Wednesday, September 14, 2022
Jews and Jamaica
Ken
Spiro-August 2022
When you think about Jamaica, what generally comes to mind is
reggae music, Bob Marley, beaches, palm trees, and maybe a few other things, but
not “Jews.” Surprisingly, the Jewish connection to Jamaica is very old and very
interesting. But before we can talk about Jews in Jamaica, we have to rewind our
story to Spain in 1492.
When you hear the date 1492, especially if you are from the U.S.,
what usually pops into your head is Christopher Columbus’s discovery of the New
World, but 1492 is also the year of one of the most traumatic events in Jewish
history-the expulsion from Spain. These
two events are actually very much connected.
July 31st, 1492 was the date set by Ferdinand and Isabella,
the king and queen of Spain, for all Jews to either convert to Christianity or
leave the country. On that date, the Jewish community of Spain, which had
flourished for 780 years, came to an end.
It is estimated that about half the Jews converted and stayed with many-
known as Conversos, Marranos or Bnei Anusim (Hebrew for
“the children who were forced”) - secretly and at great risks, continuing to
practice Judaism while an equal number left the country. Many went to Portugal where they were all
forcibly baptized five years later.
Immediately after the July 31st deadline, Columbus, who was
very possibly of Jewish ancestry, set sail on three ships with 88 crew (five of
whom were Jewish) in search of a westerly route to the Far East. Two months
later, on October 12th, 1492, he stumbled upon the Bahamas and
opened up the Americas for European colonization. Part of the reward that Columbus received for
his discovery was the Island of Jamaica.
Columbus’s accidental discovery of the Americas opened up a
massive new world for conquest, colonization, and fierce competition, primarily
between Catholic Spain, Portugal, and France and Protestant England and Holland
(which declared independence from Spain in 1581). It also opened up a new port
of refuge for the persecuted and exiled Jewish refugees of the Iberian Peninsula.
Today North America remains the largest Diaspora community in the
Jewish world, overwhelmingly populated by the descendants of Eastern European,
Ashkenazi Jews who fled by the millions from Czarist Russia between 1882 and 1914. Long before any Jews came to North America
they first settled in the West Indies and South America and Sephardic Jews
(“Sephardic” meaning from Spain) got there centuries before any Ashkenazim
showed up. The expulsion of 1492 and the
hardships that followed, for those who remained in Spain and Portugal, were the
primary reasons for the arrival of these first Sephardic Jews to the new world.
Back in Spain and Portugal, in the early 16th century,
thousands of Jewish forced converts to Christianity, now known as “new
Christians,” lived in constant terror of discovery at the hands of the Spanish
Inquisition. The Inquisition, which began in 1478, hunted down, arrested, and often
tortured and murdered tens of thousands of new Christians on suspicion of
secretly practicing their old faith and negatively influencing other new
Christians. It is estimated that more
than 30,000 people, many of them Jews, were executed by the Inquisition, which
did not officially end until 1834.
During the 16th century, fear of the Inquisition and a desire
for religious freedom led many of these crypto-Jews (forced converts who
continue to secretly cling to their faith) to flee Spain and Portugal for North
Africa, Holland, the Ottoman Empire, and the New World.
The Americas proved to be an attractive option for these crypto-Jewish refugees. Colonization
opened up many economic opportunities and there was much greater freedom since
these Spanish and Portuguese colonies were far away from the prying eyes of the
Inquisition. The oldest of these
communities were located in Brazil, Suriname, Curacao, St Domingo, Barbados, and
Jamaica.
Crypto-Jewish refugees from the Iberian Peninsula began to arrive
in Jamaica very soon after Columbus’s voyage, probably around 1494. They identified themselves as “Spanish” or “Portuguese”, not as “Jews” and settled in Kingston, Port Royal, Montego Bay, and other
locations throughout the Island. Columbus,
who controlled the island, did not allow the Inquisition into Jamaica so while
these crypto-Jewish refugees could still not openly- practice their faith it
was much easier and safer to practice in secret in Jamaica than back in Spain.
Economic opportunities were also abundant, especially in trading in sugar,
vanilla, tobacco, rum, and gold. The
community prospered and grew in relative freedom.
The situation for the Jews of Jamaica improved dramatically when England,
which was Spain’s arch-enemy, conquered the Island in 1655. The timing was perfect
as Oliver Cromwell, who ruled England at that time, had just allowed Jews back
into England 365 years after they were expelled by Edward I in 1290. The Jews
of Jamaica could finally openly practice their faith. After Cromwell, King Charles II confirmed the
citizenship and the rights of the Jews of both Great Britain and the colonies
including Jamaica.
The first synagogue in Jamaica was built in the latter half of the
17th century but was destroyed by an earthquake in 1692. (Synagogues in Jamaica and the West Indies
have a very unique feature: wooden floors
covered with sand. There is much
speculation as to the reason, ranging from a remembrance of the wandering in the
desert after the Exodus from Egypt to commemorating the attempts by crypto-Jews
back in Spain, living in fear of the inquisition, to muffle the sound of their
footsteps while they prayed in secret.) As the population began to grow so did
the number of synagogues scattered throughout the island.
The growing Jewish population in the 17th century
helped turn Jamaica into a thriving trading center in the Caribbean and also a major
launching point for raids against Spanish and Portuguese shipping. Jews such as
Abraham Blauvelt worked as privateers (legally sanctioned by the British
government to raid enemy ships as part of maritime warfare) while other Jews,
like Moses Cohen Enrique, were actual pirates. The exact extent of Jewish
pirate activity is much debated and likely exaggerated, but it certainly would
have been sweet revenge for the Jews of Jamaica whose ancestors were so abused
in the Iberian Peninsula in the 15th century. In the
Hunt’s Bay Cemetery (There are 22 known Jewish cemeteries in Jamaica) there are
seven gravestones with skulls and crossbones on them.
Ashkenazi Jews began arriving in Jamaica in the early 18th
century and by 1710 approximately 20% of the population of Kingston, the largest
city and today the capital, was Jewish.
The Jewish population reached its peak in the 1880s when 22,000 of the
island’s 580,000 residents were Jewish, including four of Kingston’s mayors.
Jamaica achieved independence from Britain in 1962 and its first
US ambassador, Neville Ashenheim, was Jewish. Political instability in the
1970s led to a mass exodus of Jews from the island and today only between 300
to 500 Jews remain. The only synagogue
still open (besides a Beit Chabad) is Shaare Shalom in Kingston, built in 1885.
One of the most fascinating connections between Jews and Jamaica
is probably Rastafarianism- a religion and social movement that appeared in
Jamaica in the 1930s that was much popularized by the Reggae musician Bob
Marley. While Jews had nothing to do
with the founding of Rastafarianism, there is no question that Judaism, the
Bible, Biblical themes and concepts - the Exodus narrative, etc. played a huge
role in shaping Rastafarianism. The music of Bob Marley is laced with Biblical
references and even direct quotes from the Bible so the next time you hear
Marley singing “Zion train is coming our way” you will know that it already made
a stop in Jamaica more than 500 years ago.
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