500 years after the expulsion of its community, Lisbon's new legislation corrects a moral wrong, albeit with some 'economic considerations'
By Michael Ireland
Special Reporter, ASSIST News Service
LISBON, PORTUGAL
(ANS) -- Until 2009, right-wing
Portuguese politician Jose Ribeiro e Castro didn't have much interest in
the expulsion of his country's Jewish community in the 16th century.
That changed once Ribeiro e Castro opened a Facebook account, according to Cnaan Liphshiz, writing for
www.thetimesofisrael.com.
Jose
Ribeiro e Castro, who spearheaded the law to naturalize the Jewish
descendants of expelled Jews, speaking at the Portuguese parliament.
(photo credit: Portugal's National Assembly/JTA) |
"The law is a commendable initiative," said Nuno Wahnon Martins, the Lisbon-born director of European affairs for B'nai B'rith International. "It has economic considerations as well, which do not subtract from parliament's worthy decision."
The
newspaper says that Portugal's initiative comes as countries across
Europe continue
to invest millions to develop Jewish heritage sites - an effort they say
is rooted in their belated recognition of the continent's vibrant
Jewish history, but often is also an acknowledged attempt to attract
tourist dollars at a time of economic stagnation.
Last
year, Spain announced a similar repatriation plan to Portugal's, though
the effort has yet to advance, the newspaper reported.
King John III, who requested the inquisition
in Portugal (photo credit: Wikipedia commons) |
The
Times of Israel goes on to report that later this month, Portugal will
open a $1.5 million learning center in Trancoso, a town once home to
many Jews. The prime minister is slated to attend the July 19 opening of
the center, which will be aimed at the area's anusim, descendants of
Jews forcibly converted during the Inquisition.
"The
tourism drive and the repatriation effort in Portugal and Spain are
connected on several levels," said Michael Freund, founder and chairman
of Shavei Israel, a Jerusalem-based nonprofit that runs outreach
programs for anusim and will operate the Trancoso center.
"The
Sephardic Diaspora can be viewed as a large pool with the potential to
benefit Spain and Portugal's economies, provided that pool can be drawn
to visit, settle and invest," he said.
According
to the Times of Israel r
eport, Ribeiro e Castro, a soft-spoken man who tends to gesticulate
vibrantly when discussing politics, insists he has no ulterior motives
for promoting the legislation.
"For
me, this is purely a historical and emotional goal," he said. "These
efforts got stuck in Spain had remained stuck also in Portugal for a
long time, until we move them along."
According to Ribeiro e
Castro, his involvement in the project began as an experiment. In 2010,
he encouraged several of his Jewish Facebook friends to apply for
Portuguese citizenship, "just to see what happens."
At
first, the newspaper says, Portugal's powerful Socialist Party was none
too thrilled about inviting descendants of Portuguese Jews to return.
But the Socialists eventually came around, submitting their own bill to
naturalize Sephardic Jews that ultimately was incorporated into Ribeiro e
Castro's amendment to the Law on Nationality.
The
new legislation says "the government will give nationality . to
Sephardic Jews of Portuguese ancestry who belong to a
tradition of a Portuguese-descended Sephardic community, based on
objective prerequisites proving a connection to Portugal through names,
language and ancestry," the newspaper explained.
The
law names Ladino, the Spanish-based Jewish dialect spoken by some
100,000 people worldwide, as a viable "linguistic connection."
The
newspaper adds that whatever his motivation, focusing international
attention on the Catholic Church's dark history is a bold choice for
Ribeiro e Castro, a Catholic himself and former director of the
Church-affiliated TVI network. He attributes his decision to an old high
school buddy who taught him about Sephardic traditions in Portugal, and
to his father, who served as Portugal's colonial governor in Angola in
the 1970s.
"My father was an
admirer of what he called 'small history,' minor developments with a
huge impact," Ribeiro e Castro said. "Naturalizing the Sephardim could
be that."
For the law to have
any impact, bureaucrats in Lisbon first need to address a host of
complications. Th
e Portuguese Bar Association already has warned that the law could
compromise the constitutional principle of equality before the law, the
newspaper stated.
But there are practical issues, the newspaper commented.
"Differentiating
between Jews whose families were exiled [from] Spain and those who fled
Portugal is very difficult," said Jose Oulman Carp, president of
Lisbon's Jewish community.
"Clearly
the Jewish communities [of Portugal] will need to be consulted on the
screening process and we can provide some input, but the distinction is
nearly impossible in many cases," he said.
The
newspaper conclude that whatever the end result, merely the effort to
lure back Portuguese Jews constitutes, in Freund's mind, an ironic twist
of history.
"Five centuries
ago, the expulsion happened partly because the Iberian rulers wanted the
Jews' assets," Freund said. "Now we see efforts to welcome back the
Jews partly for the same reason."
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