994 Jews Visigoths and Muslims in medieval Spain cooperation and conflict Leiden Brill pp 79 90 ISBN 978 9004099715 Delgado Figueira Joao 1623 Listas da Inquisicao de Goa 1560 1623 Lisbon Biblioteca Nacional de Almeida Fortunato 1923 Historia da Igreja em Portugal vol IV Porto Portucalense Editora Presencia portuguesa en el Mexico Colonial Archived 2018 09 29 at the Wayback Machine Leon Portilla Miguel UNAM 2005 La colonizacion del Nuevo Reino de Leon Y la fundacion de Monterrey por el ilustre gobernador Don Luis Carvajal y de la Cueva in Spanish June 2007 Archived from the original on January 30 2020 Retrieved March 4 2011 Carabajal Jewish Encyclopedia Accessed Mar 5 2011 a b Flint Richard Cushing Shirley Juan Morlete Gaspar Castano de Sosa and the Province of Nuevo Leon New Mexico Office of the State Historian Archived from the original on July 27 2011 Retrieved March 4 2011 Hammond George P and Rey Apapito The Rediscovery of New Mexico 1580 1594 Albuquerque U of NM Press 1966 pp 48 245 301 Wiznitzer Arnold 1962 Crypto Jews in Mexico during the Sixteenth Century American Jewish Historical Quarterly 51 3 168 214 ISSN 0002 9068 JSTOR 23873766 Retrieved 6 September 2023 Earliest Jewish manuscript in New World to return to Mexico Reuters 4 March 2017 Retrieved 6 September 2023 Hordes Stanley M 2005 To The End of The Earth A History of the Crypto Jews of New Mexico Columbia University Press p 376 ISBN 978 0231129374 Liebman Jacobs Janet 2002 Hidden Heritage The Legacy of the Crypto Jews University of California p 212 ISBN 978 0520235175 Halevy Schulamith C 2009 Descendants of the Anusim Crypto Jews in Contemporary Mexico PDF Hebrew University Kunin Seth D 2009 Juggling Identities Identity and Authenticity Among the Crypto Jews Columbia University Press p 288 ISBN 978 0231142182 Kunin 2009 p 207 Barbara Ferry and Debbie Nathan December 2000 Mistaken Identity The Case of New Mexico s Hidden Jews The Atlantic Ben Ur Aviva 2007 review To the End of the Earth A History of the Crypto Jews of New Mexico PDF American Jewish History 93 2 266 doi 10 1353 ajh 2007 0033 S2CID 162357177 Retrieved 5 December 2015 Carvajal Carmona LG Soto ID Pineda N Ortiz Barrientos D Duque C Ospina Duque J McCarthy M Montoya P Alvarez VM Bedoya G Ruiz Linares A 2000 Strong Amerind White Sex Bias and a Possible Sephardic Contribution among the Founders of a Population in Northwest Colombia American Journal of Human Genetics 67 5 1062 1066 doi 10 1016 S0002 9297 07 62956 5 PMC 1288568 PMID 11032790 Rodas Albeiro 2007 Medellin resplandece en diciembre Retrieved 2009 10 16 Farewell Espana The World The Sephardim Remembered written by Howard Sachar a b History of the Jewish People written by Eli Birnbaum a b Storm Clouds over the Bolivian Refuge written by Sherry Mangan Los Judios de Vallegrande El Deber written by Mario Rueda Pena November 23 1995 Steinberg Spitz Clara 1999 The Inquisition in the New World Retrieved 2007 04 14 Matthew HCG Harrison B eds 2004 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0198614111 OCLC 166700558 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Singer Isidore et al eds 1901 1906 The Jewish Encyclopedia New York Funk amp Wagnalls a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a Missing or empty title help Further reading EditAcevedo Field Rafaela Denunciation of Faith and Family Crypto Jews and the Inquisition in Seventeenth Century Mexico PhD diss University of California Santa Barbara 2012 Alberro Solange Inquisicion y sociedad en Mexico 1571 1700 Mexico City Fondo de Cultura Economica 1993 Alberro Solange Crypto Jews and the Mexican Holy Office in the Seventeenth Century in The Jews and the Expansion of Europe to the West 1450 1800 eds Paolo Bernardini and Norman Fiering New York Berghahn Books 2001 Arbell Mordechai The Jewish Nation of the Caribbean The Spanish Portuguese Jewish Settlements in the Caribbean and the Guianas Jerusalem Gefen Publishing House 2002 Beinart Haim Conversos ante la inquisicion Jerusalem Hebrew University 1965 Bocanegra Matias de and Seymour Liebman Jews and the Inquisition of Mexico The Great Auto de Fe