Author Topic: Spain Refuses to ask for Forgiveness from Jews it Expelled  (Read 637 times)

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Offline muman613

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Spain Refuses to ask for Forgiveness from Jews it Expelled
« on: June 06, 2011, 06:52:25 PM »
The NYT ran a piece today which downplays a very important point.... Spain, the country which expelled its entire Jewish population in the year 1492, has never ever repealed the edict nor have they ever admitted their sin against the Jews nor have they asked for forgiveness. The NYT piece seems to gloss over it in the hopes that 'reconciliation' can take place because some rabbi visited Granada.

I would think that the least the Spanish government  could do would be to officially negate that edict and ask the entire Jewish people for forgiveness for Spains wicked treatment of the Jews who were good citizens of Spain. It also appears that Spain ranks amongst the European countries with the highest level of admitted antisemitic sentiments...

So how can the NYT write a piece which purports to discuss the betterment of relations between Spain and world Jewery? Once again I come to the conclusion that NYT is a liberal mouthpiece who is concerned with feel-good stories without any historical or factual basis.

Spain at least owes the Jewish people an apology for the Expulsion of 1492 and the various Inquisitions it waged against the Jewish people.


http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/07/world/europe/07iht-granada07.html

Rabbi Praises Spain's Progress in Jewish Relations
By RAPHAEL MINDER
Published: June 6, 2011

GRANADA, SPAIN — To mark the first visit to Granada by a Jewish religious leader since Jews were expelled from Spain over five centuries ago, the city authorities had hoped to be host to a luncheon for Shlomo Moshe Amar, the Sephardic chief rabbi of Israel.

Nowadays, however, Granada, a city of about 250,000, does not have any strict kosher establishments. So the chief rabbi had to settle last week for a garden picnic, in the beautiful surroundings of the Alhambra, the former Moorish palace in whose throne room one of the 1492 expulsion edicts for Jews was said to have been signed.

As he considered whether to tuck into a plastic tub of hummus or a plate of biscuits, the chief rabbi sounded unfazed by the informal and frugal lunch.

“Birds don’t eat kosher,” he said. “When you have a place that no longer has Jews, you also cannot expect it to have the proper structures to cater to the needs and eating habits of Jews.”

Indeed, the Jewish presence in Granada is “almost nil today,” said José María Castillo Sánchez, a former theology professor at the University of Granada, who was part of the welcoming committee for the rabbi. And while estimates differ, the Jewish community in Spain — 25,000 to 45,000 in a country of 47 million people — is a tiny fraction of that living there before 1492.

Still, the chief rabbi focused on praising Spain’s recent progress in rekindling the relationship with the Jews. Visiting the Granada City Hall, he told the mayor, José Torres Hurtado, “We now see that this city is full of the light of wisdom, liberty and splendor.”
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The 1492 expulsion marks one of the bleakest moments in the history of European Jewry. But the chief rabbi, who represents, among others, Jews descended from those who were forced to flee the Iberian Peninsula, suggested that no further steps needed be taken to ensure complete reconciliation.

“We are not asking for the official abolition of the edicts of expulsion because they have no legal relevance now and are like a plate which has been used and should just be thrown away,” he said. “Trying to work out what exactly convinced people here to issue such edicts would require an infinite amount of work, when we should instead be looking to the future and not the past.”
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Some studies have suggested Spain continues to be plagued by anti-Semitism, notably a 2008 Pew Global Attitudes survey that found that 46 percent of Spaniards viewed Jews unfavorably, which gave Spain the highest negative rating in Europe.

But more recent Spanish studies have played down such findings, including one last year by Casa Sefarad-Israel, an agency of the Spanish Foreign Ministry set up to promote good relations with Spanish Jewry and Israel. Its study found that negative views had dropped to 34.6 of the Spanish population.

“What the polls really show is that much of Spanish society is not in agreement with Israel’s policy toward Palestine, but that view then sometimes gets confused with anti-Semitism,” said José María Contreras, subdirector for religious affairs in the Spanish Justice Ministry. “Many people in this country just don’t make a difference between Israelis and Jews, just as they often also don’t distinguish between Spaniards and Catholics, however much of a plural society Spain has become.”

Meanwhile, outside Granada’s City Hall, protesters were occupying the square, surrounded by banners condemning political corruption and authoritarianism, as part of a youth-led movement seeking an overhaul of Spain’s political system that started in Madrid on May 15 before spreading nationwide. “This makes for a bit of an ugly landscape, sorry about that,” Granada’s mayor told the chief rabbi.

While no words of apology were pronounced by the mayor and other Spanish officials concerning the 1492 expulsion, those in attendance suggested that the chief rabbi’s visit was in itself significant enough to draw a line under this dark episode in Spanish history.

“It should not have taken 519 years for a Jewish religious leader to come back here, but what matters is that this has finally taken place,” said Diego de Ojeda, director of Casa Sefarad-Israel.
You shall make yourself the Festival of Sukkoth for seven days, when you gather in [the produce] from your threshing floor and your vat.And you shall rejoice in your Festival-you, and your son, and your daughter, and your manservant, and your maidservant, and the Levite, and the stranger, and the orphan, and the widow, who are within your cities
Duet 16:13-14

Offline mord

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Re: Spain Refuses to ask for Forgiveness from Jews it Expelled
« Reply #1 on: June 07, 2011, 06:58:06 AM »
My Brother went to spain on his honeymoon and either Malta or Gibraltar i forget which one.He disliked Spain but either Malta or Gibraltar had a large Jewish community which he enjoyed.He also went to Greece which he also enjoyed, but he didn't like Spain  
Thy destroyers and they that make thee waste shall go forth of thee.  Isaiah 49:17

 
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