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IN-DEPTH FEATURES
Part I
Very few chapters have been recorded on Jewish history in
the Golus that are in any way comparable to that of Don Yosef
Nasi, the Duke of Naxos, and his aunt, Donna Gracia. They
were born into a wealthy family in the Marrano community in
Lisbon, Portuguese noblemen on the outside and loyal Jews in
secret. The fear of the Inquisition led them far from their
birthplace and after years of moving from place to place and
of adventures, they settled in Constantinople. They openly
returned to Judaism. They supported Jewish communities and
talmidei chachomim on a massive scale and earned the
admiration of the gedolei hador, among them the Beis
Yosef, the Mabit, and the Mahari ben Leib. Their political
and economic power, and their ability to set international
processes in motion were unprecedented in Jewish history. The
saga of the Nasi family.
*
The year 1510 (5270) heralded no brighter future for the Jews
of Portugal than had the years that preceded it. Many of
those who had been expelled from Spain still wandered the
streets of Europe and the east, vulnerable to attack and far
from any peace.
In North Africa, Ferdinand the king of Spain began his
journey of conquest, and reports went out about Jews being
murdered and others sold as slaves. Time and time again, the
Jews of Lisbon, whose situation was relatively good, were
called upon to provide the funds to redeem the captives.
The de Luna family too, was asked to aid their suffering
brethren, and they indeed gave generously of their wealth.
They were the notables of the community, an illustrious
family which had changed their Jewish name to de Luna as an
aspect of the way of life that had been forced on them as
Jews. On the outside, the lives of the Marrano Jews in Lisbon
was no different from those of their gentile neighbors
— though they were always aware that even the slightest
suspicion was sufficient for them to find themselves under
harsh investigation.
But that was on the outside. In the recesses of their homes,
far beneath the exquisite salons, there pulsed a real Jewish
life. On Shabbos and on festivals and any time they were
able, the Jews would slip away to secret hiding places which
were well guarded and remove the mask of their forced,
oppressive lives. For a short time they could be themselves:
faithful Jews who yearned for the day when they could return
to their religion without fear.
A daughter was born into the de Luna family, the second of
three children. The name given to her was Channah, but
everyone called her Gracia. Her Christian name was
Beatrice.
Her childhood was conducted in the shadow of the special way
of life that characterized the community. Even as a little
girl they taught her their secret. She learned to understand
that she was a Jewess, but that the tribulations of the times
did not allow her to live openly as such. For her bas
mitzvah she was given an elegant siddur, covered
in gold, and she knew that all her life she would live
strictly as a faithful bas Yisroel.
When Donna Gracia was 18 years old, in 1528, she married a
prominent member of her community. Francisco (Tzemach) Mendes
was also the son of a distinguished family in the community,
wealthy bankers on the outside and Jews in secret.
The wedding was held in public in front of the populace, but
the real ceremony was held in secret when a rabbi married
them according to Jewish law.
Francisco and his brother Diogo (Meir) were owners of the
Mendes bank, one of the wealthiest in Europe. Their enormous
wealth opened doors for them, and they were frequently
invited to the royal palace. Shortly afterwards, the bank
extended its operations, and it opened a branch in Antwerp.
Diogo was sent to run it. Soon the branch in Antwerp became
larger than the original.
In Lisbon, Donna Gracia's home was run like a typical
aristocratic household, with menservants and maidservants
fulfilling their every request. Two years later her daughter
Malka was born, who was given the public name Reina.
Antwerp
At that time Gracia's brother Shmuel, who served as physician
in the royal palace, died. She took his sons Yosef and Shmuel
into her home and had them educated as the children of
noblemen. At the same time she took care to give them a
Jewish education and their secret lives as Marranos
apparently left a deep impression on them.
Yosef, or Juan as his Christian name went, soon proved to
have outstanding talents. When he grew up, his aunt Gracia
took him with her on her visits to the king's court.
In 1536 (5296), Francisco suddenly passed away after only
eight years of marriage. The young widow had to contend with,
besides her private tragedy, her responsibility to her
nephews and to her young sister, Breinda. She also had to
take the place of her husband in the administration of the
enormous bank.
