Florida: A Secret Seder

Think about this at your Seders this year: We have forgotten a huge segment of the Jewish people and it is sad.

Remember that there is no day of remembrance for hundreds of thousands of Jews killed during the Inquisition, or forced to convert to Catholicism during that tragic time. It is as if all those people never existed, despite the fact that many families do know their ancestors were burned and converted.

And also know that many of their descendants will again sit on this Wednesday night – in secret, behind closed doors and draped windows – to once again tell the story of Santo Moises, as they have done for 500 years.

In South Florida, a Sephardic woman reminds people that although Yom HaShoah is April 21, there is no such day for the Inquisition’s victims. According to some estimates, there are 15-25 million descendants of Jews whose faith, heritage and history were stolen.

These families live today in the US, South America and around the world. Some know exactly who they are and remain hidden in their observance, some barely remember their grandparents’ strange customs, some are searching for more and some have found it.

West Palm Beach resident Janie Grackin wants Sephardic history to have a more prominent place in Jewish education, and as part of this, she organized a Secret Seder on March 15 for 150 people.

Read this story here in the Palm Beach Post.

At first glance, there’s nothing Jewish about northeastern Brazil, a region full of Catholics and Protestants.

But Jonatas DaSilva spent much of his childhood there wondering at his family’s unexplained customs – lighting candles on Friday evenings; avoiding pork and shellfish; and burying the dead the day after their passing.

Then came the shock that his family, like millions of Hispanic families, was once Jewish and forced to convert during the Spanish Inquisition, which started in the late 1400s and stretched over about 400 years.

When he moved to Boca Raton 10 years ago, he discovered a small but growing community of Latin Americans returning to their Jewish roots.

Now 27, DaSilva is Jewish again and preparing for Passover this week, hundreds of years after his family gave up their religion to save their lives.

DaSilva decided it wasn’t right to live a lie, he wanted to “embrace things the right way. My family was ripped from the mix of the Jewish people, and I was really determined to bring everything back.”

According to Professor Abraham Lavender of Florida International University and former persident of the Society of Crypto-Judaic Studies, there was a crypto-Jewish renaissance in the 1970s in the southwest US. His synagogue, Temple Beth Tov in Miami, has some 60 Hispanic members.

“In the past, it was sort of not talked about, and it was mostly an academic topic,” Lavender said. “The main reason that it’s slowly been growing in the last decade is that it took that much time to get it out in the public consciousness.”

A recent genetics study (Tracing the Tribe reported on it) found that 20 percent of people in Spain and Portugal were of Sephardic Jewish descent – these people also went to the New World.

Sephardic researchers have always reminded listeners and readers, that before the Inquisition, most of the world’s Jews were Sephardic. In the US, today, they are a minority, while most American Jews are of Eastern European Ashkenazi descent.

When DaSilva initially considered embracing Judaism, he was told he’d have to convert.

In Brazil, DaSilva wasn’t deeply ingrained in any religion. Because his family was forced to leave, he didn’t believe conversion was appropriate.

“How can you convert a Jew into a Jew?” DaSilva asked.

In Miami, Sephardic Rabbi Abraham DeLeon Cohen, told him about the possibility of receiving certificates of return.

DaSilva and a dozen other Hispanics in South Florida studied Judaism together. They were circumcised and received their return certificate last year, but have felt isolated.

“When a crypto Jew approaches a rabbi, the rabbi doesn’t know what is going on and doesn’t know what to say,” DaSilva said. “It’s a cultural shock.”

Most Ashkenazi rabbis don’t understand the history and the deep feelings this group of people still retain, or the fear their families still have, even 500 years after the Inquisition.

Rabbi David Goldstein of Chavura Shir Hadash in Jupiter says that he hears complaints of a declining Jewish population, and that half are marrying out-of-faith. At the same time, he argues, there is a group that is receiving no encouragement and not being embraced.