of 1649 Lawrence Kansas Coronado Press 1974 Bodian Miriam Dying the Law of Moses Crypto Jewish Martyrdom in the Iberian World Bloomington Indiana University Press 2007 Bohm Gunter Crypto Jews and New Christians in Colonial Peru and Chile In The Jews and the Expansion of Europe to the West 1450 1800 edited by Paolo Bernardini and Norman Fiering 203 212 New York Berghahn Books 2001 Cohen Martin A The Letters and Last Will and Testament of Luis De Carvajal the Younger American Jewish Historical Quarterly vol 55 no 4 1966 pp 451 520 JSTOR 23873285 Cohen Martin A The Autobiography of Luis De Carvajal the Younger American Jewish Historical Quarterly vol 55 no 3 1966 pp 277 318 JSTOR 23875621 Cohen Martin A The Martyr Luis de Carvajal A Secret Jew in Sixteenth century Mexico Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press Cohen Martin A Antonio Diaz De Caceres Marrano Adventurer in Colonial Mexico American Jewish Historical Quarterly vol 60 no 2 1970 pp 169 184 JSTOR 23877946 Cohen Martin A Some Misconceptions about the Crypto Jews in Colonial Mexico American Jewish Historical Quarterly 61 1972 277 293 JSTOR 23880521 Chuchiak John F IV The Inquisition in New Spain 1536 1820 A Documentary History Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 2012 Cohen Martin A Antonio Diaz De Caceres Marrano Adventurer in Colonial Mexico American Jewish Historical Quarterly vol 60 no 2 1970 pp 169 184 JSTOR 23877946 Corteguera Luis R Death by Effigy A Case from the Mexican Inquisition Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press 2012 Giles Mary E Women in the Inquisition Spain and the New World Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 1999 Gitlitz David Secrecy and Deceit The Religion of the Crypto Jews Albuquerque NM University of New Mexico Press 2002 Gojman Goldberg Alicia Los conversos en la Nueva Espana Mexico City Enep Acatlan UNAM 1984 Gojman de Backal Alicia Conversos in Encyclopedia of Mexico vol 1 pp 340 344 Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 Greenleaf Richard E The Mexican Inquisition in the Sixteenth Century Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 1969 Hordes Stanley M The Inquisition as Economic and Political Agent The Campaign of the Mexican Holy Office Against the Crypto Jews in the Mid Seventeenth Century The Americas 39 no 1 1982 2 38 doi 10 2307 981268 Hordes Stanley To the End of the Earth A History of the Crypto Jews of New Mexico New York Columbia University Press 2005 Israel Jonathan I Diasporas within a Diaspora Jews Crypto Jews and the World Empires 1540 1740 Leiden Brill 2002 Kagan Richard L and Abigail Dyer eds Inquisitorial Inquiries Brief Lives of Secret Jews and Other Heretics 2004 2nd ed Baltimore The Johns Hopkins University Press 2011 Kagan Richard L and Philip D Morgan Preface In Atlantic Diasporas Jews Conversos and Crypto Jews in the Age of Mercantilism 1500 1800 edited by Richard L Kagan and Philip D Morgan vii xvii Baltimore The Johns Hopkins University Press 2009 Kamen Henry The Spanish Inquisition A Historical Revision New Haven Yale University Press 1997 Kamen Henry The Spanish Inquisition London Weidenfeld and Nicolson 1965 Lafaye Jacques Cruzadas y Utopias El judeocristianismo en las sociedades Ibericas Mexico City Fondo de Cultura Economica 1984 Lanning John Tate Legitimacy and Limpieza de Sangre in the Practice of Medicine in the Spanish Empire Jahrbuch fur Geschicte 4 1967 Lea Henry Charles The Inquisition in the Spanish Dependencies Sicily Naples Sardinia Milan the Canaries Mexico Peru and New Granada New York Macmillan 1908 Lewin Boleslao Los criptojudios Un fenomeno religioso y social Buenos Aires Mila 1987 Liebman Seymour The Jews in New Spain Faith Flame and the Inquisition Coral Gables FL University of Miami Press 1970 Liebman Seymour B The Jews of Colonial Mexico The Hispanic American Historical Review vol 43 no 1 1963 pp 95 108 JSTOR 2510438 Liebman Seymour Los Judios en Mexico y en America Central Mexico City Siglo XXI 1971 Martinez Maria Elena Limpieza de Sangre in Encyclopedia of Mexico vol 1 pp 749 752 Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 