As if that were not enough, the Marranos found, to their
horror, that the laws of the Inquisition were now applied in
Portugal, just as they had been in Spain. Gradually, the
knowledge began to sink into Donna Gracia's heart that she
would have to leave her birthplace. Already during her
husband's lifetime, a plan had been prepared for a move to a
place where they could openly return to the commandments of
Judaism, and now the time had come to implement it.
She told her acquaintances and neighbors that she needed to
travel to Belgium on business, and she got on a ship heading
northwards. Even today it is not clear how she managed to
take out all her extensive possessions from the country.
There were those who maintained that she also cleared out a
portion of the royal treasury.
At first Donna Gracia stayed in London. Although the family
business was in Antwerp and her brother-in-law Diogo was one
of the largest bankers there, she was afraid of the
Inquisition there. Karl the Fifth, the Belgian ruler, was a
zealous Catholic who also ruled over Spain and sympathized
with the Inquisition.
Donna Gracia knew that only three years earlier there had
been a trial in Antwerp against Diogo who was suspected of
being Jewish. In the end, he was rescued from the danger that
hovered over his life only because the Kaiser was then in
need of his money. Thus it was crucial for Donna Gracia to be
assured that she would not be persecuted as a Jewess, and
that her possessions would not be harmed.
In the face of her economic status and the enormous wealth
that she would bring into the city the government could not
refuse, and so she settled in Antwerp.
The Escape
At the beginning of the 16th century, Antwerp was at the peak
of its prosperity. The city, the richest in Europe at that
period, was considered a vital economic crossroads.
Significant numbers of the merchants who filled its streets
were Jewish Marranos. Donna Gracia spent about eight years in
the city, but they were far from the best years of her
life.
As if it were not enough that she had to leave Lisbon out of
dread of the Inquisition, now here too a serious danger hung
over Jews who wanted to openly fulfill the commandments of
their religion
The business of the Mendes bank expanded more and more. Its
immense capital enabled the bank to finance loans even to
kings and various governments. The rulers were careful to
keep up good relations with the owners of the Jewish bank.
Donna Gracia's status made it necessary for her to pay
periodic visits to the palace, so that she had to revert to
the double life of a Portuguese noblewoman on the surface and
a Jewess only in secret.
Her nephew Yosef, who was gradually entering into the family
business and whose behavior and wisdom impressed everyone who
saw him, often accompanied her on her visits to the king's
court.
At that time Diogo married Breinda, the sister of Donna
Gracia. Gracia herself never remarried after the death of her
husband.
Helping Where they Could
The members of the Nasi family could take comfort from the
massive financial aid they were able to hand out to their
fellow Jews, as a result of their money and status. They
aided Marranos to reach Moslem Turkey, where they were free
of any fear of the Church. Their agents were instructed to
allocate all kinds of aid to Jews and Jewish communities in
trouble. Their greatest dream was that they should also be
able to leave for a country where they could at long last
openly return to their people. But the dream had to be
postponed when Diogo died and Gracia was left alone at the
head of the manifold family business.
In 1544 (5304), the time came when the family realized that
they had to leave. One day Donna Gracia was invited to the
palace, where she was informed that the great Kaiser himself
had turned matchmaker. And the person he had in mind was her
own daughter Reina-Malka, whom the king wanted to marry off
to a certain nobleman. At that Gracia realized that there was
no future for either her or her family in Antwerp.
One spring day in 1554 (5314), Donna Gracia and her sister
left secretly, together with her daughters, to Venice. They
did not wait to take care of extricating their vast
possessions, and simply told their acquaintances that they
were traveling for convalescent purposes.
Donna Gracia's flight caused a tremendous upheaval in the
palace. The Kaiser was especially disturbed by the thought of
Donna Gracia's great wealth, which it was obvious that she
would try to take out with her. The ultimate charge was
immediately whipped out—the two Jewish widows were
charged with `heresy' to Christianity. What was the flight if
not clear proof of that?
Their property was seized and transferred to the King's
treasury. It included the rights to 34 treasure chests, a
real find for the King's palace which was always in financial
distress.
The complex task of retrieving the stolen property for the
family fell on Yosef's shoulders. In the beginning it seemed
as if he would be able to persuade the King, but Queen Mary,
the Kaiser's sister and his substitute, turned out to be a
particularly hard nut to crack. All attempts at compromise,
including the generous loans that Yosef attempted to offer,
were rejected outright.
