by Eli Leon, Shlomo Cesana, Israel Hayom Staff and Reuters
More than 500 years after the Spanish Inquisition, the Spanish government has voted to facilitate the naturalization of Jewish families of Spanish descent, without demanding they give up their other citizenship.
                                            A synagogue in Toledo, 
Spain, which was built in 1180                                          
       
                                                 
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            Photo credit: Reuters                                         | 
                        
Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand of Spain 
must be rolling in their graves: The government in Madrid on Friday 
approved legislation that would allow descendents of Jews who were 
exiled from Spain to be naturalized in the country without having to 
give up their former citizenship, which had been the law until now. 
Spanish Justice Minister Alberto 
Ruiz-Gallardon said that Spain "is indebted to Spanish Jews for 
spreading the Spanish language and culture throughout the world."
"The law that was passed has a deep historical
 significance not just because it touches on events that happened in our
 past, which we shouldn't be proud of, such as the banishment of Spanish
 Jews in 1492, but because it conveys the message that Spain is open and
 pluralistic," said Ruiz-Gallardon. 
"Now, the doors have opened," he said, 
remarking that several exiled families had held onto the keys to their 
homes in Spain since the Inquisition some five centuries ago. 
Applicants will have to prove their Spanish 
heritage through using their name or language, or by genealogy, in 
addition to an approval by the Spanish Federation of Jewish Communities.
 Applicants need not be religious Jews, the Spanish justice minister 
said. 
The law potentially allows an estimated 3.5 
million residents of countries where many Sephardi Jews eventually 
settled, such as Israel, France, the United States, Turkey, Mexico, 
Argentina and Chile, to apply for Spanish nationality.
"We're very pleased to hear the Spanish 
government has facilitated the process of allowing Sephardi Jews to seek
 Spanish nationality without giving up their citizenship," Lynne 
Winters, the director of the American Sephardi Federation, told Reuters 
by telephone. 
An Israeli official involved in the new procedures responded coolly to the Spanish announcement.
"It's an interesting development, but it is 
far from simple. The federation will also ask for the parents' ketubah 
[religious marriage document], which must be signed by a Sephardi rabbi,
 not a Mizrahi or Ashkenazi rabbi," he said. 
Spanish law does not normally allow dual 
citizenship except for people from neighboring Andorra or Portugal or 
former colonies such as the Philippines, Equatorial Guinea or Latin 
American countries.
Around 300,000 Jews lived in Spain before the 
"Reyes Catolicos," Catholic monarchs Isabella and Ferdinand, ordered 
Jews and Muslims to convert to the Catholic faith or leave the country.
      Eli Leon, Shlomo Cesana, Israel Hayom Staff and Reuters
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=15357
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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