One of the
characteristic features of the early history of
As historians
look back before the first millennium at the Jewish populations of
The first of many
discriminatory laws against the Jews was passed even before the Moorish invasion
in 305 C.E. in the Roman province of Hispania (Spain); soon after the Council of
Toledo passed a canon forbidding Jews from blessing the crops of non-Jews, as
well as prohibited Christians from sharing meals with Jews. When the Visigoths (Aryan Christians)
invaded Hispania in 409 C.E., more laws were instituted further restricting the
Jews. One hundred and eighty years
later in 589 C.E., Visigoth King Recared relinquished the Aryan sect and
accepted the orthodox Catholic faith, thereby paving the way for the religious
unity in the country.
Subsequently the Church was to exert powerful influence on all aspects of
social life. Almost immediately a
canon was passed forbidding the marriage between Christian and Jews; and in 612
C.E., the Council of Gundemar of Toledo ordered that all Jews submit to baptism
within the year, or undergo “scourging, mutilation, banishment, and
confiscation of goods” (Meyrick 170).
However, the years of late Aryan and early orthodox Christian rule were
both coming to a close. In 709
C.E., internal unrest destabilized the peninsula. This strife originated between the
Trinitarian Christians--who accepted the Trinity, and Aryan Christians, who saw
Jesus not as G-d--but as a Prophet inspired by G-d (Charafi 2).
Two years later
in 711 C.E., Moorish soldiers (a mixed Arab and Berber army) crossed over from
“It is a common
misapprehension that the holy war meant that the Muslims gave their opponents a
choice ‘between Islam and the sword’. This was sometimes the case, but only when
the opponents were polytheist and idol-worshippers. For Jews, Christians, and
other ‘People of the Book’…there was a third possibility, they might become a
‘protected group’, paying a tax or tribute to the Muslims but enjoying internal
autonomy” (Watt 144).
Even
in those early days, the Moors knew and practiced the principles of
chivalry. They had already won the
title to Knightliness which many centuries later compelled the victorious
Spaniards to addressed them as “Knights of
Later,
after advancing to
“Side by side with the new rulers lived
the Christians and Jews in peace. The latter rich with commerce and industry
were content to let the memory of their oppression by the priest-ridden Goths
sleep” (Hume 23).
The
occupation of
Under the ruling
Caliph (the descendant of Mohammed--the prophet of G-d on earth), the
Jews were able to preserve their rites and traditions. Peaceful coexistence led to their
economic and social expansion.
Their status was that of Dhimmis, non-Muslims living in a land
governed by Muslims. The Jews had
limited autonomy, but full rights to practice their religion, as well as full
protection by their Muslim rulers; but this did not occur for free. There was a specific tax called the
jizya that Dhimmis had to pay to receive these benefits. Having its origin in the Qur’an,
it states Dhimmis who did not pay this tax, should either convert to Islam, or
face the death penalty (Qur’an 9, 29).
This tax, higher than the tax Muslims had to pay, was in several
occasions one of the most important sources of income for the kingdom. The jizya was not only a tax, but also a
symbolic expression of subordination (Lewis 14).
From the second
half of the eighth century to the end of the eleventh century Jewish life
flourished while contributing greatly to scholarship. A translating program was established in
The influence
Islamic culture injected into Jewish life was significant. Jews accepted many customs and
traditions of the Moors and interweaved them into their daily life. The Arabic language, instead of Spanish
and Hebrew, was used for prayers.
Ceremoniously washing of the hands and feet, which is an Islamic custom,
became adopted by Jews before entering Synagogues. Moreover, Jewish music was sung to the
tune of old Arabic melodies. Jews
adopted the clothing style of their Moorish neighbors; however, they were
restricted from wearing fine clothing such as furs and silk. Most wore the universal long robe and
belt, however they were prohibited from wearing a green or white one, which were
the traditional colors of Islam.
For almost four
hundred years the Jews lived in Al-Andalus amid the moderate Islamic rule based
in
Thus Islamic rule
continued, but quickly the peninsular realm was cleaved up into numerous small
Muslim kingdoms, each with its own ruler.
In a way not different then that of a civil war, they started fighting
among each other. Once the Muslims
divided, the armies of Christendom gained a foothold on the peninsula. It was this subsequent warring of
Islamic administrations that led to collapse of Moorish supremacy on the
peninsula, allowing the Christians to rise to power during the subsequent
reconquista. When the
Caliphate disintegrated in the eleventh century as the result of civil war, many
influential Jews remained in the Moorish kingdoms (Diaz-Mas 3). The Jews perpetuated their way of life
under the subsequent Christian monarchs of
Sources
Cited
1.
Charafi,
Abdellatif. Once Upon a Time in
2.
Diaz-Mas,
Paloma. Sephardim: The Jews from
3.
Epstein,
Isidore. Studies in the Communal Life of the Jews of
4.
Holy
Qur'an. Trans. M. H. Shakir.
5.
Hume,
Martin A. S. The Spanish People: Their Origin, Growth and Influence.
6.
Lane-Poole,
7.
Lewis,
Bernard. The Jews of Islam.
8.
Meyrick,
Fredrick. The Doctrine of the
Church of England on the Holy Communion.
9.
Sachar,
Howard M. Farewell Espana: The World of the Sephardim Remembered.
10.
Watt,
Montgomery. A History of Islamic