fbpx
Wikipedia

History of the Jews in Nicaragua

Jewish Nicaraguans or Nicaraguan Jews (Spanish: Judío Nicaragüense) are Nicaraguans of Jewish ancestry who were born in or have immigrated to Nicaragua. They are part of the ethnic Jewish diaspora.

Jewish Nicaraguan
Judío Nicaragüense
Total population
~50 families[1]
Regions with significant populations
Managua, San Juan del Sur
Languages
Spanish and Hebrew
Religion
Judaism

History Edit

It is likely that Jews first arrived in Nicaragua during the Spanish colonization of the Americas, as part of a wave of Conversos fleeing the Spanish Inquisition. Besides Conversos, one of the first Jewish families to immigrate to Nicaragua were the Oppenheimers, who were originally from France. Nestor Oppenheimer was married to Camila (Camille) Winston Lazard, and they registered the birth of a son, Rene Salomon Oppenheimer, on July 22, 1911 in the capital city of Managua.[2] Other families included Dreyfus, Levy, Raskosky, and Salomon. Another notable family who appears to be of Sephardi Jew descent is the Rios-Montiel and Morales family of Juigalpa. More Jews immigrated to Nicaragua from Eastern Europe after 1929,[3] and they formed the bulk of country's Jewish community during the 20th century. While the majority of these immigrants came to Nicaragua in pursuit of economic opportunities, many of them were either refugees from or survivors of The Holocaust.

Somoza Period Edit

The majority of Nicaraguan Jews lived in Managua, and made significant contributions to Nicaragua's economic development while dedicating themselves to farming, manufacturing, textiles, and retail.[4] Among the many Nicaraguan-Jewish families that ran successful businesses were the Salomon and Dreyfus families, which both operated well-known department stores in Managua during the first half of the 20th century, and the Gorn family, which both operated and still runs Radio Centro, the biggest electronics store in Nicaragua.

Given the small size of the community, many of the Jewish immigrants went on to marry non-Jews, giving rise to Nicaraguan families of partial Jewish ancestry. Despite this, many if not most Nicaraguan Jews were still committed to maintaining Jewish life. The Congregacion Israelita de Nicaragua was the central Jewish organization until 1979. The community maintained a synagogue and social center in Managua, as well as a B'nai B'rith lodge and a Women's International Zionist Organization (WIZO) chapter.

It has been estimated that the number of Jews in Nicaragua reached a peak of 250 in 1972.[3] However, that same year a devastating earthquake hit Managua and destroyed 90% of the city,[5] prompting many Nicaraguans to emigrate. In 1975 there were 200 Jews in Nicaragua.[6]

In 1978, during street warfare between Somozistas and Sandinistas, a Molotov cocktail was thrown at the Managua synagogue, igniting its wooden doors. When the worshipers emerged from the building they were confronted by a carload of armed men who they recognized as Sandinistas.[7] Mauricio Palacio, a former leftist rebel who became a refugee in the United States after having grown disillusioned with the Sandinistas, gave a signed statement confessing to his part in the 1978 arson attack against the Managua synagogue.[8]

Sandinista Period Edit

During and after the warfare and civil unrest of the 1978-1979 Sandinista Revolution, which culminated in the overthrow of Anastasio Somoza Debayle, thousands of wealthy and middle-class Nicaraguans fled the country, concerned about their future under the incoming socialist regime. The Sandinistas later passed a law empowering the government to seize the property of those who left.

The Sandinistas were perceived as being hostile to the country's Jewish community. This hostility was attributed to a number of factors, including traditional theological anti-Semitism, the economic status of Nicaraguan Jews, the opposition of many members of the community to the Sandinista's political platform, the support of some members of the community for the Somoza family, the Sandinista's relationship with the Palestine Liberation Organization, and misdirected blame for Israel's arms sales to the Somoza regime. By the time Somoza fell, the Jewish population had already declined to around 50 individuals.[9] The synagogue in Managua was later seized by the Sandinistas and converted into a government youth center, which was described as being an elite social club for the children of high ranking Sandinista officials.[10] As more Jews fled the country, additional properties of Jewish emigrants were seized in accordance with the relevant law.

