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Spain and Portugal naturalise 5,000 Sephardic Jews

jewishlogoNearly 5,000 people have become citizens of Spain or Portugal following the passing of laws in both countries on the naturalisation of descendants of Sephardic Jews.

In Portugal, where a procedure for naturalisation under the law went into effect last year, 292 applicants for naturalisation have been approved, Catarina Madeira, a spokeswoman for the Portuguese Justice Ministry, told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency on Wednesday.

Spain has naturalized 4,538 applicants for citizenship by Sephardim since the law went into effect last year. However, only three applicants were granted citizenship based on the actual law, the ABC daily reported Sunday. Others were naturalised by a royal decree and not through the nondiscretionary procedure devised for the law.

According to ABC, the Spanish government in effect blocked the nondiscretionary procedure to avoid mass immigration by an estimated 30 million non-Jewish descendants of Sephardim eligible under the law.

In both countries, the passing of the laws of return for Sephardim was described as an attempt to atone for the state and church-led mass expulsion, dispossession, torture and forced conversion into Christianity of Jews during the Inquisition - a period that began in the 15th century and ended with the disappearance and dispersion of what used to be one of the world’s largest Jewish communities.

In both countries, the legislation followed an economic recession that led to high unemployment and vigorous attempts by Lisbon and Madrid to attract wealthy investors, residents and tourists.

Unlike the open-ended law in Portugal, the Spanish law set a three-year window for applications. The Spanish law is also stricter than the Portuguese one, as it requires passing tests attesting to cultural or language ties to Spain by applicants. Spanish authorities are currently processing another some 3,000 applications for naturalisation under the law.

Portuguese authorities have approved only 7.5 percent of the 3,838 applications filed since March 2015, Madeira said. A bureaucratic block that had caused delays in the naturalisation process was removed in February, she added.

In Portugal and Spain, each application is vetted by the institutions of those countries’ Jewish communities, which make recommendations to the government.

“The difference between the applications approved and those pending owes to the fact that each request for naturalisation requires rigorous evaluation of documents,” Madeira said.

 

Jewish Telegraphic Agency

http://www.jta.org/

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Comments  

-4 #1 Alan Ira Silver G. 2016-10-14 11:08
Becoming an official citizen of Spain or Portugal isn't really what makes you a Sephardic Jew. What would truly make you a Sephardic Jew is, to return and perform all the mitzvot that generations before you had observed. Do you have kosher Mezzuzot on all of your doors of your house? Do you purchase only kosher products? Are you careful not to mix meat and dairy products together? For men, when was the last time you put on Tephillin if you even know what they are? Do you even own a pair? If you do, when was the last time that the Tephillin were opened to see if the parchments inside are still valid? Do you have any semblance of a Shabbat meal in your house? People working on Shabbat? When was the last time you were in the inside of a synagogue? Did you stay or you just looked around and said to yourself it is all foreign to you? Well, if you are truly a Sephardic Jew, none of this would be foreign to you as better than 80% of the Jews living in Spain and Portugal were observant of the Jewish laws.

How many of you can read or speak Hebrew, Ladino or Spanish? A good book for all of you now reawakened Sephardic Jews to read is : To Be A Jew by Haim Donin as it will teach you things that you should have been taught as a child and surely would have known if you grew up in Spain and Portugal during the 15th century.

Remember; the passport doesn't make you a Sephardic Jew but observing the mitzvot of HaShem that does. Shabbat Shalom, Teezku L'Shanim Rabot Tovot V'Neemot & Chag Samayach

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