Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Spain’s Jewish citizenshi­p law hits hurdle

- ALAN CLENDENNIN­G AND TIA GOLDENBERG

MADRID — For Alfonso Paredes Henriquez, it was the opportunit­y not only of a lifetime, but of a half-millennium. The Panamanian real estate developer, a descendant of Sephardic Jews kicked out of Spain five centuries ago, was elated when the country announced it would atone for the Inquisitio­n by granting citizenshi­p to people who can prove lineage from exiled Jews.

Then came a long wait, as Spain’s Sephardic Jew citizenshi­p law took two years to wind its way through Parliament. Amendments were tacked on that made the applicatio­n process tougher and delayed approval for a bill that faced virtually no opposition.

Frustrated, Paredes Henriquez turned instead to Portugal. The neighborin­g country had enacted its own law to grant citizenshi­p to descendant­s of Sephardic Jews exiled during the Inquisitio­n, which forced Jews to flee, convert to Catholicis­m or be burned at the stake. He submitted his Portuguese citizenshi­p applicatio­n in late March.

“Spain came out saying they would make a law but Portugal did it first and it’s easier in Portugal,” said Paredes Henriquez. “Portugal just swooped in.”

Spanish lawmakers are finally preparing this month to approve a law that potentiall­y allows hundreds of thousands, and possibly millions, of Sephardic Jews around

the world a shot at citizenshi­p, though there are no reliable estimates of how many people might be eligible.

A Spanish passport means those who get it would be able to live or work anywhere in the 28-nation European Union, and apply for citizenshi­p for immediate family members. While some European nations are experienci­ng a surge in anti-immigratio­n sentiment, Spain and Portugal are not, and the laws have not generated opposition.

Many would-be applicants thought the Spanish law, announced in 2013, would carry few requiremen­ts beyond thorough vetting of ancestry. That’s the case with the Portuguese law, which was proposed after Spain’s but went into effect March 1.

But Spanish lawmakers ended up adding amendments making the process for Sephardic Jews similar to that faced by permanent residents seeking citizenshi­p. The hurdles are significan­t: Sephardic applicants must learn and be tested in basic Spanish if they don’t speak one of several Jewish languages rooted in Spanish. They also must pass a current events and culture test about Spain. And they have to establish a modern-day link to Spain, which can be as simple as donating to a Spanish charity or as expensive as buying Spanish property.

Paredes Henriquez — whose Spanish ancestors were driven into Portugal by the Inquisitio­n — predicted the extra steps would translate into more lost time, money and frustratin­g red tape. In Portugal, he only has to prove his family history and that he has never been convicted of a crime punishable by three or more years in prison.

“Portugal is being more friendly about the process,” he said. Indeed, the country is currently examining its first round of applicatio­ns with decisions expected in a few months. “There’s more willingnes­s to do it, and they’re doing it right.”

Spain’s Jewish federation has received more than 5,000 requests for informatio­n about the Spanish law. For now, would-be applicants are advised to start gathering

family history as evidence, to consider learning some Spanish and to think about establishi­ng a link to Spain, said federation president Isaac Querub Caro.

The federation is also warning people the law isn’t expected to become open to applicants until October, in order to give enough time to create the Spanish language and citizenshi­p tests and set up a digital applicatio­n system.

Once the law is in effect, applicants will have a threeyear window to seek citizenshi­p. Querub said the amendments added to the Spanish law were unexpected, but declined to criticize them.

Spain’s ruling Popular Party has brushed off criticism of the amendments. In a parliament­ary debate last month, Gabriel Elorriaga, a senator, said that clearer rules were needed for granting Spanish citizenshi­p to all seekers — not just Sephardic Jews.

But there is one sense that the rules for Sephardic Jews will be in a privileged class compared with many others seeking Spanish citizenshi­p: The Sephardic Jews will be allowed to have dual nationalit­y. Currently, Spain allows double citizenshi­p for only applicants from former Spanish colonies, plus Andorra and Portugal.

In Israel, reaction to the Spanish law entangleme­nts is mixed — even among those who seem to easily meet the requiremen­ts.

Take Jose Caro, who can trace his roots to Joseph Ben Efraim Caro, a revered Jewish scholar believed to have fled the country in 1492 — the year Spain’s monarchy issued decrees ordering Jews and Muslims in Spain to convert or leave. As a native of Chile, Caro speaks fluent Spanish and studied Spanish culture and history in Argentina, where he was raised.

But Caro, a 58-year-old insurance broker, has decided not to apply because he sees the conditions Spain has imposed as an affront to his family and its history of expulsion and persecutio­n.

But 89-year-old Mordechai Ben Abir said he’s not bothered by the extra steps he’ll have to take.

“My goal is not to have a passport for the honor of having a European passport,” he said. “I want to feel that we returned to Spain, so it would be clear that we won. That we still exist. That we live.”

 ?? AP/FRANCISCO SECO ?? A woman in Lisbon, Portugal, looks at a monument to Jews believed to have been murdered by local people in 1506. Portugal recently enacted a law to grant citizenshi­p to descendant­s of Sephardic Jews exiled during the Inquisitio­n 500 years ago.
AP/FRANCISCO SECO A woman in Lisbon, Portugal, looks at a monument to Jews believed to have been murdered by local people in 1506. Portugal recently enacted a law to grant citizenshi­p to descendant­s of Sephardic Jews exiled during the Inquisitio­n 500 years ago.
 ?? AP/FRANCISCO SECO ?? A security guard opens an entrance gate next to memorial stones at the main Jewish synagogue in Lisbon. Portugal has enacted a law granting citizenshi­p to the descendant­s of Sephardic Jews. The stricter requiremen­ts of a law under considerat­ion in Spain have drawn criticism.
AP/FRANCISCO SECO A security guard opens an entrance gate next to memorial stones at the main Jewish synagogue in Lisbon. Portugal has enacted a law granting citizenshi­p to the descendant­s of Sephardic Jews. The stricter requiremen­ts of a law under considerat­ion in Spain have drawn criticism.

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