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From: H-Net Staff <revh...@mail.h-net.org>
Date: Thu, Jan 10, 2019 at 6:39 AM
Subject: H-Net Review [H-Judaic]: Lang Hilgartner on Ojeda-Mata, 'Modern
Spain and the Sephardim: Legitimizing Identities'
To: <h-rev...@lists.h-net.org>


Maite Ojeda-Mata.  Modern Spain and the Sephardim: Legitimizing
Identities.  Lexington Studies in Modern Jewish History,
Historiography, and Memory Series. Lanham  Lexington Books, 2017.
284 pp.  $95.00 (e-book), ISBN 978-1-4985-5175-5; $100.00 (cloth),
ISBN 978-1-4985-5174-8.

Reviewed by Judith K. Lang Hilgartner (Elon University)
Published on H-Judaic (January, 2019)
Commissioned by Katja Vehlow

_Modern Spain and the Sephardim _presents a historical and
anthropological study of the relationship and attitudes of modern
Spain toward Sephardic Jews. This publication contributes greatly to
the breadth of contemporary Sephardic scholarship by dedicating
several chapters to relatively unknown subjects, such as the Jewish
community in Barcelona and the treatment of Sephardic Freemasons in
Spain. _Modern Spain and the Sephardim _is based on research
completed as part of Maite Ojeda-Mata's doctoral studies at the
Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona. In 2012 she published a
monograph, _Identidades ambivalentes: Sefardíes en la España
contemporánea_ (Ambivalent identities: Sephardim in contemporary
Spain), whose content has been updated, expanded, and reorganized for
the present publication. _Modern Spain and the Sephardim _is one of
the first books to examine the historically discriminatory
sociopolitical narratives that influenced Spanish relations with
Sephardic Jews in light of the recent Re-Patriation Law 12/2015 that
appears to offer Spanish citizenship to Sephardim.

Ojeda-Mata uses the phrase "legitimizing identities" as a point of
departure (p. xviii). She proposes that during the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries, Spain, as a locus of political and economic
control, used different propagandistic narratives to control
Sephardic Jews, either by emphasizing their Jewish identity or by
highlighting the commonality of Spanish heritage. As the title of her
2012 monograph suggests, the cultural "ambivalence" of the projected
identity of Sephardic Jews could work to their advantage or
disadvantage. The six chapters of _Modern Spain and the Sephardim_
present different case studies in which these legitimizing factors
were in play, and the epilogue analyzes how the ideology of
legitimization underpins the Re-Patriation Law 12/2015.

Chapter 1 discusses how Spain was influenced by the humanitarian
ideals of Romanticism in its view and treatment of other races. This
chapter provides a brief but accurate summary of Romanticism, Jewish
Haskalah (Enlightenment), and Hannah Arendt's observations on pariah
and parvenu. Ojeda-Mata contextualizes the Sephardic assimilation or
lack thereof in terms of established thought regarding Jewish
integration and emancipation in the rest of Europe. Spanish dogma
tended to classify Sephardim as Jews who had an Iberian essence that
improved their Jewish heritage. In the past, physical characteristics
were used to determine race, but Romantic ideals added linguistic
traits, religion, and cultural affinity in an attempt to determine
what right Sephardim had to be included as ethnically Iberian.
Ojeda-Mata states that while Spanish qualities were generally seen to
improve Jews, Jewishness was seen to harm Spanish essence. One
excellent aspect of this chapter is that it provides a table with
legal policies regarding Jews, starting in 1492 and continuing all
the way to the present constitution.

Chapter 2 expands on the themes of the first chapter and looks at how
they applied to the case of Morocco and the eastern Mediterranean.
When Spain became anxious about the French influence pervading North
Africa, intellectuals like Ángel Pullido advocated for the
incorporation of "stateless Spaniards" (as he called the Sephardim)
who were faithful to Spain and "civilized" (p. 53). His
philo-Sephardic campaign had some success and found supporters in the
cultural historian Americo Castro and even King Alfonso XIII.
Ojeda-Mata believes that any perceived proximity found between the
Spanish government and the Sephardim in North Africa was not due to a
vision of their shared ancestry but rather the political maneuverings
of colonialism.

