A student of prejudices once said, The mind is like a sheet of white
paper in this, that the impressions it receives oftenest and retains longest,
are the black ones." The truth of this observation is never more apparent
than when considering the Jews and the Spanish Inquisition.
If the teachings of the Old Testament were dinned into the minds and
hearts of Jews as continually as is this historic calamity, the rabbis
would not have to bemoan the lack of interest in religion on the part of
children of Jewish parentage as they did lately at their Atlantic City
Conference.
Jewish book after book, weekly and monthly publication after weekly
and monthly publication, so incessantly harp upon the Spanish Inquisition
that it has become a Jewish "persecution complex," as Maurice Fueurlich
said in the "Forum" (Sept., 1937).
In writing on "Children of a Martyr Race," this writer says, that "the
Spanish Inquisition has been dinned into my consciousness so deeply that
it became a basic element in my emotional life." The Jewish version of
the Spanish Inquisition, which took place four hundred and fifty years
ago, is the source from which has emanated much Jewish fear of the Catholic
Church, and much hostility towards Jews who enter her communion. This is
true even among rabbis who seek a union of forces with Catholic priests
against the injustices of our time that afflict the Jews.
They hold that as long as Christianity is divided; as long as Catholics
are in the minority there is no fear. But should the Catholic Church ever
become the only Christian Church, as she was during the middle ages, then
beware of the Auto-da-Fe (Act of Faith), a solemn religious ceremony that
the uninformed and the misleaders hold to have been a place of torture
and burning at the stake.
Those in Jewry who speak or write about the Spanish Inquisition, with
minor exceptions, have received their knowledge of it from prejudicial
sources, or from persons whose data concerning it were taken from poisoned
sources of information. That accounts for your prodding me, as have many
others, with the query: "How can you join a church that inflicted the cruelties
practiced upon your own people during the Spanish Inquisition?"
Your query could be dismissed with the simple declaration that my journey
to the baptismal font of the Catholic Church was conditioned upon my belief
in her principles, and not upon agreement with everything done by Catholics
during the Spanish Inquisition, or any other intense historic period. But
the import of your query, considering that the Spanish Inquisition is a
bugbear that closes the Jewish mind to things Catholic, prompts me to deal
with the subject at length, and without any equivocation.
Properly to understand this question, it is necessary to bear in mind
the fact that an inquisition is a court of inquiry; that all societies,
including your Masonic lodge, have temporary or permanent trial courts,
under different names, to examine members charged with violating their
principles. If adjudged guilty, such members are punished, though not by
"having their throats cut across, their tongues torn out by the root, and
their bodies buried in the sands of the sea," as you "solemnly swore" to
permit your lodge to do when you became a Master Mason, in the event that
you revealed its secrets.
If secular societies may legitimately institute such courts, and impose
sentences, then why has not the Catholic Church a greater reason for the
institution of an inquisitorial court, considering that to violate her
sacred principles is to violate the principles God taught man through Moses
and His Son Jesus, the Messiah?
To properly understand this question, it is necessary to bear in mind
the fact that the Inquisition was instituted in Spain for persons who professed
to be Catholics and not for practicing Jews. It was to unearth, and to
bring to penance, not merely heretics, as many Jews believe, but also bigamists,
adulterers, blasphemers, and other violators of the principles of the Church
to which they, as baptized men and women, were obligated to be true.
George E. Sokolsky, publicist, of New York City, says in "We Jews,"
"The task of the Inquisition was not to Persecute Jews but to cleanse the
Church of unorthodoxy. The Inquisition was not concerned with infidels
outside the Church but with heretics within it" (N.Y., 1935, p. 53). The
Spanish Inquisition was instituted to weed out those baptized Jews and
Moslems who pretended to be sincere Catholics, while they secretly adhered
to the practices of Judaism and Mohammedanism, which is a most serious
sacrilegious offense. They were also enemies of the State, which was Christian
in principle and carried the Cross in battle against the Crescent.
As further evidence, consider what Dr. Salo Wittmayer Baron, one of
America's foremost Jewish historians, has to say about this matter. I quote
from "A Social and Religious History of the Jews" (N.Y., 1937, VOL 2 p.
58) "It appears to be a fact as well as a theory that Jews who never
ceased professing Judaism were, on the whole, left undisturbed.
In the fourteen years of the activity of the Spanish Inquisition, from
its establishment in 1478 to the expulsion of the Jews from Spain, we hear
of only one persecution directed against a Jewish community, where the
Jewry of Huesca was accused in 1489 of having admitted conversos (pseudo-converts
from Judaism to Christianity) to the Jewish fold.
