The Jerusalem Post

Madrid businessma­n on a mission to teach Spaniards about their Jewish roots

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The first online Jewish museum devoted to Spanish-Jewish culture will be activated as a first step toward an actual museum in Madrid, co-founder and president of the Fundacion HispanoJud­ia (FHJ - the Hispanic Jewish Foundation) David Hatchwell Altaras told The Jerusalem Post in a Zoom interview from his home in the Spanish capital this past week.

“We’re working on a state-of-theart Jewish Museum here in Madrid,” he said. “The virtual phase should be ready by summer 2023 and the physical one will be ready by summer 2024. We already have a beautiful site, with an amazing prime location of around 28,000 square feet.”

Hatchwell Altaras said that the foundation, which he co-founded in 2015, has invested €1.5 million for the online museum and that “we are going to be building an overall museum, which is going to be a €20 million project. We have already obtained a substantia­l amount of that – about half.”

“The Museo HispanoJud­ío is our most important project,” Hatchwell Altaras said. “It will be a place to rediscover our origins, our values, and the desire for a future of fraternity and peace.” The mission of MHJ, in his eyes “is to teach future generation­s that Judaism is an intrinsic element to Spanish and Hispanic identity. Judaism is not something foreign – on the contrary,” and to establish bridges of mutual understand­ing between the Spanish-speaking and Jewish worlds.

The online museum is expected to be “a virtual experience, something different from everything that exists today in terms of online museums,” he said. “It’s an opportunit­y to create a transforma­tive journey ‘from the crowd to the community,’ and to experiment with a living Judaism.”

Hatchwell Altaras explained that “visitors will be able to travel through time and thus immerse themselves in historical­ly unique moments. The virtual museum will raise questions and provide tools for the visitor to find the answers along their personal route.”

During the tour, visitors will be given the opportunit­y to add content to their own “personal virtual basket,” to continue enjoying the museum and its exhibition­s once they get back home.

A LEADING Spanish businessma­n, philanthro­pist and world renowned leader of Jewish initiative­s and causes, Hatchwell Altaras serves as President of Excem Grupo, a diversifie­d internatio­nal group founded by his late father, leading philanthro­pist and visionary, Mauricio Hatchwell Toledano. The group was establishe­d in 1971 as a Spanish trading and investment firm. T6oday it is focused on the technologi­cal, real estate and content areas.

Hatchwell Altaras is chairman of SIR - the Secure Income REIT (Real Estate Investment Trust) based in Spain and specialize­d in co-living. He also chairs a REIT called SITUR, which is the number one hostel owner and operator in the Iberian Peninsula. He is an investor and a member of the Internatio­nal Advisory

Board of OurCrowd, an Israeli equity crowdfundi­ng platform.

The FHJ president has held several positions in the global Jewish community in recent years. He was the president of the Jewish Community of Madrid and served on the Executive Planning Committee of Taglit Birthright and on the board of Maccabi World Union. As opposed to most Jewish leaders from Spanish speaking countries, Hatchwell Altaras speaks perfect English and understand­s the mentality of the English-speaking and Israeli Jewish communitie­s.

“The way that I conceive Judaism is to have, on the one hand, a very strong Jewish identity – I’m very Zionist,” Hatchwell Altaras explained. “And I also believe very much in the concept of engaging

with non-Jews. That’s what I’ve done with our foundation.”

WHEN THE Spanish citizenshi­p law was amended, thus allowing descendant­s of expelled Jews to obtain citizenshi­p, Hatchwell Altaras decided to establish a foundation that would invest in initiative­s and create others, promoting the story of the rich history of Sephardic Jews.

“People know that 500 years ago, there were many Jews that lived in the Iberian Peninsula. Then there was the expulsion and there was pretty much nothing afterwards – according to what the general public knows,” he claimed.

“We understand how important and impactful the Jewish presence was in these areas,” he said, “not only historical­ly, but how it affected Spain with the Jews that remained. At the moment of the expulsion, 8% of the overall Spanish population was Jewish. And it is said by historians, like Ben-Zion Netanyahu, that the Jews initially thought that things would change eventually; that the kings might change their minds or die.

“But unfortunat­ely, for 500 years, the lid was closed on them,” the history awareness promoter said. “And those Jews initially tried to stay Jewish, but the pogroms continued. And after a couple of generation­s, there was definitely an attempt by those who had been Jewish to marry nonJews. So if you take these percentage­s of intermarri­age for over 25 generation­s, according to the exponentia­l law of growth, it is impossible for anybody in Spain to say that they don’t have Jewish ancestry.”

According to Hatchwell Altaras, “One in four people in Latin-America has Jewish ancestry; so if there are close to 700 million people in these countries, we’re talking about close to 200 million people with Spanish-Jewish background. That’s a huge number.”

He hopes that if he’s able to make millions of Spanish or Latin Americans understand that they have a Jewish connection, it can assist the battle of combating antisemiti­sm, “because once you realize that you have Jewish ancestry, you can no longer be antisemiti­c. If you are antisemiti­c, then you’re a fool – hating your own origins.”

He said that “we’re also making sure that Christian societies that have Hispanic origin also understand the fundamenta­l values that are shared between Christians and

Jews, which are huge.”

THE FOUNDATION that Hatchwell Altaras establishe­d has a fascinatin­g list of figures supporting it. One of them is Stuart Weitzman, the Jewish-American shoe designer who establishe­d an empire under his name. Others include media personalit­ies, rabbis, mayors of major cities, Israeli singer Achinoam (Noa) Nini, Russian billionair­e Michael Friedman and others.

When asked what Weitzman’s connection was to Hispanic Jewry, Hatchwell Altaras smiled. “So here’s the story,” he said, as if waiting to be asked. “Stewart, wonderfull­y, has a personal connection, because when he built his shoe empire, he manufactur­ed in Spain. So for 40 years, he was spending a lot of time in Spain and he realized how ignorant people were about Judaism. We got connected, our paths crossed and he believes very much in our projects and therefore has been a very strong supporter. Actually, Stuart is our main benefactor.”

As a true hardcore Zionist, Hatchwell Altaras believes that “Each Jew has a mission,” and explained that “the only reason that my family and I live in Spain is because we are needed here, doing our share.” He is very well connected in Israel and the names of his three boys are Hebrew: Yavne (an Israeli city), Dayan (named for the late IDF leader and Israeli minister Moshe Dayan) and Magen (“shield” or “protector”).

It would be “much more comfortabl­e” for him to live in Jerusalem, where he has a home, he said, “but there’s a sense of mission,” about living in Spain as a Jew.

 ?? (Fundación HispanoJud­ía) ?? DAVID HATCHWELL ALTARAS presenting the book Memories of Luis de Carvajal in the Mexican embassy in Madrid.
(Fundación HispanoJud­ía) DAVID HATCHWELL ALTARAS presenting the book Memories of Luis de Carvajal in the Mexican embassy in Madrid.

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