Media Controversy Edit

Beginning in 1983, the Reagan administration, which was trying to increase domestic support for the Contras, made an effort to persuade the American people that not only were the Sandinistas anti-Semitic, but that the Nicaraguan government had launched a general assault on the freedom of Catholics, Evangelicals, Miskito Indians, Jews, and other groups.[11][12] While instances of the Sandinista government restricting the activities of Catholics, Evangelicals, and Miskito Indians are well documented, whether the Sandinistas were antisemitic is a matter of dispute.[13] The Anti-Defamation League supported the Reagan administration's charge of anti-semitism.[14] However, investigations by various groups that were opposed to the Reagan administration's policies in Central America, including the progressive New Jewish Agenda, the American Jewish Committee, as well as an investigation by US Nicaraguan embassy staff, all found that the Sandinistas did not have a policy of anti-semitism, and or that they did not persecute individual Nicaraguan Jews solely because they were Jewish.[15][16][17][18] These reports were disputed by Nicaraguan Jewish exiles, most of whom had not been interviewed, and who corroborated Reagan's charge of anti-Semitism, citing several instances of intimidation, harassment, and arbitrary arrest.[7][8][10][19]

Sandinistas of Jewish Descent Edit

While none of the Sandinistas identified with Judaism or the Jewish community, there were prominent Sandinistas of Jewish descent. Among them were Carlos Tünnerman, minister of education and later ambassador to the U.S.; Herty Lewites, minister of tourism in the 1980s and later mayor of Managua; and his brother Israel Lewites, a Sandinista leader. The Lewites brothers were sons of a Jewish immigrant from Poland and a Nicaraguan mother who raised them in Catholicism.[20]

1990 to the present Edit

After Daniel Ortega lost the 1990 presidential election, Jews started returning to Nicaragua.[21] The Jewish community had its first bris in over 25 years when twins Jacob and Jonathan Gould, sons of Dr. Keith and Kathy Gould, had their bris performed by Rabbi Trager who flew in from Philadelphia in December 2004. After that, there was another bris for the Najman family and then some bar mitzvahs.[22] There is a synagogue in the city of San Juan del Sur. On December 16, 2007, Nicaraguan Jews welcomed a new Torah after 28 years. On the following day, the Torah was used for the first time in a minyan at a bar mitzvah of a local Nicaraguan Jew.[23]

The Jewish population in 2012 was estimated at around 50 people. That same year, 14 Nicaraguans converted to Judaism, most of whom were the children and grandchildren of Jewish men who married non-Jewish Nicaraguan women. Another 14 Nicaraguans converted in 2015. In 2017, there was a mass conversion of 114 Nicaraguans to Judaism, and 22 Jewish weddings were performed by rabbis from Israel and the US. Many of the 2017 converts trace their ancestry to Conversos. Kulanu, a New York-based nonprofit group that supports communities around the world seeking to learn about Judaism, facilitated the conversions.[24]

Notable persons Edit

  • William Abdalah, medical doctor and politician.
  • Abraham Blauvelt, a Dutch-Jewish pirate, after whom the town of Bluefields was named[25]
  • Michael Gordon, composer
  • Keith Gould, physician.
  • Herty Lewites, Nicaraguan politician
  • Francisca Batres Mayorga, merchant/business owner/realtor
  • Gustavo Montiel, Police Chief of Managua, Chief of Military Intelligence, Chief of the National Guard under Somoza and Minister of Public Credit and Finance upon military retirement
  • Laszlo Pataky, journalist and author[26][27]
  • Israel Lewites Rodríguez, Sandinista leader and martyr of the revolution.
  • Luis "Lou" Ramirez, celebrity chef

