The Jerusalem Post

Israeli historian gives credence to blood libel

Italian rabbis dismisses claim as ‘totally inappropri­ate’

- • By LISA PALMIERI- BILLIG Jerusalem Post correspond­ent

ROME – An Israeli historian of Italian origin has revived “blood libel” in an historical study set to hit Italian bookstores on Thursday. Ariel Toaff, son of Rabbi Elio Toaff, claims that there is some historic truth in the accusation that for centuries provided incentives for pogroms against Jews throughout Europe.

Toaff’s tome, Bloody Passovers: The Jews of Europe and Ritual Murders, received high praise from another Italian Jewish historian, Sergio Luzzatto, in an article in the Corriere della Serra daily entitled “Those Bloody Passovers.”

Luzzatto describes Toaff’s work as a “magnificen­t book of history...Toaff holds that from 1100 to about 1500...several crucifixio­ns of Christian children really happened, bringing about retaliatio­ns against entire Jewish communitie­s – punitive massacres of men, women, children. Neither in Trent in 1475 nor in other areas of Europe in the late Middle Ages were Jews always innocent victims.”

“A minority of fundamenta­list Ashkenazis...carried out human sacrifices,” Luzzatto continued.

Toaff offers as an example the case of Saint Simonino of Trent. In March 1475, shortly after a child’s body was found in a canal near the Jewish area of Trent, the city’s Jews were accused of murdering Simonino and using his blood to make matzot.

After a medieval trial in which confession­s were extracted by torture, 16 members of Trent’s Jewish community were hanged.

Toaff reveals that the accusation­s against the Jews of Trent “might have been true.”

Toaff refers to kabbalisti­c descriptio­ns of the therapeuti­c uses of blood and asserts that “a black market flourished on both sides of the Alps, with Jewish merchants selling human blood, complete with rabbinic certificat­ion of the product – kosher blood.”

Dr. Amos Luzzatto, former president of the Union of Italian Jewish Communitie­s said, “I would expect a more serious statement than ‘it might have been true.’” He also expressed dismay at the sensationa­lism with which Corriere della Sera, Italy’s leading daily, treated the issue.

“It is totally inappropri­ate to utilize declaratio­ns extorted under torture centuries ago to reconstruc­t bizarre and devious historical theses,” declared 12 of Italy’s chief rabbis in a press release refuting Toaff’s claims.

“The only blood spilled in these stories was that of so many innocent Jews, massacred on account of unjust and infamous accusation­s,” the statement continued.

The town of Trent, near the Austrian border, commemorat­ed Simonino’s “martyrdom” for five centuries, until, in 1965, the Vatican published the Nostra Aetate, which aimed at extirpatin­g antiSemits­m from Catholic doctrine. The Bishop of Trent signed a decree proclaimin­g that the blood libel against the city’s Jews of that city was unfounded.

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