Rabbi Cohen, 67, was raised as a Sephardic Jew in Turkey. He believes 5 million people around the world would want to return, which would be astonishing, considering there are about 13 million Jews worldwide.

Jewish congregations don’t traditionally recruit members outside the faith, but Cohen insists that he’s simply returning people to a religion they never would have left by choice.

“There are millions of people like Jonatas who want to return,” Cohen said.

In South Florida, believes Lavender, there are hundreds of thousands of Hispanics of Jewish descent.

West Palm Beach resident Janie Grackin – from a New York Sephardic family – is frustrated over a lack of education about Sephardic heritage and she organized a Secret Seder held March 15 for 150 people at the JCC of the Greater Palm Beaches.

Even though DaSilva’s family is wary, the young man hopes the Jewish community will embrace the returnees and Sephardic heritage. As is common in Converso families, his family has married cousins for generations but none has considered openly identifying as Jewish.

“My grandma thinks it’s crazy to return,” DaSilva. “There’s still a fear of the Inquisition, even though the last crypto Jew was burned in Brazil in the 18th century. The idea that it’s dangerous to be Jewish has been passed down from generation to generation.

Instead of an organized Jewish response and outreach to Conversos, the gap is unfortunately being filled by Messianic Christians combining Jewish and Christian practices and attempting to convince people that they can be both Jewish and Christian, impossible by Jewish law.

At your seders on Wednesday and Thursday – if that’s your tradition – think about this.

Australia: Schindler’s List found in Sydney library

The BBC reported that the original Schindler’s List has been found at the New South Wales Library in Sydney, Australia.

The typed list of 13 pages features 801 people by name and nationality. It was prepared on April 18, 1945.

Oskar Schindler’s Krakow factory used Jewish labor. He was appalled by the Nazis’ conduct, and tried to persuade them that his factory workers were essential to the war effort and should be spared.

The typed list was found between Australian author Thomas Keneally’s research notes and German newspaper clippings. The library bought six boxes of material from a book dealer in 1996; no one knew the list was there.

Some 30 years ago, Keneally was given the list by Leopold Pfefferberg in Los Angeles. Pfefferberg was worker 173 on the list, and he wanted the author to write Schindler’s story. It was originally published as Schindler’s Ark, on which the Oscar-winning film was based.

Bloggers: Now we’re a scare tactic?

Due to holiday preparations, I’m a bit behind in reading my e-mail. Today’s messages included delightful and dismaying news.

There were three emails from President Elisa Spungen Bildner of JTA.org. They appeared to be solicitation letters aimed at different segments of readers. I don’t have a problem with funding requests – we all know what it’s like out there. However, the one titled “The Future of Jewish Storytelling,” offered this phrase:

“Without a strong JTA, the storytelling will be left to bloggers, twitterers, and non-professionals. Is this the best way for our future Jewish stories to be told and recorded?”

What? Come again?



As the author of JTA’s very first blog (Tracing the Tribe) back in 2006, I wondered what she was thinking when she wrote that? Is it possible to be that out of touch with digital media and the blogosphere?

Of course, just five minutes before, I had learned that Tracing the Tribe was ranked #10 in the 25 most popular genealogy blogs of 2009, listed by Progenealogists.com. This blog got its start at JTA, and I have always been grateful for that impetus, but I was really confused by the letter.

I checked JTA where I found this response by digital media editor Dan Sieradski, in part:

I will therefore be the first to admit that Friday’s fundraising letter was ill-advised and regrettable. The characterization of bloggers and Twitterers as “non-professional” and unreliable was not only counterproductive but arguably false. Worse yet, by seemingly attacking the blogosphere and Twittersphere, JTA has turned itself into a straw man in the battle between old and new media.

And – because I was a bit late to this – I also found Elisa Spungen Bildner’s apology, in part:

A fundraising email appeal JTA sent out Friday under my signature contained words I did not specifically approve, words that seemed to criticize bloggers and Twitterers. Understandably, they ruffled a few feathers in the blogosphere.

