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Sephardic Jews

Sephardic or Sephardi Jews (Hebrew: יהדות ספרד, romanizedYahadut Sefarad, transl.Jewry of Hispania; Ladino: Djudíos Sefardíes), also Sephardim [a][1] or Hispanic Jews,[2] are a Jewish diaspora population associated with the Iberian Peninsula. The term, which is derived from the Hebrew Sepharad (lit.'Spain'), can also refer to the Mizrahi Jews of Western Asia and North Africa, who were also influenced by Sephardic law and customs.[3] Many Iberian Jewish exiles also later sought refuge in Mizrahi Jewish communities, resulting in integration with those communities.

Sephardic Jews
יהדות ספרד
Statue of the Sephardic rabbi and philosopher Maimonides in Córdoba, Spain
Languages
Traditional:
Judaeo-Spanish, Andalusian Arabic, Judaeo-Portuguese, Haketia, Judaeo-Catalan, Judaeo-Occitan, Judaeo-Berber, Judeo-Arabic
Modern:
Israeli Hebrew, Sephardi Hebrew (liturgical), French, English, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Turkish, Arabic, other local languages
Religion
Judaism
Related ethnic groups
Mizrahi Jews, Ashkenazi Jews, Hispanic Jews, other Jewish ethnic divisions and Samaritans

The Jewish communities of the Iberian Peninsula prospered for centuries under the Muslim reign of Al-Andalus following the Umayyad conquest of Hispania, but their fortunes began to decline with the Christian Reconquista campaign to retake Spain. In 1492, the Alhambra Decree by the Catholic Monarchs of Spain called for the expulsion of Jews, and in 1496, King Manuel I of Portugal issued a similar edict for the expulsion of both Jews and Muslims.[4] These actions resulted in a combination of internal and external migrations, mass conversions, and executions. By the late 15th century, Sephardic Jews had been largely expelled from Spain and scattered across North Africa, Western Asia, Southern and Southeastern Europe, either settling near existing Jewish communities or as the first in new frontiers, such as along the Silk Road.[5]

Historically, the vernacular languages of the Sephardic Jews and their descendants have been variants of either Spanish, Portuguese, or Catalan, though they have also adopted and adapted other languages. The historical forms of Spanish that differing Sephardic communities spoke communally were related to the date of their departure from Iberia and their status at that time as either New Christians or Jews. Judaeo-Spanish, also called Ladino, is a Romance language derived from Old Spanish that was spoken by the eastern Sephardic Jews who settled in the Eastern Mediterranean after their expulsion from Spain in 1492; Haketia (also known as "Tetuani Ladino" in Algeria), an Arabic-influenced variety of Judaeo-Spanish, was spoken by North African Sephardic Jews who settled in the region after the 1492 Spanish expulsion.

In 2015, more than five centuries after the expulsion, both Spain and Portugal enacted laws allowing Sephardic Jews who could prove their ancestral origins in those countries to apply for citizenship;[6] while the Spanish law that offered expedited citizenship to Sephardic Jews expired in 2019, the Portuguese law was effectively ended for new applicants in 2022.[7]

Etymology

The name Sephardi means "Spanish" or "Hispanic", derived from Sepharad (Hebrew: סְפָרַד, Modern: Sfarád, Tiberian: Səp̄āráḏ), a Biblical location.[8] The location of the biblical Sepharad points to the Iberian peninsula, then the westernmost outpost of Phoenician maritime trade.[9] Jewish presence in Iberia is believed to have started during the reign of King Solomon, whose excise imposed taxes on Iberian exiles. Although the first date of arrival of Jews in Iberia is the subject of ongoing archaeological research, there is evidence of established Jewish communities as early as the 1st century CE.[10][better source needed]

Modern transliteration of Hebrew romanizes the consonant פ (pe without a dagesh dot placed in its center) as the digraph ph, in order to represent fe or the single phoneme /f/ , the English sound that is voiceless labiodental fricative. In other languages and scripts, "Sephardi" may be translated as plural Hebrew: סְפָרַדִּים, Modern: Sfaraddim, Tiberian: Səp̄āraddîm; Spanish: Sefardíes; Portuguese: Sefarditas; Catalan: Sefardites; Aragonese: Safardís; Basque: Sefardiak; French: Séfarades; Galician: Sefardís; Italian: Sefarditi; Greek: Σεφαρδίτες, Sephardites; Serbian: Сефарди, Sefardi; Serbian, Judaeo-Spanish: Sefaradies/Sefaradim; and Arabic: سفارديون, Safārdiyyūn.

Definition

Narrow ethnic definition

In the narrower ethnic definition, a Sephardi Jew is one descended from the Jews who lived in the Iberian Peninsula in the late 15th century, immediately prior to the issuance of the Alhambra Decree of 1492 by order of the Catholic Monarchs in Spain, and the decree of 1496 in Portugal by order of King Manuel I.

In Hebrew, the term "Sephardim Tehorim" (ספרדים טהורים‎, literally "Pure Sephardim"), derived from a misunderstanding of the initials ס"ט "Samekh Tet" traditionally used with some proper names (which stand for sofo tov, "may his end be good"[11][better source needed]), has in recent times been used in some quarters to distinguish Sephardim proper, "who trace their lineage back to the Iberian/Spanish population", from Sephardim in the broader religious sense.[12] This distinction has also been made in reference to 21st-century genetic findings in research on 'Pure Sephardim', in contrast to other communities of Jews today who are part of the broad classification of Sephardi.[13]

Ethnic Sephardic Jews have had a presence in North Africa and various parts of the Mediterranean and Western Asia due to their expulsion from Spain. There have also been Sephardic communities in South America and India.

Katalanim

Originally the Jews spoke of Sefarad referring to Al-Andalus[14] and not the entire peninsula, nor as it is understood today, in which the term Sefarad is used in modern Hebrew to refer in Spain.[15] This has caused a long misunderstanding, since traditionally the entire Iberian Diaspora has been included in a single group. But the historiographical research reveals that that world, seen as homogeneous, was actually divided into distinct groups: the Sephardim, coming from the countries of the Castilian crown, Castilian language speakers, and the Katalanim / Katalaní, originally from the Crown of Aragon, Judeo-Catalan speakers.[16][17][18][19]

Broad religious definition

The modern Israeli Hebrew definition of Sephardi is a much broader, religious based, definition that generally excludes ethnic considerations. In its most basic form, this broad religious definition of a Sephardi refers to any Jew, of any ethnic background, who follows the customs and traditions of Sepharad. For religious purposes, and in modern Israel, "Sephardim" is most often used in this wider sense. It encompasses most non-Ashkenazi Jews who are not ethnically Sephardi, but are in most instances of West Asian or North African origin. They are classified as Sephardi because they commonly use a Sephardic style of liturgy; this constitutes a majority of Mizrahi Jews in the 21st century.

The term Sephardi in the broad sense, describes the nusach (Hebrew language, "liturgical tradition") used by Sephardi Jews in their Siddur (prayer book). A nusach is defined by a liturgical tradition's choice of prayers, order of prayers, text of prayers and melodies used in the singing of prayers. Sephardim traditionally pray using Minhag Sefarad.

The term Nusach Sefard or Nusach Sfarad does not refer to the liturgy generally recited by Sephardim proper or even Sephardi in a broader sense, but rather to an alternative Eastern European liturgy used by many Hasidim, who are Ashkenazi.

Additionally, Ethiopian Jews, whose branch of practiced Judaism is known as Haymanot, have been included under the oversight of Israel's already broad Sephardic Chief Rabbinate.

Divisions

The divisions among Sephardim and their descendants today are largely a result of the consequences of the royal edicts of expulsion. Both the Spanish and Portuguese crowns ordered their respective Jewish subjects to choose one of three options:

  1. to convert to Catholicism and be allowed to remain within the kingdom,
  2. to remain Jewish and leave or be expelled by the stipulated deadline, or
  3. to stay and eventually be prosecuted by the Inquisition and summarily executed as Jews.

In the case of the Alhambra Decree of 1492, the primary purpose was to eliminate Jewish influence on Spain's large converso population, and ensure they did not revert to Judaism. Over half of Spain's Jews had converted in the 14th century as a result of the religious persecution and pogroms which occurred in 1391. They and their Catholic descendants were not subject to the Decree or to expulsion, yet were surveilled by the Spanish Inquisition. British scholar Henry Kamen has said that

"the real purpose of the 1492 edict likely was not expulsion, but compulsory conversion and assimilation of all Spanish Jews, a process which had been underway for a number of centuries. Indeed, a further number of those Jews who had not yet joined the converso community finally chose to convert and avoid expulsion as a result of the edict. As a result of the Alhambra decree and persecution during the prior century, between 200,000 and 250,000 Jews converted to Catholicism and between one third and one half of Spain's remaining 100,000 non-converted Jews chose exile, with an indeterminate number returning to Spain in the years following the expulsion."[20]

Foreseeing a negative economic effect of a similar Jewish flight from Portugal, King Manuel issued his decree four years later — presumably to satisfy a precondition that the Spanish monarchs had set for him in order to allow him to marry their daughter Isabella. While the stipulations were similar in the Portuguese decree, King Manuel largely prevented Portugal's Jews from leaving, by blocking Portugal's ports of exit. He decided that the Jews who stayed accepted Catholicism by default, proclaiming them New Christians by royal decree. Physical forced conversions, however, were also suffered by Jews throughout Portugal.

Sephardi Jews encompass Jews descended from those Jews who left the Iberian Peninsula as Jews by the expiration of the respective decreed deadlines. This group is further divided between those who fled south to North Africa, as opposed to those who fled eastwards to the Balkans, West Asia and beyond. Others fled east into Europe, with many settling in northern Italy. Also included among Sephardi Jews are those who descend from "New Christian" conversos, but returned to Judaism after leaving Iberia, largely after reaching Southern and Western Europe.[citation needed]

From these regions, many late migrated again, this time to the non-Iberian territories of the Americas. Additional to all these Sephardic Jewish groups are the descendants of those New Christian conversos who either remained in Iberia, or moved from Iberia directly to the Iberian colonial possessions in what are today the various Latin American countries. For historical reasons and circumstances, most of the descendants of this group of conversos never formally returned to the Jewish religion.

All these sub-groups are defined by a combination of geography, identity, religious evolution, language evolution, and the timeframe of their reversion (for those who had in the interim undergone a temporary nominal conversion to Catholicism) or non-reversion back to Judaism.

These Sephardic sub-groups are separate from any pre-existing local Jewish communities they encountered in their new areas of settlement. From the perspective of the present day, the first three sub-groups appeared to have developed as separate branches, each with its own traditions.

In earlier centuries, and as late as the editing of the Jewish Encyclopedia at the beginning of the 20th century, the Sephardim were usually regarded as together forming a continuum. The Jewish community of Livorno, Italy acted as the clearing-house of personnel and traditions among the first three sub-groups; it also developed as the chief publishing centre.[improper synthesis?]

Eastern Sephardim

 
Sephardi Jewish couple from Sarajevo in traditional clothing (1900)

Eastern Sephardim comprise the descendants of the expellees from Spain who left as Jews in 1492 or earlier. This sub-group of Sephardim settled mostly in various parts of the Ottoman Empire, which then included areas in West Asia's Near East such as Anatolia, the Levant and Egypt; in Southeastern Europe, some of the Dodecanese islands and the Balkans. They settled particularly in European cities ruled by the Ottoman Empire, including Salonica in present-day Greece; Constantinople, which today is known as Istanbul on the European portion of modern Turkey; and Sarajevo, in what is today Bosnia and Herzegovina. Sephardic Jews also lived in Bulgaria, where they absorbed into their community the Romaniote Jews they found already living there. They had a presence as well in Walachia in what is today southern Romania, where there is still a functioning Sephardic Synagogue.[21] Their traditional language is referred to as Judezmo ("Jewish [language]"). It is Judaeo-Spanish, sometimes also known as Ladino, which consisted of the medieval Spanish and Portuguese they spoke in Iberia, with admixtures of Hebrew, and the languages around them, especially Turkish. This Judeo-Spanish language was often written in Rashi script.

 
A 1902 Issue of La Epoca, a Ladino newspaper from Salonica (Thessaloniki)

Regarding the Middle East, some Sephardim went further east into the West Asian territories of the Ottoman Empire, settling among the long-established Arabic-speaking Jewish communities in Damascus and Aleppo in Syria, as well as in the Land of Israel, and as far as Baghdad in Iraq. Although technically Egypt was a North African Ottoman region, those Jews who settled in Alexandria are included in this group, due to Egypt's cultural proximity to the other West Asian provinces under Ottoman rule.

For the most part, Eastern Sephardim did not maintain their own separate Sephardic religious and cultural institutions from pre-existing Jews. Instead the local Jews came to adopt the liturgical customs of the recent Sephardic arrivals. Eastern Sephardim in European areas of the Ottoman Empire, as well as in Palestine, retained their culture and language, but those in the other parts of the West Asian portion gave up their language and adopted the local Judeo-Arabic dialect. This latter phenomenon is just one of the factors which have today led to the broader and eclectic religious definition of Sephardi Jews.

Thus, the Jewish communities in Lebanon, Syria, and Egypt are partly of Spanish Jewish origin and they are counted as Sephardim proper. The great majority of the Jewish communities in Iraq, and all of those in Iran, Eastern Syria, Yemen, and Eastern Turkey, are descendants of pre-existing indigenous Jewish populations. They adopted the Sephardic rites and traditions through cultural diffusion, and are properly termed Mizrahi Jews.[citation needed]

Going even further into South Asia, a few of the Eastern Sephardim followed the spice trade routes as far as the Malabar coast of southern India, where they settled among the established Cochin Jewish community. Their culture and customs were absorbed by the local Jews.[citation needed]. Additionally, there was a large community of Jews and crypto-Jews of Portuguese origin in the Portuguese colony of Goa. Gaspar Jorge de Leão Pereira, the first archbishop of Goa, wanted to suppress or expel that community, calling for the initiation of the Goa Inquisition against the Sephardic Jews in India.

In recent times, principally after 1948, most Eastern Sephardim have since relocated to Israel, and others to the US and Latin America.

Eastern Sephardim still often carry common Spanish surnames, as well as other specifically Sephardic surnames from 15th-century Spain with Arabic or Hebrew language origins (such as Azoulay, Abulafia, Abravanel) which have since disappeared from Spain when those that stayed behind as conversos adopted surnames that were solely Spanish in origin. Other Eastern Sephardim have since also translated their Hispanic surnames into the languages of the regions they settled in, or have modified them to make them sound more local.

North African Sephardim

 
19th-century Moroccan Sephardic wedding dress

North African Sephardim consists of the descendants of the expellees from Spain who also left as Jews in 1492. This branch settled in North Africa (except Egypt, see Eastern Sephardim above). Settling mostly in Morocco and Algeria, they spoke a variant of Judaeo-Spanish known as Haketia. They also spoke Judeo-Arabic in a majority of cases. They settled in the areas with already established Arabic-speaking Jewish communities in North Africa and eventually merged with them to form new communities based solely on Sephardic customs.[citation needed]

Several of the Moroccan Jews emigrated back to the Iberian Peninsula to form the core of the Gibraltar Jews.[citation needed]

In the 19th century, modern Spanish, French and Italian gradually replaced Haketia and Judeo-Arabic as the mother tongue among most Moroccan Sephardim and other North African Sephardim.[22]

In recent times, with the Jewish exodus from Arab and Muslim countries, principally after the creation of Israel in 1948, most North African Sephardim have relocated to Israel (total pop. est. 1,400,000 in 2015), and most others to France (361,000)[23] and the US (300,000), as well as other countries. As of 2015 there was a significant community still in Morocco (10,000).[24]

North African Sephardim still also often carry common Spanish surnames, as well as other specifically Sephardic surnames from 15th century Spain with Arabic or Hebrew language origins (such as Azoulay, Abulafia, Abravanel) which have since disappeared from Spain when those that stayed behind as conversos adopted surnames that were solely Spanish in origin. Other North African Sephardim have since also translated their Hispanic surnames into local languages or have modified them to sound local.[citation needed]

Western Sephardim

 
First Cemetery of the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue, Shearith Israel (1656–1833) in Manhattan, New York City
 
Emma Lazarus, American poet. Born into a large New York Sephardi family.

Western Sephardim (also known more ambiguously as "Spanish and Portuguese Jews", "Spanish Jews", "Portuguese Jews" and "Jews of the Portuguese Nation") are the community of Jewish ex-conversos whose families initially remained in Spain and Portugal as ostensible New Christians, that is, as Anusim or "forced [converts]". Western Sephardim are further sub-divided into an Old World branch and a New World branch.

Henry Kamen and Joseph Perez estimate that of the total Jewish origin population of Spain at the time of the issuance of the Alhambra Decree, those who chose to remain in Spain represented the majority, up to 300,000 of a total Jewish origin population of 350,000. Furthermore, a significant number returned to Spain in the years following the expulsion, on condition of converting to Catholicism, the Crown guaranteeing they could recover their property at the same price at which it was sold.

Discrimination against this large community of conversos nevertheless remained, and those who secretly practiced the Jewish faith specifically suffered severe episodes of persecution by the Inquisition. The last episode of persecution occurred in the mid-18th century. External migrations out of the Iberian peninsula coincided with these episodes of increased persecution by the Inquisition.

As a result of this discrimination and persecution, a small number of marranos (conversos who secretly practiced Judaism) later emigrated to more religiously tolerant Old World countries outside the Iberian cultural sphere such as the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Italy, Germany, England.[citation needed] In these lands conversos reverted to Judaism, rejoining the Jewish community sometimes up to the third or even fourth generations after the initial decrees stipulating conversion, expulsion, or death. It is these returnees to Judaism that represent Old World Western Sephardim.

New World Western Sephardim, on the other hand, are the descendants of those Jewish-origin New Christian conversos who accompanied the millions of Old Christian Spaniards and Portuguese that emigrated to the Americas. More specifically, New World Western Sephardim are those Western Sephardim whose converso ancestors migrated to various of the non-Iberian colonies in the Americas in whose jurisdictions they could return to Judaism.

New World Western Sephardim are juxtaposed to yet another group of descendants of conversos who settled in the Iberian colonies of the Americas who could not revert to Judaism. These comprise the related but distinct group known as Sephardic Bnei Anusim (see the section below).

Due to the presence of the Spanish and Portuguese Inquisition in the Iberian American territories, initially, converso immigration was barred throughout much of Ibero-America. Because of this, very few converso immigrants in Iberian American colonies ever reverted to Judaism. Of those conversos in the New World who did return to Judaism, it was principally those who had come via an initial respite of refuge in the Netherlands and/or who were settling the New World Dutch colonies such as Curaçao and the area then known as New Holland (also called Dutch Brazil). Dutch Brazil was the northern portion of the colony of Brazil ruled by the Dutch for under a quarter of a century before it also fell to the Portuguese who ruled the remainder of Brazil. Jews who had only recently reverted in Dutch Brazil then again had to flee to other Dutch-ruled colonies in the Americas, including joining brethren in Curaçao, but also migrating to New Amsterdam, in what is today Lower Manhattan in New York City.

All of the oldest congregations in the non-Iberian colonial possessions in the Americas were founded by Western Sephardim, many who arrived in the then Dutch-ruled New Amsterdam, with their synagogues being in the tradition of "Spanish and Portuguese Jews".

In the United States in particular, Congregation Shearith Israel, established in 1654, in today's New York City, is the oldest Jewish congregation in the United States. Its present building dates from 1897. Congregation Jeshuat Israel in Newport, Rhode Island, is dated to sometime after the arrival there of Western Sephardim in 1658 and prior to the 1677 purchase of a communal cemetery, now known as Touro Cemetery. See also List of the oldest synagogues in the United States.

The intermittent period of residence in Portugal (after the initial fleeing from Spain) for the ancestors of many Western Sephardim (whether Old World or New World) is a reason why the surnames of many Western Sephardim tend to be Portuguese variations of common Spanish surnames, though some are still Spanish.

Among a few notable figures with roots in Western Sephardim are the current president of Venezuela, Nicolás Maduro, and former Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, Benjamin N. Cardozo. Both descend from Western Sephardim who left Portugal for the Netherlands, and in the case of Nicolás Maduro, from the Netherlands to Curaçao, and ultimately Venezuela.

Sephardic Bnei Anusim

 
Sephardi family from Misiones Province, Argentina, circa 1900.

The Sephardic Bnei Anusim consists of the contemporary and largely nominal Christian descendants of assimilated 15th century Sephardic anusim. These descendants of Spanish and Portuguese Jews forced or coerced to convert to Catholicism remained, as conversos, in Iberia or moved to the Iberian colonial possessions across various Latin American countries during the Spanish colonization of the Americas.

Due to historical reasons and circumstances, Sephardic Bnei Anusim had not been able to return to the Jewish faith over the last five centuries,[25] although increasing numbers have begun emerging publicly in modern times, especially over the last two decades. Except for varying degrees of putatively rudimentary Jewish customs and traditions which had been retained as family traditions among individual families, Sephardic Bnei Anusim became a fully assimilated sub-group within the Iberian-descended Christian populations of Spain, Portugal, Hispanic America and Brazil. In the last 5 to 10 years,[when?] however, "organized groups of [Sephardic] Benei Anusim in Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Chile, Ecuador, Mexico, Puerto Rico, Venezuela, Dominican Republic and in Sefarad [Iberia] itself"[26] have now been established, some of whose members have formally reverted to Judaism, leading to the emergence of Neo-Western Sephardim (see group below).

