Portuguese researchers have catalogued hundreds of secret markings
that Jews left on structures in the northern Portuguese municipality of
Seia in the 16th century, after their forced conversion to Christianity.
The team’s three members -- Alberto Martinho, Jose Levy Domingos and
Luiza Metzker Lyra -- say they found 500 markings in Seia, including
coded Hebrew letters and words carved into walls of homes where
converted Jews used to live, as well as distinctive indentations in
stone doorframes where the residents would have placed mezuzahs.
Martinho told Portugal’s Lusa news agency on Friday that the findings
“elucidate the Jewish presence” in the region. According to Jose Oulman
Carp, the president of the Jewish Community of Lisbon, Portugal had a
Jewish population of about 400,000 Jews in 1536, when the Portuguese
Inquisition officially began.
Many of the Jews in Portugal were refugees from neighboring Spain,
where the Inquisition -- an organized campaign of persecution led by the
Catholic Church -- began in 1492. Persecution in Portugal forced many
Jews into exile, whereas those who stayed became known as “New
Christians” though many of them continued to practice Judaism in secret
and developed special customs to set themselves apart in discrete ways
from the rest of the population.
The Portuguese parliament earlier this month passed a law which says
descendants of Jews who left are entitled to citizenship. A similar bill
is being prepared in Spain.
According to the researchers, who are scheduled to publish their full
study within two weeks, they found 42 marked houses in the small
village of Santa Marinha alone. The town of Trancoso has many more
marked houses, they said.
Sunday, 21 April 2013
Hundreds of Jewish markings cataloged in Portuguese town
Posted @ 12:23
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