EJP

Law submitted in the Knesset to commemorate the victims of the Inquisition

The Fundación is building a museum in Madrid to highlight thousands of years of Jewish life and its contribution to Spain and the rest of the world. The Museum will be located in Paseo del Prado, 30, just a few steps away from El Prado Museum.

Beginning in 1381, hundreds of thousands of Jews were forcibly converted to Catholicism and formally disconnected from the Jewish world, especially with the Expulsion from Spain in 1492. Many of these Anousim (forcibly converted Jews) were subsequently investigated by The Inquisition, formally created in 1478 in Spain and 1536 in Portugal, for maintaining their Jewish identity, tradition and practices.

 

A Member of the Knesset for the Blue and White party, Michal Cotler-Wunsch, has presented a bill for an official Day to Commemorate the Victims of the Inquisition.

The Day of Commemoration will be held every year on November 1st, the date of the official establishment of the Spanish Inquisition in 1478.

Beginning in 1381, hundreds of thousands of Jews were forcibly converted to Catholicism and formally disconnected from the Jewish world, especially with the Expulsion from Spain in 1492. Many of these Anousim (forcibly converted Jews) were subsequently investigated by The Inquisition, formally created in 1478 in Spain and 1536 in Portugal, for maintaining their Jewish identity, tradition and practices.

Thousands of Anousim were burnt at the stake, hundreds of thousands were prosecuted, brutally tortured, imprisoned, humiliated, and had their livelihoods taken away from them. The reign of terror imposed by The Inquisition and its partners had a profound and threatening effect on the Jewish People and those with significant Jewish ancestry up until the modern era.

Co-signatories to the bill include MK Tzvi Hauser (Derech Eretz), Chairman of the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, MK Oded Forer (Yisrael Beytenu), Chairman of the Knesset Caucus for Renewing the Relations With the Descendants of the Jewish Communities in Spain and Portugal, MKs Amit Halevi and Michal Shir (Likud), MKs Michael Malchieli and Yosef Taieb (Shas), and MK Tehila Friedman (Blue and White).

The law calls for certain activities on the day of commemoration, including for the Minister of Education to arrange for educational activities and resources associated with The Inquisition.

Michal Cotler-Wunsh, who chairs the subcommittee on Israel-Diaspora Relations, spoke about the importance of the law in a webinar hosted by the Board of the Fundación Hispanojudía (Hispanic-Jewish Foundation), an organization dedicated to the reconnection between the Spanish-speaking world and the Jewish people, and the outreach, encouragement, and promotion of Jewish culture in all its aspects and expressions.

Cotler-Wunsh said that the bill ‘’will create a day of memory and reminder in the Knesset for us to recognize this tragic event in our collective history and learn from it, in order to ensure ‘never again’ in a world of ‘again and again.’” “It also provides us with an opportunity to connect with the descendants of those affected by the Spanish Inquisition, in Israel and in the diaspora, based on our shared history and values,” she added.

The President of the Fundación, David Hatchwell, said that the law was timely because of the increasing interest in the Spanish-speaking world about possible shared roots with the Jewish People.

“The Spanish-speaking world, whether in Spain or in Latin America, is gaining a greater understanding of its common roots, culture and traditions with the Jewish People,” Hatchwell said.

“The Inquisition was a dark chapter for Humanity and in both of our peoples’ history.  It should be remembered as pure religious fanaticism and intolerance. Nevertheless, we should also use these historic events to chart a more positive future between the Spanish-speaking world and the Jewish people based on respecting diversity emulating the modern State of Israel.”

The Fundación is building a museum in Madrid to highlight thousands of years of Jewish life and its contribution to Spain and the rest of the world, focusing on the unique legacy of the Sephardim that traveled with those who were exiled through different times and places.

According to recent academic scientific research, the descendants of Spanish and Portuguese Jewish communities number around 200 million around the world, comprising one in four Latinos and Hispanic, and a reconnection could have massive positive diplomatic, demographic, political and economic advantages for the State of Israel and the Jewish People.

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