The Jewish Agency for Israel estimates the Sephardic Bnei Anusim population to number in the millions.[27] Their population size is several times larger than the three Jewish-integrated Sephardi descendant sub-groups combined, consisting of Eastern Sephardim, North African Sephardim, and the ex-converso Western Sephardim (both New World and Old World branches).

Although numerically superior, Sephardic Bnei Anusim is, however, the least prominent or known sub-group of Sephardi descendants. Sephardic Bnei Anusim are also more than twice the size of the total world Jewish population as a whole, which itself also encompasses Ashkenazi Jews, Mizrahi Jews and various other smaller groups.

Unlike the Anusim ("forced [converts]") who were the conversos up to the third, fourth or fifth generation (depending on the Jewish responsa) who later reverted to Judaism, the Bnei Anusim ("[later] sons/children/descendants [of the] forced [converts]") were the subsequent generations of descendants of the Anusim who remained hidden ever since the Inquisition in the Iberian Peninsula and its New World franchises. At least some Sephardic Anusim in the Hispanosphere (in Iberia, but especially in their colonies in Ibero-America) had also initially tried to revert to Judaism, or at least maintain crypto-Jewish practices in privacy. This, however, was not feasible long-term in that environment, as Judaizing conversos in Iberia and Ibero-America remained persecuted, prosecuted, and liable to conviction and execution. The Inquisition itself was only finally formally disbanded in the 19th century.

Historical documentation shedding new light on the diversity in the ethnic composition of the Iberian immigrants to the Spanish colonies of the Americas during the conquest era suggests that the number of New Christians of Sephardi origin that actively participated in the conquest and settlement was more significant than previously estimated. A number of Spanish conquerors, administrators, settlers, have now been confirmed to have been of Sephardi origin.[citation needed] Recent revelations have only come about as a result of modern DNA evidence and newly discovered records in Spain, which had been either lost or hidden, relating to conversions, marriages, baptisms, and Inquisition trials of the parents, grandparents and great-grandparents of the Sephardi-origin Iberian immigrants.

Overall, it is now estimated that up to 20% of modern-day Spaniards and 10% of colonial Latin America's Iberian settlers may have been of Sephardic origin, although the regional distribution of their settlement was uneven throughout the colonies. Thus, Iberian settlers of New Christian Sephardi-origin ranged anywhere from none in most areas to as high as 1 in every 3 (approx. 30%) Iberian settlers in other areas. With Latin America's current population standing at close to 590 million people, the bulk of which consists of persons of full or partial Iberian ancestry (both New World Hispanics and Brazilians, whether they're criollos, mestizos or mulattos), it is estimated that up to 50 million of these possess Sephardic Jewish ancestry to some degree.

In Iberia, settlements of known and attested populations of Bnei Anusim include those in Belmonte, in Portugal, and the Xuetes of Palma de Mallorca, in Spain. In 2011 Rabbi Nissim Karelitz, a leading rabbi and Halachic authority and chairman of the Beit Din Tzedek rabbinical court in Bnei Brak, Israel, recognized the entire Xuete community of Bnei Anusim in Palma de Mallorca, as Jews.[28] That population alone represented approximately 18,000 people, or just over 2% of the entire population of the island. The proclamation of the Jews' default acceptance of Catholicism by the Portuguese king actually resulted in a high percentage being assimilated into the Portuguese population. Besides the Xuetas, the same is true of Spain.

Almost all Sephardic Bnei Anusim carry surnames which are known to have been used by Sephardim during the 15th century. However, almost all of these surnames are not specifically Sephardic per se, and most are in fact surnames of gentile Spanish or gentile Portuguese origin which only became common among Bnei Anusim because they deliberately adopted them during their conversions to Catholicism, in an attempt to obscure their Jewish heritage. Given that conversion made New Christians subject to Inquisitorial prosecution as Catholics, crypto-Jews formally recorded Christian names and gentile surnames to be publicly used as their aliases in notarial documents, government relations and commercial activities, while keeping their given Hebrew names and Jewish surnames secret.[29] As a result, very few Sephardic Bnei Anusim carry surnames that are specifically Sephardic in origin, or that are exclusively found among Bnei Anusim.

Distribution

Pre-1492

Prior to 1492, substantial Jewish populations existed in most Spanish and Portuguese provinces. Among the larger Jewish populations in actual numbers were the Jewish communities in cities like Lisbon, Toledo, Córdoba, Seville, Málaga and Granada. In these cities, however, Jews constituted only substantial minorities of the overall population. In several smaller towns, however, Jews composed majorities or pluralities, as the towns were founded or inhabited principally by Jews. Among these towns were Ocaña, Guadalajara, Buitrago del Lozoya, Lucena, Ribadavia, Hervás, Llerena, and Almazán.

In Castile, Aranda de Duero, Ávila, Alba de Tormes, Arévalo, Burgos, Calahorra, Carrión de los Condes, Cuéllar, Herrera del Duque, León, Medina del Campo, Ourense, Salamanca, Segovia, Soria, and Villalón were home to large Jewish communities or aljamas. Aragon had substantial Jewish communities in the Calls of Girona, Barcelona, Tarragona, Valencia and Palma (Majorca), with the Girona Synagogue serving as the centre of Catalonian Jewry

The first Jews to leave Spain settled in what is today Algeria after the various persecutions that took place in 1391.

 
The Expulsion of the Jews from Spain (in the year 1492) by Emilio Sala Francés

Post-1492

The Alhambra Decree (also known as the Edict of Expulsion) was an edict issued on 31 March 1492, by the joint Catholic Monarchs of Spain (Isabella I of Castile and Ferdinand II of Aragon) ordering the expulsion of practicing Jews from the Kingdoms of Castile and Aragon and its territories and possessions by 31 July, of that year.[30] The primary purpose was to eliminate their influence on Spain's large converso population and ensure they did not revert to Judaism. Over half of Spain's Jews had converted as a result of the religious persecution and pogroms which occurred in 1391, and as such were not subject to the Decree or to expulsion. A further number of those remaining chose to avoid expulsion as a result of the edict. As a result of the Alhambra decree and persecution in prior years, over 200,000 Jews converted to Catholicism, and between 40,000 and 100,000 were expelled, an indeterminate number returning to Spain in the years following the expulsion.[31]

The Spanish Jews who chose to leave Spain instead of converting dispersed throughout the region of North Africa known as the Maghreb. In those regions, they often intermingled with the already existing Mizrahi Arabic-speaking communities, becoming the ancestors of the Moroccan, Algerian, Tunisian, and Libyan Jewish communities.

Many Spanish Jews fled to the Ottoman Empire where they had been given refuge. Sultan Bayezid II of the Ottoman Empire, learning about the expulsion of Jews from Spain, dispatched the Ottoman Navy to bring the Jews safely to Ottoman lands, mainly to the cities of Salonika (currently Thessaloniki, now in Greece) and Smyrna (now known in English as İzmir, currently in Turkey).[32][better source needed] Some believe that Persian Jewry (Iranian Jews), as the only community of Jews living under the Shiites, probably suffered more than any Sephardic community (Persian Jews are not[33] Sephardic in descent[34][35]).[36] Many of these Jews also settled in other parts of the Balkans ruled by the Ottomans such as the areas that are now Bulgaria, Serbia, and Bosnia.

Throughout history, scholars have given widely differing numbers of Jews expelled from Spain. However, the figure is likely preferred by minimalist scholars to be below the 100,000 Jews - while others suggest larger numbers - who had not yet converted to Christianity by 1492, possibly as low as 40,000 and as high as 200,000 (while Don Isaac Abarbanel stated he led 300,000 Jews out of Spain) dubbed "Megorashim" ("Expelled Ones", in contrast to the local Jews they met whom they called "Toshavim" - "Citizens") in the Hebrew they had spoken.[37] Many went to Portugal, gaining only a few years of respite from persecution. The Jewish community in Portugal (perhaps then some 10% of that country's population)[38] were then declared Christians by Royal decree unless they left.

Such figures exclude the significant number of Jews who returned to Spain due to the hostile reception they received in their countries of refuge, notably Fez. The situation of returnees was legalized with the Ordinance of 10 November 1492 which established that civil and church authorities should be witness to baptism and, in the case that they were baptized before arrival, proof and witnesses of baptism were required. Furthermore, all property could be recovered by returnees at the same price at which it was sold. Returnees are documented as late as 1499. On the other hand, the Provision of the Royal Council of 24 October 1493 set harsh sanctions for those who slandered these New Christians with insulting terms such as tornados.[39]

As a result of the more recent Jewish exodus from Arab lands, many of the Sephardim Tehorim from Western Asia and North Africa relocated to either Israel or France, where they form a significant portion of the Jewish communities today. Other significant communities of Sephardim Tehorim also migrated in more recent times from the Near East to New York City, Argentina, Costa Rica, Mexico, Montreal, Gibraltar, Puerto Rico, and Dominican Republic.[40][better source needed] Because of poverty and turmoil in Latin America, another wave of Sephardic Jews joined other Latin Americans who migrated to the United States, Canada, Spain, and other countries of Europe.

Permanence of Sephardim in Spain

According to the genetic study "The Genetic Legacy of Religious Diversity and Intolerance: Paternal Lineages of Christians, Jews, and Muslims in the Iberian Peninsula" at the University Pompeu Fabra of Barcelona and the University of Leicester, led by Briton Mark Jobling, Francesc Calafell, and Elena Bosch, published by the American Journal of Human Genetics, genetic markers show that nearly 20% of Spaniards have Sephardic Jewish markers (direct male descent male for Y, equivalent weight for female mitochondria); residents of Catalonia have approximately 6%. This shows that there was historic intermarriage between ethnic Jews and other Spaniards, and essentially, that some Jews remained in Spain. Similarly, the study showed that some 11% of the population has DNA associated with the Moors.[41]

Sephardim in modern Iberia

Today, around 50,000 recognized Jews live in Spain, according to the Federation of Jewish Communities in Spain.[42][43] The tiny Jewish community in Portugal is estimated between 1,740 and 3,000 people.[44] Although some are of Ashkenazi origin, the majority are Sephardic Jews who returned to Spain after the end of the protectorate over northern Morocco. A community of 600 Sephardic Jews live in Gibraltar.[45][better source needed]

In 2011 Rabbi Nissim Karelitz, a leading rabbi and Halachic authority and chairman of the Beit Din Tzedek rabbinical court in Bnei Brak, Israel, recognized the entire community of Sephardi descendants in Palma de Mallorca, the Chuetas, as Jewish.[28] They number approximately 18,000 people or just over 2% of the entire population of the island.

Of the Bnei Anusim community in Belmonte, Portugal, some officially returned to Judaism in the 1970s. They opened a synagogue, Bet Eliahu, in 1996.[46] The Belmonte community of Bnei Anusim as a whole, however, have not yet been granted the same recognition as Jews that the Chuetas of Palma de Majorca achieved in 2011.

Spanish citizenship by Iberian Sephardic descent

In 1924, the Dictatorship of Primo de Rivera approved a decree to enable Sephardi Jews to obtain Spanish nationality. Although the deadline was originally the end of 1930, diplomat Ángel Sanz Briz used this decree as the basis for giving Spanish citizenship papers to Hungarian Jews in the Second World War to try to save them from the Nazis.

Today, Spanish nationality law generally requires a period of residency in Spain before citizenship can be applied for. This had long been relaxed from ten to two years for Sephardi Jews, Hispanic Americans, and others with historical ties to Spain. In that context, Sephardi Jews were considered to be the descendants of Spanish Jews who were expelled or fled from the country five centuries ago following the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492.[47]

In 2015 the Government of Spain passed Law 12/2015 of 24 June, whereby Sephardi Jews with a connection to Spain could obtain Spanish nationality by naturalization, without the usual residency requirement. Applicants must provide evidence of their Sephardi origin and some connection with Spain, and pass examinations on the language, government, and culture of Spain.[48]

The Law establishes the right to Spanish nationality of Sephardi Jews with a connection to Spain who apply within three years from 1 October 2015. The law defines Sephardic as Jews who lived in the Iberian Peninsula until their expulsion in the late fifteenth century, and their descendants.[49] The law provides for the deadline to be extended by one year, to 1 October 2019; it was extended in March 2018.[50] It was modified in 2015 to remove a provision that required persons acquiring Spanish nationality by law 12/2015 must renounce any other nationality held.[51] Most applicants must pass tests of knowledge of the Spanish language and Spanish culture, but those who are under 18, or handicapped, are exempted. A Resolution in May 2017 also exempted those aged over 70.[52]

The Sephardic citizenship law was set to expire in October 2018 but was extended for an additional year by the Spanish government.[53]

The Law states that Spanish citizenship will be granted to "those Sephardic foreign nationals who prove that [Sephardic] condition and their special relationship with our country, even if they do not have legal residence in Spain, whatever their [current] ideology, religion or beliefs."

Eligibility criteria for proving Sephardic descent include: a certificate issued by the Federation of Jewish Communities of Spain, or the production of a certificate from the competent rabbinic authority, legally recognized in the country of habitual residence of the applicant, or other documentation which might be considered appropriate for this purpose; or by justifying one's inclusion as a Sephardic descendant, or a direct descendant of persons included in the list of protected Sephardic families in Spain referred to in the Decree-Law of 29 December 1948, or descendants of those who obtained naturalization by way of the Royal Decree of 20 December 1924; or by the combination of other factors including surnames of the applicant, spoken family language (Spanish, Ladino, Haketia), and other evidence attesting descent from Sephardic Jews and a relationship to Spain. Surnames alone, language alone, or other evidence alone will not be determinative in the granting of Spanish nationality.

The connection with Spain can be established, if kinship with a family on a list of Sephardic families in Spain is not available, by proving that Spanish history or culture have been studied, proof of charitable, cultural, or economic activities associated with Spanish people, or organizations, or Sephardic culture.[48]

The path to Spanish citizenship for Sephardic applicants remained costly and arduous.[54] The Spanish government takes about 8–10 months to decide on each case.[55] By March 2018, some 6,432 people had been granted Spanish citizenship under the law.[53] A total of about 132,000[56] applications were received, 67,000 of them in the month before the 30 September 2019 deadline. Applications for Portuguese citizenship for Sephardis remained open.[57] The deadline for completing the requirements was extended until September 2021 due to delays due to the Covid-19 pandemic, but only for those who had made a preliminary application by 1 October 2019.[56]

In what appeared to be a reciprocal gesture, Natan Sharansky, chairman of the quasi-governmental Jewish Agency for Israel, said "the state of Israel must ease the way for their return", referring to the millions of descendants of conversos around Latin America and Iberia. Some hundreds of thousands maybe exploring ways to return to the Jewish people. .[27]

Portuguese citizenship by Portuguese Sephardic descent

In April 2013 Portugal amended its Law on Nationality to confer citizenship to descendants of Portuguese Sephardic Jews who were expelled from the country five centuries ago following the Portuguese Inquisition.

The amended law gave descendants of Portuguese Sephardic Jews the right to become Portuguese citizens, wherever they lived, if they "belong to a Sephardic community of Portuguese origin with ties to Portugal."[58] Portugal thus became the first country after Israel to enact a Jewish Law of Return.

On 29 January 2015, the Portuguese Parliament ratified the legislation offering dual citizenship to descendants of Portuguese Sephardic Jews. Like the law later passed in Spain, the newly established legal rights in Portugal apply to all descendants of Portugal's Sephardic Jews, regardless of the current religion of the descendant, so long as the descendant can demonstrate "a traditional connection" to Portuguese Sephardic Jews. This may be through "family names, family language, and direct or collateral ancestry."[59] Portuguese nationality law was amended to this effect by Decree-Law n.º 43/2013, and further amended by Decree-Law n.º 30-A/2015, which came into effect on 1 March 2015.[60] «Applicants for Portuguese citizenship via this route are assessed by experts at one of Portugal's Jewish communities in either Lisbon or Porto».[61]

In a reciprocal response to the Portuguese legislation, Michael Freund, Chairman of Shavei Israel told news agencies in 2015 that he "call[s] on the Israeli government to embark on a new strategic approach and to reach out to the [Sephardic] Bnei Anousim, people whose Spanish and Portuguese Jewish ancestors were compelled to convert to Catholicism more than five centuries ago."[62]

By July 2017 the Portuguese government had received about 5,000 applications, mostly from Brazil, Israel, and Turkey. 400 had been granted, with a period between application and resolution of about two years.[55] In 2017 a total of 1,800 applicants had been granted Portuguese citizenship.[63] By February 2018, 12,000 applications were in process.[63]

Language

 
Dedication at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem written in Hebrew, English, Yiddish, and Judeo-Spanish

The most typical traditional language of Sephardim is Judeo-Spanish, also called Judezmo or Ladino. It is a Romance language derived mainly from Old Castilian (Spanish), with many borrowings from Turkish, and to a lesser extent from Greek, Arabic, Hebrew, and French. Until recently, two different dialects of Judeo-Spanish were spoken in the Mediterranean region: Eastern Judeo-Spanish (in various distinctive regional variations) and Western or North African Judeo-Spanish (also known as Ḥakitía). The latter was once spoken, with little regional distinction, in six towns in Northern Morocco. Because of later emigration, it was also spoken by Sephardim in Ceuta and Melilla (Spanish cities in North Africa), Gibraltar, Casablanca (Morocco), and Oran (Algeria).

The Eastern Sephardic dialect is typified by its greater conservatism, its retention of numerous Old Spanish features in phonology, morphology, and lexicon, and its numerous borrowings from Turkish and, to a lesser extent, also from Greek and South Slavic. Both dialects have (or had) numerous borrowings from Hebrew, especially in reference to religious matters. But the number of Hebraisms in everyday speech or writing is in no way comparable to that found in Yiddish, the first language for some time among Ashkenazi Jews in Europe.

On the other hand, the North African Sephardic dialect was, until the early 20th century, also highly conservative; its abundant Colloquial Arabic loan words retained most of the Arabic phonemes as functional components of a new, enriched Hispano-Semitic phonological system. During the Spanish colonial occupation of Northern Morocco (1912–1956), Ḥakitía was subjected to pervasive, massive influence from Modern Standard Spanish. Most Moroccan Jews now speak a colloquial, Andalusian form of Spanish, with only occasional use of the old language as a sign of in-group solidarity. Similarly, American Jews may now use an occasional Yiddishism in colloquial speech. Except for certain younger individuals, who continue to practice Ḥakitía as a matter of cultural pride, this dialect, probably the most Arabized of the Romance languages apart from Mozarabic, has essentially ceased to exist.

By contrast, Eastern Judeo-Spanish has fared somewhat better, especially in Israel, where newspapers, radio broadcasts, and elementary school and university programs strive to keep the language alive. But the old regional variations (i.e. Bosnia, Macedonia, Bulgaria, Romania, Greece, and Turkey for instance) are already either extinct or doomed to extinction. Only time will tell whether Judeo-Spanish koiné, now evolving in Israel—similar to that which developed among Sephardic immigrants to the United States early in the 20th century- will prevail and survive into the next generation.[64]

Judæo-Portuguese was used by Sephardim — especially among the Spanish and Portuguese Jews. The pidgin forms of Portuguese spoken among slaves and their Sephardic owners were an influence in the development of Papiamento and the Creole languages of Suriname.

Other Romance languages with Jewish forms, spoken historically by Sephardim, include Judeo-Catalan. Often underestimated, this language was the main language used by the Jewish communities in Catalonia, Balearic Isles and the Valencian region. The Gibraltar community has had a strong influence on the Gibraltar dialect Llanito, contributing several words to this English/Spanish patois.

Other languages associated with Sephardic Jews are mostly extinct, e. g. Corfiot Italkian, formerly spoken by some Sephardic communities in Italy.[65] Judeo-Arabic and its dialects have been a large vernacular language for Sephardim who settled in North African kingdoms and Arabic-speaking parts of the Ottoman Empire. Low German (Low Saxon), formerly used as the vernacular by Sephardim around Hamburg and Altona in Northern Germany, is no longer in use as a specifically Jewish vernacular.

Through their diaspora, Sephardim have been a polyglot population, often learning or exchanging words with the language of their host population, most commonly Italian, Arabic, Greek, Turkish, and Dutch. They were easily integrated with the societies that hosted them. Within the last centuries and, more particularly the 19th and 20th centuries, two languages have become dominant in the Sephardic diaspora: French, introduced first by the Alliance Israélite Universelle, and then by absorption of new immigrants to France after Tunisia, Morocco and Algeria became independent, and Hebrew in the state of Israel.[citation needed]

Literature

The doctrine of galut is considered by scholars to be one of the most important concepts in Jewish history, if not the most important. In Jewish literature glut, the Hebrew word for diaspora, invoked common motifs of oppression, martyrdom, and suffering in discussing the collective experience of exile in diaspora that has been uniquely formative in Jewish culture. This literature was shaped for centuries by the expulsions from Spain and Portugal and thus featured prominently in a wide range of medieval Jewish literature from rabbinic writings to profane poetry. Even so, the treatment of glut diverges in Sephardic sources, which scholar David A. Wacks says "occasionally belie the relatively comfortable circumstances of the Jewish community of Sefarad."[66]

History

Early history

The precise origins of the Jewish communities of the Iberian peninsula are unclear. There is fragmentary and inconclusive evidence of a Jewish presence on the Iberian Peninsula which dates back to pre-Roman times. More substantial references date back to the Roman period.

The Provençal rabbi and scholar Rabbi Abraham ben David wrote in anno 1161: "A tradition exists with the [Jewish] community of Granada that they are from the inhabitants of Jerusalem, of the descendants of Judah and Benjamin, rather than from the villages, the towns in the outlying districts [of Israel]."[67] Elsewhere, he writes about his maternal grandfather's family and how they came to Spain: "When Titus prevailed over Jerusalem, his officer who was appointed over Hispania appeased him, requesting that he send to him captives made-up of the nobles of Jerusalem, and so he sent a few of them to him, and there were amongst them those who made curtains and who were knowledgeable in the work of silk, and [one] whose name was Baruch, and they remained in Mérida."[68] Here, Rabbi Abraham ben David refers to the second influx of Jews into Spain, shortly after the destruction of Israel's Second Temple in 70 CE.

The earliest mention of Spain is, allegedly, found in Obadiah 1:20: "And the exiles of this host of the sons of Israel who are among the Canaanites as far as Ṣarfat (Hebrew: צרפת), and the exiles of Jerusalem who are in Sepharad, will possess the cities of the south." While the medieval lexicographer, David ben Abraham Al-Fāsī, identifies Ṣarfat with the city of Ṣarfend (Judeo-Arabic: צרפנדה),[69] the word Sepharad (Hebrew: ספרד) in the same verse has been translated by the first-century rabbinic scholar, Yonathan Ben Uzziel, as Aspamia.[70] Based on a later teaching in the compendium of Jewish oral laws compiled by Rabbi Judah Hanasi in 189 CE, known as the Mishnah, Aspamia is associated with a very far place, generally thought of as Hispania, or Spain.[71] In circa 960 CE, Ḥisdai ibn Šaprūṭ, minister of trade in the court of the Caliph in Córdoba, wrote to Joseph, the king of Khazaria, saying: "The name of our land in which we dwell is called in the sacred tongue, Sefarad, but in the language of the Arabs, the indwellers of the lands, Alandalus [Andalusia], the name of the capital of the kingdom, Córdoba."[72]

According to Rabbi David Kimchi (1160–1235), in his commentary on Obadiah 1:20, Ṣarfat and Sepharad, both, refer to the Jewish captivity (Heb. galut) expelled during the war with Titus and who went as far as the countries Alemania (Germany), Escalona,[73] France and Spain. The names Ṣarfat and Sepharad are explicitly mentioned by him as being France and Spain, respectively. Some scholars think that, in the case of the place-name, Ṣarfat (lit. Ṣarfend) – which, as noted, was applied to the Jewish Diaspora in France, the association with France was made only exegetically because of its similarity in spelling with the name פרנצא (France), by a reversal of its letters.

Spanish Jew Moses de León (ca. 1250 – 1305) mentions a tradition concerning the first Jewish exiles, saying that the vast majority of the first exiles driven away from the land of Israel during the Babylonian captivity refused to return, for they had seen that the Second Temple would be destroyed like the first.[74] In yet another teaching, passed down later by Moses ben Machir in the 16th century, an explicit reference is made to the fact that Jews have lived in Spain since the destruction of the First Temple:[75]

Now, I have heard that this praise, emet weyaṣiv [which is now used by us in the prayer rite] was sent by the exiles who have driven away from Jerusalem and who were not with Ezra in Babylon and that Ezra had sent inquiring after them, but they did not wish to go up [there], replied that since they were destined to go off again into exile a second time, and that the Temple would once again be destroyed, why should we then double our anguish? It is best for us that we remain here in our place and to serve God. Now, I have heard that they are the people of Ṭulayṭulah (Toledo) and those who are near to them. However, that they might not be thought of as wicked men and those who are lacking in fidelity, may God forbid, they wrote down for them this magnanimous praise, etc.

Similarly, Gedaliah ibn Jechia the Spaniard has written:[76]

In [5,]252 anno mundi [1492 CE], the King Ferdinand and his wife, Isabella, made war with the Ishmaelites who were in Granada and took it, and while they returned they commanded the Jews in all of his kingdoms that in but a short time they were to take leave from the countries [they had heretofore possessed], they being Castile, Navarre, Catalonia, Aragón, Granada and Sicily. Then the [Jewish] inhabitants of Ṭulayṭulah (Toledo) answered that they were not present [in the land of Judea] at the time when their Christ was put to death. Apparently, it was written upon a large stone in the city's street which some very ancient sovereign inscribed and testified that the Jews of Ṭulayṭulah (Toledo) did not depart from there during the building of the Second Temple, and were not involved in putting to death [the man whom they called] Christ. Yet, no apology was of any avail to them, neither unto the rest of the Jews, till at length, six hundred-thousand souls had evacuated from there.

Don Isaac Abrabanel, a prominent Jewish figure in Spain in the 15th century and one of the king's trusted courtiers who witnessed the expulsion of Jews from Spain in 1492, informs his readers[77] that the first Jews to reach Spain were brought by ship to Spain by a certain Phiros who was confederate with the king of Babylon when he laid siege to Jerusalem. This man was a Grecian by birth, but who had been given a kingdom in Spain. He became related by marriage to a certain Espan, the nephew of king Heracles, who also ruled over a kingdom in Spain. This Heracles later renounced his throne because of his preference for his native country in Greece, leaving his kingdom to his nephew, Espan, by whom the country of España (Spain) derives its name. The Jewish exiles transported there by the said Phiros were descended by lineage from Judah, Benjamin, Shimon, and Levi, and were, according to Abrabanel, settled in two districts in southern Spain: one, Andalusia, in the city of Lucena—a city so-called by the Jewish exiles that had come there; the second, in the country around Ṭulayṭulah (Toledo).

Abrabanel says that the name Ṭulayṭulah (Toledo) was given to the city by its first Jewish inhabitants, and surmises that the name may have meant טלטול (= wandering), on account of their wandering from Jerusalem. He says, furthermore, that the original name of the city was Pirisvalle, so-called by its early pagan inhabitants. He also writes there that he found written in the ancient annals of Spanish history collected by the kings of Spain that the 50,000 Jewish households then residing in the cities throughout Spain were the descendants of men and women who were sent to Spain by the Roman Emperor and who had formerly been subjected to him and whom Titus had originally exiled from places in or around Jerusalem. The two Jewish exiles joined and became one.

Evidence that suggests Jewish connections with the Iberian Peninsula includes:

  • References in the books of Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, I Kings, and Jonah to the country of Tarshish, which is thought by many to have been located in modern southern Spain (in ancient Tartessus).
  • A signet ring found at Cadiz, dating from the eighth–7th century BC. The inscription on the ring, generally accepted as Phoenician, has been interpreted by a few scholars to be "paleo-hebraic."
  • An amphora dating from at least the first century found in Ibiza, which bears imprints of two Hebrew characters.
  • Several early Jewish writers wrote that their families had lived in Spain since the destruction of the first temple. Isaac Abravanel (1437–1508) stated that the Abravanel family had lived on the Iberian Peninsula for 2,000 years.

Some suggest that substantial Jewish immigration probably occurred during the Roman period of Hispania. The province came under Roman control with the fall of Carthage after the Second Punic War (218–202 BC). Exactly how soon after this time Jews made their way onto the scene in this context is a matter of speculation. It is within the realm of possibility that they went there under the Romans as free men to take advantage of its rich resources. The Jewish historian Josephus confirms that as early as 90 CE there was already a Jewish Diaspora living in Europe, made-up of the two tribes, Judah and Benjamin. Thus, he writes in his Antiquities:[78] "... there are but two tribes in Asia (Turkey) and Europe subject to the Romans, while the ten tribes are beyond the Euphrates till now and are an immense multitude."

Although the spread of Jews into Europe is most commonly associated with the Diaspora that ensued from the Roman conquest of Judea, emigration from Judea into the greater Roman Mediterranean area antedated the destruction of Jerusalem at the hands of the Romans under Titus. Any Jews already in Hispania at this time would have been joined by those who had been enslaved by the Romans under Vespasian and Titus, and dispersed to the extreme west during the period of the Jewish Wars, and especially after the defeat of Judea in 70. One account placed the number carried off to Hispania at 80,000. Subsequent immigrations came into the area along both the northern African and southern European sides of the Mediterranean.

Among the earliest records that may refer specifically to Jews in the Iberian peninsula during the Roman period is Paul's Epistle to the Romans. Scholars such as Josephus Flavius have taken Paul's intention to go to Hispania to preach the gospel (Romans 15:24, 28) to indicate the presence of Jewish communities there, as well as the fact that Herod Antipas's banishment by Caligula in the year 39 may have been to Hispania.[79]

From a slightly later period, Midrash Rabbah (Leviticus Rabba § 29.2), and Pesikta de-Rav Kahana (Rosh Hashanna), both, make mention of the Jewish Diaspora in Spain (Hispania) and their eventual return.

Perhaps the most direct and substantial of early references are the several decrees of the Council of Elvira, convened in the early fourth century, which address proper Christian behavior with regard to the Jews of Hispania.

As citizens of the Roman Empire, the Jews of Hispania engaged in a variety of occupations, including agriculture. Until the adoption of Christianity, Jews had close relations with non-Jewish populations and played an active role in the social and economic life of the province. The edicts of the Synod of Elvira, provide evidence of Jews who were integrated enough into the greater community to cause alarm among some. Of the council's 80 canonic decisions, those that pertain to Jews maintained a separation between the two communities. It seems that by this time the presence of Jews was of greater concern to Christian authorities than the presence of pagans. Canon 16, which prohibited the marriage of Christians with Jews, was worded more strongly than canon 15, which prohibited marriage with pagans. Canon 78 threatens Christians who commit adultery with Jews with ostracism. Canon 48 forbade the blessing of Christian crops by Jews, and canon 50 forbade the sharing of meals by Christians and Jews.

Yet in comparison to Jewish life in Byzantium and Italy, life for the early Jews in Hispania and the rest of southern Europe was relatively tolerable. This is due in large measure to the difficulty the Church had in establishing itself in its western frontier. In the west, Germanic tribes such as the Suevi, the Vandals, and especially the Visigoths had more or less disrupted the political and ecclesiastical systems of the Roman empire, and for several centuries the Jews enjoyed a degree of peace their brethren to the east did not.

Barbarian invasions brought most of the Iberian peninsula under Visigothic rule by the early fifth century. Other than in their contempt for Trinitarian Christians, the Arian Visigoths were largely uninterested in the religious creeds within their kingdom. It was not until 506, when Alaric II (484–507) published his Brevarium Alaricianum (Breviary of Alaric) (wherein he adopted the laws of the ousted Romans), that a Visigothic king concerned himself with the Jews.

The situation of the Jews changed after the conversion of the Visigothic royal family under Recared from Arianism to Roman Catholicism in 587. In their desire to consolidate the realm under the new religion, the Visigoths adopted an aggressive policy towards Jews. As the king and the church acted in a single interest, the Jews' situation deteriorated. Under successive Visigothic kings and under ecclesiastical authority, many orders of expulsion, forced conversion, isolation, enslavement, execution, and other punitive measures were made. By 612–621, the situation for Jews became intolerable and many left Spain for nearby northern Africa. In 711, thousands of Jews from North Africa accompanied the Moslems who invaded Spain, subsuming Catholic Spain and turning much of it into an Arab state, Al-Andalus.[80]

The Jews of Hispania had been utterly embittered and alienated by Catholic rule by the time of the Muslim invasion. To them, the Moors was perceived as, and indeed were, a liberating force. Wherever they went, the Muslims were greeted by Jews eager to aid them in administering the country. In many conquered towns the garrison was left in the hands of the Jews before the Muslims proceeded further north. This began nearly four centuries of Muslim rule in the Iberian peninsula, which became known as the "Golden Age" of Sephardi Jewry.

 
13th-century depiction of a Jew and Muslim playing chess in Al-Andalus

Jews in Muslim Iberia

With the victory of Tariq ibn Ziyad in 711, the lives of the Sephardim changed dramatically. Though Islamic law placed restrictions on dhimmis (non-Muslim members of monotheistic faiths), the coming of the Moors was by and large welcomed by the Jews of Iberia.

Both Muslim and Christian sources claim that Jews provided valuable aid to the Muslim conquerors. Once captured, the defense of Cordoba was left in the hands of Jews, and Granada, Malaga, Seville, and Toledo were left to a mixed army of Jews and Moors. Although in some towns Jews may have been helpful to Muslim success, because of the small numbers they were of limited impact.

In spite of the restrictions placed upon the Jews as dhimmis, life under Muslim rule was one of great opportunity and Jews flourished as they did not under the Christian Visigoths. Many Jews came to Iberia, seen as a land of tolerance and opportunity, from the Christian and Muslim worlds. Following initial Arab victories, and especially with the establishment of Umayyad rule by Abd al-Rahman I in 755, the native Jewish community was joined by Jews from the rest of Europe, as well as from Arab lands, from Morocco to Babylon.[citation needed] Jewish communities were enriched culturally, intellectually, and religiously by the commingling of these diverse Jewish traditions.[further explanation needed]

Arabic culture, of course, also made a lasting impact on Sephardic cultural development. General re-evaluation of scripture was prompted by Muslim anti-Jewish polemics and the spread of rationalism, as well as the anti-Rabbanite polemics of Karaites. The cultural and intellectual achievements of the Arabs, and much of the scientific and philosophical speculation of Ancient Greek culture, which had been best preserved by Arab scholars, was made available to the educated Jew. The meticulous regard the Arabs had for grammar and style also had the effect of stimulating an interest in philological matters in general among Jews. Arabic became the main language of Sephardic science, philosophy, and everyday business, as had been the case with Babylonian geonim. This thorough adoption of the Arabic language also greatly facilitated the assimilation of Jews into Moorish culture, and Jewish activity in a variety of professions, including medicine, commerce, finance, and agriculture increased.

By the ninth century, some members of the Sephardic community felt confident enough to take part in proselytizing amongst Christians. This included the heated correspondences sent between Bodo Eleazar, a former Christian deacon who had converted to Judaism in 838, and the Bishop of Córdoba Paulus Albarus, who had converted from Judaism to Christianity. Each man, using such epithets as "wretched compiler", tried to convince the other to return to his former faith, to no avail.[citation needed]

The Golden Age is most closely identified with the reign of Abd al-Rahman III (882–942), the first independent Caliph of Cordoba, and in particular with the career of his Jewish councilor, Hasdai ibn Shaprut (882–942). Within this context of cultural patronage, studies in Hebrew, literature, and linguistics flourished.

Hasdai benefitted world Jewry not only indirectly by creating a favorable environment for scholarly pursuits within Iberia, but also by using his influence to intervene on behalf of foreign Jews: in his letter to Byzantine Princess Helena, he requested protection for the Jews under Byzantine rule, attesting to the fair treatment of the Christians of al-Andalus, and perhaps indicating that such was contingent on the treatment of Jews abroad.

One notable contribution to Christian intellectualism is Ibn Gabirol's neo-Platonic Fons Vitae ("The Source of Life;" "Mekor Hayyim"). Thought by many to have been written by a Christian, this work was admired by Christians and studied in monasteries throughout the Middle Ages, though the work of Solomon Munk in the 19th century proved that the author of Fons Vitae was the Jewish ibn Gabirol.[81]

In addition to contributions of original work, the Sephardim were active as translators. Mainly in Toledo, texts were translated between Greek, Arabic, Hebrew, and Latin. In translating the great works of Arabic, Hebrew, and Greek into Latin, Iberian Jews were instrumental in bringing the fields of science and philosophy, which formed much of the basis of Renaissance learning, into the rest of Europe.

In the early 11th century, centralized authority based at Cordoba broke down following the Berber invasion and the ousting of the Umayyads. In its stead arose the independent taifa principalities under the rule of local Muwallad, Arab, Berber, or Slavonic leaders. Rather than having a stifling effect, the disintegration of the caliphate expanded the opportunities to Jewish and other professionals. The services of Jewish scientists, doctors, traders, poets, and scholars were generally valued by Christian and Muslim rulers of regional centers, especially as order was restored in recently conquered towns. Rabbi Samuel ha-Nagid (ibn Naghrela) was the Vizier of Granada. He was succeeded by his son Joseph ibn Naghrela who was slain by an incited mob along with most of the Jewish community. The remnant fled to Lucena.

 
Observing the Havdalah ritual, 14th-century Spain

The first major and most violent persecution in Islamic Spain was the 1066 Granada massacre, which occurred on 30 December, when a Muslim mob stormed the royal palace in Granada, crucified Jewish vizier Joseph ibn Naghrela and massacred most of the Jewish population of the city after rumors spread that the powerful vizier was plotting to kill the weak-minded and drunk King Badis ibn Habus.[82] According to the 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia, "More than 1,500 Jewish families, numbering 4,000 persons, fell in one day,[83] a number contested by some historians who deem it to be an example of "the usual hyperbole in numerical estimates, with which history abounds."[84] The decline of the Golden Age began before the completion of the Christian Reconquista, with the penetration and influence of the Almoravides, and then the Almohads, from North Africa. These more intolerant sects abhorred the liberality of the Islamic culture of al-Andalus, including the position of authority some dhimmis held over Muslims. When the Almohads gave the Jews a choice of either death or conversion to Islam, many Jews emigrated. Some, such as the family of Maimonides, fled south and east to the more tolerant Muslim lands, while others went northward to settle in the growing Christian kingdoms.

Meanwhile, the Reconquista continued in the north throughout the 12th century. As various Arab lands fell to the Christians, conditions for some Jews in the emerging Christian kingdoms became increasingly favorable. As had happened during the reconstruction of towns following the breakdown of authority under the Umayyads, the services of Jews were employed by the victorious Christian leaders. Sephardic knowledge of the language and culture of the enemy, their skills as diplomats and professionals, as well as their desire for relief from intolerable conditions — the very same reasons that they had proved useful to the Arabs in the early stages of the Muslim invasion — made their services very valuable.

However, the Jews from the Muslim south were not entirely secure in their northward migrations. Old prejudices were compounded by newer ones. Suspicions of complicity with the Muslims were alive and well as Jews immigrated, speaking Arabic. However, many of the newly arrived Jews of the north prospered during the late 11th and early 12th centuries. The majority of Latin documentation regarding Jews during this period refers to their landed property, fields, and vineyards.

In many ways life had come full circle for the Sephardim of al-Andalus. As conditions became more oppressive during the 12th and 13th centuries, Jews again looked to an outside culture for relief. Christian leaders of reconquered cities granted them extensive autonomy, and Jewish scholarship recovered somewhat and developed as communities grew in size and importance. However, the Reconquista Jews never reached the same heights as had those of the Golden Age.

After the Reconquista

Among the Sephardim were many who were the descendants, or heads, of wealthy families and who, as Marranos, had occupied prominent positions in the countries they had left. Some had been stated officials, others had held positions of dignity within the Church; many had been the heads of large banking-houses and mercantile establishments, and some were physicians or scholars who had officiated as teachers in high schools. Their Spanish or Portuguese was a lingua franca that enabled Sephardim from different countries to engage in commerce and diplomacy.

With their social equals they associated freely, without regard to religion and more likely with regard to equivalent or comparative education, for they were generally well read, which became a tradition and expectation. They were received at the courts of sultans, kings, and princes, and often were employed as ambassadors, envoys, or agents. The number of Sephardim who have rendered important services to different countries is considerable as Samuel Abravanel (or "Abrabanel"—financial councilor to the viceroy of Naples) or Moses Curiel (or "Jeromino Nunes da Costa"-serving as Agent to the Crown of Portugal in the United Provinces).[85][86] Among other names mentioned are those of Belmonte, Nasi, Francisco Pacheco, Blas, Pedro de Herrera, Palache, Pimentel, Azevedo, Sagaste, Salvador, Sasportas, Costa, Curiel, Cansino, Schönenberg, Sapoznik (Zapatero), Toledo, Miranda, Toledano, Pereira, and Teixeira.

The Sephardim distinguished themselves as physicians and statesmen, and won the favor of rulers and princes, in both the Christian and the Islamic world. That the Sephardim were selected for prominent positions in every country where they settled was only in part due to the fact that Spanish had become a world-language through the expansion of Spain into the world-spanning Spanish Empire—the cosmopolitan cultural background after long associations with Islamic scholars of the Sephardic families also made them extremely well educated for the times, even well into the European Enlightenment.

For a long time, the Sephardim took an active part in Spanish literature; they wrote in prose and in rhyme, and were the authors of theological, philosophical, belletristic (aesthetic rather than content-based writing), pedagogic (teaching), and mathematical works. The rabbis, who, in common with all the Sephardim, emphasized a pure and euphonious pronunciation of Hebrew, delivered their sermons in Spanish or in Portuguese. Several of these sermons have appeared in print. Their thirst for knowledge, together with the fact that they associated freely with the outer world, led the Sephardim to establish new educational systems. Wherever they settled, they founded schools that used Spanish as the medium of instruction. Theatre in Constantinople was in Judæo-Spanish since it was forbidden to Muslims.

 
A representation of the 1506 Jewish Massacre in Lisbon.

In Portugal, the Sephardim were given important roles in the sociopolitical sphere and enjoyed a certain amount of protection from the Crown (e.g. Yahia Ben Yahia, first "Rabino Maior" of Portugal and supervisor of the public revenue of the first King of Portugal, D. Afonso Henriques). Even with the increasing pressure from the Catholic Church, this state of affairs remained more or less constant and the number of Jews in Portugal grew with those running from Spain. This changed with the marriage of D. Manuel I of Portugal with the daughter of the Catholic Monarchs of the newly born Spain. In 1497 the Decree ordering the expulsion or forced conversion of all the Jews was passed, and the Sephardim either fled or went into secrecy under the guise of "Cristãos Novos", i.e. New Christians (this Decree was symbolically revoked in 1996 by the Portuguese Parliament). Those who fled to Genoa were only allowed to land provided they received baptism. Those who were fortunate enough to reach the Ottoman Empire had a better fate: the Sultan Bayezid II sarcastically[citation needed] sent his thanks to Ferdinand for sending him some of his best subjects, thus "impoverishing his own lands while enriching his (Bayezid's)". Jews arriving in the Ottoman Empire were mostly resettled in and around Thessalonica and to some extent in Constantinople and İzmir. This was followed by a great massacre of Jews in the city of Lisbon in 1506 and the establishment of the Portuguese Inquisition in 1536. This caused the flight of the Portuguese Jewish community, which continued until the extinction of the Courts of Inquisition in 1821; by then there were very few Jews in Portugal.