Martinez Maria Elena Interrogating Blood Line Purity of Blood the Inquisition and Casta Categories in Religion in New Spain Susan Schroeder and Stafford Poole eds Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 2007 Martinez Maria Elena Genealogical Fictions Limpieza de sangre religion and gender in colonial Mexico Stanford Calif Stanford University Press 2008 Medina Jose Toribio Historia del Tribunal del Santo Oficio de la Inquisicion de Cartagena de las Indias Santiago Imprenta Elzeviriana 1899 Medina Jose Toribio Historia del tribunal del Santo Oficio de la Inquisicion en Mexico 2nd edition Mexico City 1954 Parello Vincent Inquisition and Crypto Judaism The Complicity of the Mora Family of Quintanar de la Orden 1588 1592 In The Conversos and Moriscos in Late Medieval Spain and Beyond Volume One Departures and Change edited by Kevin Ingram 187 199 Leiden Brill 2009 Perelis Ronnie These Indians Are Jews Lost Tribes Crypto Jews and Jewish Self Fashioning in Antonio de Montezinos s Relacion of 1644 In Atlantic Diasporas Jews Conversos and Crypto Jews in the Age of Mercantilism edited by Richard L Kagan and Philip D Morgan 195 211 Baltimore The Johns Hopkins University Press 2009 Schaposchnik Ana E The Lima Inquisition The Plight of the Crypto Jews in Seventeenth Century Peru Madison University of Wisconsin Press 2015 Schorsch Jonathan Swimming the Christian Atlantic Judeoconversos Afroiberians and Amerindians in the Seventeenth Century 2 vols Leiden Brill 2009 Seed Patricia To Love Honor and Obey in Colonial Mexico Conflicts over Marriage Choices 1574 1821 Stanford Stanford University Press 1988 Sicroff Albert A Los estatutos de limpieza de sangre Translated by Mauro Armino Madrid Tauros 1985 Studnicki Gizbert Daviken A Nation upon the Ocean Sea Portugal s Atlantic Diaspora and the Crisis of the Spanish Empire 1492 1640 Oxford Oxford University Press 2007 Ushmany Eva Alexandra La vida entre el judismo y el cristianismo en la Nueva Espana 1580 1606 Mexico Fondo de Cultura Economico 1992 Ushmany Eva Alexandra The Participation of New Christians and Crypto Jews in the Conquest Colonization and Trade of Spanish America 1521 1660 in The Jews and the Expansion of Europe to the West 1450 1800 Paolo Bernardini and Norman Fiering eds New York Berghahn Books 1991 Uchmany Eva Alexandra La vida entre el judaismo y el cristianismo en la Nueva Espana 1580 1606 Mexico City Fondo de Cultura Economica 1992 Warshawsky Matthew D Inquisitorial Prosecution of Tomas Trevino de Sobremontes a Crypto Jew in Colonial Mexico Colonial Latin American Review 17 no 1 2008 pp 101 123 doi 10 1080 10609160802025516 Wiznitzer Arnold Crypto Jews in Mexico during the Sixteenth Century American Jewish Historical Quarterly vol 51 no 3 1962 pp 168 214 JSTOR 23873766 External links EditResources gt Medieval Jewish History gt Expulsion from Spain and The Anusim The Jewish History Resource Center Project of the Dinur Center for Research in Jewish History The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Donagraciaproject org The Story of Secret and Forcibly Converted Jews Luis Carvajal s 400th Yartzheit Society for Crypto Judaic Studies History of the Jews in Greece Crypto Jews Anusim Resources Shavei Israel a group that helps our lost brethren return Beth HaDerech Returning to Judaism Chavura Zohar Yisrael Crypto Jewish Outreach Crypto Jewish Education New Christians and Old Christians in Portugal written by Antonio Nunes Ribeiro Sanches in 1748 in Portuguese A history of the Marranos by Cecil Roth Dramatic episodes of the Portuguese Inquisition volume 1 by Antonio Baiao in Portuguese Dramatic episodes of the Portuguese Inquisition volume 2 by Antonio Baiao in Portuguese Trial of Gabriel de Granada by the Inquisition in Mexico 1642 1645 according to Cecil Roth it gives a remarkably graphic impression of a typical Inquisitional case Who Are the Crypto Jews by Dr Henry Abramson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Crypto Judaism amp oldid 1176464824, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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