Chapter 3 focuses on Sephardic life within Spanish borders, in
particular, the cities of Melilla and Barcelona. Ojeda-Mata carried
out an extensive anthropological study of the demographics of both
regions. This chapter provides some of the only research available
about the Jewish communities in Barcelona before 1939. A unique
aspect of this chapter is that it includes some interview material
with Jewish residents of Barcelona. Chapter 4 does not concentrate on
a particular geographic region but rather on the different ways in
which Jews obtained citizenship prior to the dissolution of the
Spanish protectorate in Morocco in 1956. Interestingly, Jews were
considered "foreigners" in Spain proper but in the protectorate, they
were considered "natives." Once again, Ojeda-Mata links the idea of
ambivalence to the treatment of Jews in Melilla, because they were
assigned the designation "Hebrew" or "Spanish" depending on their
nationality (p. 122). The demographic information provided here adds
depth to the study as a whole.

Chapters 5 and 6 are replete with details about the treatment of Jews
during the rule of Francisco Franco. Ojeda-Mata offers first-time
research on the Sephardic Freemasons in Spain. Jewishness was
associated with both capitalism and Freemasonry during the early
years of Franco. These qualities were viewed as threats to the
Catholic nationalism pervading Spain. Ojeda-Mata lists the numerous
Jewish Freemasons who suffered prosecution (and in some cases death)
because of their Masonic affiliations. Chapter 6 begins by linking
the fear of a Marxist-Judeo-Masonic conspiracy with the political
divides of the Spanish Civil War. Ojeda-Mata analyzes the incongruity
of the treatment of Sephardic and Ashkenazi Jews who were trying to
escape Eastern Europe. While Franco initially allowed Ashkenazi Jews
to pass through Spain, policies eventually became stricter due to
Nazi German pressure. While Spain occasionally did protect Sephardic
Jews, protection did not imply acceptance or assimilation.

Ojeda-Mata casts a critical eye on instances when Spain reportedly
demonstrated benevolence toward Sephardic Jews. Although Spain
declared neutrality during the war, Franco was far from munificent
toward Jews. This publication presents evidence that Franco treated
Jews in a haphazard way, sometimes allowing for Sephardim to receive
citizenship, while at other times, such as during the genocide of
Salonica, turning a blind eye. Ojeda-Mata points out that efforts
were made to limit and/or deport Jews who resided within Spanish
borders during World War II. In her epilogue, she points out the
inconsistencies in Law 12/2015, showing that this legislation was not
the giant step forward in Jewish-Spanish relations that some had
hoped for. She hypothesizes that Spain may have pushed for the law to
counterbalance the anti-Israeli and pro-Palestinian rhetoric that has
pervaded recent Spanish politics and society. Ojeda-Mata's
observations are helpful because the media has often presented Law
12/2015 as a quasi-birthright for Sephardim. Bringing to bear
carefully researched data, Ojeda-Mata shows that Spanish citizenship
still is offered on a limited-term basis with many contingencies.

The nuanced manner with which Ojeda-Mata treats the complicated
subject of Spanish relations with the Sephardim within its borders,
in the protectorate, and in Europe is valuable for the future of
Sephardic studies. The chapters are at times quite dense, in keeping
with the multifaceted nature of the subject matter and a heavy
emphasis on historicity and interview material. Her sources are
impeccably cited and amply explained in extensive notes at the end of
each chapter and a long bibliography. The strength of this volume is
the concrete nature of all of the data, which often comes directly
from primary sources. Ojeda-Mata does not generalize the intricacies
of the often-convoluted relationships between Spain and Sephardic
Jews. _Modern Spain and the Sephardim _is sure to become a touchstone
in Sephardic studies for years to come.

Citation: Judith K. Lang Hilgartner. Review of Ojeda-Mata, Maite,
_Modern Spain and the Sephardim: Legitimizing Identities_. H-Judaic,
H-Net Reviews. January, 2019.
URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=52091

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States
License.

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Andrew Stewart
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