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "International Religious Freedom Report 2005". U.S. Department of State. Archived from the original on 2012-12-14. Retrieved 2007-08-30.
  2. ^ "Winston Gaston" (PDF). crt-ii.org. Retrieved 8 May 2023.
  3. ^ a b "World Jewish Communities - Latin America - Nicaragua". World Jewish Congress. Retrieved 2007-08-30.
  4. ^ "Persecution and restrictions of religion in Nicaragua - transcript". US Department of State Bulletin. 1984. p. 2. Retrieved 2007-08-30.
  5. ^ "Deadly history of earthquakes: 23 December 1972". BBC News. Retrieved 2007-08-19.
  6. ^ "Jewish Community of Nicaragua". Beit Hatfutsot Open Databases Project, The Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot.
  7. ^ a b "Sandinista Anti-Semitism and Its Apologists". Commentary Magazine. September 1, 1986.
  8. ^ a b "Shows Small Nicaraguan Jewish Community Mistreated by Sandinistas". AP NEWS.
  9. ^ Parry, Robert; Kornbluh, Peter (4 September 1988). "Reagan's Pro-Contra Propaganda Machine". Washington Post. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  10. ^ a b L, Melanie. "The Sandinista War on Human Rights". The Heritage Foundation.
  11. ^ https://www.reaganlibrary.gov/archives/speech/address-nation-situation-nicaragua
  12. ^ Hunter. Israeli Foreign Policy. p. 170.
  13. ^ https://www.loc.gov/item/94021664/
  14. ^ "ADL Reports That Nicaragua's Jewish Community Has Been Forced into Exile by Sandinist Government".
  15. ^ Hunter. Israeli Foreign Policy. p. 171.
  16. ^ Wingerter, Eric; Delacour, Justin (31 May 2016). "Playing the 'Anti-Semitism' Card Against Venezuela". NACLA Report on the Americas. 42 (5): 49–52. doi:10.1080/10714839.2009.11725471. S2CID 157079721. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  17. ^ Kruckewitt. The Death of Ben Linder. p. 84.
  18. ^ Kornbluh, Peter (1987). Nicaragua, the Price of Intervention: Reagan's Wars Against the Sandinistas. Institute for Policy Studies. p. 174. ISBN 9780897580403. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  19. ^ Berger, Joseph (20 April 1986). "Among Jews of Nicaragua, Much Debate". New York Times. Retrieved 7 December 2020.
  20. ^ Kinzer, Stephen (2006-07-04). "Herty Lewites, 66, Ex-Sandinista, Dies". New York Times. Retrieved 2007-08-30.
  21. ^ "2001 International Religious Freedom Report". U.S. State Department. Retrieved 2007-08-30.
  22. ^ Gould, Keith. . Jewish Independent. Archived from the original on 2007-09-30. Retrieved 2007-08-30.
  23. ^ Harris, Brian. "Nicaraguan Jews celebrate first Torah in 28 years". JewishReview. Retrieved 2008-01-14.
  24. ^ "Tiny Nicaragua Jewish community doubles in size as 114 convert". The Times of Israel.
  25. ^ Cwik, Christian (2019). "Displaced Minorities: The Wayuu and Miskito People". The Palgrave Handbook of Ethnicity. pp. 1593–1609. doi:10.1007/978-981-13-2898-5_117. ISBN 978-981-13-2897-8. S2CID 239122464.
  26. ^ Pataky (1957). "Nicaragua desconocida [Unknown Nicaragua]", Ed.l Universal, Managua
  27. ^ Pataky (1975). "Llegaron los que no estaban invitados: la sombra de Sandino [Those who were not invited arrived: the shadow of Sandino]", Editorial Pereira, Managua