Judaism in the Open
Donna Gracia, who had settled meanwhile in Venice, took her
own steps. Many of the forfeited treasure chests had been
deposited with German merchants. Those merchants also had
property in Venice, and Donna Gracia managed to persuade the
Venice authorities to attach their property as a means of
compulsion. Left with little choice in the matter, the
merchants returned the chests to their owners.
Back in Antwerp, Yosef continued to conduct wearisome
negotiations over the fate of the remaining property.
However, at a certain point, he left the country quite
suddenly. Perhaps he had managed to gradually take out the
assets, or it could be that he felt that the Kaiser's
patience was exhausted and was worried about his own
safety.
In any event, the wealth that they did retrieve came to a
considerable amount. The Mendes family remained, in spite of
the losses, one of the richest in the generation.
The two De Luna sisters, as they were called in Venice, were
careful to live modestly. They might have been able to reside
there peacefully for many more years, had it not been for a
trouble that came to Donna Gracia from a completely
unexpected quarter. Her sister Breinda, for reasons that are
not clear, informed the government that Gracia was secretly
observing the Jewish commandments, and that she intended to
smuggle her property to Turkey and move there herself.
The Venetian government was delighted at the opportunity to
lay their hands on the vast property of the Jewish dowager.
They seized her possessions and threw her into prison. As for
her daughter Reina and `little' Gracia, Breinda's daughter,
they ordered them to be placed in a convent to prevent the
prisoner from having any thoughts of escape.
Breinda soon discovered that informing could be a two-edged
sword. Greed on the part of Breinda's agent led him to open
his mouth, and he informed the government that Breinda
herself was no less a secret Jewess. Obviously, they were
only too pleased with this additional revelation, and lost no
time in throwing her in prison.
The trial of the sisters went on for two months. Enormous
sums of money were exchanged to bring this affair to a close,
but to no avail. In the end, R' Yosef Nasi, who at the time
was in Constantinople on business, decided that there was no
choice but to request the intervention of the Sultan. He met
with Moshe Hammon, the Sultan's Jewish physician, and asked
him to try to influence his master to intervene in the
affair.
The physician spoke to the Sultan and contended that it was a
very worthwhile move for him, since the Mendes sisters wished
to bring in their property and to settle permanently in
Constantinople.
When the Sultan's request reached Venice, the government was
left with little choice, and it released the prisoners. The
road to Constantinople, which had already been taken
successfully by masses of Jewish refugees during that time,
was open.
However, in order to leave Venice for Constantinople, Donna
Gracia would have to declare her property, a declaration
which would mean huge losses. She therefore decided to move
first to the city of Ferrara, which received her with joy and
immense reverence. Her sister, Breinda, joined her. She
regretted the great suffering she had brought on both of
them, and preferred to live close beside her sister, as a
Jewess.
Medallion in Hebrew
Once in Ferrara, Donna Gracia was able to enjoy a freedom
such as she had never had before. The letter of asylum that
the Duke of Ferrara granted her contained a solemn promise
that she was entitled to live in accordance with her religion
and to take her property out from the place whenever she so
desired.
In an instant, years of suffering were removed. Donna Gracia
was finally able to remove her gentile mask and to openly
observe the dictates of her religion. She went back to her
original surname, `Nasi.' She gave immense financial support
to local community institutions, and her home was open to
rabbis and talmidei chachomim. For authors of
seforim who could not afford it, she sponsored the
printing.
In Ferrara, Breinda's daughter married Shmuel, the brother of
Yosef.
Donna Gracia's name was uttered with reverence and prayer
throughout the entire Jewish world. She established a secret
organization to rescue Jewish refugees in Europe, a ramified
structure which was a work of art. Hundreds of her agents who
were dispersed throughout Europe were commanded to aid
refugees with everything they needed, until their safe
arrival in Ferrara or Turkey. Don Yosef paid frequent visits
to his aunt during his journeys to the European capitals. He
would be given rescue instructions, which he faithfully
carried out.
During that period, Donna Gracia had a famous medallion
coined, which bore her name and image in Hebrew letters.
Meanwhile in the gentile world outside, a storm was brewing.
A number of years earlier, in 1517 in the city of Wittenberg,
Germany, a man by the name of Martin Luther had laid out the
principles of his system, and thereby set in motion the
wheels of the Protestant Reformation.