In Amsterdam, where Jews were especially prominent in the 17th century on account of their number, wealth, education, and influence, they established poetical academies after Spanish models; two of these were the Academia de Los Sitibundos and the Academia de Los Floridos. In the same city they also organized the first Jewish educational institution, with graduate classes in which, in addition to Talmudic studies, the instruction was given in the Hebrew language. The most important synagogue, or Esnoga, as it is usually called amongst Spanish and Portuguese Jews, is the Amsterdam Esnoga—usually considered the "mother synagogue", and the historical center of the Amsterdam minhag.

A sizable Sephardic community had settled in Morocco and other Northern African countries, which were colonized by France in the 19th century. Jews in Algeria were given French citizenship in 1870 by the décret Crémieux (previously Jews and Muslims could apply for French citizenship, but had to renounce the use of traditional religious courts and laws, which many did not want to do). When France withdrew from Algeria in 1962, the local Jewish communities largely relocated to France. There are some tensions between some of those communities and the earlier French Jewish population (who were mostly Ashkenazi Jews), and with Arabic-Muslim communities.

In the Age of Discoveries

 
Interior of the Portuguese synagogue in Amsterdam, c. 1680

The largest part of Spanish Jews expelled in 1492 fled to Portugal, where they eluded persecution for a few years. The Jewish community in Portugal was perhaps then some 15% of that country's population.[38] They were declared Christians by Royal decree unless they left, but the King hindered their departure, needing their artisanship and working population for Portugal's overseas enterprises and territories. Later Sephardic Jews settled in many trade areas controlled by the Empire of Philip II and others. With various countries in Europe also the Sephardi Jews established commercial relations. In a letter dated 25 November 1622, King Christian IV of Denmark invites Jews of Amsterdam to settle in Glückstadt, where, among other privileges, the free exercise of their religion would be assured to them.

Álvaro Caminha, in Cape Verde islands, who received the land as a grant from the crown, established a colony with Jews forced to stay on the island of São Tomé. Príncipe island was settled in 1500 under a similar arrangement. Attracting settlers proved difficult, however, the Jewish settlement was a success and their descendants settled many parts of Brazil.[87] In 1579 Luis de Carvajal y de la Cueva a Portuguese-born Converso, Spanish-Crown officer, was awarded a large swath of territory in New Spain, known as Nuevo Reino de León. He founded settlements with other conversos that would later become Monterrey.

In particular, Jews established relations between the Dutch and South America. They contributed to the establishment of the Dutch West Indies Company in 1621, and some were members of the directorate. The ambitious schemes of the Dutch for the conquest of Brazil were carried into effect through Francisco Ribeiro, a Portuguese captain, who is said to have had Jewish relations in the Netherlands. Some years afterward, when the Dutch in Brazil appealed to the Netherlands for craftsmen of all kinds, many Jews went to Brazil. About 600 Jews left Amsterdam in 1642, accompanied by two distinguished scholars—Isaac Aboab da Fonseca and Moses Raphael de Aguilar. Jews supported the Dutch in the struggle between the Netherlands and Portugal for possession of Brazil.

 
Execution of Mariana de Carabajal in Mexico City, daughter of Francisca Nuñez de Carabajal, in 1601 by the Santo Oficio.

In 1642, Aboab da Fonseca was appointed rabbi at Kahal Zur Israel Synagogue in the Dutch colony of Pernambuco (Recife), Brazil. Most of the white inhabitants of the town were Sephardic Jews from Portugal who had been banned by the Portuguese Inquisition to this town at the other side of the Atlantic Ocean. In 1624, the colony had been occupied by the Dutch. By becoming the rabbi of the community, Aboab da Fonseca was the first appointed rabbi of the Americas. The name of his congregation was Kahal Zur Israel Synagogue and the community had a synagogue, a mikveh and a yeshiva as well. However, during the time he was a rabbi in Pernambuco, the Portuguese re-occupied the place again in 1654, after a struggle of nine years. Aboab da Fonseca managed to return to Amsterdam after the occupation of the Portuguese. Members of his community immigrated to North America and were among the founders of New York City, but some Jews took refuge in Seridó.

The Sephardic kehilla in Zamość in the 16th and 17th centuries was the one of its kind in the entire Poland of that time. It was an autonomous institution, and until the mid-17th century it was not under the authority of the highest organ of the Jewish self-government in the Republic of Poland - the Council of Four Lands.[88]

Besides merchants, a great number of physicians were among the Spanish Jews in Amsterdam: Samuel Abravanel, David Nieto, Elijah Montalto, and the Bueno family; Joseph Bueno was consulted in the illness of Prince Maurice (April 1623). Jews were admitted as students at the university, where they studied medicine as the only branch of the science of practical use to them, for they were not permitted to practice law, and the oath they would be compelled to take excluded them from the professorships. Neither were Jews taken into the trade-guilds: a resolution passed by the city of Amsterdam in 1632 (the cities being autonomous) excluded them. Exceptions, however, were made in the case of trades that related to their religion: printing, bookselling, and the selling of meat, poultry, groceries, and drugs. In 1655 a Jew was, exceptionally, permitted to establish a sugar-refinery.

Jonathan Ray, a professor of Jewish theological studies, has argued that the community of Sephardim was formed more during the 1600s than the medieval period. He explains that prior to expulsion Spanish Jewish communities did not have a shared identity in the sense that developed in diaspora. They did not carry any particular Hispano-Jewish identity into exile with them, but certain shared cultural traits contributed to the formation of the diaspora community from what had historically been independent communities.[89]

The Holocaust

 
A young woman weeps during the deportation of Jews of Ioannina (Greece) on 25 March 1944.

The Holocaust that devastated European Jewry and virtually destroyed its centuries-old culture also wiped out the great European population centers of Sephardi Jewry and led to the almost complete demise of its unique language and traditions. Sephardi Jewish communities from France and the Netherlands in the northwest to Yugoslavia and Greece in the southeast almost disappeared.

On the eve of World War II, the European Sephardi community was concentrated in Southeastern Europe countries of Greece, Yugoslavia, and Bulgaria. Its leading centers were in Salonika, Sarajevo, Belgrade, and Sofia. The experience of Jewish communities in those countries during the war varied greatly and depended on the type of regime under which they fell.

The Jewish communities of Yugoslavia and northern Greece, including the 50,000 Jews of Salonika, fell under direct German occupation in April 1941 and bore the full weight and intensity of Nazi repressive measures from dispossession, humiliation, and forced labor to hostage-taking, and finally deportation to the Auschwitz concentration camp and extermination.[90]

The Jewish population of southern Greece fell under the jurisdiction of the Italians who eschewed the enactment of anti-Jewish legislation and resisted whenever possible German efforts to transfer them to occupied Poland, until the surrender of Italy on 8 September 1943 brought the Jews under German control.

Sephardi Jews in Bosnia and Croatia were ruled by a German-created Independent State of Croatia state from April 1941, which subjected them to pogrom-like actions before herding them into local camps where they were murdered side by side with Serbs and Roma (see Porajmos). The Jews of Macedonia and Thrace were controlled by Bulgarian occupation forces, which after rendering them stateless, rounded them up and turned them over to the Germans for deportation.

Finally, the Jews of Bulgaria proper were under the rule of a Nazi ally that subjected them to ruinous anti-Jewish legislation, but ultimately yielded to pressure from Bulgarian parliamentarians, clerics, and intellectuals not to deport them. More than 50,000 Bulgarian Jews were thus saved.

The Jews in North Africa identified themselves only as Jews or European Jews, having been westernized by French and Italian colonization. During World War II and until Operation Torch, the Jews of Morocco, Algeria, and Tunesia, governed by pro-Nazi Vichy France, suffered the same antisemitic legislation that Jews suffered in France mainland. They did not, however, directly suffer the more extreme Nazi Germany antisemitic policies, and nor did the Jews in Italian Libya. The Jewish communities in those European North Africa countries, in Bulgaria, and in Denmark were the only ones who were spared the mass deportation and mass murder that afflicted other Jewish communities. Operation Torch therefore saved more than 400,000 Jews in European North Africa.

Later history and culture

The Jews in French Algeria were awarded French citizenship by 1870 Crémieux Decree. They were therefore considered part of the European pieds noirs community in spite of having been established in North Africa for many centuries, rather than subject to the Indigénat status imposed on their Muslim former neighbors. Most consequently moved to France in the late 1950s and early 1960s after Tunisia, Morocco and Algeria became independent, and they now make up a majority of the French Jewish community.

Today, the Sephardim have preserved the romances and the ancient melodies and songs of Spain and Portugal, as well as a large number of old Portuguese and Spanish proverbs.[91] A number of children's plays, like, for example, El Castillo, are still popular among them, and they still manifest a fondness for the dishes peculiar to Iberia, such as the pastel, or pastelico, a sort of meat-pie, and the pan de España, or pan de León. At their festivals, they follow the Spanish custom of distributing dulces, or dolces, a confection wrapped in paper bearing a picture of the magen David (six-pointed star).

In Mexico, the Sephardic community originates mainly from Turkey, Greece, and Bulgaria. In 1942 the Colegio Hebreo Tarbut was founded in collaboration with the Ashkenazi family and instruction was in Yiddish. In 1944 the Sephardim community established a separate "Colegio Hebreo Sefaradí" with 90 students where instruction was in Hebrew and complemented with classes on Jewish customs. By 1950 there were 500 students. In 1968 a group of young Sephardim created the group Tnuat Noar Jinujit Dor Jadash in support of the creation of the state of Israel. In 1972 the Majazike Tora institute is created aiming to prepare young male Jews for their Bar Mitzvah.[92]

While the majority of American Jews today are Ashkenazim, in Colonial times Sephardim made up the majority of the Jewish population. For example, the 1654 Jews who arrived in New Amsterdam fled from the colony of Recife, Brazil after the Portuguese seized it from the Dutch. Through most of the 18th century, American synagogues conducted and recorded their business in Portuguese, even if their daily language was English. It was not until widespread German immigration to the United States in the 19th century that the tables turned and Ashkenazim (initially from Germany but by the 20th century from Eastern Europe) began to dominate the American Jewish landscape.

The Sephardim usually have followed the general rules for Spanish and Portuguese names. Many used to bear Portuguese and Spanish names; however, it is noteworthy that a large number of Sephardic names are of Hebrew and Arabic roots and are totally absent in Iberian patronyms and are therefore often seen as typically Jewish. Many of the names are associated with non-Jewish (Christian) families and individuals and are by no means exclusive to Jews. After 1492, many marranos changed their names to hide their Jewish origins and avoid persecution, adopting professions and even translating such patronyms to local languages like Arabic and even German.[citation needed] It was common to choose the name of the Parish Church where they have been baptized into the Christian faith, such as Santa Cruz or the common name of the word "Messiah" (Savior/Salvador) or adopted the name of their Christian godparents.[93] Dr. Mark Hilton's research demonstrated in IPS DNA testing that the last name of Marranos linked with the location of the local parish was correlated 89.3%

In contrast to Ashkenazic Jews, who do not name newborn children after living relatives, Sephardic Jews often name their children after the children's grandparents, even if they are still alive. The first son and daughter are traditionally named after the paternal grandparents, then the maternal parents' names are next in line for the remaining children. After that, additional children's names are "free", so to speak, meaning that one can choose whatever name, without any more "naming obligations." The only instance in which Sephardic Jews will not name after their own parents is when one of the spouses shares a common first name with a mother/father-in-law (since Jews will not name their children after themselves.) There are times though when the "free" names are used to honor the memory of a deceased relative who died young or childless. These conflicting naming conventions can be troublesome when children are born into mixed Ashkenazic-Sephardic households.

A notable exception to the distinct Ashkenazi and Sephardi naming traditions is found among Dutch Jews, where Ashkenazim have for centuries followed the tradition otherwise attributed to Sephardim. See Chuts.

Citizenship laws in Spain and Portugal

Since April 2013, Sephardim who are descendants of those expelled in the inquisition are entitled to claim Portuguese citizenship provided that they "belong to a Sephardic community of Portuguese origin with ties to Portugal". The amendment to Portugal's "Law on Nationality" was approved unanimously on 11 April 2013,[94] and remains open to applications as of March 2023.[95]

A similar law was approved in Spain in 2014[96] and passed in 2015. By the expiry date on 30 September 2019, Spain had received 127,000 applications, mostly from Latin America.[97]

Sephardic pedigrees

See also Sephardic Jewish surnames, Spanish and Portuguese names, List of Sephardic Jews, List of Iberian Jews

Relations with Ashkenazim

During the medieval period, a considerable number of Ashkenazi Jews from historic "Ashkenaz" (Germany) had moved to study Kabbalah and Torah under the guidance of Sephardic Jewish Rabbis in Iberia. These Ashkenazi Jews who assimilated into the Sephardic society eventually gained the surnames "Ashkenazi"[134] if they came from Germany and "Zarfati" if they came from France.[135]

Sephardi-Ashkenazi relations have at times been tense and clouded by arrogance, snobbery and claims of racial superiority, with both sides claiming the inferiority of the other, based upon such features as physical traits and culture.[136][137][138][139][140]

In some instances, Sephardi Jews have joined Ashkenazi communities, and have intermarried.[141][142]

Leading Sephardic rabbis

Genetics

Genetically, Sephardic Jews are closely related to their Ashkenazi Jewish counterparts and studies have revealed that they mainly have a mixed Middle Eastern (Levantine) and Southern European ancestry.[143] Due to their origin in the Mediterranean basin and strict practice of endogamy, there is a higher incidence of certain hereditary diseases and inherited disorders in Sephardi Jews. However, there are no specifically Sephardic genetic diseases, since the diseases in this group are not necessarily common to Sephardic Jews specifically, but are instead common in the particular country of birth, and sometimes among many other Jewish groups generally.[144] The most important ones are:

List of Nobel laureates

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Hebrew: סְפָרַדִּים, Modern Hebrew: Sfaradim, Tiberian: Səp̄āraddîm, also יְהוּדֵי סְפָרַד‎, Ye'hude Sepharad, lit. "The Jews of Spain", Spanish: Judíos sefardíes (or sefarditas), Portuguese: Judeus sefarditas

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Bibliography

  • Ashtor, Eliyahu, The Jews of Moslem Spain, Vol. 2, Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society of America (1979)
  • Assis, Yom Tov, The Jews of Spain: From Settlement to Expulsion, Jerusalem: Hebrew University of Jerusalem|The Hebrew University of Jerusalem (1988)
  • Baer, Yitzhak. A History of the Jews of Christian Spain. 2 vols. Jewish Publication Society of America (1966).
  • Bowers, W. P. "Jewish Communities in Spain in the Time of Paul the Apostle" in Journal of Theological Studies Vol. 26 Part 2, October 1975, pp. 395–402
  • Carasso, Lucienne. "Growing Up Jewish in Alexandria: The Story of a Sephardic Family's Exodus from Egypt". New York, 2014. ISBN 1500446351.
  • Dan, Joseph, "The Epic of a Millennium: Judeo-Spanish Culture's Confrontation" in Judaism Vol. 41, No. 2, Spring 1992
  • Gampel, Benjamin R., "Jews, Christians, and Muslims in Medieval Iberia: Convivencia through the Eyes of Sephardic Jews," in Convivencia: Jews, Muslims, and Christians in Medieval Spain, ed. Vivian B. Mann, Thomas F. Glick, and Jerrilynn D. Dodds, New York: George Braziller, Inc. (1992)
  • Groh, Arnold A. "Searching for Sephardic History in Berlin", in Semana Sepharad: The Lectures. Studies on Sephardic History, ed. Serels, M. Mitchell, New York: Jacob E. Safra Institute of Sephardic Studies (2001).
  • Kaplan, Yosef, An Alternative Path to Modernity: The Sephardi Diaspora in Western Europe. Brill Publishers (2000). ISBN 90-04-11742-3
  • Katz, Solomon, Monographs of the Mediaeval Academy of America No. 12: The Jews in the Visigothic and Frankish Kingdoms of Spain and Gaul, Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Mediaeval Society of America (1937)
  • Kedourie, Elie, editor. Spain and the Jews: The Sephardi Experience 1492 and After. Thames & Hudson (1992).
  • Levie, Tirtsah, Poverty and Welfare Among the Portuguese Jews in Early Modern Amsterdam, Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2012.
  • Raphael, Chaim, The Sephardi Story: A Celebration of Jewish History London: Valentine Mitchell & Co. Ltd. (1991)
  • Rauschenbach, Sina, The Sephardic Atlantic. Colonial Histories and Postcolonial Perspectives. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019.
  • Rauschenbach, Sina, Sephardim and Ashkenazim. Jewish-Jewish Encounters in History and Literature. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2020 (forthcoming).
  • Sarna, Nahum M., "Hebrew and Bible Studies in Medieval Spain" in Sephardi Heritage, Vol. 1 ed. R. D. Barnett, New York: Ktav Publishing House, Inc. (1971)
  • Sassoon, Solomon David, "The Spiritual Heritage of the Sephardim," in The Sephardi Heritage, Vol. 1 ed. R. D. Barnett, New York: Ktav Publishing House Inc. (1971)
  • Segrè, Emilio (1993). A Mind Always in Motion: the Autobiography of Emilio Segrè. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-07627-3. OCLC 25629433. Free Online – UC Press E-Books Collection
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  • Swetschinski, Daniel. Reluctant Cosmopolitans: The Portuguese Jews of Seventeenth-Century Amsterdam. Litmann Library of Jewish Civilization, (2000)
  • Zolitor, Jeff, "The Jews of Sepharad" Philadelphia: Congress of Secular Jewish Organizations (CSJO) (1997) ("" reprinted with permission on CSJO website.)
  • "The Kahal Zur Israel Synagogue, Recife, Brazil". Database of Jewish communities. Archived from the original on 24 November 2007. Retrieved 2008-06-28.
  • "History of the Jewish community of Recife". Database of Jewish communities. Archived from the original on 2008-01-04. Retrieved 2008-06-28.
  • "Synagogue in Brazilian town Recife considered oldest in the Americas". Reuters. 2008-11-12. Archived from the original on 30 May 2012. Retrieved 2008-06-29. Oldest synagogue in Americas draws tourists to Brazil

External links

Genealogy:

  • Sefardies.org Sephardic Genealogy and official web in Spain
  • Sephardic Genealogy
  • Multiple searchable databases for Sephardic genealogy
  • Consolidated Index of Sephardic Surnames
  • Extensive bibliography for Sephardim and Sephardic Genealogy

Genetics:

  • Bedford, Felice L (April 2012). "Sephardic signature in haplogroup T mitochondrial DNA". European Journal of Human Genetics. 20 (4): 441–448. doi:10.1038/ejhg.2011.200. PMC 3306851. PMID 22108605.