Bibliography Edit

history, jews, nicaragua, jewish, nicaraguans, nicaraguan, jews, spanish, judío, nicaragüense, nicaraguans, jewish, ancestry, were, born, have, immigrated, nicaragua, they, part, ethnic, jewish, diaspora, jewish, nicaraguanjudío, nicaragüensetotal, population,. Jewish Nicaraguans or Nicaraguan Jews Spanish Judio Nicaraguense are Nicaraguans of Jewish ancestry who were born in or have immigrated to Nicaragua They are part of the ethnic Jewish diaspora Jewish NicaraguanJudio NicaraguenseTotal population 50 families 1 Regions with significant populationsManagua San Juan del SurLanguagesSpanish and HebrewReligionJudaism Contents 1 History 1 1 Somoza Period 1 2 Sandinista Period 1 3 Media Controversy 1 4 Sandinistas of Jewish Descent 2 1990 to the present 3 Notable persons 4 See also 5 References 6 BibliographyHistory EditIt is likely that Jews first arrived in Nicaragua during the Spanish colonization of the Americas as part of a wave of Conversos fleeing the Spanish Inquisition Besides Conversos one of the first Jewish families to immigrate to Nicaragua were the Oppenheimers who were originally from France Nestor Oppenheimer was married to Camila Camille Winston Lazard and they registered the birth of a son Rene Salomon Oppenheimer on July 22 1911 in the capital city of Managua 2 Other families included Dreyfus Levy Raskosky and Salomon Another notable family who appears to be of Sephardi Jew descent is the Rios Montiel and Morales family of Juigalpa More Jews immigrated to Nicaragua from Eastern Europe after 1929 3 and they formed the bulk of country s Jewish community during the 20th century While the majority of these immigrants came to Nicaragua in pursuit of economic opportunities many of them were either refugees from or survivors of The Holocaust Somoza Period Edit The majority of Nicaraguan Jews lived in Managua and made significant contributions to Nicaragua s economic development while dedicating themselves to farming manufacturing textiles and retail 4 Among the many Nicaraguan Jewish families that ran successful businesses were the Salomon and Dreyfus families which both operated well known department stores in Managua during the first half of the 20th century and the Gorn family which both operated and still runs Radio Centro the biggest electronics store in Nicaragua Given the small size of the community many of the Jewish immigrants went on to marry non Jews giving rise to Nicaraguan families of partial Jewish ancestry Despite this many if not most Nicaraguan Jews were still committed to maintaining Jewish life The Congregacion Israelita de Nicaragua was the central Jewish organization until 1979 The community maintained a synagogue and social center in Managua as well as a B nai B rith lodge and a Women s International Zionist Organization WIZO chapter It has been estimated that the number of Jews in Nicaragua reached a peak of 250 in 1972 3 However that same year a devastating earthquake hit Managua and destroyed 90 of the city 5 prompting many Nicaraguans to emigrate In 1975 there were 200 Jews in Nicaragua 6 In 1978 during street warfare between Somozistas and Sandinistas a Molotov cocktail was thrown at the Managua synagogue igniting its wooden doors When the worshipers emerged from the building they were confronted by a carload of armed men who they recognized as Sandinistas 7 Mauricio Palacio a former leftist rebel who became a refugee in the United States after having grown disillusioned with the Sandinistas gave a signed statement confessing to his part in the 1978 arson attack against the Managua synagogue 8 Sandinista Period Edit During and after the warfare and civil unrest of the 1978 1979 Sandinista Revolution which culminated in the overthrow of Anastasio Somoza Debayle thousands of wealthy and middle class Nicaraguans fled the country concerned about their future under the incoming socialist regime The Sandinistas later passed a law empowering the government to seize the property of those who left The Sandinistas were perceived as being hostile to the country s Jewish community This hostility was attributed to a number of factors including traditional theological anti Semitism the economic status of Nicaraguan Jews the opposition of many members of the community to the Sandinista s political platform the support of some members of the community for the Somoza family the Sandinista s relationship with the Palestine Liberation Organization and misdirected blame for Israel s arms sales to the Somoza regime By the time Somoza fell the Jewish population had already declined to around 50 individuals 9 The synagogue in Managua was later seized by the Sandinistas and converted into a government youth center which was described as being an elite social club for the children of high ranking Sandinista officials 10 As more Jews fled the country additional properties of Jewish emigrants were seized in accordance with the relevant law Media Controversy Edit Beginning in 1983 the Reagan administration which was trying to increase domestic support for the Contras made an effort to persuade the American people that not only were the Sandinistas anti Semitic but that the Nicaraguan government had launched a general assault on the freedom of Catholics Evangelicals Miskito Indians Jews and other groups 11 12 While instances of the Sandinista government restricting the activities of Catholics Evangelicals and Miskito Indians are well documented whether the Sandinistas were antisemitic is a matter of dispute 13 The Anti Defamation League supported the Reagan administration s charge of anti semitism 14 However investigations by various groups that were opposed to the Reagan administration s policies in Central America including the progressive New Jewish Agenda the American Jewish Committee as well as an investigation by US Nicaraguan embassy staff all found that the Sandinistas did not have a policy of anti semitism and or that they did not persecute individual Nicaraguan Jews solely because they were Jewish 15 16 17 18 These reports were disputed by Nicaraguan Jewish exiles most of whom had not been interviewed and who corroborated Reagan s charge of anti Semitism citing several instances of intimidation harassment and arbitrary arrest 7 8 10 19 Sandinistas of Jewish Descent Edit While none of the Sandinistas identified with Judaism or the Jewish community there were prominent Sandinistas of Jewish descent Among them were Carlos Tunnerman minister of education and later ambassador to the U S Herty Lewites minister of tourism in the 1980s and later mayor of Managua and his brother Israel Lewites a Sandinista leader The Lewites brothers were sons of a Jewish immigrant from Poland and a Nicaraguan mother who raised them in Catholicism 20 1990 to the present EditAfter Daniel Ortega lost the 1990 presidential election Jews started returning to Nicaragua 21 The Jewish community had its first bris in over 25 years when twins Jacob and Jonathan Gould sons of Dr Keith and Kathy Gould had their bris performed by Rabbi Trager who flew in from Philadelphia in December 2004 After that there was another bris for the Najman family and then some bar mitzvahs 22 There is a synagogue in the city of San Juan del Sur On December 16 2007 Nicaraguan Jews welcomed a new Torah after 28 years On the following day the Torah was used for the first time in a minyan at a bar mitzvah of a local Nicaraguan Jew 23 The Jewish population in 2012 was estimated at around 50 people That same year 14 Nicaraguans converted to Judaism most of whom were the children and grandchildren of Jewish men who married non Jewish Nicaraguan women Another 14 Nicaraguans converted in 2015 In 2017 there was a mass conversion of 114 Nicaraguans to Judaism and 22 Jewish weddings were performed by rabbis from Israel and the US Many of the 2017 converts trace their ancestry to Conversos Kulanu a New York based nonprofit group that supports communities around the world seeking to learn about Judaism facilitated the conversions 24 Notable persons EditWilliam Abdalah medical doctor and politician Abraham Blauvelt a Dutch Jewish pirate after whom the town of Bluefields was named 25 Michael Gordon composer Keith Gould physician Herty Lewites Nicaraguan politician Francisca Batres Mayorga merchant business owner realtor Gustavo Montiel Police Chief of Managua Chief of Military Intelligence Chief of the National Guard under Somoza and Minister of Public Credit and Finance upon military retirement Laszlo Pataky journalist and author 26 27 Israel Lewites Rodriguez Sandinista leader and martyr of the revolution Luis Lou Ramirez celebrity chefSee also Edit nbsp Judaism portal nbsp Nicaragua portalDemographics of Nicaragua History of the Jews in Latin America List of Latin American JewsReferences Edit International Religious Freedom Report 2005 U S Department of State Archived from the original on 2012 12 14 Retrieved 2007 08 30 Winston Gaston PDF crt ii org Retrieved 8 May 2023 a b World Jewish Communities Latin America Nicaragua World Jewish Congress Retrieved 2007 08 30 Persecution and restrictions of religion in Nicaragua transcript US Department of State Bulletin 1984 p 2 Retrieved 2007 08 30 Deadly history of earthquakes 23 December 1972 BBC News Retrieved 2007 08 19 Jewish Community of Nicaragua Beit Hatfutsot Open Databases Project The Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot a b Sandinista Anti Semitism and Its Apologists Commentary Magazine September 1 1986 a b Shows Small Nicaraguan Jewish Community Mistreated by Sandinistas AP NEWS Parry Robert Kornbluh Peter 4 September 1988 Reagan s Pro Contra Propaganda Machine Washington Post Retrieved 8 December 2020 a b L Melanie The Sandinista War on Human Rights The Heritage Foundation https www reaganlibrary gov archives speech address nation situation nicaragua Hunter Israeli Foreign Policy p 170 https www loc gov item 94021664 ADL Reports That Nicaragua s Jewish Community Has Been Forced into Exile by Sandinist Government Hunter Israeli Foreign Policy p 171 Wingerter Eric Delacour Justin 31 May 2016 Playing the Anti Semitism Card Against Venezuela NACLA Report on the Americas 42 5 49 52 doi 10 1080 10714839 2009 11725471 S2CID 157079721 Retrieved 8 December 2020 Kruckewitt The Death of Ben Linder p 84 Kornbluh Peter 1987 Nicaragua the Price of Intervention Reagan s Wars Against the Sandinistas Institute for Policy Studies p 174 ISBN 9780897580403 Retrieved 8 December 2020 Berger Joseph 20 April 1986 Among Jews of Nicaragua Much Debate New York Times Retrieved 7 December 2020 Kinzer Stephen 2006 07 04 Herty Lewites 66 Ex Sandinista Dies New York Times Retrieved 2007 08 30 2001 International Religious Freedom Report U S State Department Retrieved 2007 08 30 Gould Keith The Jews of Nicaragua Three brises mark a growing and vibrant community Jewish Independent Archived from the original on 2007 09 30 Retrieved 2007 08 30 Harris Brian Nicaraguan Jews celebrate first Torah in 28 years JewishReview Retrieved 2008 01 14 Tiny Nicaragua Jewish community doubles in size as 114 convert The Times of Israel Cwik Christian 2019 Displaced Minorities The Wayuu and Miskito People The Palgrave Handbook of Ethnicity pp 1593 1609 doi 10 1007 978 981 13 2898 5 117 ISBN 978 981 13 2897 8 S2CID 239122464 Pataky 1957 Nicaragua desconocida Unknown Nicaragua Ed l Universal Managua Pataky 1975 Llegaron los que no estaban invitados la sombra de Sandino Those who were not invited arrived the shadow of Sandino Editorial Pereira ManaguaBibliography EditHunter Jane Israeli Foreign Policy South Africa and Central America South End Press 1987 Kruckewitt Joan The Death of Ben Linder The Story of a North American in Sandinista Nicaragua Seven Stories Press 1999 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of the Jews in Nicaragua amp oldid 1177672780, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.