The new movement called for changes to be made in the ranks
of the corrupt Catholic Church. The idea began to disseminate
in Europe, and for the first time in many generations the
Church was seriously threatened. The reaction of the Catholic
Church was typical: the decision was made to forcefully exert
the Inquisition against any manifestation of `heresy.' The
Jews, as usual, were among the first to suffer.
The plague which struck in Ferrara intensified the hatred
towards the Jews of the city, and Donna Gracia once again
felt that the ground underneath her feet was unsteady.
In the spring of 1552 (5312), the Nasi household gathered up
their portables, and finally left behind them Christian
Europe. The ship upon which they sailed was bound for
Constantinople, the royal Ottoman capital.
Forty Cavaliers
The Turkish coasts had been the destination of thousands of
immigrants ever since the expulsion from Spain, sixty years
earlier. They knew that they would find religious freedom
there, human decency and tolerance—concepts that were
so rare in the countries of their origin.
In 1520 (5280), Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent had ascended
the throne which heralded the beginning of the golden era of
the Turkish empire. The advisors that he chose were superb,
and the melting policy that he introduced led to the
streaming of immense sums of money to the Turkish treasury,
which were used for development purposes. The Turkish fleet
was the most powerful in the Mediterranean.
It was Suleiman the Magnificent who built the walls of
Jerusalem which are familiar to us today.
Suleiman welcomed the Jewish refugees who flowed into his
country. He permitted them to develop their lives in finance,
industry and construction, and even allowed them self-rule.
The knowledge that the wealthy Nasi family was arriving in
Constantinople gave him great satisfaction.
Prior to their arrival in Constantinople, an agreement was
reached between the government and Donna Gracia, in which she
was promised that her property would remain hers. A special
writ also permitted her and her household to continue to wear
their Venetian apparel. In response, Donna Gracia committed
herself to paying taxes like any other resident, and not to
demand extra privileges.
In 1553 (5313) Donna Gracia arrived in Constantinople. She
was then 43 years old. According to sources from that period,
the Sultan placed at her disposal a special ship. Besides the
Nasi family, another 500 Marranos from Spain, Portugal, and
Italy were on the boat. Thousands of local Jews crowded
around both sides of the wayside while the carriages bearing
the hundreds of refugee-immigrants passed through the streets
of the city, with 40 cavaliers riding in front of them.
Gossip mongers and peddlers weaved fabricated tales over and
over again about the vast wealth of the `senora.'
Following the magnificent reception accorded her by the
Sultan, Donna Gracia set up her residence in a mansion in the
European Glatta quarter, on the banks of the Bosphorus, the
channel between the Mediterranean and the Black Sea —
and also the point closest to Europe. She dispensed charity
daily to institutions and Jewish organizations, and eighty
poor Jews from the community sat around her table
regularly.
To the best of her ability, Donna Gracia took care to carry
out the wishes of the rabbis and wise men of the community,
who also frequented her home.
Donna Gracia allocated enormous sums for the support of those
learning Torah. She assumed the responsibility for supporting
numerous talmidei chachomim and for maintaining many
botei midroshim, some of which had been founded by her
even before she arrived in Turkey.
Beside her residence she set up a yeshiva, which rapidly
became the central yeshiva in the city. Rabbis and yeshiva
students would receive their pay promptly, and were free to
devote themselves to their learning.
This was not the only reason for the number of students
there, which was constantly growing. The yeshiva was headed
by the Mahari ben Lev, one of the gedolei hador who,
only a few months earlier, had arrived from Salonika. In the
introduction to his Responsa, he writes that he is
grateful to, "The lady who is royal both in descent,
greatness, piety and yiras Hashem — Madame
Gracia Nasi," and to Don Yosef Nasi "son-in-law and relative
of the lady."
A year after her arrival in Constantinople, in 1554 (5314),
her nephew Yosef also came to settle in the city, delayed by
his assignments in Europe. He had managed to extricate most
of the family's possessions. Now he openly returned to
Judaism, and had his name officially changed from Juan Miguez
to Yosef Nasi.
At the same time, Don Yosef and Donna Gracia's status grew
steadily in the king's court, as did their business
transactions. Wool from Greece, spices from the East, grain
from the West, and wine from Moldova — the enormous
scope of their commerce necessitated the maintenance of a
private fleet of ships. The ships which sailed between the
numerous ports were granted an escort by a Turkish convoy of
ships.