History and community:

  • European Sephardic Institute
  • Sephardic educational materials for children
  • International Sephardic Leadership Council
  • Radio Sefarad an internet radio broadcasting from Madrid; includes Huellas, a weekly program for those looking for the origins of their Sephardic surnames
  • Turkish Sephardi Şalom Newspaper
  • [Usurped!] (American Sephardi Federation)
  • American Jewish Historical Society, New England Archives
  • Sefarad, Journal on Hebraic, Sephardim and Middle East Studies, ILC 17 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine, CSIC (scientific articles in Spanish, English and other languages)
  • Hebrew Synagogue, (Hebrew Synagogue is seen as an advisory body on matters pertaining to religious practice and is widely consulted by many agencies)

Philosophical:

  • by Jose Faur, outlining the positive yet traditionalist responses to modernity typical of the Sepharadi Jewish community
  • by Jose Faur, identifying the difference in reaction to the European Enlightenment among Sepharadi and Ashkenazi communities
  • by Jose Faur, describing the cultural response of Sepharadim to anti-Semitism
  • Can Sephardic Judaism be Reconstructed?
  • The Special Character of Sephardic Tolerance

Music and liturgy:

  • Folk Literature of the Sephardic Jews Searchable archive of audio recordings of Sephardic ballads and other oral literature collected from informants from around the world, from 1950s until the 1990s, by Professor Samuel Armistead and his colleagues, maintained by Professor Bruce Rosenstock.
  • Sephardic Pizmonim Project- Music of the Middle Eastern Sephardic Community.
  • Daniel Halfon website of a British-born cantor and leading exponent of the liturgical tradition of Spanish and Portuguese Jews
  • Liturgy of the Spanish Synagogue in Rome performed by Rev. Alberto Funaro
  • Isaac Azose website of a cantor from Seattle, WA, USA, instrumental in preservation of the Sephardic liturgical tradition of Rhodes
  • Songs of the Sephardic Jewish Women of Morocco Internet Radio Show featuring field recordings of Sephardic Jewish Women in Tangier & Tetuan, 1954 w/ song texts translated into English.
  • Diaspora Sefardi – Jordi Savall, Hespèrion XXI – Alia Vox AV9809
  • Katalanim songs