It was precisely the inability of the inquisitorial courts to check
Jewish influence on the conversos that served as a decisive argument for
the Catholic monarchs in banishing Jews from Spain.
Properly to understand this question, it is necessary to bear in mind
the fact that Spain was at war for more than a half dozen centuries against
the Mohammedans with whom the Jews were lined up against the Spaniards.
It was a battle of the Cross against the Crescent. This is vouched for
by Graetz's "History of the Jews," the "Jewish Encyclopedia," the "Encyclopedia
of Jewish Knowledge," "Vallentine's Jewish Encyclopedia," and other authorities
of foremost standing in Jewry.
The two last named say, "The Spanish Jews welcomed, it is even said
that they invited, the Arab invasion. Under the Caliphate (Mohammedan ruler)
of the West, with its capital at Cordova, their members (the Jews) grew
and they attained great influence in the State" (Dr. Cecil Roth, in Vallentine's
J.E., p. 612). "It is admitted that the African Jews aided the Arabs in
the capture of Cordova, Malaga, Granada, Seville, and Toledo and these
cities were placed under Jewish control by the conquerors" (Ency. J. Knowledge,
p. 531).
Properly to understand this question, it is necessary to bear in mind
the fact that as far as the abuses of the Inquisition are concerned, the
Catholic Church is no more responsible for them than she is for the Spanish
bull fights which she condemned.
Those abuses were committed, with a few exceptions, by the civil power,
and they were condemned by Popes Leo X, Paul III, Paul IV, and Sixtus IV
who reigned during that period of history.
That is very likely news to you, as it is to most Jews, who have been
"fed up" with stories of the Auto-da-Fe that are as far from being true
as are the stories about Jews slaughtering Christian children to use their
blood for ritual purposes.
Properly to understand this question, it is necessary to bear in mind
the fact that the popes were the protectors of the Jews, and not their
enemies.
Rome was a haven of refuge for the persecuted Jews when the Eternal
City was ruled by the popes, to which many of the Jews driven out of Spain
migrated. You need not take my word regarding the friendliness of the popes,
as it is confirmed by Dr. Cecil Roth of London, Jewry's leading present-day
historian on the middle ages. He said a few years ago, while addressing
the Zionist Forum in Buffalo, N.Y. "Only in Rome has the colony of Jews
continued its existence since before the beginning of the Christian era,
because of all the dynasties of Europe, the Papacy not only refused to
persecute the Jews of Rome and Italy, but throughout the ages popes were
protectors of the Jews.
Some Jews have the feeling that the Papacy has a policy of persecuting
Jews. But you must remember that English history is definitely anti-Catholic'
and your views of Catholicism may have been colored by English history.
We Jews who have suffered so much from prejudices, should rid our minds
of prejudices and learn the facts. The truth is that the popes and the
Catholic Church from the earliest days of the Church were never responsible
for physical persecution of Jews and only Rome, among the capitals of the
world, is free from having been a place of Jewish tragedy. For this we
Jews must have gratitude" (Feb. 25th, 1927).
Properly to understand this question, it is necessary to bear in mind
the fact that many, many centuries before the Catholic Church came into
existence the Jewish Church put to death violators of the Mosaic Law, for
infractions of that Law which were not as serious as the offenses of which
Jews were guilty in Spain. This was done by the priests of Jewry, whereas
the extreme penalties during the days of the Spanish inquisition were imposed
by the state, as heresy was considered to be a crime in those days.
That abuses took place at times on the part of the inquisitors is not
denied. The Catholic Church, while divinely protected from error in defining
matters of faith and morals, does not claim to be immune from acts of abuse
of power on the part of some of her children, even in high places. Such
an abuse on the part of officials of the Church caused Pope Leo X to excommunicate
the Catholic tribunal at Toledo, and to have the witnesses who appeared
before its inquisitorial trial arrested for perjury.
This was during Spanish Inquisition days. But such an abuse of power
was rare, as the spirit of charity dominated those historic inquiries regarding
heresy. Persons called before the inquisitors who repented were released
after promising to mend their ways and to do the penances enjoined, such
as fasting, wearing a special penitential garb for a time, and imprisonment,
which very often was in the houses of the penitents themselves.
Torturing and burning were no part of the solemn religious ceremony
called the Auto-da-Fe, where the penitents abjured their errors and made
public recantation, by making an Act of Faith. To properly understand this
question, it is necessary to bear in mind the fact that extreme punishments
meted out during the middle ages, such as burning at the stake, which you
and I abhor, were common throughout the world at that time. They did not
originate during the middle ages, having been the law before the Christian
era. Such punishment did not shock the people then any more than the people
of our country are shocked at the present time by the lethal chambers,
hanging, lining men up against the wall before firing squads, and electrocution,
penalties imposed for kidnapping and sometimes burglary, as well as for
murder and treason.