"Nations would gossip about her riches, the queenly
fortress," wrote the poet Rabbi Saadia Longo of Salonika
about Donna Gracia.
At that time Donna Gracia fulfilled a dream that she had
secretly cherished in her heart for 20 years: She transferred
her late husband's remains from the Christian cemetery in
Lisbon to Jerusalem, where he was buried at the foot of Har
Hazeisim. How she managed to pull this off was something she
never did tell. Her prayer was only that her last rest would
be at his side, in the Holy Land.
Once she had fulfilled her heart's desire, she went on to her
second assignment: to marry her daughter Malka (Reina), who
was 24, to Yosef, who was then in his late thirties. In 1554
an enormous wedding was held, the likes of which the Jews of
the city had never seen. It comprised seven days of feasting
and gifts, while presents were liberally distributed to the
poor.
It meant the closing of the circle, in that she was giving
her only daughter to her nephew, whom she had fostered in her
house all these years, the person who had shared the years of
trouble, prayer, and, also, success.
The Martyrs of Ancona
After his marriage, Yosef also set up house in the Glatta
quarter, on the banks of the Bosphorus. His relations with
the Sultan, Suleiman the Magnificent, had earned him a
standing that had no parallel in the history of the Turkish
royal court.
His agents, who were dispersed throughout the capitals of
Europe, always managed to get him information on what was
happening behind the scenes in the courts of kings and dukes,
knowledge which also proved helpful to the Sultan's
advisors.
Don Yosef's status was actually third in the hierarchy of the
empire, after the Sultan and the Grand Vizier, Rostam Pasha.
It was not uncommon for the Sultan to decide to follow the
advice of Yosef Nasi rather than that of the Vizier.
Don Yosef and Donna Gracia were involved in a few famous
political incidents during the 16th century. The best known
was the ban on the port of Ancona.
Ancona was an important port town in east Italy. For hundreds
of years the city had been independent. However, in the
middle of the 14th century, its dependence on the Papacy grew
stronger. The local Jews had an important role in the economy
of the city due to their involvement in sea commerce,
although life in the hostile gentile surroundings was far
from easy. In the years following the expulsion from Spain,
Marranos who had returned to Judaism found a haven there and
were given letters of asylum by the papal authorities.
Matters took a turn for the worse in the year 1555 (5315),
when Paul IV ascended to the papal seat. He was one of the
cruelest adversaries of the Jews. He lost no time in this. He
forced the Jews in his kingdom to wear a mark of disgrace,
forbade them any kind of occupation other than the lowest
professions, and was the first to force Jews into a
ghetto.
The year before he became pope he was a central figure in the
episode of the burning of the Talmud in Rome, a tragedy that
led to the destruction of Torah life in Italy. He was even
hated by his own people, who nicknamed him `the demented.'
One of his first acts was to take care of the Portuguese
Marranos in Ancona. Without any prior warning he ordered
Inquisition trials to be opened against them. About a hundred
distinguished members of the community were imprisoned, but
most managed to extricate themselves though bribery, and
escaped to the city of Pesaro and other Italian cities. The
rest were sentenced to death.
When the harsh news reached Constantinople, Donna Gracia did
not waste a moment. She applied to the Sultan, requesting
that he wield his influence on the Catholic Church to let the
Jews alone. The Sultan responded by threatening the Pope that
whatever the Inquisition did to the Jews he would repay in
kind to the Christians in Turkey. This forceful demand led to
the release of those prisoners who had any kind of link with
Turkey. But others were not as fortunate. In the spring of
1556, fifty-two Marranos died al Kiddush Hashem.
"And they recited Shema Yisroel as their souls left
them, and their neshomos ascended in a flame to the
Heavens — it was the most evil act perpetrated in Italy
up till this day" (Emek Habocho). Seventy-two others
who admitted their `guilt' were sentenced to hard labor but
managed to escape. This incident is mentioned in the
Shalsheles Kabboloh by Rabbi Gedaliah ibn Yihya, and
in the Emek Habocho by Rabbi Yosef Cohen.
The world was horrified, and the Nasi family decided, in
consultation with rabbonim to take action.
End of Part I
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