sephardic, jews, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, november, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, template, message,. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Sephardic or Sephardi Jews Hebrew יהדות ספרד romanized Yahadut Sefarad transl Jewry of Hispania Ladino Djudios Sefardies also Sephardim a 1 or Hispanic Jews 2 are a Jewish diaspora population associated with the Iberian Peninsula The term which is derived from the Hebrew Sepharad lit Spain can also refer to the Mizrahi Jews of Western Asia and North Africa who were also influenced by Sephardic law and customs 3 Many Iberian Jewish exiles also later sought refuge in Mizrahi Jewish communities resulting in integration with those communities Sephardic Jewsיהדות ספרד Statue of the Sephardic rabbi and philosopher Maimonides in Cordoba SpainLanguagesTraditional Judaeo Spanish Andalusian Arabic Judaeo Portuguese Haketia Judaeo Catalan Judaeo Occitan Judaeo Berber Judeo ArabicModern Israeli Hebrew Sephardi Hebrew liturgical French English Spanish Portuguese Italian Turkish Arabic other local languagesReligionJudaismRelated ethnic groupsMizrahi Jews Ashkenazi Jews Hispanic Jews other Jewish ethnic divisions and SamaritansThe Jewish communities of the Iberian Peninsula prospered for centuries under the Muslim reign of Al Andalus following the Umayyad conquest of Hispania but their fortunes began to decline with the Christian Reconquista campaign to retake Spain In 1492 the Alhambra Decree by the Catholic Monarchs of Spain called for the expulsion of Jews and in 1496 King Manuel I of Portugal issued a similar edict for the expulsion of both Jews and Muslims 4 These actions resulted in a combination of internal and external migrations mass conversions and executions By the late 15th century Sephardic Jews had been largely expelled from Spain and scattered across North Africa Western Asia Southern and Southeastern Europe either settling near existing Jewish communities or as the first in new frontiers such as along the Silk Road 5 Historically the vernacular languages of the Sephardic Jews and their descendants have been variants of either Spanish Portuguese or Catalan though they have also adopted and adapted other languages The historical forms of Spanish that differing Sephardic communities spoke communally were related to the date of their departure from Iberia and their status at that time as either New Christians or Jews Judaeo Spanish also called Ladino is a Romance language derived from Old Spanish that was spoken by the eastern Sephardic Jews who settled in the Eastern Mediterranean after their expulsion from Spain in 1492 Haketia also known as Tetuani Ladino in Algeria an Arabic influenced variety of Judaeo Spanish was spoken by North African Sephardic Jews who settled in the region after the 1492 Spanish expulsion In 2015 more than five centuries after the expulsion both Spain and Portugal enacted laws allowing Sephardic Jews who could prove their ancestral origins in those countries to apply for citizenship 6 while the Spanish law that offered expedited citizenship to Sephardic Jews expired in 2019 the Portuguese law was effectively ended for new applicants in 2022 7 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Definition 2 1 Narrow ethnic definition 2 1 1 Katalanim 2 2 Broad religious definition 3 Divisions 3 1 Eastern Sephardim 3 2 North African Sephardim 3 3 Western Sephardim 3 4 Sephardic Bnei Anusim 4 Distribution 4 1 Pre 1492 4 2 Post 1492 4 2 1 Permanence of Sephardim in Spain 4 3 Sephardim in modern Iberia 4 3 1 Spanish citizenship by Iberian Sephardic descent 4 3 2 Portuguese citizenship by Portuguese Sephardic descent 5 Language 6 Literature 7 History 7 1 Early history 7 2 Jews in Muslim Iberia 7 3 After the Reconquista 7 4 In the Age of Discoveries 7 5 The Holocaust 7 6 Later history and culture 7 7 Citizenship laws in Spain and Portugal 7 8 Sephardic pedigrees 8 Relations with Ashkenazim 9 Leading Sephardic rabbis 10 Genetics 11 List of Nobel laureates 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Bibliography 16 External linksEtymology EditThe name Sephardi means Spanish or Hispanic derived from Sepharad Hebrew ס פ ר ד Modern Sfarad Tiberian Sep araḏ a Biblical location 8 The location of the biblical Sepharad points to the Iberian peninsula then the westernmost outpost of Phoenician maritime trade 9 Jewish presence in Iberia is believed to have started during the reign of King Solomon whose excise imposed taxes on Iberian exiles Although the first date of arrival of Jews in Iberia is the subject of ongoing archaeological research there is evidence of established Jewish communities as early as the 1st century CE 10 better source needed Modern transliteration of Hebrew romanizes the consonant פ pe without a dagesh dot placed in its center as the digraph ph in order to represent fe or the single phoneme f the English sound that is voiceless labiodental fricative In other languages and scripts Sephardi may be translated as plural Hebrew ס פ ר ד ים Modern Sfaraddim Tiberian Sep araddim Spanish Sefardies Portuguese Sefarditas Catalan Sefardites Aragonese Safardis Basque Sefardiak French Sefarades Galician Sefardis Italian Sefarditi Greek Sefardites Sephardites Serbian Sefardi Sefardi Serbian Judaeo Spanish Sefaradies Sefaradim and Arabic سفارديون Safardiyyun Definition Edit Jewish Festival in Tetuan Alfred Dehodencq 1865 Paris Museum of Jewish Art and History Narrow ethnic definition Edit In the narrower ethnic definition a Sephardi Jew is one descended from the Jews who lived in the Iberian Peninsula in the late 15th century immediately prior to the issuance of the Alhambra Decree of 1492 by order of the Catholic Monarchs in Spain and the decree of 1496 in Portugal by order of King Manuel I In Hebrew the term Sephardim Tehorim ספרדים טהורים literally Pure Sephardim derived from a misunderstanding of the initials ס ט Samekh Tet traditionally used with some proper names which stand for sofo tov may his end be good 11 better source needed has in recent times been used in some quarters to distinguish Sephardim proper who trace their lineage back to the Iberian Spanish population from Sephardim in the broader religious sense 12 This distinction has also been made in reference to 21st century genetic findings in research on Pure Sephardim in contrast to other communities of Jews today who are part of the broad classification of Sephardi 13 Ethnic Sephardic Jews have had a presence in North Africa and various parts of the Mediterranean and Western Asia due to their expulsion from Spain There have also been Sephardic communities in South America and India Katalanim Edit Originally the Jews spoke of Sefarad referring to Al Andalus 14 and not the entire peninsula nor as it is understood today in which the term Sefarad is used in modern Hebrew to refer in Spain 15 This has caused a long misunderstanding since traditionally the entire Iberian Diaspora has been included in a single group But the historiographical research reveals that that world seen as homogeneous was actually divided into distinct groups the Sephardim coming from the countries of the Castilian crown Castilian language speakers and the Katalanim Katalani originally from the Crown of Aragon Judeo Catalan speakers 16 17 18 19 Broad religious definition Edit See also Sephardic law and customs Sephardic Haredim Maghrebi Jews Mashriqi Jews Mizrahi Jews and Jewish ethnic divisions This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The modern Israeli Hebrew definition of Sephardi is a much broader religious based definition that generally excludes ethnic considerations In its most basic form this broad religious definition of a Sephardi refers to any Jew of any ethnic background who follows the customs and traditions of Sepharad For religious purposes and in modern Israel Sephardim is most often used in this wider sense It encompasses most non Ashkenazi Jews who are not ethnically Sephardi but are in most instances of West Asian or North African origin They are classified as Sephardi because they commonly use a Sephardic style of liturgy this constitutes a majority of Mizrahi Jews in the 21st century The term Sephardi in the broad sense describes the nusach Hebrew language liturgical tradition used by Sephardi Jews in their Siddur prayer book A nusach is defined by a liturgical tradition s choice of prayers order of prayers text of prayers and melodies used in the singing of prayers Sephardim traditionally pray using Minhag Sefarad The term Nusach Sefard or Nusach Sfarad does not refer to the liturgy generally recited by Sephardim proper or even Sephardi in a broader sense but rather to an alternative Eastern European liturgy used by many Hasidim who are Ashkenazi Additionally Ethiopian Jews whose branch of practiced Judaism is known as Haymanot have been included under the oversight of Israel s already broad Sephardic Chief Rabbinate Divisions EditThe divisions among Sephardim and their descendants today are largely a result of the consequences of the royal edicts of expulsion Both the Spanish and Portuguese crowns ordered their respective Jewish subjects to choose one of three options to convert to Catholicism and be allowed to remain within the kingdom to remain Jewish and leave or be expelled by the stipulated deadline or to stay and eventually be prosecuted by the Inquisition and summarily executed as Jews In the case of the Alhambra Decree of 1492 the primary purpose was to eliminate Jewish influence on Spain s large converso population and ensure they did not revert to Judaism Over half of Spain s Jews had converted in the 14th century as a result of the religious persecution and pogroms which occurred in 1391 They and their Catholic descendants were not subject to the Decree or to expulsion yet were surveilled by the Spanish Inquisition British scholar Henry Kamen has said that the real purpose of the 1492 edict likely was not expulsion but compulsory conversion and assimilation of all Spanish Jews a process which had been underway for a number of centuries Indeed a further number of those Jews who had not yet joined the converso community finally chose to convert and avoid expulsion as a result of the edict As a result of the Alhambra decree and persecution during the prior century between 200 000 and 250 000 Jews converted to Catholicism and between one third and one half of Spain s remaining 100 000 non converted Jews chose exile with an indeterminate number returning to Spain in the years following the expulsion 20 Foreseeing a negative economic effect of a similar Jewish flight from Portugal King Manuel issued his decree four years later presumably to satisfy a precondition that the Spanish monarchs had set for him in order to allow him to marry their daughter Isabella While the stipulations were similar in the Portuguese decree King Manuel largely prevented Portugal s Jews from leaving by blocking Portugal s ports of exit He decided that the Jews who stayed accepted Catholicism by default proclaiming them New Christians by royal decree Physical forced conversions however were also suffered by Jews throughout Portugal Sephardi Jews encompass Jews descended from those Jews who left the Iberian Peninsula as Jews by the expiration of the respective decreed deadlines This group is further divided between those who fled south to North Africa as opposed to those who fled eastwards to the Balkans West Asia and beyond Others fled east into Europe with many settling in northern Italy Also included among Sephardi Jews are those who descend from New Christian conversos but returned to Judaism after leaving Iberia largely after reaching Southern and Western Europe citation needed From these regions many late migrated again this time to the non Iberian territories of the Americas Additional to all these Sephardic Jewish groups are the descendants of those New Christian conversos who either remained in Iberia or moved from Iberia directly to the Iberian colonial possessions in what are today the various Latin American countries For historical reasons and circumstances most of the descendants of this group of conversos never formally returned to the Jewish religion All these sub groups are defined by a combination of geography identity religious evolution language evolution and the timeframe of their reversion for those who had in the interim undergone a temporary nominal conversion to Catholicism or non reversion back to Judaism These Sephardic sub groups are separate from any pre existing local Jewish communities they encountered in their new areas of settlement From the perspective of the present day the first three sub groups appeared to have developed as separate branches each with its own traditions In earlier centuries and as late as the editing of the Jewish Encyclopedia at the beginning of the 20th century the Sephardim were usually regarded as together forming a continuum The Jewish community of Livorno Italy acted as the clearing house of personnel and traditions among the first three sub groups it also developed as the chief publishing centre improper synthesis Eastern Sephardim Edit Main article Eastern Sephardim Sephardi Jewish couple from Sarajevo in traditional clothing 1900 Eastern Sephardim comprise the descendants of the expellees from Spain who left as Jews in 1492 or earlier This sub group of Sephardim settled mostly in various parts of the Ottoman Empire which then included areas in West Asia s Near East such as Anatolia the Levant and Egypt in Southeastern Europe some of the Dodecanese islands and the Balkans They settled particularly in European cities ruled by the Ottoman Empire including Salonica in present day Greece Constantinople which today is known as Istanbul on the European portion of modern Turkey and Sarajevo in what is today Bosnia and Herzegovina Sephardic Jews also lived in Bulgaria where they absorbed into their community the Romaniote Jews they found already living there They had a presence as well in Walachia in what is today southern Romania where there is still a functioning Sephardic Synagogue 21 Their traditional language is referred to as Judezmo Jewish language It is Judaeo Spanish sometimes also known as Ladino which consisted of the medieval Spanish and Portuguese they spoke in Iberia with admixtures of Hebrew and the languages around them especially Turkish This Judeo Spanish language was often written in Rashi script A 1902 Issue of La Epoca a Ladino newspaper from Salonica Thessaloniki Regarding the Middle East some Sephardim went further east into the West Asian territories of the Ottoman Empire settling among the long established Arabic speaking Jewish communities in Damascus and Aleppo in Syria as well as in the Land of Israel and as far as Baghdad in Iraq Although technically Egypt was a North African Ottoman region those Jews who settled in Alexandria are included in this group due to Egypt s cultural proximity to the other West Asian provinces under Ottoman rule For the most part Eastern Sephardim did not maintain their own separate Sephardic religious and cultural institutions from pre existing Jews Instead the local Jews came to adopt the liturgical customs of the recent Sephardic arrivals Eastern Sephardim in European areas of the Ottoman Empire as well as in Palestine retained their culture and language but those in the other parts of the West Asian portion gave up their language and adopted the local Judeo Arabic dialect This latter phenomenon is just one of the factors which have today led to the broader and eclectic religious definition of Sephardi Jews Thus the Jewish communities in Lebanon Syria and Egypt are partly of Spanish Jewish origin and they are counted as Sephardim proper The great majority of the Jewish communities in Iraq and all of those in Iran Eastern Syria Yemen and Eastern Turkey are descendants of pre existing indigenous Jewish populations They adopted the Sephardic rites and traditions through cultural diffusion and are properly termed Mizrahi Jews citation needed Going even further into South Asia a few of the Eastern Sephardim followed the spice trade routes as far as the Malabar coast of southern India where they settled among the established Cochin Jewish community Their culture and customs were absorbed by the local Jews citation needed Additionally there was a large community of Jews and crypto Jews of Portuguese origin in the Portuguese colony of Goa Gaspar Jorge de Leao Pereira the first archbishop of Goa wanted to suppress or expel that community calling for the initiation of the Goa Inquisition against the Sephardic Jews in India In recent times principally after 1948 most Eastern Sephardim have since relocated to Israel and others to the US and Latin America Eastern Sephardim still often carry common Spanish surnames as well as other specifically Sephardic surnames from 15th century Spain with Arabic or Hebrew language origins such as Azoulay Abulafia Abravanel which have since disappeared from Spain when those that stayed behind as conversos adopted surnames that were solely Spanish in origin Other Eastern Sephardim have since also translated their Hispanic surnames into the languages of the regions they settled in or have modified them to make them sound more local North African Sephardim Edit 19th century Moroccan Sephardic wedding dress Main article North African SephardimNorth African Sephardim consists of the descendants of the expellees from Spain who also left as Jews in 1492 This branch settled in North Africa except Egypt see Eastern Sephardim above Settling mostly in Morocco and Algeria they spoke a variant of Judaeo Spanish known as Haketia They also spoke Judeo Arabic in a majority of cases They settled in the areas with already established Arabic speaking Jewish communities in North Africa and eventually merged with them to form new communities based solely on Sephardic customs citation needed Several of the Moroccan Jews emigrated back to the Iberian Peninsula to form the core of the Gibraltar Jews citation needed In the 19th century modern Spanish French and Italian gradually replaced Haketia and Judeo Arabic as the mother tongue among most Moroccan Sephardim and other North African Sephardim 22 In recent times with the Jewish exodus from Arab and Muslim countries principally after the creation of Israel in 1948 most North African Sephardim have relocated to Israel total pop est 1 400 000 in 2015 and most others to France 361 000 23 and the US 300 000 as well as other countries As of 2015 there was a significant community still in Morocco 10 000 24 North African Sephardim still also often carry common Spanish surnames as well as other specifically Sephardic surnames from 15th century Spain with Arabic or Hebrew language origins such as Azoulay Abulafia Abravanel which have since disappeared from Spain when those that stayed behind as conversos adopted surnames that were solely Spanish in origin Other North African Sephardim have since also translated their Hispanic surnames into local languages or have modified them to sound local citation needed Western Sephardim Edit Main article Spanish and Portuguese Jews See also Anusim Marrano and Crypto Judaism First Cemetery of the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue Shearith Israel 1656 1833 in Manhattan New York City Emma Lazarus American poet Born into a large New York Sephardi family Western Sephardim also known more ambiguously as Spanish and Portuguese Jews Spanish Jews Portuguese Jews and Jews of the Portuguese Nation are the community of Jewish ex conversos whose families initially remained in Spain and Portugal as ostensible New Christians that is as Anusim or forced converts Western Sephardim are further sub divided into an Old World branch and a New World branch Henry Kamen and Joseph Perez estimate that of the total Jewish origin population of Spain at the time of the issuance of the Alhambra Decree those who chose to remain in Spain represented the majority up to 300 000 of a total Jewish origin population of 350 000 Furthermore a significant number returned to Spain in the years following the expulsion on condition of converting to Catholicism the Crown guaranteeing they could recover their property at the same price at which it was sold Discrimination against this large community of conversos nevertheless remained and those who secretly practiced the Jewish faith specifically suffered severe episodes of persecution by the Inquisition The last episode of persecution occurred in the mid 18th century External migrations out of the Iberian peninsula coincided with these episodes of increased persecution by the Inquisition As a result of this discrimination and persecution a small number of marranos conversos who secretly practiced Judaism later emigrated to more religiously tolerant Old World countries outside the Iberian cultural sphere such as the Netherlands Belgium France Italy Germany England citation needed In these lands conversos reverted to Judaism rejoining the Jewish community sometimes up to the third or even fourth generations after the initial decrees stipulating conversion expulsion or death It is these returnees to Judaism that represent Old World Western Sephardim New World Western Sephardim on the other hand are the descendants of those Jewish origin New Christian conversos who accompanied the millions of Old Christian Spaniards and Portuguese that emigrated to the Americas More specifically New World Western Sephardim are those Western Sephardim whose converso ancestors migrated to various of the non Iberian colonies in the Americas in whose jurisdictions they could return to Judaism New World Western Sephardim are juxtaposed to yet another group of descendants of conversos who settled in the Iberian colonies of the Americas who could not revert to Judaism These comprise the related but distinct group known as Sephardic Bnei Anusim see the section below Due to the presence of the Spanish and Portuguese Inquisition in the Iberian American territories initially converso immigration was barred throughout much of Ibero America Because of this very few converso immigrants in Iberian American colonies ever reverted to Judaism Of those conversos in the New World who did return to Judaism it was principally those who had come via an initial respite of refuge in the Netherlands and or who were settling the New World Dutch colonies such as Curacao and the area then known as New Holland also called Dutch Brazil Dutch Brazil was the northern portion of the colony of Brazil ruled by the Dutch for under a quarter of a century before it also fell to the Portuguese who ruled the remainder of Brazil Jews who had only recently reverted in Dutch Brazil then again had to flee to other Dutch ruled colonies in the Americas including joining brethren in Curacao but also migrating to New Amsterdam in what is today Lower Manhattan in New York City All of the oldest congregations in the non Iberian colonial possessions in the Americas were founded by Western Sephardim many who arrived in the then Dutch ruled New Amsterdam with their synagogues being in the tradition of Spanish and Portuguese Jews In the United States in particular Congregation Shearith Israel established in 1654 in today s New York City is the oldest Jewish congregation in the United States Its present building dates from 1897 Congregation Jeshuat Israel in Newport Rhode Island is dated to sometime after the arrival there of Western Sephardim in 1658 and prior to the 1677 purchase of a communal cemetery now known as Touro Cemetery See also List of the oldest synagogues in the United States The intermittent period of residence in Portugal after the initial fleeing from Spain for the ancestors of many Western Sephardim whether Old World or New World is a reason why the surnames of many Western Sephardim tend to be Portuguese variations of common Spanish surnames though some are still Spanish Among a few notable figures with roots in Western Sephardim are the current president of Venezuela Nicolas Maduro and former Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States Benjamin N Cardozo Both descend from Western Sephardim who left Portugal for the Netherlands and in the case of Nicolas Maduro from the Netherlands to Curacao and ultimately Venezuela Sephardic Bnei Anusim Edit Main article Sephardic Bnei Anusim See also Converso and New Christian Sephardi family from Misiones Province Argentina circa 1900 The Sephardic Bnei Anusim consists of the contemporary and largely nominal Christian descendants of assimilated 15th century Sephardic anusim These descendants of Spanish and Portuguese Jews forced or coerced to convert to Catholicism remained as conversos in Iberia or moved to the Iberian colonial possessions across various Latin American countries during the Spanish colonization of the Americas Due to historical reasons and circumstances Sephardic Bnei Anusim had not been able to return to the Jewish faith over the last five centuries 25 although increasing numbers have begun emerging publicly in modern times especially over the last two decades Except for varying degrees of putatively rudimentary Jewish customs and traditions which had been retained as family traditions among individual families Sephardic Bnei Anusim became a fully assimilated sub group within the Iberian descended Christian populations of Spain Portugal Hispanic America and Brazil In the last 5 to 10 years when however organized groups of Sephardic Benei Anusim in Brazil Colombia Costa Rica Chile Ecuador Mexico Puerto Rico Venezuela Dominican Republic and in Sefarad Iberia itself 26 have now been established some of whose members have formally reverted to Judaism leading to the emergence of Neo Western Sephardim see group below The Jewish Agency for Israel estimates the Sephardic Bnei Anusim population to number in the millions 27 Their population size is several times larger than the three Jewish integrated Sephardi descendant sub groups combined consisting of Eastern Sephardim North African Sephardim and the ex converso Western Sephardim both New World and Old World branches Although numerically superior Sephardic Bnei Anusim is however the least prominent or known sub group of Sephardi descendants Sephardic Bnei Anusim are also more than twice the size of the total world Jewish population as a whole which itself also encompasses Ashkenazi Jews Mizrahi Jews and various other smaller groups Unlike the Anusim forced converts who were the conversos up to the third fourth or fifth generation depending on the Jewish responsa who later reverted to Judaism the Bnei Anusim later sons children descendants of the forced converts were the subsequent generations of descendants of the Anusim who remained hidden ever since the Inquisition in the Iberian Peninsula and its New World franchises At least some Sephardic Anusim in the Hispanosphere in Iberia but especially in their colonies in Ibero America had also initially tried to revert to Judaism or at least maintain crypto Jewish practices in privacy This however was not feasible long term in that environment as Judaizing conversos in Iberia and Ibero America remained persecuted prosecuted and liable to conviction and execution The Inquisition itself was only finally formally disbanded in the 19th century Historical documentation shedding new light on the diversity in the ethnic composition of the Iberian immigrants to the Spanish colonies of the Americas during the conquest era suggests that the number of New Christians of Sephardi origin that actively participated in the conquest and settlement was more significant than previously estimated A number of Spanish conquerors administrators settlers have now been confirmed to have been of Sephardi origin citation needed Recent revelations have only come about as a result of modern DNA evidence and newly discovered records in Spain which had been either lost or hidden relating to conversions marriages baptisms and Inquisition trials of the parents grandparents and great grandparents of the Sephardi origin Iberian immigrants Overall it is now estimated that up to 20 of modern day Spaniards and 10 of colonial Latin America s Iberian settlers may have been of Sephardic origin although the regional distribution of their settlement was uneven throughout the colonies Thus Iberian settlers of New Christian Sephardi origin ranged anywhere from none in most areas to as high as 1 in every 3 approx 30 Iberian settlers in other areas With Latin America s current population standing at close to 590 million people the bulk of which consists of persons of full or partial Iberian ancestry both New World Hispanics and Brazilians whether they re criollos mestizos or mulattos it is estimated that up to 50 million of these possess Sephardic Jewish ancestry to some degree In Iberia settlements of known and attested populations of Bnei Anusim include those in Belmonte in Portugal and the Xuetes of Palma de Mallorca in Spain In 2011 Rabbi Nissim Karelitz a leading rabbi and Halachic authority and chairman of the Beit Din Tzedek rabbinical court in Bnei Brak Israel recognized the entire Xuete community of Bnei Anusim in Palma de Mallorca as Jews 28 That population alone represented approximately 18 000 people or just over 2 of the entire population of the island The proclamation of the Jews default acceptance of Catholicism by the Portuguese king actually resulted in a high percentage being assimilated into the Portuguese population Besides the Xuetas the same is true of Spain Almost all Sephardic Bnei Anusim carry surnames which are known to have been used by Sephardim during the 15th century However almost all of these surnames are not specifically Sephardic per se and most are in fact surnames of gentile Spanish or gentile Portuguese origin which only became common among Bnei Anusim because they deliberately adopted them during their conversions to Catholicism in an attempt to obscure their Jewish heritage Given that conversion made New Christians subject to Inquisitorial prosecution as Catholics crypto Jews formally recorded Christian names and gentile surnames to be publicly used as their aliases in notarial documents government relations and commercial activities while keeping their given Hebrew names and Jewish surnames secret 29 As a result very few Sephardic Bnei Anusim carry surnames that are specifically Sephardic in origin or that are exclusively found among Bnei Anusim Distribution EditPre 1492 Edit This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Sephardic Jews news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Prior to 1492 substantial Jewish populations existed in most Spanish and Portuguese provinces Among the larger Jewish populations in actual numbers were the Jewish communities in cities like Lisbon Toledo Cordoba Seville Malaga and Granada In these cities however Jews constituted only substantial minorities of the overall population In several smaller towns however Jews composed majorities or pluralities as the towns were founded or inhabited principally by Jews Among these towns were Ocana Guadalajara Buitrago del Lozoya Lucena Ribadavia Hervas Llerena and Almazan In Castile Aranda de Duero Avila Alba de Tormes Arevalo Burgos Calahorra Carrion de los Condes Cuellar Herrera del Duque Leon Medina del Campo Ourense Salamanca Segovia Soria and Villalon were home to large Jewish communities or aljamas Aragon had substantial Jewish communities in the Calls of Girona Barcelona Tarragona Valencia and Palma Majorca with the Girona Synagogue serving as the centre of Catalonian JewryThe first Jews to leave Spain settled in what is today Algeria after the various persecutions that took place in 1391 The Expulsion of the Jews from Spain in the year 1492 by Emilio Sala Frances Post 1492 Edit The Alhambra Decree also known as the Edict of Expulsion was an edict issued on 31 March 1492 by the joint Catholic Monarchs of Spain Isabella I of Castile and Ferdinand II of Aragon ordering the expulsion of practicing Jews from the Kingdoms of Castile and Aragon and its territories and possessions by 31 July of that year 30 The primary purpose was to eliminate their influence on Spain s large converso population and ensure they did not revert to Judaism Over half of Spain s Jews had converted as a result of the religious persecution and pogroms which occurred in 1391 and as such were not subject to the Decree or to expulsion A further number of those remaining chose to avoid expulsion as a result of the edict As a result of the Alhambra decree and persecution in prior years over 200 000 Jews converted to Catholicism and between 40 000 and 100 000 were expelled an indeterminate number returning to Spain in the years following the expulsion 31 The Spanish Jews who chose to leave Spain instead of converting dispersed throughout the region of North Africa known as the Maghreb In those regions they often intermingled with the already existing Mizrahi Arabic speaking communities becoming the ancestors of the Moroccan Algerian Tunisian and Libyan Jewish communities Many Spanish Jews fled to the Ottoman Empire where they had been given refuge Sultan Bayezid II of the Ottoman Empire learning about the expulsion of Jews from Spain dispatched the Ottoman Navy to bring the Jews safely to Ottoman lands mainly to the cities of Salonika currently Thessaloniki now in Greece and Smyrna now known in English as Izmir currently in Turkey 32 better source needed Some believe that Persian Jewry Iranian Jews as the only community of Jews living under the Shiites probably suffered more than any Sephardic community Persian Jews are not 33 Sephardic in descent 34 35 36 Many of these Jews also settled in other parts of the Balkans ruled by the Ottomans such as the areas that are now Bulgaria Serbia and Bosnia Throughout history scholars have given widely differing numbers of Jews expelled from Spain However the figure is likely preferred by minimalist scholars to be below the 100 000 Jews while others suggest larger numbers who had not yet converted to Christianity by 1492 possibly as low as 40 000 and as high as 200 000 while Don Isaac Abarbanel stated he led 300 000 Jews out of Spain dubbed Megorashim Expelled Ones in contrast to the local Jews they met whom they called Toshavim Citizens in the Hebrew