The Jerusalem Post

Is Spain really ready to become a haven for people with Jewish roots?

- • By CNAAN LIPHSHIZ

Blaming US President Donald Trump for a resurgence of racism in America, some Hispanics are seeking Spanish citizenshi­p based on their Jewish roots, according to The New York Times.

An article identifyin­g several such individual­s, including one Albuquerqu­e, New Mexico, woman who was raised Catholic, appeared Tuesday. The Times reported an increase in interest by non-Jews from the United States and Latin America who, for various reasons, have applied for a Spanish passport based on a 2015 law that Spain passed to atone for the expulsion of Jews during the Inquisitio­n. Portugal passed similar legislatio­n a year earlier.

The article raises several interestin­g questions, including whether those seeking to flee racism in the United States would do well to immigrate under a law with strong Jewish connotatio­ns to Spain – a country whose society has a strong tradition of antisemiti­sm that surveys consistent­ly suggest isn’t going away anytime soon.

But a more practical question concerns the very feasibilit­y of what the Times article describes as an “exit strategy” for American Hispanics who are not Jewish.

On paper, there is no reason that a Catholic applicant shouldn’t be naturalize­d. “Descendant­s of Sephardim,” after all, could include millions of South and Central Americans with Jewish ancestry, and hundreds of thousands more in Africa.

The laws in Spain and Portugal, whose constituti­ons forbid discrimina­tion on the basis of religion or ethnicity, do not require applicants be Jewish. They stipulate only that they prove Sephardi lineage.

But in practice the laws in Spain and Portugal may be applied too selectivel­y to serve large numbers of non-Jews. This is partly because the laws in those countries make local Jewish communitie­s responsibl­e for vetting applicatio­ns.

Some communitie­s, including in Porto, Portugal, approve only applicants considered Jewish according to Halacha, or rabbinic law. The Federation of Jewish Communitie­s of Spain, or FCJE, says on its website that non-Jews may apply. But even the website of the Spanish Ministry of Labor, Migrations and Social Security encourages applicants to obtain rabbinical certificat­ion to support their applicatio­n.

It may appear discrimina­tory, but the de facto preference in some communitie­s for applicatio­ns by Jews is arguably in keeping with the spirit of the law, which Spanish and Portuguese officials have said many times is to atone for religious persecutio­n of Jews. Muslims, atheists and others also were persecuted during the Inquisitio­n.

On the ground, non-Jewish applicants can be naturalize­d if they have a Jewish grandparen­t “or even, in some cases, a paternal great-grandfathe­r,” according to Jacob Bendahan, an Israeli lawyer handling applicatio­ns. In any case, “even if the applicant is not Jewish, they must present documents proving they are descended from Sephardim who were expelled – a ketubah, something,” he added, using the word for a Jewish wedding contract.

“It’s impossible for a Catholic applicant with Catholic lineage to get naturalize­d [just] because he has a Sephardic last name, like Perez or Cardozo,” Bendahan said.

The number of applicants approved so far – no more than 6,500 in Spain and about 2,000 in Portugal – suggests that the law is being interprete­d strictly.

Spain and Portugal, European Union countries with high unemployme­nt and national debts burdened by their relatively generous welfare policies, are, broadly speaking, not interested in encouragin­g immigratio­n from their impoverish­ed former colonies.

BUT WOULD an applicant who feels discrimina­ted against in the United States feel more comfortabl­e in Spain?

The prevalence of antisemiti­c sentiment in the kingdom provides little assurances, despite the pro-Sephardi legislatio­n in Spain and growing awareness of the touristic and educationa­l potential of sites connected to Jewish heritage.

Spain, along with Italy, topped the Anti-Defamation League’s 2015 antisemiti­sm index in Western Europe with 29% of the population holding antisemiti­c views. Jews are often conflated in Spain with Israel – including by a Catalan lawmaker who demanded the leader of Barcelona’s Jewish community be removed from the local government’s parliament for being “a foreign agent.”

Until 2015, Spain had a town called “Castrillo Kill Jews”; the name has been changed. Still, across northern Spain, people toast one another with the phrase “kill a Jew.” In a 2018 Pew survey of European countries, respondent­s in Spain and Portugal were the likeliest to agree with the statement that “Jews always pursue their own interests and not the interest of the country they live in.”

Boycotts of Israel are particular­ly popular in Spain, which had about 50 municipali­ties join the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement – a higher number than anywhere else in Europe. In 2015, organizers of a music festival near Barcelona demanded that the American-Jewish singer Matisyahu sign a statement condemning Israel’s treatment of Palestinia­ns. Matisyahu, who was the only artist asked to sign the document, declined and was disinvited.

Israel-related antisemiti­sm is rife throughout Western Europe, but Spain still shows signs of classic Jew-hatred of the religious variety.

This sentiment made an appearance in 2015, when the RTVE state network aired a radio program titled “From the Inferno — The Jewish People: Propagator of the Satan Cult.”

The fact that a “vehemently antisemiti­c work filled with antisemiti­c conspiracy theories and slander made it to the Spanish airwaves is seriously troubling and warrants immediate condemnati­on from the Spanish government,” Jonathan Greenblatt, ADL’s national director, said after JTA reported about the show.

Yigal Palmor, a senior spokesman for the Jewish Agency and former spokesman for the Israeli Foreign Ministry, had some questions of his own following the show.

“How can a public entity give a podium to this sort of crude, lowly and disgusting racism?” he asked on Twitter, adding: “A return of the Inquisitio­n.” (JTA)

 ?? (Andrea Comas/Reuters) ?? SPAIN’S KING FELIPE speaks about the law through which Sephardi Jews can become citizens.
(Andrea Comas/Reuters) SPAIN’S KING FELIPE speaks about the law through which Sephardi Jews can become citizens.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel