History of the Jews in Peru

(Redirected from Judaism in Peru)

The history of the Jews in Peru dates back to the country's Spanish period with the arrival of migration flows of Sephardic Jews from Europe, the Near East and Northern Africa. This small community virtually disappeared as a result of the Inquisition, and was only revived by two migratory waves that took place during the late 19th-century and the early to mid-20th century, with a number of Sephardic and Ashkenazi Jews arriving to northeastern Iquitos due to the Amazon rubber boom, as well as the country's capital, Lima, through neighbouring Callao, where they also settled due to World War II.

Peruvian Jews
Judíos del Perú
The location of Peru in South America
Total population
1,900[a][5]
Regions with significant populations
Lima metropolitan area, Cuzco, Iquitos
Languages
Spanish, Hebrew, Yiddish, Ladino, Quechua
Religion
Judaism
Related ethnic groups
Chilean Jews, Bolivian Jews, Quechua people

The small community in and around Iquitos is now known as the Amazonian Jews, most of which have since established themselves in Israel since the late 20th century. In Lima, the community is based in the upper-class districts of San Isidro and Miraflores, where a number of synagogues are also located. A synagogue also services a small community in the southern city of Cuzco.

History

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Spanish period

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Some Jewish conversos arrived at the time of the Spanish conquest of the Inca Empire. Then, only Christians were allowed to take part in expeditions to the New World. At first, they had lived without restrictions because the Inquisition was not active in Peru at the beginning of the Viceroyalty. According to the Jewish Virtual Library, the original attraction for Jews to come to Peru was the mineral potential. Many Jews had come to Portugal disregarding the immigration restrictions placed at the time.[6] This action would then be used in trials against some of these crypto-Jews who faced the tribunal of Lima, further adding on a penalty to their actions.[7]

The Holy Office of the Inquisition established an office in Lima January 9, 1570, to control the Christian population of the Viceroyalty and to identify non-Catholics, such as Jews, Lutherans, and Muslims.[b][7][8] Consequently, 'New Christians' began to be persecuted, and, in some cases, executed. Descendants of Jews were sometimes called "marranos" ("pigs"), converts ("conversos"), and "Cristianos nuevos" (New Christians) even if they had been reared as Catholics from birth. Crypto-Jews, self-proclaimed Catholics who would secretly adhere to Judaism, were the initial targets of the tribunal and punished, tortured or killed if caught.[9] Some avoided the tribunals by immigrating out of Spanish territories, such as Peru.[7]

To escape persecution, the conversos settled mainly in the northern highlands and northern high jungle. They intermarried with natives and non-Jewish Europeans (mainly Spanish and Portuguese people) in some areas, assimilating to the local people: in Cajamarca, the northern highlands of Piura (Ayabaca and Huancabamba), among others, due to cultural and ethnic contact with people of the southern highlands of Ecuador. Their mixed-race descendants, known today as the Amazonian Jews, were reared with syncretic Catholic, Jewish, European, and Andean rituals and beliefs.[10]

According to historian Ana Schaposchnik, the stages of the trial followed "a sequence of: denunciation, deposition, imprisonment, hearings, accusation, torture, confession, defense, publication, sentence, and the Auto."[7] The Auto de Fe were occasional public ceremony of punishments made through the inquisition. The punishments included being burnt to a stake, whipping, and being exiled. The trial had started with the accused being convicted of a crime.[9][11]

The tribunal had often used their connections of viceroyalty to gain information about the New Christians, about their past actions in other Spanish colonies.[7] This was the case of Joan Vincente, who was a Portuguese New Christian who had previously been renounced but was put into trial in 1603. His previous actions in Brazil, Potosi, and Tucumán had all been shared by the viceroyalties in those regions.[7] The genealogies of the crypto-Jews were accessible through this connection, making it possible to accurately see who were New Christians.[7] Since the actions of the accused was often not documented, the accused New Christians in court could not prove their statements, while the viceroyalty could obtain all the documentation needed in the trial.[7]

In most trials, the accused New Christians would not give up names of others who were also known to be Judaizing, until they were tortured. After days or weeks of torture, most crypto-Jews gave up other crypto-Jews up to the tribunal.[8] For example, Mencia de Luna, had said during the trial, "tell notaries of the tribunal to write whatever they wanted in her declaration, so that her suffering would come to an end".[7] Schaposchnik also states that from recorded accounts from 1635 to 1639 of new Christian Portuguese, 110 people were arrested due to their alleged connection to the Great Jewish Conspiracy, with many having to reconcile their faith to Christianity along with being exiled and facing confiscation of property.[7][8] He states, "As a result of the Auto General de Fe, the community of Portuguese New Christians in Lima were decimated."[7] It is said that up 11 people were burned at a stake as they did not confess to committing any Judaic practices.[7][9]

According to anthropologist Irene Silverblatt, though it is not clear that those who were persecuted under the inquisition were practicing Judaism, most of the New Christians in Lima were considered "tainted" even after being baptised. Many New Christians during this time were seen to be inferior to Old Christians being banned from certain professions, entering universities and public offices.[9] The inquisition had those who had been called, to confess to their sins and share information on others who had practiced Judaism in Lima.

A notable figure of those prosecuted in Lima included Manuel Bautista Pérez, an individual who was considered as "one of the world’s most powerful men in international commerce".[8] Perez had been arrested once in 1620, when a broad sheet had been found which claimed that Perez was one of the premier teachers of Judaism in Lima. The witnesses and inquisitors considered Perez to be an 'oracle' due to his vast knowledge and wealth.[8] Though Peru fought to the best of his abilities during the hearings, the overwhelming evidence against had mounted up. The inquisitors had faced some difficulty in going through with the trial, as Perez was a part of the viceroyalty's high society, with many clergy and high figures testifying for his innocence.[8] Some of the evidence submitted in the trial included many New Christians appearing as witnesses calling him the Great Captain of Jews in Peru, along with his brother-in-law denouncing him.[8]

Another notable crypto-Jew that had been in the tribunal was Antonio Cordero, who was a clerk from Seville. He had been originally denounced in 1634 with weak evidence, such as abstaining from work on Saturdays and not eating pork.[12] The tribunal decided to conduct a secret arrest on Cordero, so there would be no one suspecting the tribunal's involvement. They gave him no sequestration, and he confessed that he was a crypto-Jew.[12] After they had tortured Cordero, he gave up the name of his employer and two others, which then gave up the name of more crypto-Jews in Lima. This eventually led to seventeen arrests being made, with many notable merchants being brought to the Tribunal as crypto-jews.[12] According to Henry Charles Lea, this then led to many frightened Portuguese to try to flee Lima.[12]

19th century

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During the last decades of the 19th century, many Sephardi Jews from Morocco emigrated to Loreto as traders and trappers, working with the natives. The first was Alfredo Coblentz, a German Jew who arrived in 1880 at the port of Yurimaguas.[13] Starting in 1885, the Amazon rubber boom attracted even greater numbers of Sephardi Jews from North Africa as well as Europeans.[c] Many settled in Iquitos, which was the Peruvian centre for the export of rubber along the Amazon River. They created the second organised Jewish community in Peru after Lima, founding a Jewish cemetery and synagogue. After the boom fizzled due to competition from Southeast Asia, many European and North African Jews left Iquitos. Those who remained over generations have eventually married native women; their mixed-race or mestizo descendants grew up in the local culture, a mixture of Jewish and Amazonian influences and faiths, and are now known as the Amazonian Jews.[13]

In Lima, a small number of Ashkenazi Jews left Europe and the United States for Peru, working in banking, commerce and infrastructure, among other lines of work. In 1875, the number of Jews in Lima was 300, of which 55% were from Germany, 15% from France, 10% from England, 10% from Russia and 20% from other backgrounds.[6] A notable resident at the time was Auguste Dreyfus,[6] who had signed a contract with the Peruvian government to acquire 2 million tons of guano.

20th century

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During the early 20th century, some Ashkenazi Jews, mostly from Western and Eastern Slavic areas and from Hungary, migrated to Peru, chiefly to the capital Lima. Until the 1930s, there were no synagogues in Peru due to the community only celebrating the High Holy Days.[14] During this decade, the Unión Israelita del Perú—the Ashkenazi congregation of Peru—hired Abraham Moshe Brener, a Polish Rabbi, to perform Jewish rituals in the country.[d] Brener arrived in Lima in 1934 and oversaw the rituals of all Jewish denominations up until around 1950, when the Sephardic congregation hired Abraham Shalem. In 1957, another rabbi, Lothar Goldstein, was hired by the German Israelite Society.[14]

The Unión Israelita saw the separation of two more Orthodox group who opposed Brener and opened two synagogues of their own.[15] Knesset Israel separated in 1942, led by Leib Fishman; and Adat Israel did the same in 1953, led by Abraham Shapiro Klein and reuniting to pray at one room of a house in Bolivia Avenue that belonged to member Jaime Portnoi. On the High Holidays of the same year (July 29),[16] they inaugurated a synagogue of their own at 542[16] Iquique street in Chacra Colorada (a neighbourhood of Breña, one of the city's districts), commonly known as the Mandel Synagogue after the family of the same name affiliated to the group.[17] The congregation eventually unified again.[14]

During World War II, the Consul-General of Peru in Geneva, José Maria Barreto, secretly issued passports to a group of Jews which included prisoners at the concentration camp in the (German-occupied) French city of Vittel. The Peruvian government at the time had forbidden its diplomatic missions to issue visas to Jewish refugees, an order that Barreto ignored. In 2014, he was posthumously recognised as Righteous Among the Nations.[18] According to the World Jewish Congress, 650 Jews fled to Peru during this period.[18]

 
This synagogue in Jesús María, built in 1958,[19] was later demolished during the 1980s to build a supermarket.

During the early 1950s, the Jewish community in Lima and Callao was distributed as follows:[15]

Location Description
Bellavista Location of the Jewish Cemetery founded by the German Jews in 1875.
Breña Two synagogues belonging to the Ashkenazi community were located at Iquique and Malvas streets, both located in Chacra Colorada.
Jesús María A synagogue belonging to the Sephardic community was located at the intersection of Enrique Villar and Carlos Arrieta streets.
Lima The Bodega Universal, a Jewish pastry shop owned by Isaac Goldemberg and José Schneider, was located at the intersection of Camaná and Huancavelica streets, also serving as a meeting place for local Jews.
Lince At the time, the León Pinelo School was located at the intersection of Húsares de Junín street and the 15th block of Brasil Avenue, also the site of a synagogue.[20] It had moved from its original location at Carlos Arrieta in Breña, and later moved to its current location in San Isidro.

Starting in 1950, the Jews in Peru started their involvement in the country's economy and a number of white-collar workspaces. An strong interest in Zionism also took over the community, with two youth organisations being formed to prepare young Jews to emigrate to Israel: Betar (located at the synagogue in Iquique street) and Hanoar Hatzioní (located at León Pinelo School).[15] Marcos Roitman, an ardent Jewish-Peruvian Zionist, was nominated as honorary consul of Israel in 1951, inaugurating the consulate in 1953. Relations between both countries were then elevated to legation level in 1956 and to embassy level in 1958, with Tuvia Arazi serving as Israel's first ambassador.[6]

Massive immigration to Israel began after the Six Day War in 1967, similar to other countries in Latin America.

During a trip to Iquitos in 1948 and 1949, the Argentine-Israeli geologist Alfredo Rosensweig had noted that the Amazonian Jews were "almost a hidden community" due to their geographical separation from Lima and the city's inaccessibility by road. At the time that Rosensweig visited, the community did not have a Jewish school, a rabbi, or a synagogue.[13] Most Amazonian Jews in Iquitos are of Christian origin, and consider themselves to be a mix between Christians and Jews.[21] It's believed that was due to the fact that most immigrant Jews who had come to Iquitos in the 19th century were single men, who then married the Christian women of Iquitos.[13] In the 1950s and 60s, the Jews of Iquitos had almost disappeared due to the mass emigration to Lima.[13] The community of Iquitos Jews had not been recognised by the rest of Peru until the 1980s, when Rabbi Guillermo Bronstein, who was then the chief rabbi of the Asociación Judía del Perú in Lima, was contacted by the Iquitos Jews and visited the community in 1991, subsequently sending resources such as prayer books and other Jewish texts.[13] In 1991, the Sociedad Israelita de Iquitos was established.

In 1990, 70 people from Cajamarca who claimed descent from the Ten Lost Tribes (and thus converted to Judaism) moved to Israel. Another group followed in 1991, composed of 32 people. On the same year, an Indigenous woman married a soon-to-be Israeli rabbi.[15]

21st century

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As of 2023, there are about 1,900 Jews in Peru,[5][1][2] with only three organised communities: Lima, Iquitos and Cuzco.[4][22] The community is in decline,[1] having been numbered at 3,000 years prior and 5,000 in the 1970s,[2][4][23][24] but has nevertheless contributed to the country's economy and politics. the majority in Lima (and the country) are Ashkenazi Jews (whose community was founded in 1934), while others are Sephardic Jews (whose community was founded in 1933).[25] Both communities proclaim themselves to be Orthodox.[14]

The Unión Israelita continues to represent the Ashkenazi community and operates the Sinagoga Sharón [es] in San Isidro and its Jewish Museum.[1] Another synagogue, the Sinagoga 1870 [es], is located near Miraflores Central Park.[26] The León Pinelo school operates since April 24, 1946,[6] and serves as the city's only Jewish school, educating 90% of local Jews.[25]

The northeastern city of Iquitos has maintained its small community of Amazonian Jews (also called "Iquitos Jews"), of mixed Moroccan Sephardic,[10] Ashkenazi, and/or Indigenous Peruvian descent, observing some form of Jewish traditions and customs.[21] Some[27] have claimed that there exists a kind of pressure exerted upon this community to adhere to customs that are normative in the broader Jewish community; though these customs have been characterised as specifically Ashkenazi,[27] they are often in fact matters of Jewish law recognised by non-Ashkenazi Jews throughout the world as binding. Iquitos Jews' unique practices and customs are syncretic to varying degrees, influenced by Catholicism and local traditional spiritual traditions. Thus, they come from the mix of Peruvian and Jewish cultures.[10] This community has been rather isolated from the rest of the Peruvian Jewish community, which is concentrated in Lima.

The Iquitos community's claims of Jewish status have been subjected to some question by the Orthodox Jewish leaders of Lima, as the only people Jewish law considers to be Jews are those who are born to a Jewish mother, or who have formally converted. Because the community itself says that its founding members were Jewish men and non-Jewish women, their descendants are not always considered Jewish by Jews who adhere to Jewish law. In the late 20th century, some descendants in Iquitos began to study Judaism and eventually made formal conversions in 2002 and 2004 with the aid of a sympathetic American rabbi from Brooklyn. A few hundred were given permission to make aliyah to Israel. By 2014, nearly 150 more Iquitos Jews had emigrated to Israel.[13] These waves comprised an estimated 80% of the community in Peru, which now numbers only 50 individuals.[3]

In Cuzco, the community was numbered at 200 to 300 people in 2015.[4]

