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Spain’s Sephardic secrets

After the discovery of a string of Jewish sites in Andalucia, our writer tries out a new tour uncovering the area’s Sephardic past – and present

August 12, 2018 15:41
Granada, aka Gar-Anat al Yehud
4 min read

‘My grandmother lit candles like these on a Friday and had no idea why,” says Antonio Gomez, pausing before a typical Shabbat tableau in Granada’s Palacio de los Olvidados. And pointing out a ram’s horn from another town in Andalucia, he adds: “They blow this during Holy Week — but they have no idea why.”

Sephardic heritage buffs visiting the Palacio, now a museum commemorating Jews who left during the Spanish inquisition, could give them a fair idea.

Catholics who follow Jewish traditions for which they have long forgotten the explanation almost certainly had ancestors who were “conversos” — Jews forced by Spanish zealots to convert to Christianity in the late 15th century or get out.

While 100,000 fled, thousands of others converted while covertly hanging on to their faith; tales of lighting candles behind the closed doors of corner cupboards are not unknown.