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Isaac de Castro lived in the Dutch-held section
of 17th century Brazil, one of the earliest permanent Jewish settlements
in America. The Dutch had conquered the northeastern provinces of Brazil
from Portugal in 1630. Until 1654, when the Portuguese reconquered the
area, several hundred European Jewish families migrated there and formed
a vibrant community centered in Recife. The Calvinist Protestant Dutch
were tolerant of Judaism and, therefore, Recife attracted European Jews
forced to practice their religion in secret while pretending to live as
Catholics.
Isaac de Castro migrated from Amsterdam to Recife in 1641, at age sixteen.
In 1644, de Castro chose to move from the relative safety of Recife to
Bahia, the capital of Portuguese Brazil, where he came under scrutiny
by the Catholic Inquisition. Historian Arnold Wiznitzer speculates that
de Castro moved to Bahia because he was an emissary sent by the Amsterdam
Jewish community to Portuguese Brazil to encourage Jewish conversos living
there to observe Jewish rituals. If Wiznitzer is correct, De Castro's
mission to these secret Jews cost him his life.
Soon after he arrived in Bahia, someone denounced Isaac de Castro to Dom
Pedro da Silva, the Catholic Bishop of Bahia, chief of the Portuguese
Catholic Inquisition in the colony. The bishop's informant recognized
de Castro as a visitor to the Recife synagogue. Brought before the bishop
in December 1644, de Castro tried at first to evade punishment. He swore
that he was Jose de Liz, a circumcised Jew born in France. De Castro (alias
de Liz) testified that he developed doubts about Judaism while studying
at a French university and came to Bahia to learn more about Catholicism.
* In 1498, Portugal compelled its Jews to convert or be expelled.
In order to stay, many Jews chose outward conversion. Contrary to popular
imagery, the Catholic Inquisition did not execute professing Jews who
refused to convert. Rather, its targets were Jews who had accepted baptism
and converted to Catholicism but who continued, secretly, to maintain
or promote Jewish practices. Isaac de Castro tried to convince the bishop
that he was not a baptized Christian, although he had a Christian education,
and was thus outside the Inquisition's jurisdiction.
The Catholic bishop was having none of de Castro's story. His Catholic
Bible and tefillin were introduced as evidence of de Castro's double life.
The bishop ordered de Castro shipped to Lisbon, Portugal for formal adjudication.
At his ecclesiastical trial in June, 1645, de Castro finally admitted
his correct identity. He was indeed the son of Portuguese conversos and
had lived outwardly as a Catholic when the family moved to France. His
mother told him, however, when he was supposed to undergo infant baptism,
she substituted another child for him. For this reason, de Castro claimed,
he felt free to practice Judaism without running afoul of the Inquisition.
When the de Castro family moved to Amsterdam, Isaac, his brothers and
his father underwent circumcision and openly reclaimed their Jewish identity.De
Castro claimed that he migrated to Recife and then Bahia to avoid a murder
charge pending in Amsterdam. Witnesses testified to the contrary that
de Castro was sent to Bahia by the Jewish community to teach Judaism to
the province's secret Jews.
The tribunal believed the witnesses and found Isaac de Castro, who in
their judgment had been properly baptized a Catholic, guilty of secretly
practicing and proselytizing for Judaism. He was offered two choices:
continue to deny Catholicism and be burned at the stake, or confess his
errors, return to the Church and suffer a prison sentence not likely to
exceed five years.
According to Wiznitzer, de Castro understood that, to save his life, "he
was expected to abjure Judaism and profess Catholicism as the vast majority
of imprisoned apostates had done under similar circumstances." To his
credit, de Castro "decided that such a price for saving his life was too
high and preferred to perish...for the sanctification of God's name."
." The trial transcript records that, upon hearing of his conviction,
de Castro indicated that he prayed to G-d seven times each day, observed
the Jewish holidays and fast days, upheld the laws of kashrut and complied
as best he could with the 613 mitzvot prescribed by the sages -- while
presenting the outward appearance of a Christian. For two years, priests
attempted to convince de Castro that Jesus was the Messiah and that he
should accept Jesus as his savior. Frustrated by de Castro's refusal,
the clergy finally informed the court that he was incorrigible.
On December 15, 1647, de Castro was re-tried in criminal court and sentenced
to death. Offered another chance to convert, he refused. Taken to the
Square of the Royal Palace for public execution, de Castro was offered
a final chance to embrace Catholicism so he might mercifully be strangled
before being burned alive. He refused once again. Eyewitness accounts
indicate that, as the flames rose, de Castro intoned the Shema and then
called out his final words: Ely, Adonai, Sabahot.
Shalom from New York,
Dr. Michael Feldberg
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