Notable people

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Pedro Pablo Kuczynski served as president of Peru from 2016 to 2018.
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The Fire Within: Jews in the Amazonian Rainforest (2008) is a documentary about the Jewish descendants in Iquitos and their efforts to revive Judaism and emigrate to Israel in the late 20th century. It is written, directed and produced by Lorry Salcedo Mitrani.[32][33] Before that Salcedo published the book (Salcedo: photos, Henry Mitrani Reaño: text) The Eternal Return: Homage to the Jewish Community of Peru [El eterno retorno : retrato de la comunidad judío-peruana] (2002) on the subject.[34]

The 2018 film Utopía, based on the 2002 fire of a nightclub of the same name, features the story of Orly Gomberoff Elon, one of the victims of the fire, as well as her family, all practising Jews.[35]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ The declining community[1][2] is mostly based in Lima and Iquitos. The later's community of Amazonian Jews is numbered at 50 people, while the rest (80% of the community) left the country and established itself in Israel during the early 21st century.[3] The community in Cuzco is numbered at 200 to 300 people.[4]
  2. ^ The Jewish Virtual Library argues however, that towards the early 17th century, the tribunal had started to focus on crypto-Jews who were rich and wealthy, as the holy office were able to confiscate their properties after the condemnation.[6]
  3. ^ Rita Saccal, former director the library of the Seminario Rabínico Latinoamericano, writes that "In 1885, the first year of the Amazon rubber boom, the Pinto brothers — Moises, Abraham and Jaime — immigrated to Iquitos , such as other 150 Sephardi Jews, mainly from Morocco, Gibraltar, Malta, Alsace, and Manchester, named Bohabot, Bendayán, Edery, Toledano, Assayac, Cohen, Levi, Nahmías, Sarfati, Azulay. They spoke Ladino, Hebrew and Haketia."[13]
  4. ^ Brener's work was controversial due to it not strictly following Jewish law, although later authorities recognised his work, seeing this flexibility as having avoided the exclusion of many Jews from the community.[14]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Angulo, Jazmine (2024-05-20). "Un encuentro con la historia y el legado judío del Perú: Descubre el 'Museo Judío del Perú', un refugio cultural en Lima". Infobae.
  2. ^ a b c Chaignon, Juliette (2023-07-06). "'Oh-Jalá', la panadería que celebra la cultura judía en Lima". Radio France Internationale.
  3. ^ a b "Encyclopedia Judaica: Iquitos, Peru". Encyclopedia Judaica. The Gale Group. Retrieved 7 July 2022.
  4. ^ a b c d "3000 judíos profesan su fe en Lima, Iquitos y Cusco". Diario Correo. 2015-02-15.
  5. ^ a b "Peru Virtual Jewish History Tour". Jewish Virtual Library.
  6. ^ a b c d e f "Peru". www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved 2022-05-24.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Schaposchnik, Ana E. The Lima Inquisition : the plight of crypto-Jews in seventeenth-century Peru. ISBN 978-0-299-30610-6. OCLC 904756025.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Silverblatt, Irene (2005). Modern Inquisitions : Peru and the colonial origins of the civilized world. Duke University Press. ISBN 0-8223-3417-8. OCLC 1056017758.
  9. ^ a b c d Silverblatt, Irene (July 2000). "New Christians and New World Fears in Seventeenth-Century Peru". Comparative Studies in Society and History. 42 (3): 524–546. doi:10.1017/S0010417500002929.
  10. ^ a b c Sedaka, Jan (December 12, 2002). "Who is a Jew in Peru". JTA. Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Retrieved 7 July 2022.
  11. ^ "Three Accused Heretics", Modern Inquisitions, Duke University Press, pp. 29–53, 2004, doi:10.1215/9780822386230-001, ISBN 978-0-8223-3406-4, retrieved 2022-05-24