they had spoken 37 Many went to Portugal gaining only a few years of respite from persecution The Jewish community in Portugal perhaps then some 10 of that country s population 38 were then declared Christians by Royal decree unless they left Such figures exclude the significant number of Jews who returned to Spain due to the hostile reception they received in their countries of refuge notably Fez The situation of returnees was legalized with the Ordinance of 10 November 1492 which established that civil and church authorities should be witness to baptism and in the case that they were baptized before arrival proof and witnesses of baptism were required Furthermore all property could be recovered by returnees at the same price at which it was sold Returnees are documented as late as 1499 On the other hand the Provision of the Royal Council of 24 October 1493 set harsh sanctions for those who slandered these New Christians with insulting terms such as tornados 39 As a result of the more recent Jewish exodus from Arab lands many of the Sephardim Tehorim from Western Asia and North Africa relocated to either Israel or France where they form a significant portion of the Jewish communities today Other significant communities of Sephardim Tehorim also migrated in more recent times from the Near East to New York City Argentina Costa Rica Mexico Montreal Gibraltar Puerto Rico and Dominican Republic 40 better source needed Because of poverty and turmoil in Latin America another wave of Sephardic Jews joined other Latin Americans who migrated to the United States Canada Spain and other countries of Europe Permanence of Sephardim in Spain Edit According to the genetic study The Genetic Legacy of Religious Diversity and Intolerance Paternal Lineages of Christians Jews and Muslims in the Iberian Peninsula at the University Pompeu Fabra of Barcelona and the University of Leicester led by Briton Mark Jobling Francesc Calafell and Elena Bosch published by the American Journal of Human Genetics genetic markers show that nearly 20 of Spaniards have Sephardic Jewish markers direct male descent male for Y equivalent weight for female mitochondria residents of Catalonia have approximately 6 This shows that there was historic intermarriage between ethnic Jews and other Spaniards and essentially that some Jews remained in Spain Similarly the study showed that some 11 of the population has DNA associated with the Moors 41 Sephardim in modern Iberia Edit Today around 50 000 recognized Jews live in Spain according to the Federation of Jewish Communities in Spain 42 43 The tiny Jewish community in Portugal is estimated between 1 740 and 3 000 people 44 Although some are of Ashkenazi origin the majority are Sephardic Jews who returned to Spain after the end of the protectorate over northern Morocco A community of 600 Sephardic Jews live in Gibraltar 45 better source needed In 2011 Rabbi Nissim Karelitz a leading rabbi and Halachic authority and chairman of the Beit Din Tzedek rabbinical court in Bnei Brak Israel recognized the entire community of Sephardi descendants in Palma de Mallorca the Chuetas as Jewish 28 They number approximately 18 000 people or just over 2 of the entire population of the island Of the Bnei Anusim community in Belmonte Portugal some officially returned to Judaism in the 1970s They opened a synagogue Bet Eliahu in 1996 46 The Belmonte community of Bnei Anusim as a whole however have not yet been granted the same recognition as Jews that the Chuetas of Palma de Majorca achieved in 2011 Spanish citizenship by Iberian Sephardic descent Edit See also Spanish nationality law Sephardi Jews In 1924 the Dictatorship of Primo de Rivera approved a decree to enable Sephardi Jews to obtain Spanish nationality Although the deadline was originally the end of 1930 diplomat Angel Sanz Briz used this decree as the basis for giving Spanish citizenship papers to Hungarian Jews in the Second World War to try to save them from the Nazis Today Spanish nationality law generally requires a period of residency in Spain before citizenship can be applied for This had long been relaxed from ten to two years for Sephardi Jews Hispanic Americans and others with historical ties to Spain In that context Sephardi Jews were considered to be the descendants of Spanish Jews who were expelled or fled from the country five centuries ago following the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492 47 In 2015 the Government of Spain passed Law 12 2015 of 24 June whereby Sephardi Jews with a connection to Spain could obtain Spanish nationality by naturalization without the usual residency requirement Applicants must provide evidence of their Sephardi origin and some connection with Spain and pass examinations on the language government and culture of Spain 48 The Law establishes the right to Spanish nationality of Sephardi Jews with a connection to Spain who apply within three years from 1 October 2015 The law defines Sephardic as Jews who lived in the Iberian Peninsula until their expulsion in the late fifteenth century and their descendants 49 The law provides for the deadline to be extended by one year to 1 October 2019 it was extended in March 2018 50 It was modified in 2015 to remove a provision that required persons acquiring Spanish nationality by law 12 2015 must renounce any other nationality held 51 Most applicants must pass tests of knowledge of the Spanish language and Spanish culture but those who are under 18 or handicapped are exempted A Resolution in May 2017 also exempted those aged over 70 52 The Sephardic citizenship law was set to expire in October 2018 but was extended for an additional year by the Spanish government 53 The Law states that Spanish citizenship will be granted to those Sephardic foreign nationals who prove that Sephardic condition and their special relationship with our country even if they do not have legal residence in Spain whatever their current ideology religion or beliefs Eligibility criteria for proving Sephardic descent include a certificate issued by the Federation of Jewish Communities of Spain or the production of a certificate from the competent rabbinic authority legally recognized in the country of habitual residence of the applicant or other documentation which might be considered appropriate for this purpose or by justifying one s inclusion as a Sephardic descendant or a direct descendant of persons included in the list of protected Sephardic families in Spain referred to in the Decree Law of 29 December 1948 or descendants of those who obtained naturalization by way of the Royal Decree of 20 December 1924 or by the combination of other factors including surnames of the applicant spoken family language Spanish Ladino Haketia and other evidence attesting descent from Sephardic Jews and a relationship to Spain Surnames alone language alone or other evidence alone will not be determinative in the granting of Spanish nationality The connection with Spain can be established if kinship with a family on a list of Sephardic families in Spain is not available by proving that Spanish history or culture have been studied proof of charitable cultural or economic activities associated with Spanish people or organizations or Sephardic culture 48 The path to Spanish citizenship for Sephardic applicants remained costly and arduous 54 The Spanish government takes about 8 10 months to decide on each case 55 By March 2018 some 6 432 people had been granted Spanish citizenship under the law 53 A total of about 132 000 56 applications were received 67 000 of them in the month before the 30 September 2019 deadline Applications for Portuguese citizenship for Sephardis remained open 57 The deadline for completing the requirements was extended until September 2021 due to delays due to the Covid 19 pandemic but only for those who had made a preliminary application by 1 October 2019 56 In what appeared to be a reciprocal gesture Natan Sharansky chairman of the quasi governmental Jewish Agency for Israel said the state of Israel must ease the way for their return referring to the millions of descendants of conversos around Latin America and Iberia Some hundreds of thousands maybe exploring ways to return to the Jewish people 27 Portuguese citizenship by Portuguese Sephardic descent Edit See also Portuguese nationality law Jewish Law of Return In April 2013 Portugal amended its Law on Nationality to confer citizenship to descendants of Portuguese Sephardic Jews who were expelled from the country five centuries ago following the Portuguese Inquisition The amended law gave descendants of Portuguese Sephardic Jews the right to become Portuguese citizens wherever they lived if they belong to a Sephardic community of Portuguese origin with ties to Portugal 58 Portugal thus became the first country after Israel to enact a Jewish Law of Return On 29 January 2015 the Portuguese Parliament ratified the legislation offering dual citizenship to descendants of Portuguese Sephardic Jews Like the law later passed in Spain the newly established legal rights in Portugal apply to all descendants of Portugal s Sephardic Jews regardless of the current religion of the descendant so long as the descendant can demonstrate a traditional connection to Portuguese Sephardic Jews This may be through family names family language and direct or collateral ancestry 59 Portuguese nationality law was amended to this effect by Decree Law n º 43 2013 and further amended by Decree Law n º 30 A 2015 which came into effect on 1 March 2015 60 Applicants for Portuguese citizenship via this route are assessed by experts at one of Portugal s Jewish communities in either Lisbon or Porto 61 In a reciprocal response to the Portuguese legislation Michael Freund Chairman of Shavei Israel told news agencies in 2015 that he call s on the Israeli government to embark on a new strategic approach and to reach out to the Sephardic Bnei Anousim people whose Spanish and Portuguese Jewish ancestors were compelled to convert to Catholicism more than five centuries ago 62 By July 2017 the Portuguese government had received about 5 000 applications mostly from Brazil Israel and Turkey 400 had been granted with a period between application and resolution of about two years 55 In 2017 a total of 1 800 applicants had been granted Portuguese citizenship 63 By February 2018 12 000 applications were in process 63 Language Edit Dedication at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem written in Hebrew English Yiddish and Judeo Spanish The most typical traditional language of Sephardim is Judeo Spanish also called Judezmo or Ladino It is a Romance language derived mainly from Old Castilian Spanish with many borrowings from Turkish and to a lesser extent from Greek Arabic Hebrew and French Until recently two different dialects of Judeo Spanish were spoken in the Mediterranean region Eastern Judeo Spanish in various distinctive regional variations and Western or North African Judeo Spanish also known as Ḥakitia The latter was once spoken with little regional distinction in six towns in Northern Morocco Because of later emigration it was also spoken by Sephardim in Ceuta and Melilla Spanish cities in North Africa Gibraltar Casablanca Morocco and Oran Algeria The Eastern Sephardic dialect is typified by its greater conservatism its retention of numerous Old Spanish features in phonology morphology and lexicon and its numerous borrowings from Turkish and to a lesser extent also from Greek and South Slavic Both dialects have or had numerous borrowings from Hebrew especially in reference to religious matters But the number of Hebraisms in everyday speech or writing is in no way comparable to that found in Yiddish the first language for some time among Ashkenazi Jews in Europe On the other hand the North African Sephardic dialect was until the early 20th century also highly conservative its abundant Colloquial Arabic loan words retained most of the Arabic phonemes as functional components of a new enriched Hispano Semitic phonological system During the Spanish colonial occupation of Northern Morocco 1912 1956 Ḥakitia was subjected to pervasive massive influence from Modern Standard Spanish Most Moroccan Jews now speak a colloquial Andalusian form of Spanish with only occasional use of the old language as a sign of in group solidarity Similarly American Jews may now use an occasional Yiddishism in colloquial speech Except for certain younger individuals who continue to practice Ḥakitia as a matter of cultural pride this dialect probably the most Arabized of the Romance languages apart from Mozarabic has essentially ceased to exist By contrast Eastern Judeo Spanish has fared somewhat better especially in Israel where newspapers radio broadcasts and elementary school and university programs strive to keep the language alive But the old regional variations i e Bosnia Macedonia Bulgaria Romania Greece and Turkey for instance are already either extinct or doomed to extinction Only time will tell whether Judeo Spanish koine now evolving in Israel similar to that which developed among Sephardic immigrants to the United States early in the 20th century will prevail and survive into the next generation 64 Judaeo Portuguese was used by Sephardim especially among the Spanish and Portuguese Jews The pidgin forms of Portuguese spoken among slaves and their Sephardic owners were an influence in the development of Papiamento and the Creole languages of Suriname Other Romance languages with Jewish forms spoken historically by Sephardim include Judeo Catalan Often underestimated this language was the main language used by the Jewish communities in Catalonia Balearic Isles and the Valencian region The Gibraltar community has had a strong influence on the Gibraltar dialect Llanito contributing several words to this English Spanish patois Other languages associated with Sephardic Jews are mostly extinct e g Corfiot Italkian formerly spoken by some Sephardic communities in Italy 65 Judeo Arabic and its dialects have been a large vernacular language for Sephardim who settled in North African kingdoms and Arabic speaking parts of the Ottoman Empire Low German Low Saxon formerly used as the vernacular by Sephardim around Hamburg and Altona in Northern Germany is no longer in use as a specifically Jewish vernacular Through their diaspora Sephardim have been a polyglot population often learning or exchanging words with the language of their host population most commonly Italian Arabic Greek Turkish and Dutch They were easily integrated with the societies that hosted them Within the last centuries and more particularly the 19th and 20th centuries two languages have become dominant in the Sephardic diaspora French introduced first by the Alliance Israelite Universelle and then by absorption of new immigrants to France after Tunisia Morocco and Algeria became independent and Hebrew in the state of Israel citation needed Literature EditThe doctrine of galut is considered by scholars to be one of the most important concepts in Jewish history if not the most important In Jewish literature glut the Hebrew word for diaspora invoked common motifs of oppression martyrdom and suffering in discussing the collective experience of exile in diaspora that has been uniquely formative in Jewish culture This literature was shaped for centuries by the expulsions from Spain and Portugal and thus featured prominently in a wide range of medieval Jewish literature from rabbinic writings to profane poetry Even so the treatment of glut diverges in Sephardic sources which scholar David A Wacks says occasionally belie the relatively comfortable circumstances of the Jewish community of Sefarad 66 History EditMain articles History of the Jews in Spain and History of the Jews in Portugal Early history Edit The precise origins of the Jewish communities of the Iberian peninsula are unclear There is fragmentary and inconclusive evidence of a Jewish presence on the Iberian Peninsula which dates back to pre Roman times More substantial references date back to the Roman period The Provencal rabbi and scholar Rabbi Abraham ben David wrote in anno 1161 A tradition exists with the Jewish community of Granada that they are from the inhabitants of Jerusalem of the descendants of Judah and Benjamin rather than from the villages the towns in the outlying districts of Israel 67 Elsewhere he writes about his maternal grandfather s family and how they came to Spain When Titus prevailed over Jerusalem his officer who was appointed over Hispania appeased him requesting that he send to him captives made up of the nobles of Jerusalem and so he sent a few of them to him and there were amongst them those who made curtains and who were knowledgeable in the work of silk and one whose name was Baruch and they remained in Merida 68 Here Rabbi Abraham ben David refers to the second influx of Jews into Spain shortly after the destruction of Israel s Second Temple in 70 CE The earliest mention of Spain is allegedly found in Obadiah 1 20 And the exiles of this host of the sons of Israel who are among the Canaanites as far as Ṣarfat Hebrew צרפת and the exiles of Jerusalem who are in Sepharad will possess the cities of the south While the medieval lexicographer David ben Abraham Al Fasi identifies Ṣarfat with the city of Ṣarfend Judeo Arabic צרפנדה 69 the word Sepharad Hebrew ספרד in the same verse has been translated by the first century rabbinic scholar Yonathan Ben Uzziel as Aspamia 70 Based on a later teaching in the compendium of Jewish oral laws compiled by Rabbi Judah Hanasi in 189 CE known as the Mishnah Aspamia is associated with a very far place generally thought of as Hispania or Spain 71 In circa 960 CE Ḥisdai ibn Sapruṭ minister of trade in the court of the Caliph in Cordoba wrote to Joseph the king of Khazaria saying The name of our land in which we dwell is called in the sacred tongue Sefarad but in the language of the Arabs the indwellers of the lands Alandalus Andalusia the name of the capital of the kingdom Cordoba 72 According to Rabbi David Kimchi 1160 1235 in his commentary on Obadiah 1 20 Ṣarfat and Sepharad both refer to the Jewish captivity Heb galut expelled during the war with Titus and who went as far as the countries Alemania Germany Escalona 73 France and Spain The names Ṣarfat and Sepharad are explicitly mentioned by him as being France and Spain respectively Some scholars think that in the case of the place name Ṣarfat lit Ṣarfend which as noted was applied to the Jewish Diaspora in France the association with France was made only exegetically because of its similarity in spelling with the name פרנצא France by a reversal of its letters Spanish Jew Moses de Leon ca 1250 1305 mentions a tradition concerning the first Jewish exiles saying that the vast majority of the first exiles driven away from the land of Israel during the Babylonian captivity refused to return for they had seen that the Second Temple would be destroyed like the first 74 In yet another teaching passed down later by Moses ben Machir in the 16th century an explicit reference is made to the fact that Jews have lived in Spain since the destruction of the First Temple 75 Now I have heard that this praise emet weyaṣiv which is now used by us in the prayer rite was sent by the exiles who have driven away from Jerusalem and who were not with Ezra in Babylon and that Ezra had sent inquiring after them but they did not wish to go up there replied that since they were destined to go off again into exile a second time and that the Temple would once again be destroyed why should we then double our anguish It is best for us that we remain here in our place and to serve God Now I have heard that they are the people of Ṭulayṭulah Toledo and those who are near to them However that they might not be thought of as wicked men and those who are lacking in fidelity may God forbid they wrote down for them this magnanimous praise etc Similarly Gedaliah ibn Jechia the Spaniard has written 76 In 5 252 anno mundi 1492 CE the King Ferdinand and his wife Isabella made war with the Ishmaelites who were in Granada and took it and while they returned they commanded the Jews in all of his kingdoms that in but a short time they were to take leave from the countries they had heretofore possessed they being Castile Navarre Catalonia Aragon Granada and Sicily Then the Jewish inhabitants of Ṭulayṭulah Toledo answered that they were not present in the land of Judea at the time when their Christ was put to death Apparently it was written upon a large stone in the city s street which some very ancient sovereign inscribed and testified that the Jews of Ṭulayṭulah Toledo did not depart from there during the building of the Second Temple and were not involved in putting to death the man whom they called Christ Yet no apology was of any avail to them neither unto the rest of the Jews till at length six hundred thousand souls had evacuated from there Don Isaac Abrabanel a prominent Jewish figure in Spain in the 15th century and one of the king s trusted courtiers who witnessed the expulsion of Jews from Spain in 1492 informs his readers 77 that the first Jews to reach Spain were brought by ship to Spain by a certain Phiros who was confederate with the king of Babylon when he laid siege to Jerusalem This man was a Grecian by birth but who had been given a kingdom in Spain He became related by marriage to a certain Espan the nephew of king Heracles who also ruled over a kingdom in Spain This Heracles later renounced his throne because of his preference for his native country in Greece leaving his kingdom to his nephew Espan by whom the country of Espana Spain derives its name The Jewish exiles transported there by the said Phiros were descended by lineage from Judah Benjamin Shimon and Levi and were according to Abrabanel settled in two districts in southern Spain one Andalusia in the city of Lucena a city so called by the Jewish exiles that had come there the second in the country around Ṭulayṭulah Toledo Abrabanel says that the name Ṭulayṭulah Toledo was given to the city by its first Jewish inhabitants and surmises that the name may have meant טלטול wandering on account of their wandering from Jerusalem He says furthermore that the original name of the city was Pirisvalle so called by its early pagan inhabitants He also writes there that he found written in the ancient annals of Spanish history collected by the kings of Spain that the 50 000 Jewish households then residing in the cities throughout Spain were the descendants of men and women who were sent to Spain by the Roman Emperor and who had formerly been subjected to him and whom Titus had originally exiled from places in or around Jerusalem The two Jewish exiles joined and became one Evidence that suggests Jewish connections with the Iberian Peninsula includes References in the books of Isaiah Jeremiah Ezekiel I Kings and Jonah to the country of Tarshish which is thought by many to have been located in modern southern Spain in ancient Tartessus A signet ring found at Cadiz dating from the eighth 7th century BC The inscription on the ring generally accepted as Phoenician has been interpreted by a few scholars to be paleo hebraic An amphora dating from at least the first century found in Ibiza which bears imprints of two Hebrew characters Several early Jewish writers wrote that their families had lived in Spain since the destruction of the first temple Isaac Abravanel 1437 1508 stated that the Abravanel family had lived on the Iberian Peninsula for 2 000 years Some suggest that substantial Jewish immigration probably occurred during the Roman period of Hispania The province came under Roman control with the fall of Carthage after the Second Punic War 218 202 BC Exactly how soon after this time Jews made their way onto the scene in this context is a matter of speculation It is within the realm of possibility that they went there under the Romans as free men to take advantage of its rich resources The Jewish historian Josephus confirms that as early as 90 CE there was already a Jewish Diaspora living in Europe made up of the two tribes Judah and Benjamin Thus he writes in his Antiquities 78 there are but two tribes in Asia Turkey and Europe subject to the Romans while the ten tribes are beyond the Euphrates till now and are an immense multitude Although the spread of Jews into Europe is most commonly associated with the Diaspora that ensued from the Roman conquest of Judea emigration from Judea into the greater Roman Mediterranean area antedated the destruction of Jerusalem at the hands of the Romans under Titus Any Jews already in Hispania at this time would have been joined by those who had been enslaved by the Romans under Vespasian and Titus and dispersed to the extreme west during the period of the Jewish Wars and especially after the defeat of Judea in 70 One account placed the number carried off to Hispania at 80 000 Subsequent immigrations came into the area along both the northern African and southern European sides of the Mediterranean Among the earliest records that may refer specifically to Jews in the Iberian peninsula during the Roman period is Paul s Epistle to the Romans Scholars such as Josephus Flavius have taken Paul s intention to go to Hispania to preach the gospel Romans 15 24 28 to indicate the presence of Jewish communities there as well as the fact that Herod Antipas s banishment by Caligula in the year 39 may have been to Hispania 79 From a slightly later period Midrash Rabbah Leviticus Rabba 29 2 and Pesikta de Rav Kahana Rosh Hashanna both make mention of the Jewish Diaspora in Spain Hispania and their eventual return Perhaps the most direct and substantial of early references are the several decrees of the Council of Elvira convened in the early fourth century which address proper Christian behavior with regard to the Jews of Hispania As citizens of the Roman Empire the Jews of Hispania engaged in a variety of occupations including agriculture Until the adoption of Christianity Jews had close relations with non Jewish populations and played an active role in the social and economic life of the province The edicts of the Synod of Elvira provide evidence of Jews who were integrated enough into the greater community to cause alarm among some Of the council s 80 canonic decisions those that pertain to Jews maintained a separation between the two communities It seems that by this time the presence of Jews was of greater concern to Christian authorities than the presence of pagans Canon 16 which prohibited the marriage of Christians with Jews was worded more strongly than canon 15 which prohibited marriage with pagans Canon 78 threatens Christians who commit adultery with Jews with ostracism Canon 48 forbade the blessing of Christian crops by Jews and canon 50 forbade the sharing of meals by Christians and Jews Yet in comparison to Jewish life in Byzantium and Italy life for the early Jews in Hispania and the rest of southern Europe was relatively tolerable This is due in large measure to the difficulty the Church had in establishing itself in its western frontier In the west Germanic tribes such as the Suevi the Vandals and especially the Visigoths had more or less disrupted the political and ecclesiastical systems of the Roman empire and for several centuries the Jews enjoyed a degree of peace their brethren to the east did not Barbarian invasions brought most of the Iberian peninsula under Visigothic rule by the early fifth century Other than in their contempt for Trinitarian Christians the Arian Visigoths were largely uninterested in the religious creeds within their kingdom It was not until 506 when Alaric II 484 507 published his Brevarium Alaricianum Breviary of Alaric wherein he adopted the laws of the ousted Romans that a Visigothic king concerned himself with the Jews The situation of the Jews changed after the conversion of the Visigothic royal family under Recared from Arianism to Roman Catholicism in 587 In their desire to consolidate the realm under the new religion the Visigoths adopted an aggressive policy towards Jews As the king and the church acted in a single interest the Jews situation deteriorated Under successive Visigothic kings and under ecclesiastical authority many orders of expulsion forced conversion isolation enslavement execution and other punitive measures were made By 612 621 the situation for Jews became intolerable and many left Spain for nearby northern Africa In 711 thousands of Jews from North Africa accompanied the Moslems who invaded Spain subsuming Catholic Spain and turning much of it into an Arab state Al Andalus 80 The Jews of Hispania had been utterly embittered and alienated by Catholic rule by the time of the Muslim invasion To them the Moors was perceived as and indeed were a liberating force Wherever they went the Muslims were greeted by Jews eager to aid them in administering the country In many conquered towns the garrison was left in the hands of the Jews before the Muslims proceeded further north This began nearly four centuries of Muslim rule in the Iberian peninsula which became known as the Golden Age of Sephardi Jewry 13th century depiction of a Jew and Muslim playing chess in Al Andalus Jews in Muslim Iberia Edit See also Al Andalus Golden age of Jewish culture in the Iberian Peninsula and Timeline of the Muslim presence in the Iberian peninsula With the victory of Tariq ibn Ziyad in 711 the lives of the Sephardim changed dramatically Though Islamic law placed restrictions on dhimmis non Muslim members of monotheistic faiths the coming of the Moors was by and large welcomed by the Jews of Iberia Both Muslim and Christian sources claim that Jews provided valuable aid to the Muslim conquerors Once captured the defense of Cordoba was left in the hands of Jews and Granada Malaga Seville and Toledo were left to a mixed army of Jews and Moors Although in some towns Jews may have been helpful to Muslim success because of the small numbers they were of limited impact In spite of the restrictions placed upon the Jews as dhimmis life under Muslim rule was one of great opportunity and Jews flourished as they did not under the Christian Visigoths Many Jews came to Iberia seen as a land of tolerance and opportunity from the Christian and Muslim worlds Following initial Arab victories and especially with the establishment of Umayyad rule by Abd al Rahman I in 755 the native Jewish community was joined by Jews from the rest of Europe as well as from Arab lands from Morocco to Babylon citation needed Jewish communities were enriched culturally intellectually and religiously by the commingling of these diverse Jewish traditions further explanation needed Arabic culture of course also made a lasting impact on Sephardic cultural development General re evaluation of scripture was prompted by Muslim anti Jewish polemics and the spread of rationalism as well as the anti Rabbanite polemics of Karaites The cultural and intellectual achievements of the Arabs and much of the scientific and philosophical speculation of Ancient Greek culture which had been best preserved by Arab scholars was made available to the educated Jew The meticulous regard the Arabs had for grammar and style also had the effect of stimulating an interest in philological matters in general among Jews Arabic became the main language of Sephardic science philosophy and everyday business as had been the case with Babylonian geonim This thorough adoption of the Arabic language also greatly facilitated the assimilation of Jews into Moorish culture and Jewish activity in a variety of professions including medicine commerce finance and agriculture increased By the ninth century some members of the Sephardic community felt confident enough to take part in proselytizing amongst Christians This included the heated correspondences sent between Bodo Eleazar a former Christian deacon who had converted to Judaism in 838 and the Bishop of Cordoba Paulus Albarus who had converted from Judaism to Christianity Each man using such epithets as wretched compiler tried to convince the other to return to his former faith to no avail citation needed The Golden Age is most closely identified with the reign of Abd al Rahman III 882 942 the first independent Caliph of Cordoba and in particular with the career of his Jewish councilor Hasdai ibn Shaprut 882 942 Within this context of cultural patronage studies in Hebrew literature and linguistics flourished Hasdai benefitted world Jewry not only indirectly by creating a favorable environment for scholarly pursuits within Iberia but also by using his influence to intervene on behalf of foreign Jews in his letter to Byzantine Princess Helena he requested protection for the Jews under Byzantine rule attesting to the fair treatment of the Christians of al Andalus and perhaps indicating that such was contingent on the treatment of Jews abroad One notable contribution to Christian intellectualism is Ibn Gabirol s neo Platonic Fons Vitae The Source of Life Mekor Hayyim Thought by many to have been written by a Christian this work was admired by Christians and studied in monasteries throughout the Middle Ages though the work of Solomon Munk in the 19th century proved that the author of Fons Vitae was the Jewish ibn Gabirol 81 In addition to contributions of original work the Sephardim were active as translators Mainly in Toledo texts were translated between Greek Arabic Hebrew and Latin In translating the great works of Arabic Hebrew and Greek into Latin Iberian Jews were instrumental in bringing the fields of science and philosophy which formed much of the basis of Renaissance learning into the rest of Europe In the early 11th century centralized authority based at Cordoba broke down following the Berber invasion and the ousting of the Umayyads In its stead arose the independent taifa principalities under the rule of local Muwallad Arab Berber or Slavonic leaders Rather than having a stifling effect the disintegration of the caliphate expanded the opportunities to Jewish and other professionals The services of Jewish scientists doctors traders poets and scholars were generally valued by Christian and Muslim rulers of regional centers especially as order was restored in recently conquered towns Rabbi Samuel ha Nagid ibn Naghrela was the Vizier of Granada