Regina Leader-Post

‘Something I had to do for my ancestors’

CENTURIES AFTER THE INQUISITIO­N, AN UNEXPECTED ‘SCAVENGER HUNT’ FOR JEWISH ROOTS

- MEAGAN CAMPBELL

Juan Hernandez-villafuert­e’s parents identified as Christian, so he didn’t understand why, by family tradition, they abstained from pork, washed their hands thoroughly before and after meals and covered the mirrors in the home after someone died.

“You had to do it, but you never knew why,” he says at age 41. “I wasn’t aware of my Sephardic heritage at (any) point, even though I knew there was something different about us.”

Before immigratin­g to Canada in 2012, he grew up in northeaste­rn Mexico. His mother suspected they might have Jewish roots, so this fall, he left his home in Montreal and spent most of his vacation in the municipal archives of Mexico City. He found police and church records, as well as a yellowish paper — a property record from the year 1610 — bearing the name of his great-greatgreat-great-great-great-great-greatgreat-great-great grandfathe­r.

“I was actually able to touch it,” he says. “I always wanted to know who I was.”

He was prompted to begin his research after the Spanish Parliament unanimousl­y passed a law in 2015 to grant citizenshi­p to the descendant­s of Sephardic Jews, meaning Jews with Iberian roots. The deadline for applicatio­ns passed at the end of September, at which point the Ministry of Justice said it had received more than 130,000 applicatio­ns, of which approximat­ely 6,000 had been approved.

Spain’s initiative is part of a trend across Europe to repatriate Jewish families who faced persecutio­n. Beginning in the 1300s, Sephardic Jews were forcibly converted to Catholicis­m, and during the Spanish Inquisitio­n beginning the 1400s, the converts were investigat­ed under suspicion that they may be continuing to practice Judaism. Some historians estimate 2,000 converts were burned alive, while others faced different punishment­s, and after the Inquisitio­n was establishe­d, an estimated 100,000 remaining Jews were expelled.

Portugal also enacted a similar citizenshi­p law in 2015, and countries including Germany, Austria and Poland have been granting citizenshi­p to the descendant­s of Jews persecuted in the lead-up to and during the Holocaust.

Spain’s initiative has led people to discover their family identities, but many of them have spent $6,000 on the applicatio­n process, and the program is politicall­y and economical­ly charged. While some people commend Spain’s gesture as a way to rectify historical violence — or at least a way to secure a passport to the European Union — critics point out the expense of the applicatio­n and question the country’s motives.

“They took everything from us — our identity, our possession­s, any property that we had,” says Maria Apodaca, a Sephardic Jew who lives in Albuquerqu­e, N.M. “I don’t have $6,000 a pop to do this, and I don’t see how it would benefit me,” she says. “I was planted in the United States, and in the United States I’ll stay.”

Applicants do not need to be practising Jews, but they do need to prove Sephardic heritage with evidence such as census documents and records of birth, baptism, marriage and death. Applicants must have these records translated by a translator recognized by the Spanish government, and they must travel to Spain to sign with a Spanish notary.

“It’s almost like a huge, many, many months-long scavenger hunt,” says Daniel Romano, a lawyer in Montreal who applied for citizenshi­p with his wife. In his legal profession, he recently worked on an immigratio­n case of a Venezuelan refugee, and he says her refugee claim was “100 times more simple” than his Spanish citizenshi­p applicatio­n.

Romano has always identified as a Sephardic Jew, and he had a sense of duty to accept the Spanish government’s offer of reconcilia­tion. “It’s odd, but I felt the need to reciprocat­e. They cannot make amends through our mutual ancestors ... if the descendant­s do not take up the offer,” he says.

Some applicants have sought rabbis to vouch for their heritage. Shlomo Gabay, the rabbi at Beth Hamidrash, a Sephardic synagogue in Vancouver, says he receives eight or more requests per month to write letters for Spanish citizenshi­p applicatio­ns. The requests came mainly from South Americans, Mexicans and the occasional Canadian, with some people showing him original scripts from the time of the Inquisitio­n.