Please do not conclude from this that the people in former times were
less merciful than we are. Such punishments were meted out more often,
and for lesser offenses, in Protestant England (the source from whence
most anti-Catholic history emanated) than in Catholic Spain. As evidence,
I recommend reading "The Protestant Reformation," by William Cobbett, a
Protestant historian.
Properly to understand this question, it is necessary to bear in mind
the fact that Jewry inflicted the same sort of severe punishments long
before the Christian era, when blasphemy was rightly considered to be a
major offense, being directed against Almighty God. It is for that offense,
falsely charged, that the Sanhedrin, under the direction of the high priests,
declared Jesus to be worthy of death, for claiming to be the Messiah.
In answering the inquiry, "What are the types of capital punishment
according to Jewish law?" the "Oracle," a Jewish publication, replied,
"According to the Jewish law there are four kinds of execution, stoning,
burning, the sword and strangling. Death by strangling is not in the scriptures,
but the rabbis interpreted that wherever death is mentioned without specific
mode, strangling is generally meant" (Carl Alpert, Boston. 1935, p. 77).
Such capital punishments were inflicted in Jewry not only for blasphemy,
but for Sabbath-breaking, witchcraft, idolatry, refusal to submit to the
decrees of the priests or judge, and for a dozen other offenses, as well
as murder. Properly to understand this question, it is necessary to bear
in mind the fact that the Catholic Church can no more be judged by the
abuses of the Spanish Inquisition, which ended in the deportation of about
160,000 Jews (including many who were not guilty of offenses against the
Church or the State), than Judaism can be judged by the persecution of
the people of Edom, descendants of Esau.
Jewish minds have been poisoned against the Catholic Church through
stories about the Inquisition; whereas it is most difficult to find Catholics
who have even heard the story of Jewish persecution of the Idumeans. I
quote it from "The History of the Jews," by Graetz, though the same thing
can be found in the life of Josephus, the Jewish Encyclopedia, and many
other authoritative Jewish publications, "
After the victory over the Samaritans, Hyrcanus marched against the
Idumeans, laid siege to their two fortresses, and after having demolished
them, gave the Idumeans the choice between acceptance of Judaism, and exile....
For the first time Judaism, in the person of its head, John Hyrcanus
(high priest), practiced intolerance against other faiths, but it soon
found out with deep pain how highly injurious it is to allow religious
zeal for the preservation of the faith to degenerate into the desire to
effect violent conversion of others...." These forced conversions of the
people of Edom did bring a painful experience upon Jewry from which it
never recovered. It robbed Jewry of more than Esau (of whom the Idumeans
are descendants) robbed his brother Jacob.
It gave Jewry the Herods (Idumeans) who ruthlessly ended the Judaean
Maccabean dynasty and its Hasmonaean high priestly family; the Herods who
"appointed the high priests (including Caiaphas and Annas) and took over
the government of the Jews," as Josephus says, and finally lined up with
Titus in the siege of Jerusalem.
After all that has been said, the fact remains that the Spanish Inquisition
was a much to be regretted calamity; it was necessitated by the conditions
of the time, and it cannot be rightly understood by the conditions of our
time. Our "third degree," drastic though it is, cannot be compared to the
in. human methods in the world during inquisition times, and for many centuries
before the Christian era.
Deportation, which climaxed the Spanish Inquisition in 1492, is always
to be deplored irrespective of the cause of it or whom it afflicts. It
was resorted to because, as Dr. Baron the Jewish historian said, "the inquisitorial
courts could not check the Jewish influence on the conversos," the fake
converts from the Synagogue to the Church, "who," the Encyclopedia of Jewish
Knowledge says, "were the direct cause of the inquisition" (p. 331).
Whatever may be said about the abuses of the Spanish Inquisition, which
are to be deplored, the following two simple facts ought to remove from
Jewish minds that historic obstacle to an open-minded examination of the
teachings of the Catholic Church. First, the Catholic Church has as legitimate
a right to weed out pseudo converts from Judaism as the priests and Sanhedrin
in Jewry had to bring to book the members of their Church who violated
the Mosaic Law.
The Catholic Church had a much sounder right to do so than had the
descendants of the deported Spanish Jews to excommunicated Spinoza and
other pantheistic Jews from the Synagogue in Amsterdam, finally driving
them out of Holland.
