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The Jews of San Nicandro

An extraordinary conversion tale

December 2, 2010 12:05
Judaism book

By

Simon Rocker,

Simon Rocker

1 min read

John A Davis
Yale University Press, £20

I was talking recently to Professor Tudor Parfitt of London School’s Oriental and African Studies when he he mentioned a story which I had never heard before: about a band of Catholic villagers from San Nicandro in a remote region of south east Italy who took up Judaism in the 1930s and eventually settled in Israel. By chance, just a couple of days later, a new book on the subject appeared at the office.

It is a quite remarkable tale, possibly the only example of collection conversion to Judaism in modern Europe, according to the author, John Davis, a professor of Italian history.

The patriarch of this singular group was Donato Manduzio, a shoemaker invalided in the First World War and a kind of autodidact prophet who claimed to have visionary dreams. His reading of scripture led him to conclude that the New Testament was false and that the true religion lay in the Old.

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