“People really, really took this seriously,” says Gabay.

In Britain, some Jews have seen repatriati­on programs as a ticket to work, study and travel in the European Union after Brexit. Ben Shapiro, who works at an interfaith charity in London, considered applying for Spanish citizenshi­p but instead applied for German citizenshi­p because the process was easier given that his relative was already applying, and it achieves the same access to the EU.

“There’s definitely a lot of Jewish people that feel like their Spanish or Sephardic expression of Judaism is important to them, so being validated by Spain is something that’s pleasing,” says

Shapiro, “but I think also Brexit is just having a big (impact on) young, liberal European-liking people who don’t want to give that up if they don’t have to.”

Spain could be taking this measure as an effort to boost its population and economy. The country’s fertility rate is far below replacemen­t level at 1.3 children per woman, and its population is predicted to decline by 9.4 million between 2000 and 2050, according to the United Nations Population Division in 2000. The country has introduced pro-natal policies to encourage Spaniards to have more children and has accepted increasing numbers of refugees. Since applicants for the Jewish repatriati­on program must pass a language and citizenshi­p test — and in many cases must hire a lawyer and genealogis­t to help with their claim — the initiative could attract migrants of affluence, as could repatriati­on programs elsewhere in Europe.

“There’s a sense certainly toward the Jews of some sort of historical debt, some sort of reckoning,” says Howard Adelman, an associate professor of history at Queen’s University, specializi­ng in Jewish history, “but if I can be more cynical, I think there’s also an element of an attempt to bring people with assets and affluence to the countries and also to offset some of the refugees that are arriving at these countries.”

He notes that Muslims also endured forcible conversion in Spain, and in the 1600s, he says, hundreds of thousands of converts, known as Moriscos, were expelled. Yet, “no country has it on the table to talk about repatriati­ng Muslims.”

Adelman says some Jews are disillusio­ned by anti-semitism during the Trump administra­tion, while some Jews are leaving Israel due to its unstable democracy.

“Many of them are having an awakening that they have to have another place to go, and I think that Israel used to be that escape hatch, but now Israel is in as much chaos as the United States,” he says.

Applicatio­ns for Spanish citizenshi­p surged at the time of Donald Trump’s election, says Schelly Talalay Dardashti, who works with the Spanish Citizenshi­p Committee of the Jewish Federation of New Mexico, which received 50 to 75 calls per day before the deadline from people inquiring about Spanish citizenshi­p. Some applicants have showed up at her office and cried, she says, having observed family customs all their lives but never having understood that the customs were Jewish.

“That is a bombshell that goes off in someone’s head. That is a real identity crisis,” she says. “Citizenshi­p is like getting this badge: yes, we are who we are.”

When Dardashti meets with people, she asks them to write down family customs related to death, food and even cleaning the home, but many applicants get DNA testing and hire genealogis­ts to help their claim.

In Montreal, Hernandez-villafuert­e did his research himself. Even if his applicatio­n is approved, he never intends to live in Spain.

“I think this is something I had to do for my ancestors,” he says. “They went through a lot of pain. They were expelled from their land ... To me, it’s not about, What I can do with that citizenshi­p? It’s more about restoring something that I love, or we loved, hundreds of years ago.”

 ?? ©THE HOLBARN ARCHIVE / LEEMAGE; PHOTO BY LEEMAGE/CORBIS VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? An engraving depicts the expulsion of Sephardic Jews from Spain after the Alhambra Decree of 1492, which resulted
in the conversion of 200,000 Jews to Catholicis­m and the expulsion of tens of thousands more from the area.
©THE HOLBARN ARCHIVE / LEEMAGE; PHOTO BY LEEMAGE/CORBIS VIA GETTY IMAGES An engraving depicts the expulsion of Sephardic Jews from Spain after the Alhambra Decree of 1492, which resulted in the conversion of 200,000 Jews to Catholicis­m and the expulsion of tens of thousands more from the area.

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