Heinrich Graetz says, "The Amsterdam rabbis introduced the innovation
of bringing religious opinions and convictions before their judgment seat,
of constituting themselves a sort of inquisitional tribunal, and instituting
autos-da-fe which, even if bloodless, were not less painful to the sufferers"
("History of the Jews," Vol. 4, p. 684).
Secondly, if our country may rightly put men through the "third degree";
into concentration camps and prisons; deport them, as well as line them
up before firing squads, for sabotage, espionage, "fifth column" activities
and other treasonable acts during our short wars; then was the Spanish
Government doubly warranted in so doing, considering that she was at war
for centuries.
To come back once more to your query, if "what is good for the goose
is good for the gander"; if I should not have become a Catholic on account
of the injustices perpetrated upon the Jews by the Catholics of Spain,
then ought you to refuse to remain a Jew on account of the injustices of
the Jews in Edom.
Such logic, which follows from the sentiment expressed in your query,
is strongly against yourself, because the abuses of the Spanish Inquisition
were committed by the State; whereas the forced circumcision of the Idumeans
was the work of official Jewry.
I called to see Mr. C... F..... His understanding of Judaism,
like that of most Americanized Jews, was limited to knowing that Jews are
circumcised, barmitzvah, keep the Saturday Sabbath, Yom Kippur and Rosh
Hashanah, refrain from eating pork, & etc. When it came to principles
that are Jewish, he was so lacking in knowledge of them that it was necessary
to talk Judaism to him, for without that knowledge it is impossible to
understand that Judaism in its fullness is Christianity.
Ah, he did know of the Spanish Inquisition. He wanted to know if "the
Catholic Church still holds non-Catholics to be heretics, as she did the
Jews and Moslems in Spanish Inquisition days."
This was not a surprise, because of all things related to the Catholic
Church during the twenty centuries of her existence, the Spanish Inquisition
is foremost in the minds of Jews. Considering that my conversation with
your friend came right after I had written to you about the Spanish Inquisition,
a word regarding heresy and heretics will add to your understanding of
the subject, as I hope my outline of it last night enlightened Mr. C...
F.....
It is a commonplace for non-Catholics to assume that the Jews in Spain
were all held to be guilty of heresy; that both Jews and Protestants are
considered by Catholics to be heretics. This is a false notion, based upon
failure to realize that heresy charges by the Catholic Church are brought
against Catholics, and not against persons who openly profess to be Jews,
Moslems, or Protestants, though they may believe in some things that are
heretical....
The Maranos were tried, and rightly found guilty of heresy. They were
under the jurisdiction of the Catholic Church through baptism, hence their
public declaration that they were Catholics, while they were secretly following
Jewish practices, was heretical. It was their action that caused the Inquisition
to be instituted in Spain in 1480, which lasted until 1492....
Heresy is a sin. It is so declared in Jewish as well as Christian law.
St. Paul enumerates heresies among "works of the flesh" (Gal. 5:20). A
Catholic who denies one or more of the teachings of Christ is held by the
Church to be a heretic. The Catholic Church teaches with absolute authority
in matters of faith and morals, hence she is obligated to declare, as did
St. Paul, "Even if an angel from heaven should preach a gospel to you other
than that which we have preached to you, let him be anathema" (Gal. 1:8).
This applies to the denial of a single basic Christian teaching, for
to deny one of God's teachings is to deny God. Hence a Catholic who proclaims
belief in only nine of the Ten Commandments, for instance, is a heretic,
as the denial of one of the Commandments is a denial of God, its Author.
The same thing applies to every article in the Apostles Creed, and other
teachings of the Church. Heresy, properly understood, is worse than murder.
Murder robs man of his physical life, which at best is limited to a short
term of years; whereas heresy robs man of his spiritual inheritance; it
murders the soul, with the result that the heretic is deprived of an eternity
of happiness, in the event of dying unrepentant.
Trial and punishment for Heresy is of Jewish and not of Catholic origin,
its objective being to keep pure in hearts the teachings of God; and to
safeguard the attainment of eternal life. Look under "Heresy and Heretics"
in "Vallentine's Jewish Encyclopedia" for an understanding of the Orthodox
Jewish concept of the subject. This is what you will find, "The term 'heretic'
in connection with Judaism may conveniently be applied to any one who does
not accept the two Torahs .the Written and Oral in which Jewish teaching
is contained. Apart from the idolaters of ancient times, the Talmud knows
four main kinds of such heretics, which however, it is not always careful
to distinguish: (1) the Cutheans or Samaritans, who accepted only the Pentateuch
and the Book of Joshua as inspired, and rejected the rest of the Scriptures;
(2) the Sadducees and Boethusians, who rejected the Oral Law; (3) the MINIM
Judaeo-Christians (that is converts from the Synagogue to the Church)
and Gnostics who desired to supplement the TORAH Of Moses with some other
TORAH Of superior authority; (4) the APIKORSIM, who denied the divine origin
of the TORAH. The Karaite heresy, which appeared later, was essentially
the same as that of the Sadducees" (p. 279).