He was succeeded by his son Joseph ibn Naghrela who was slain by an incited mob along with most of the Jewish community The remnant fled to Lucena Observing the Havdalah ritual 14th century Spain The first major and most violent persecution in Islamic Spain was the 1066 Granada massacre which occurred on 30 December when a Muslim mob stormed the royal palace in Granada crucified Jewish vizier Joseph ibn Naghrela and massacred most of the Jewish population of the city after rumors spread that the powerful vizier was plotting to kill the weak minded and drunk King Badis ibn Habus 82 According to the 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia More than 1 500 Jewish families numbering 4 000 persons fell in one day 83 a number contested by some historians who deem it to be an example of the usual hyperbole in numerical estimates with which history abounds 84 The decline of the Golden Age began before the completion of the Christian Reconquista with the penetration and influence of the Almoravides and then the Almohads from North Africa These more intolerant sects abhorred the liberality of the Islamic culture of al Andalus including the position of authority some dhimmis held over Muslims When the Almohads gave the Jews a choice of either death or conversion to Islam many Jews emigrated Some such as the family of Maimonides fled south and east to the more tolerant Muslim lands while others went northward to settle in the growing Christian kingdoms Meanwhile the Reconquista continued in the north throughout the 12th century As various Arab lands fell to the Christians conditions for some Jews in the emerging Christian kingdoms became increasingly favorable As had happened during the reconstruction of towns following the breakdown of authority under the Umayyads the services of Jews were employed by the victorious Christian leaders Sephardic knowledge of the language and culture of the enemy their skills as diplomats and professionals as well as their desire for relief from intolerable conditions the very same reasons that they had proved useful to the Arabs in the early stages of the Muslim invasion made their services very valuable However the Jews from the Muslim south were not entirely secure in their northward migrations Old prejudices were compounded by newer ones Suspicions of complicity with the Muslims were alive and well as Jews immigrated speaking Arabic However many of the newly arrived Jews of the north prospered during the late 11th and early 12th centuries The majority of Latin documentation regarding Jews during this period refers to their landed property fields and vineyards In many ways life had come full circle for the Sephardim of al Andalus As conditions became more oppressive during the 12th and 13th centuries Jews again looked to an outside culture for relief Christian leaders of reconquered cities granted them extensive autonomy and Jewish scholarship recovered somewhat and developed as communities grew in size and importance However the Reconquista Jews never reached the same heights as had those of the Golden Age After the Reconquista Edit Among the Sephardim were many who were the descendants or heads of wealthy families and who as Marranos had occupied prominent positions in the countries they had left Some had been stated officials others had held positions of dignity within the Church many had been the heads of large banking houses and mercantile establishments and some were physicians or scholars who had officiated as teachers in high schools Their Spanish or Portuguese was a lingua franca that enabled Sephardim from different countries to engage in commerce and diplomacy With their social equals they associated freely without regard to religion and more likely with regard to equivalent or comparative education for they were generally well read which became a tradition and expectation They were received at the courts of sultans kings and princes and often were employed as ambassadors envoys or agents The number of Sephardim who have rendered important services to different countries is considerable as Samuel Abravanel or Abrabanel financial councilor to the viceroy of Naples or Moses Curiel or Jeromino Nunes da Costa serving as Agent to the Crown of Portugal in the United Provinces 85 86 Among other names mentioned are those of Belmonte Nasi Francisco Pacheco Blas Pedro de Herrera Palache Pimentel Azevedo Sagaste Salvador Sasportas Costa Curiel Cansino Schonenberg Sapoznik Zapatero Toledo Miranda Toledano Pereira and Teixeira The Sephardim distinguished themselves as physicians and statesmen and won the favor of rulers and princes in both the Christian and the Islamic world That the Sephardim were selected for prominent positions in every country where they settled was only in part due to the fact that Spanish had become a world language through the expansion of Spain into the world spanning Spanish Empire the cosmopolitan cultural background after long associations with Islamic scholars of the Sephardic families also made them extremely well educated for the times even well into the European Enlightenment For a long time the Sephardim took an active part in Spanish literature they wrote in prose and in rhyme and were the authors of theological philosophical belletristic aesthetic rather than content based writing pedagogic teaching and mathematical works The rabbis who in common with all the Sephardim emphasized a pure and euphonious pronunciation of Hebrew delivered their sermons in Spanish or in Portuguese Several of these sermons have appeared in print Their thirst for knowledge together with the fact that they associated freely with the outer world led the Sephardim to establish new educational systems Wherever they settled they founded schools that used Spanish as the medium of instruction Theatre in Constantinople was in Judaeo Spanish since it was forbidden to Muslims A representation of the 1506 Jewish Massacre in Lisbon In Portugal the Sephardim were given important roles in the sociopolitical sphere and enjoyed a certain amount of protection from the Crown e g Yahia Ben Yahia first Rabino Maior of Portugal and supervisor of the public revenue of the first King of Portugal D Afonso Henriques Even with the increasing pressure from the Catholic Church this state of affairs remained more or less constant and the number of Jews in Portugal grew with those running from Spain This changed with the marriage of D Manuel I of Portugal with the daughter of the Catholic Monarchs of the newly born Spain In 1497 the Decree ordering the expulsion or forced conversion of all the Jews was passed and the Sephardim either fled or went into secrecy under the guise of Cristaos Novos i e New Christians this Decree was symbolically revoked in 1996 by the Portuguese Parliament Those who fled to Genoa were only allowed to land provided they received baptism Those who were fortunate enough to reach the Ottoman Empire had a better fate the Sultan Bayezid II sarcastically citation needed sent his thanks to Ferdinand for sending him some of his best subjects thus impoverishing his own lands while enriching his Bayezid s Jews arriving in the Ottoman Empire were mostly resettled in and around Thessalonica and to some extent in Constantinople and Izmir This was followed by a great massacre of Jews in the city of Lisbon in 1506 and the establishment of the Portuguese Inquisition in 1536 This caused the flight of the Portuguese Jewish community which continued until the extinction of the Courts of Inquisition in 1821 by then there were very few Jews in Portugal In Amsterdam where Jews were especially prominent in the 17th century on account of their number wealth education and influence they established poetical academies after Spanish models two of these were the Academia de Los Sitibundos and the Academia de Los Floridos In the same city they also organized the first Jewish educational institution with graduate classes in which in addition to Talmudic studies the instruction was given in the Hebrew language The most important synagogue or Esnoga as it is usually called amongst Spanish and Portuguese Jews is the Amsterdam Esnoga usually considered the mother synagogue and the historical center of the Amsterdam minhag A sizable Sephardic community had settled in Morocco and other Northern African countries which were colonized by France in the 19th century Jews in Algeria were given French citizenship in 1870 by the decret Cremieux previously Jews and Muslims could apply for French citizenship but had to renounce the use of traditional religious courts and laws which many did not want to do When France withdrew from Algeria in 1962 the local Jewish communities largely relocated to France There are some tensions between some of those communities and the earlier French Jewish population who were mostly Ashkenazi Jews and with Arabic Muslim communities In the Age of Discoveries Edit Interior of the Portuguese synagogue in Amsterdam c 1680 The largest part of Spanish Jews expelled in 1492 fled to Portugal where they eluded persecution for a few years The Jewish community in Portugal was perhaps then some 15 of that country s population 38 They were declared Christians by Royal decree unless they left but the King hindered their departure needing their artisanship and working population for Portugal s overseas enterprises and territories Later Sephardic Jews settled in many trade areas controlled by the Empire of Philip II and others With various countries in Europe also the Sephardi Jews established commercial relations In a letter dated 25 November 1622 King Christian IV of Denmark invites Jews of Amsterdam to settle in Gluckstadt where among other privileges the free exercise of their religion would be assured to them Alvaro Caminha in Cape Verde islands who received the land as a grant from the crown established a colony with Jews forced to stay on the island of Sao Tome Principe island was settled in 1500 under a similar arrangement Attracting settlers proved difficult however the Jewish settlement was a success and their descendants settled many parts of Brazil 87 In 1579 Luis de Carvajal y de la Cueva a Portuguese born Converso Spanish Crown officer was awarded a large swath of territory in New Spain known as Nuevo Reino de Leon He founded settlements with other conversos that would later become Monterrey In particular Jews established relations between the Dutch and South America They contributed to the establishment of the Dutch West Indies Company in 1621 and some were members of the directorate The ambitious schemes of the Dutch for the conquest of Brazil were carried into effect through Francisco Ribeiro a Portuguese captain who is said to have had Jewish relations in the Netherlands Some years afterward when the Dutch in Brazil appealed to the Netherlands for craftsmen of all kinds many Jews went to Brazil About 600 Jews left Amsterdam in 1642 accompanied by two distinguished scholars Isaac Aboab da Fonseca and Moses Raphael de Aguilar Jews supported the Dutch in the struggle between the Netherlands and Portugal for possession of Brazil Execution of Mariana de Carabajal in Mexico City daughter of Francisca Nunez de Carabajal in 1601 by the Santo Oficio In 1642 Aboab da Fonseca was appointed rabbi at Kahal Zur Israel Synagogue in the Dutch colony of Pernambuco Recife Brazil Most of the white inhabitants of the town were Sephardic Jews from Portugal who had been banned by the Portuguese Inquisition to this town at the other side of the Atlantic Ocean In 1624 the colony had been occupied by the Dutch By becoming the rabbi of the community Aboab da Fonseca was the first appointed rabbi of the Americas The name of his congregation was Kahal Zur Israel Synagogue and the community had a synagogue a mikveh and a yeshiva as well However during the time he was a rabbi in Pernambuco the Portuguese re occupied the place again in 1654 after a struggle of nine years Aboab da Fonseca managed to return to Amsterdam after the occupation of the Portuguese Members of his community immigrated to North America and were among the founders of New York City but some Jews took refuge in Serido The Sephardic kehilla in Zamosc in the 16th and 17th centuries was the one of its kind in the entire Poland of that time It was an autonomous institution and until the mid 17th century it was not under the authority of the highest organ of the Jewish self government in the Republic of Poland the Council of Four Lands 88 Besides merchants a great number of physicians were among the Spanish Jews in Amsterdam Samuel Abravanel David Nieto Elijah Montalto and the Bueno family Joseph Bueno was consulted in the illness of Prince Maurice April 1623 Jews were admitted as students at the university where they studied medicine as the only branch of the science of practical use to them for they were not permitted to practice law and the oath they would be compelled to take excluded them from the professorships Neither were Jews taken into the trade guilds a resolution passed by the city of Amsterdam in 1632 the cities being autonomous excluded them Exceptions however were made in the case of trades that related to their religion printing bookselling and the selling of meat poultry groceries and drugs In 1655 a Jew was exceptionally permitted to establish a sugar refinery Jonathan Ray a professor of Jewish theological studies has argued that the community of Sephardim was formed more during the 1600s than the medieval period He explains that prior to expulsion Spanish Jewish communities did not have a shared identity in the sense that developed in diaspora They did not carry any particular Hispano Jewish identity into exile with them but certain shared cultural traits contributed to the formation of the diaspora community from what had historically been independent communities 89 The Holocaust Edit A young woman weeps during the deportation of Jews of Ioannina Greece on 25 March 1944 The Holocaust that devastated European Jewry and virtually destroyed its centuries old culture also wiped out the great European population centers of Sephardi Jewry and led to the almost complete demise of its unique language and traditions Sephardi Jewish communities from France and the Netherlands in the northwest to Yugoslavia and Greece in the southeast almost disappeared On the eve of World War II the European Sephardi community was concentrated in Southeastern Europe countries of Greece Yugoslavia and Bulgaria Its leading centers were in Salonika Sarajevo Belgrade and Sofia The experience of Jewish communities in those countries during the war varied greatly and depended on the type of regime under which they fell The Jewish communities of Yugoslavia and northern Greece including the 50 000 Jews of Salonika fell under direct German occupation in April 1941 and bore the full weight and intensity of Nazi repressive measures from dispossession humiliation and forced labor to hostage taking and finally deportation to the Auschwitz concentration camp and extermination 90 The Jewish population of southern Greece fell under the jurisdiction of the Italians who eschewed the enactment of anti Jewish legislation and resisted whenever possible German efforts to transfer them to occupied Poland until the surrender of Italy on 8 September 1943 brought the Jews under German control Sephardi Jews in Bosnia and Croatia were ruled by a German created Independent State of Croatia state from April 1941 which subjected them to pogrom like actions before herding them into local camps where they were murdered side by side with Serbs and Roma see Porajmos The Jews of Macedonia and Thrace were controlled by Bulgarian occupation forces which after rendering them stateless rounded them up and turned them over to the Germans for deportation Finally the Jews of Bulgaria proper were under the rule of a Nazi ally that subjected them to ruinous anti Jewish legislation but ultimately yielded to pressure from Bulgarian parliamentarians clerics and intellectuals not to deport them More than 50 000 Bulgarian Jews were thus saved The Jews in North Africa identified themselves only as Jews or European Jews having been westernized by French and Italian colonization During World War II and until Operation Torch the Jews of Morocco Algeria and Tunesia governed by pro Nazi Vichy France suffered the same antisemitic legislation that Jews suffered in France mainland They did not however directly suffer the more extreme Nazi Germany antisemitic policies and nor did the Jews in Italian Libya The Jewish communities in those European North Africa countries in Bulgaria and in Denmark were the only ones who were spared the mass deportation and mass murder that afflicted other Jewish communities Operation Torch therefore saved more than 400 000 Jews in European North Africa Later history and culture Edit The Jews in French Algeria were awarded French citizenship by 1870 Cremieux Decree They were therefore considered part of the European pieds noirs community in spite of having been established in North Africa for many centuries rather than subject to the Indigenat status imposed on their Muslim former neighbors Most consequently moved to France in the late 1950s and early 1960s after Tunisia Morocco and Algeria became independent and they now make up a majority of the French Jewish community Today the Sephardim have preserved the romances and the ancient melodies and songs of Spain and Portugal as well as a large number of old Portuguese and Spanish proverbs 91 A number of children s plays like for example El Castillo are still popular among them and they still manifest a fondness for the dishes peculiar to Iberia such as the pastel or pastelico a sort of meat pie and the pan de Espana or pan de Leon At their festivals they follow the Spanish custom of distributing dulces or dolces a confection wrapped in paper bearing a picture of the magen David six pointed star In Mexico the Sephardic community originates mainly from Turkey Greece and Bulgaria In 1942 the Colegio Hebreo Tarbut was founded in collaboration with the Ashkenazi family and instruction was in Yiddish In 1944 the Sephardim community established a separate Colegio Hebreo Sefaradi with 90 students where instruction was in Hebrew and complemented with classes on Jewish customs By 1950 there were 500 students In 1968 a group of young Sephardim created the group Tnuat Noar Jinujit Dor Jadash in support of the creation of the state of Israel In 1972 the Majazike Tora institute is created aiming to prepare young male Jews for their Bar Mitzvah 92 While the majority of American Jews today are Ashkenazim in Colonial times Sephardim made up the majority of the Jewish population For example the 1654 Jews who arrived in New Amsterdam fled from the colony of Recife Brazil after the Portuguese seized it from the Dutch Through most of the 18th century American synagogues conducted and recorded their business in Portuguese even if their daily language was English It was not until widespread German immigration to the United States in the 19th century that the tables turned and Ashkenazim initially from Germany but by the 20th century from Eastern Europe began to dominate the American Jewish landscape The Sephardim usually have followed the general rules for Spanish and Portuguese names Many used to bear Portuguese and Spanish names however it is noteworthy that a large number of Sephardic names are of Hebrew and Arabic roots and are totally absent in Iberian patronyms and are therefore often seen as typically Jewish Many of the names are associated with non Jewish Christian families and individuals and are by no means exclusive to Jews After 1492 many marranos changed their names to hide their Jewish origins and avoid persecution adopting professions and even translating such patronyms to local languages like Arabic and even German citation needed It was common to choose the name of the Parish Church where they have been baptized into the Christian faith such as Santa Cruz or the common name of the word Messiah Savior Salvador or adopted the name of their Christian godparents 93 Dr Mark Hilton s research demonstrated in IPS DNA testing that the last name of Marranos linked with the location of the local parish was correlated 89 3 In contrast to Ashkenazic Jews who do not name newborn children after living relatives Sephardic Jews often name their children after the children s grandparents even if they are still alive The first son and daughter are traditionally named after the paternal grandparents then the maternal parents names are next in line for the remaining children After that additional children s names are free so to speak meaning that one can choose whatever name without any more naming obligations The only instance in which Sephardic Jews will not name after their own parents is when one of the spouses shares a common first name with a mother father in law since Jews will not name their children after themselves There are times though when the free names are used to honor the memory of a deceased relative who died young or childless These conflicting naming conventions can be troublesome when children are born into mixed Ashkenazic Sephardic households A notable exception to the distinct Ashkenazi and Sephardi naming traditions is found among Dutch Jews where Ashkenazim have for centuries followed the tradition otherwise attributed to Sephardim See Chuts Citizenship laws in Spain and Portugal Edit Since April 2013 Sephardim who are descendants of those expelled in the inquisition are entitled to claim Portuguese citizenship provided that they belong to a Sephardic community of Portuguese origin with ties to Portugal The amendment to Portugal s Law on Nationality was approved unanimously on 11 April 2013 94 and remains open to applications as of March 2023 update 95 A similar law was approved in Spain in 2014 96 and passed in 2015 By the expiry date on 30 September 2019 Spain had received 127 000 applications mostly from Latin America 97 Sephardic pedigrees Edit See also Sephardic Jewish surnames Spanish and Portuguese names List of Sephardic Jews List of Iberian JewsAbravanel family 98 Aboab family 99 Alfandari family 100 Al Taras family 101 Astruc family 102 Benveniste family 103 Cansino family 104 Carabajal family 105 Carasso family 106 Carvajal family 107 Castellazzo family 108 Cicurel family 109 Coronel family 110 better source needed Curiel family 111 better source needed De Castro family 112 Espadero family 113 Galante family 114 Henriques family 115 Ibn Tibbon family 116 Laguna family 117 118 Lindo family 119 better source needed Lopes Suasso family 120 better source needed Mocatta family 121 Monsanto family 122 better source needed Najara family 123 better source needed Pallache family 124 better source needed Paredes family 125 Sanchez family 126 Sassoon family 127 Senigaglia family 128 Soncino family 129 Sosa family 130 Taitazak family 131 Taroc family 132 Vaez family 133 Relations with Ashkenazim EditFurther information Racism in Israel Intra Jewish racism Racism between Jews During the medieval period a considerable number of Ashkenazi Jews from historic Ashkenaz Germany had moved to study Kabbalah and Torah under the guidance of Sephardic Jewish Rabbis in Iberia These Ashkenazi Jews who assimilated into the Sephardic society eventually gained the surnames Ashkenazi 134 if they came from Germany and Zarfati if they came from France 135 Sephardi Ashkenazi relations have at times been tense and clouded by arrogance snobbery and claims of racial superiority with both sides claiming the inferiority of the other based upon such features as physical traits and culture 136 137 138 139 140 In some instances Sephardi Jews have joined Ashkenazi communities and have intermarried 141 142 Leading Sephardic rabbis EditIslamic Spain dd Isaac Alfasi Joseph ibn Migash Judah al Bargeloni Solomon ibn Gabirol Abraham ibn Ezra Moses ibn Ezra Yehuda Halevi Samuel ibn Naghrela Bahya ibn Paquda Maimonides Isaac ibn Ghiyyat Christian Spain dd Nahmanides Shlomo ben Aderet Yom Tob of Seville the Ritba Nissim of Gerona Asher ben Jehiel Ashkenazi by birth became Chief Rabbi of Toledo Jacob ben Asher Moses de Leon Abraham Senior Abraham Saba David Abudirham Isaac Campanton Isaac Aboab I Isaac Aboab of Castile Don Isaac Abravanel Profiat Duran Menachem Meiri Vidal of Tolosa After the expulsion dd David ben Solomon ibn Abi Zimra Jacob Berab Levi ibn Ḥabib Yosef Karo Yaakov de Castro Bezalel Ashkenazi Moses ben Jacob Cordovero Ḥayim Vital Moses Alshech Abraham Cohen Pimentel Solomon Nissim Algazi Yaakov Culi Hayim Palaggi Chaim Yosef David Azulai David Pardo Azaria Piccio Jacob Rakkah Mas ud Hai Rakkah Recent Sephardi rabbis dd Israel Abuhatzeira Amram Aburbeh Shlomo Amar Elijah Benamozegh David de Sola Pool Mordechai Eliyahu Shem Tob Gaguine Solomon Gaon Yosef Hayyim Yitzhak Kaduri Ovadiah Yosef Pinchas Toledano Joseph Dweck Elie AbadieGenetics EditMain articles Genetic history of Europe Genetic history of the Middle East and Genetic studies on Jews Further information Medical genetics of Jews Genetically Sephardic Jews are closely related to their Ashkenazi Jewish counterparts and studies have revealed that they mainly have a mixed Middle Eastern Levantine and Southern European ancestry 143 Due to their origin in the Mediterranean basin and strict practice of endogamy there is a higher incidence of certain hereditary diseases and inherited disorders in Sephardi Jews However there are no specifically Sephardic genetic diseases since the diseases in this group are not necessarily common to Sephardic Jews specifically but are instead common in the particular country of birth and sometimes among many other Jewish groups generally 144 The most important ones are Beta Thalassemia Familial Mediterranean fever Glucose 6 phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency and Gilbert s Syndrome Glycogen storage disease type III Machado Joseph diseaseList of Nobel laureates Edit1906 Henri Moissan Chemistry 1911 Tobias Asser Peace 1959 Emilio G Segre 145 Physics 1968 Rene Cassin 146 Peace 1969 Salvador Luria 147 Medicine 1980 Baruj Benacerraf 148 Medicine 1981 Elias Canetti 149 Literature 1985 Franco Modigliani 150 Economics 1997 Claude Cohen Tannoudji 151 Physics 2012 Serge Haroche 152 Physics 2014 Patrick Modiano 153 LiteratureSee also EditMa amad a Council of Elders of Sephardic communities Jews of Catalonia Arab Jews Maghrebi Jews Mizrahi Jews Berber Jews Adeni Jews Yemenite Jews Eastern Sephardim North African Sephardim Spanish and Portuguese Jews Sephardic law and customs History of the Jews in Jamaica Jewish history Jewish culture Jewish diaspora Jewish ethnic divisions Ashkenazi Jews Hebrews Israelites Groups claiming affiliation with Israelites Ten Lost Tribes Judaeo Portuguese Judaeo Spanish List of Sephardic Jews List of notable Mizrahi Jews and Sephardi Jews in Israel Yeshiva Sephardi yeshivas and Category Sephardic yeshivasNotes Edit Hebrew ס פ ר ד ים Modern Hebrew Sfaradim Tiberian Sep araddim also י הו ד י ס פ ר ד Ye hude Sepharad lit The Jews of Spain Spanish Judios sefardies or sefarditas Portuguese Judeus sefarditasReferences Edit Aroeste Sarah 13 December 2018 Latino Hispanic or Sephardic A Sephardi Jew explains some commonly confused terms My Jewish Learning My Jewish Learning Archived from the original on 7 August 2020 Retrieved 1 December 2019 Aroeste Sarah 13 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Wayback Machine And the captivity of this host of the children of Israel shall possess that of the Canaanites even unto Zarephath and the captivity of Jerusalem which is in Sepharad shall possess the cities of the south King James Version Strabo Geography III 2 14 15 Marta Garcia Morcillo Patterns of trade and economy in Strabo s Geography in The Routledge Companion to Strabo Taylor amp Francis 2017 chapter 12 Sephardim www jewishvirtuallibrary org Archived from the original on 17 January 2017 Retrieved 11 May 2021 Rabinowitz Dan 4 September 2007 the Seforim blog Marc Shapiro What Do Adon Olam and ס ט Mean Archived from the original on 4 October 2018 Retrieved 15 October 2018 Mintz Alan L The Boom in Contemporary Israeli Fiction University Press of New England Hanover NH USA 1997 p115 Pure Sephardim liable to carry mutation for cancer Jpost com 2011 Archived from the original on 8 May 2014 Retrieved 7 May 2014 Etimologia de Sefardi in Spanish Diccionario etimologico castellano en linea 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Studies 2001 Kaplan Yosef An Alternative Path to Modernity The Sephardi Diaspora in Western Europe Brill Publishers 2000 ISBN 90 04 11742 3 Katz Solomon Monographs of the Mediaeval Academy of America No 12 The Jews in the Visigothic and Frankish Kingdoms of Spain and Gaul Cambridge Massachusetts The Mediaeval Society of America 1937 Kedourie Elie editor Spain and the Jews The Sephardi Experience 1492 and After Thames amp Hudson 1992 Levie Tirtsah Poverty and Welfare Among the Portuguese Jews in Early Modern Amsterdam Liverpool Liverpool University Press 2012 Raphael Chaim The Sephardi Story A Celebration of Jewish History London Valentine Mitchell amp Co Ltd 1991 Rauschenbach Sina The Sephardic Atlantic Colonial Histories and Postcolonial Perspectives New York Palgrave Macmillan 2019 Rauschenbach Sina Sephardim and Ashkenazim Jewish Jewish Encounters in History and Literature Berlin De Gruyter 2020 forthcoming Sarna Nahum M Hebrew and Bible Studies in Medieval Spain in Sephardi Heritage Vol 1 ed R D Barnett New York Ktav Publishing House Inc 1971 Sassoon Solomon David The Spiritual Heritage of the Sephardim in The Sephardi Heritage Vol 1 ed R D Barnett New York Ktav Publishing House Inc 1971 Segre Emilio 1993 A Mind Always in Motion the Autobiography of Emilio Segre Berkeley California University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 07627 3 OCLC 25629433 Free Online UC Press E Books Collection Stein Gloria Sananes Marguerite Journey of a Sephardic Woman Morgantown PA Masthof Press 1997 Stillman Norman Aspects of Jewish Life in Islamic Spain in Aspects of Jewish Culture in the Middle Ages ed Paul E Szarmach Albany State University of New York Press 1979 Swetschinski Daniel Reluctant Cosmopolitans The Portuguese Jews of Seventeenth Century Amsterdam Litmann Library of Jewish Civilization 2000 Zolitor Jeff The Jews of Sepharad Philadelphia Congress of Secular Jewish Organizations CSJO 1997 The Jews of Sepharad reprinted with permission on CSJO website The Kahal Zur Israel Synagogue Recife Brazil Database of Jewish communities Archived from the original on 24 November 2007 Retrieved 2008 06 28 History of the Jewish community of Recife Database of Jewish communities Archived from the original on 2008 01 04 Retrieved 2008 06 28 Synagogue in Brazilian town Recife considered oldest in the Americas Reuters 2008 11 12 Archived from the original on 30 May 2012 Retrieved 2008 06 29 Oldest synagogue in Americas draws tourists to BrazilExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sephardi Jews Genealogy Sefardies org Sephardic Genealogy and official web in Spain Sephardic Genealogy Multiple searchable databases for Sephardic genealogy Consolidated Index of Sephardic Surnames Extensive bibliography for Sephardim and Sephardic Genealogy Sephardic names translated into EnglishGenetics Bedford Felice L April 2012 Sephardic signature in haplogroup T mitochondrial DNA European Journal of Human Genetics 20 4 441 448 doi 10 1038 ejhg 2011 200 PMC 3306851 PMID 22108605 History and community European Sephardic Institute International Sephardic Education Foundation International Sephardic Journal Sephardic educational materials for children International Sephardic Leadership Council Radio Sefarad an internet radio broadcasting from Madrid includes Huellas a weekly program for those looking for the origins of their Sephardic surnames Turkish Sephardi Salom Newspaper Sephardic Dating Project From Andalusian Orangeries to Anatolia Sephardic Jewish History Iberian Peninsula Usurped American Sephardi Federation Pascua Marrana Surname Rojas Shajor black sefardim American Jewish Historical Society New England Archives Sefarad Journal on Hebraic Sephardim and Middle East Studies ILC Archived 17 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine CSIC scientific articles in Spanish English and other languages Hebrew Synagogue Hebrew Synagogue is seen as an advisory body on matters pertaining to religious practice and is widely consulted by many agencies Philosophical Sepharadim in the Nineteenth Century New Directions and Old Values by Jose Faur outlining the positive yet traditionalist responses to modernity typical of the Sepharadi Jewish community Sepharadi Thought in the Presence of the European Enlightenment by Jose Faur identifying the difference in reaction to the European Enlightenment among Sepharadi and Ashkenazi communities Anti Semitism in the Sepharadi Mind by Jose Faur describing the cultural response of Sepharadim to anti Semitism Can Sephardic Judaism be Reconstructed The Special Character of Sephardic ToleranceMusic and liturgy Folk Literature of the Sephardic Jews Searchable archive of audio recordings of Sephardic ballads and other oral literature collected from informants from around the world from 1950s until the 1990s by Professor Samuel Armistead and his colleagues maintained by Professor Bruce Rosenstock Sephardic Pizmonim Project Music of the Middle Eastern Sephardic Community Daniel Halfon website of a British born cantor and leading exponent of the liturgical tradition of Spanish and Portuguese Jews Liturgy of the Spanish Synagogue in Rome performed by Rev Alberto Funaro Isaac Azose website of a cantor from Seattle WA USA instrumental in preservation of the Sephardic liturgical tradition of Rhodes Songs of the Sephardic Jewish Women of Morocco Internet Radio Show featuring field recordings of Sephardic Jewish Women in Tangier amp Tetuan 1954 w song texts translated into English A Guide to Jewish Bulgaria published by Vagabond Media Sofia 2011 Diaspora Sefardi Jordi Savall Hesperion XXI Alia Vox AV9809 Katalanim songs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sephardic Jews amp oldid 1152294679, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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