She didn’t read her words before someone hit the button? “Seemed” to criticize bloggers and Twitterers? Ruffled a “few” feathers?

Somehow her apology sounds less sincere than Dan’s – perhaps because he was a very active blogger and understands the blogosphere. His full apology details the fact that JTA’s blogs are actually its top-viewed content and it has launched its own blog aggregator to highlight Jewish bloggers’ content.

As a journalist who began blogging at JTA’s request nearly three years ago, I’m sort of in the middle.

In any case, I went looking for more on the blogosphere’s reaction to the letter and found it. The talented Esther Kustanowitz was (I believe) the second blogger invited to JTA in 2006, and she summed it up nicely (read her complete post here); here’s some of “Jewish bloggers are not the enemies of Jewish storytelling.”


… But this particular email, headed “The Future of Jewish Storytelling,” seemed to be using bloggers (and Twitterers) as a scare tactic designed to elicit donations, the way other organizations use terms like “aging Holocaust population,” “Jewish singles crisis,” and “rise in anti-Semitism.”

Unless you act now, the message seemed to say, “bloggers, Twitterers, and nonprofessionals” will take over Jewish journalism entirely and (the ultimate implied leap from any scare tactic used in Jewish fundraising) cause the demise of the Jewish people.

But that couldn’t be what they were saying, could it? I used to blog for the JTA. I’ve watched with delight as the site revamped its look and content, including blogging and Twitter as two additional tools in the arsenal of Jewish journalism. …

… In speaking with a friend and fellow blogger about this email, it became clear that JTA sent at least two versions of their solicitation letter today. I got the one that must have been designated for Jewish education professionals, while hers seemed to have a business edge, invoking the “instant journalism” and fast-changing “news business,” as well as a mention of Bloomberg News and the noticeable absence of both Passover imagery and blogger/Twitter denigration. The email’s title: “The Info You Need, When You Need It.”

“The Info You Need, When You Need It” – why not stick with that as a service motto, instead of resorting to threats or scare tactics? Demonizing a group of people who are united only in one characteristic – the technology they use to ensure that their stories are heard – constructs unnecessary barriers between mainstream media and the communications wave of the present.

If you ask me, the news, personal reflections or opinions that resonate with people who blog or Tweet or Digg or Facebook message are becoming – as much as any piece of current news or element of our written history – a vital part of our Jewish storytelling, for the present and future.

Jewish bloggers are not the enemies of Jewish storytelling: if anything, as bickering, economic collapse and technological confusion compete for communal attention, they just might be its salvation.

But what do I know? I’m just a blogger.

Esther hit it on the head.

2009’s Top 25 Gen Blogs: Tracing the Tribe is #10

The 25 most popular genealogy blogs of 2009 were named by ProGenealogists.com

I’m delighted to report that Tracing the Tribe – The Jewish Genealogy Blog is listed as number 10, among some very distinguished company.

The blogs were evaluated based on overall content, Technorati rating and industry experience.

Here’s Heather’s introduction, followed by the complete list:

Genealogy blogging is all the rage and on the rise. A Google search for genealogy blogs currently results in nearly half a million options, with over seven times that number for “family history” blogs. Nielsen Buzz Metrics BlogPulse shows a steady trend for genealogy and family history blogs with spikes correlating to celebrity family history activity in the news. Of the millions, 25 surface as the most popular all-around genealogy blogs, with a tie for 25th place according to rankings from Technorati.