Charges of heresy are not so frequent among non-Catholics today as
they were in the religious past, on account of religious indifference,
and theological incoherence. In our country, in which about one-third of
the Jews of the world reside, a man may believe anything or nothing and
be designated by sons of Israel as a Jew.
Rabbi Stephen S. Wise could stand up in his "Free Synagogue," in Carnegie
Hall, and shout out, "I do not believe that the Ten Commandments
were given by God on tablets of stone and handed to Moses on Mount Sinai.
If that be heresy, then banish me from the Synagogue."
This sensational statement obtained the desired front page in the public
press throughout the country. Of course, no one can be charged with heresy
in a Synagogue that is "Free" from dogma, and from control of any one but
the Rabbi himself. Heresy assumes an authoritatively defined belief and
practice, such as obtains in the Catholic Church.
Hence I asked at the time, "Who has any right to try Rabbi Wise for
heresy, in a pulpit where he may speak on any thing he desires, in any
manner that suits him personally? The Rabbi was only making a 'stageplay'
when he challenged any one to try him for denying the Mosaic miracle."
The so-called Jew of Jews, Einstein, went a step further. He denied
belief in a personal God, while speaking in a Jewish Theological Seminary.
Was he tried for heresy? Not at all. He would very likely have been, and
rightly so, were he a member of an Orthodox Synagogue. I told in my last
letter of Spinoza, whose denial of belief in a personal God caused him
to be excommunicated by the sons of Jews who were deported from Spain and
Portugal on account of the heretical conduct of the Maranos.
Spinoza was banished from Amsterdam, and to avoid assassination, after
"a fanatic made an attempt on his life with a knife," he left his native
city where the "curses had been pronounced upon him" by the rabbis in their
leading Synagogue.
Gabriel da Costa, is another leading Jew whose tragic life and treatment
by these Amsterdam Jews, on account of his heretical teachings, was most
dramatic. It inspired Gutzkow's tragedy, "Uriel Acosta"; and Zangwill's
"Dreamers of the Ghetto." His denial of the immortality of the soul was
rightly called a heresy.
The Rabbis caused him to be arrested in Amsterdam, fined 300 guilders,
and his "heterodox book to be publicly burned." Let the Encyclopedia of
Jewish Knowledge say a further word about him: "He fled to Hamburg, but
soon returned to Amsterdam, and in 1633 became, in his own words, 'an ape
among the apes' offering his submission to the Synagogue.
Formalist he could not be, and his contrariness resulted in his being
made subject to the 'great ban.' For seven years he lived silent and solitary,
boycotted even by his relatives. Then he yielded, made confession of error
and suffered the ignominy of a public scourging and 39 stripes. He went
home, wrote an impassioned sketch of his own life, 'A Specimen of Human
Existence,' and shot himself" (p. II).
That the charges against Spinoza and da Costa were warranted, no one
can rightly deny, for the Jews of Amsterdam had a definite doctrinal code
which they had a right to uphold, as did the Church and the State in Spain.
Yet these Rabbis, who belonged to the Amsterdam community that was started
by the Maranos (the pretended-to-be-Catholics), who cursed the Catholic
Church and Spain for the deportation of their forbears, deemed it legitimate
to curse, scourge, excommunicate, and drive from Amsterdam those of their
fellow-Israelites who were guilty of heresy.
To these Iberian descendents a Dutch Auto da. Fe was perfectly legitimate,
but not one in Spain or Portugal, where the welfare of the State as well
as the Church was at stake.
I carried a four page leaflet with me on my visit to the Copley Plaza
Hotel, that was being distributed on the streets of Boston, called "Sucker
Bait." It told of "Rumors-Lies-Deceits" being circulated by agents of Hitler,
Mussolini and Hirohito. It called upon citizens to report such "fifth columnists"
to the Massachusetts Committee of Public Safety.
I asked Mr. C... F...., and I ask you, Mr. Isaacs, if it is proper
during the present World War, as we three believe it is, to report such
"whisperers," who are trying to "Divide and Conquer"; to have them placed
into concentration camps if found guilty, then why was it not perfectly
legitimate to punish heretics in Spain who pretended to be Catholics in
order to undermine the State as well as the Church? Remember that the Maranos
were the fifth columnists of the fifteenth century.
David Goldstein