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The Jewish faith
doesn't really seek out converts, nor does it
trumpet examples of conversion; yet, one of the most
passionate declarations of conversion is, in fact,
by a woman who became a Jew. She is, of course, the
Moabite widow, Ruth, who,
at the death of her husband, refuses to leave Naomi,
her mother-in-law, saying "...Intreat me not to leave
thee, or to return from following after thee: for
whither thou goest, I will go; and where thou lodgest,
I will lodge: thy people shall be my people, and thy
God my God." (KJV-Ruth
1:16-17). What follows is, I think, just
as dramatic. The earliest
reference I have come across to this unusual case of
a large group of Roman Catholic villagers in
southern Italy converting to Judaism was in the
September 15, 1947, issue of Time magazine. The piece was
entitled "The Converts of San
Nicandro." The lead was this: "All over the world next
week, the ram's horns of Rosh Hashanah (beginning of the
New Year) will call faithful Jews to the Ten Days of
Penitence that end with Yom Kippur. No prayers will be
more fervent than those from the 80-odd ex-Catholics of
San Nicandro, Italy." The item went on to tell the tale
of one Donato Manduzio [1885-1948], an illiterate
villager of San Nicandro in the Gargano region (the
"spur" of the boot of Italy on the Adriatic) in the
province of Apulia. He was injured in WWI and during his
convalescence taught himself to read by studying the
Bible. He had had what Christians might call a
"road-to-Damascus" conversion. Apparently, a street
sermon by a Protestant preacher convinced him that Roman
Catholicism was empty; yet, he reasoned, Christ, though
a prophet, could not be the Messiah because there was so
much misery in the world. Donato thus decided to return
to the God of the Old Testament and become a Jew. He
spent the 1920s and 1930s converting about 80 of his
fellow villagers to the God of Abraham. The Time article ends
at the point where the recent converts have decided to
emigrate to Palestine and help form the state of Israel. At the
beginning, Manduzio had not even been aware of other, "real" Jews
in Italy, a community that was, until well into the
period of Italian Fascism in the mid- and late 1930s, on
a respected and solid footing in Italy. When Manduzio
learned of such Jewish groups elsewhere, he started
communicating with them. John Davis (sources, below)
writes, "Anyone reading the correspondence would
immediately have been aware of the very humble
background of the writer and would probably have
suspected some sort of prank." Yet, little
by little, the small community of Jewish converts
won respect and acceptance; the Rabbinate in Rome
accepted the converts into their new faith in
September, 1946. A few years
later, the New York
Times reported (March 3, 1953) that "...the
Jews of San Nicandro...have found their
portion of the Promised Land here in the mountains
of Galilee...". As background, the item added how
the new Jews had originally met resistance in Italy
from both the head Rabbi in Rome as well as from
local parish priests and ardent Catholic villagers.
(These same villagers, however, in 1943 had hidden
"our Jews" in caves to protect them from German
searches.) In September, 1943, an
interesting highlight was then added to the whole tale
when Phinn Lapide, Canadian-born Lieutenant in the
Jewish Brigade of the British Eighth Army “discovered”
the San Nicandro Jews and became instrumental in
persuading the Rabbinate to accept the villagers. The
"Jewish Brigade" of the British Eighth Army was
technically Company 178, composed of Jews from
Palestine who had enlisted in the British Army to
fight Germany. It was one of the groups that rolled
up from the south and into San Nicandro, liberating
it as part of the general Allied push to the north
in pursuit of the retreating German Army. The trucks
from Company 178 had Stars of David painted on the
sides and the members of the company must have been
surprised to see cheering residents of San Nicandro
standing in the road to greet them, waving their own
Star of David flags! So, in the
spring of 1948, some members of new Jewish community
from San Nicandro volunteered for service with the
Jewish forces in Israel. They and others settled in the
village of Alma in 1950. The New York Times reported in April,
1953, from Israel just how "authentic" the new Jews from
Italy really were. All they had ever read was the Bible
and had not even heard of the Talmud or its enjoinder
upon Jews to give to the poor instead of making burnt
offerings; thus, for a few Passovers, the community in
Alma had been performing the ritual slaughter of a white
lamb without blemish before a specially built altar of
unhewn stone, exactly as prescribed in Leviticus and
Deuteronomy! Adam
Kirsch (sources, below) in his review of Davis,
writes ...the home-made Judaism of the Jews of San Nicandro grew into a passionate Zionism. From 1944 on, the community’s goal was to emigrate and build the Jewish state. This was by no means easy... the British were intent on keeping Jewish immigrants out of Palestine, and the few available permits were meant for Holocaust survivors, not the comparatively well-off Jews of San Nicandro. Yet in November 1949...after the death of Donato Manduzio, who grew increasingly alienated from his flock, the Jews of San Nicandro did make aliyah [emigrate]. Davis writes only sparingly about their experience in Israel, which was apparently as difficult as that of most immigrants to the new country. But perhaps this very hardship was the best proof that they had achieved their extraordinary goal of becoming ordinary Jews. In his own book on San Nicandro, Lapide (sources, below) writes in obvious amazement: It was in 1943, while serving in Italy with a Palestinian unit of the British Eighth Army, that I came upon the new Jews of San Nicandro, a small village near the southern tip of Italy. These people had, under the influence of a peasant named Manduzio, become converts quite on their own several years previously, having moved from Catholicism to Judaism without ever having so much as laid eyes on a Jew, and without ever having exchanged a word with any organized Jewish body. The intensity of their new faith was borne witness to by the way in which they voluntarily shouldered the burden of Fascism’s oppressive, anti-Semitic legislation. In August 1946, a rabbi and a mohel journeyed from Rome to San Nicandro to circumsise the new converts and welcome them formally into the Jewish community. This did not, however, end the saga of San Nicandro’s Jews. There lay ahead a period of internal contention, fighting in a distant country, a long voyage, a new homeland…. Like Moses, Manduzio never made it to the Promised Land. But he did leave a diary in which he told of his dreams, his visions, his new faith. Birnbaum (sources, below) says: These visions appear in Manduzio’s diary in a crowded hand spread over 400 pages, which I was privileged to hold in my hand. It is stored in the San Nicandro community president’s home...The diaries open with the author’s unique and emotional words: “In these pages a short and simple story will be related. You will read in them how the light shone over the gloom, light that dispelled the night’s darkness and distanced the shadows of Death. You, my dear man, the reader, do not laugh at my perverse and flawed writing, because in all the days of my existence I did not spend a day on a bench in a house of learning. My master and teacher was the God of Abraham who redeemed our Forefather Abraham from idolatry and showed him the path to the land of Canaan.” I
did say it
was dramatic. And it is, but even the prosaic is
interesting. After all, not all the San Nicandro
Jews left for Israel. Birnbaum says that "...the
women and families [and descendants] of the converts
continue to live as Jews in every way. The women
keep the Sabbath and holidays, they eat kosher meat
brought in from Rome...light [the Sabbath] candles,
pray in the synagogue every Sabbath and holiday
[and] fast on the Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur)."
Also, I don't know that anyone has tried to keep
track of the Israeli descendants of the original San
Nicandro immigrants, but I imagine that whenever
Israelis gather and talk about their immigrant
ancestors, there are no doubt tales of fleeing from
pogroms and vicious anti-Semitism in
many parts of the world, but there will be
at least a few who can say, "Hey, we used to be
Catholic farmers in southern Italy!"
Jewish community Jewish catacombs Jewish quarter Jews (early in Italy) sources:
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