Top 25 Genealogy Blogs as of 3 April 2009:

1. About.com Genealogy (Kimberly Powell)
2.
Eastman Online Newsletter* (Dick Eastman)
3.
Genea-Musings (Randy Seaver)
4.
Creative Gene (Jasia)
5.
Dear Myrtle (Pat Richley)
6.
AnceStories (Miriam Midkiff)
7.
Genealogue (Chris Dunham)
8.
footnoteMaven (Anonymous)
9.
Genetic Genealogist (Blaine Bettinger)
10.
Tracing The Tribe: The Jewish Genealogy Blog (Schelly Talalay Dardashti)
11.
GenaBlogie (Craig Manson)
12.
Olive Tree Genealogy Blog (Lorine McGinnis Schulze)
13.
Steve’s Genealogy Blog (Stephen J. Danko)
14.
24-7 Family History Circle (Juliana Smith)
15.
TransylvanianDutch (John Newmark)
16.
GenDisasters (Stu Beitler)
17.
http://blog.familytreemagazine.com/insider/ (Diane Haddad)
18.
Think Genealogy (Mark Tucker)
19.
California Genealogical Society and Library Blog (California Genealogical Society)
20.
The Genealogy Guys (George G. Morgan and Drew Smith)
21.
CanadaGenealogy, or, ‘Jane’s Your Aunt’ (Diane Rogers)
22.
Ancestry Insider (Anonymous)
23.
GenealogyBlog (Leland Meitzler)
24.
Ancestor Search Blog (Kathi)
25.
Tie Hugh Watkins Genealogue (Hugh Watkins) /its a tie!/
25.
Tie Legacy News (Legacy Tree Software) /its a tie!/

Thank you, ProGenealogists.com.

2009’s Top 25 Gen Blogs: Tracing the Tribe is #10

The 25 most popular genealogy blogs of 2009 were named by ProGenealogists.com

I’m delighted to report that Tracing the Tribe – The Jewish Genealogy Blog is listed as number 10, among some very distinguished company.

The blogs were evaluated based on overall content, Technorati rating and industry experience.

Here’s Heather’s introduction, followed by the complete list:

Genealogy blogging is all the rage and on the rise. A Google search for genealogy blogs currently results in nearly half a million options, with over seven times that number for “family history” blogs. Nielsen Buzz Metrics BlogPulse shows a steady trend for genealogy and family history blogs with spikes correlating to celebrity family history activity in the news. Of the millions, 25 surface as the most popular all-around genealogy blogs, with a tie for 25th place according to rankings from Technorati.

Top 25 Genealogy Blogs as of 3 April 2009:

1. About.com Genealogy (Kimberly Powell)
2.
Eastman Online Newsletter* (Dick Eastman)
3.
Genea-Musings (Randy Seaver)
4.
Creative Gene (Jasia)
5.
Dear Myrtle (Pat Richley)
6.
AnceStories (Miriam Midkiff)
7.
Genealogue (Chris Dunham)
8.
footnoteMaven (Anonymous)
9.
Genetic Genealogist (Blaine Bettinger)
10.
Tracing The Tribe: The Jewish Genealogy Blog (Schelly Talalay Dardashti)
11.
GenaBlogie (Craig Manson)
12.
Olive Tree Genealogy Blog (Lorine McGinnis Schulze)
13.
Steve’s Genealogy Blog (Stephen J. Danko)
14.
24-7 Family History Circle (Juliana Smith)
15.
TransylvanianDutch (John Newmark)
16.
GenDisasters (Stu Beitler)
17.
http://blog.familytreemagazine.com/insider/ (Diane Haddad)
18.
Think Genealogy (Mark Tucker)
19.
California Genealogical Society and Library Blog (California Genealogical Society)
20.
The Genealogy Guys (George G. Morgan and Drew Smith)
21.
CanadaGenealogy, or, ‘Jane’s Your Aunt’ (Diane Rogers)
22.
Ancestry Insider (Anonymous)
23.
GenealogyBlog (Leland Meitzler)
24.
Ancestor Search Blog (Kathi)
25.
Tie Hugh Watkins Genealogue (Hugh Watkins) /its a tie!/
25.
Tie Legacy News (Legacy Tree Software) /its a tie!/

Thank you, ProGenealogists.com.