  12. ^ a b c d Lea, Henry Charles (2010). The Inquisition in the Spanish Dependencies: Sicily, Naples, Sardinia, Milan, the Canaries, Mexico, Peru, New Granada. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/cbo9780511709807. ISBN 978-0-511-70980-7.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h Rita Saccal, "The Jews of Iquitos (Peru)"
  14. ^ a b c d e Segal Freilich, Ariel (1999). Jews of the Amazon: Self-exile in Earthly Paradise. Jewish Publication Society. pp. 103–105. ISBN 9780827606692.
  15. ^ a b c d Salcedo-Mitrani, Lorry; Mitrani Reaño, Henry (2002). El eterno retorno: retrato de la comunidad judío-peruana (in Spanish). Fondo Editorial del Congreso del Perú. p. 17. ISBN 9789972890222.
  16. ^ a b Trahtemberg, Leon (2018-02-25) [20080512]. "La presencia judía en el Perú". Caretas – via Enlace Judío.
  17. ^ Trahtemberg Siederer, León (1989). Vida judía en Lima y en las provincias del Perú: un recuento histórico documentado sobre la presencia judía en el territorio del Perú en el siglo XX (in Spanish). Unión Israelita del Perú. p. 28.
  18. ^ a b "World Jewish Congress CEO honors Peruvian saviour of Jews". World Jewish Congress. Retrieved 2022-05-24.
  19. ^ Yalonetzky Mankevich, Romina Perla (2016-02-18). ‘Nosotros’ y ‘los otros’: peruanos judíos en la ciudad de Lima (1944-2014) (PDF) (Thesis) (in Spanish). Lima: Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2022-02-25.
  20. ^ Orrego Penagos, Juan Luis (2008-07-15). "Por la avenida Brasil". Blog PUCP. Archived from the original on 2017-07-15.
  21. ^ a b Segal, Ariel (1999). Jews of the Amazon : self-exile in earthly paradise. The Jewish publication Society. ISBN 0-8276-0669-9. OCLC 469648338.
  22. ^ Ariel Segal Freilich, Jews of the Amazon: Self-exile in Earthly Paradise, Jewish Publication Society, 1999, pp. 1-5
  23. ^ "Asociación Judía del Perú". Archived from the original on 2014-12-21. Retrieved 2015-07-05.
  24. ^ Congreso Judío Latinoamericano. "Comunidades judías: Perú". Archived from the original on 21 December 2014. Retrieved 13 December 2015.
  25. ^ a b Medina Minaya, Abdías Jonatán (2008). Perú, igualdad vs discriminación religiosa (in Spanish). Talleres Unidos. p. 35.
  26. ^ Orrego Penagos, Juan Luis. "La sinagoga '1870' (Lima)". Blog PUCP. Archived from the original on 2009-08-13.
  27. ^ a b Charlotte, Waterhouse, Beatrice (2020-01-01). Diaspora, Transnationalism, and Racialization: Jews and Jewishness Between Perú and Israel. eScholarship, University of California. OCLC 1287375865.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  28. ^ Planas, Enrique (2020-11-18). "Recordemos a Elsa de Sagasti, madre del actual presidente del país y recordada figura del periodismo peruano". El Comercio.
  29. ^ "El empresario de televisión expropiado acusa de antisemita a Fujimori". El País / Reuters. 1997-09-16.
  30. ^ Trahtemberg Siederer, León (1987). La inmigración judía al Perú, 1848-1948: una historia documentada de la inmigración de los judíos de habla alemana (in Spanish). Asociación Judía de Beneficencia y Culto de 1870. p. 53.
  31. ^ Camacho, Emilio (2023-10-15). "León Trahtemberg: "Netanyahu tenía problemas internos, como ocurre en otros países democráticos"". La República.
  32. ^ "The Fire Within: Jews in the Amazonian Rainforest"
  33. ^ "Hidden Roots in the Jungle. A new film spotlights a far-flung group seeking connection with the mainstream" by ROBIN CEMBALEST JANUARY 07, 2009, Tablet Magazine
  34. ^ "Inside the NYJFF: Exploring The Fire Within", by Ronit Waisbrod, New York Jewish Film Festival correspondent
  35. ^ Olivera La Rosa, Mariano (2018-09-18). "Jack Gomberoff: una vida de película". Cosas.

Further reading

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