The Cross and the Pear Tree: A Sephardic JourneyTracing the dramatic lives, through 500 years, of the old and distinguished Sephardic Jewish family from whom he is descended, Victor Perera brilliantly re-creates the history not only of his own people but of an entire culture. The story he tells begins in Spain in the fifteenth century, when the Sephardim are offered a choice of conversion, exile or death. It is the story of a richly flourishing tradition - intellectual, religious, worldly and spiritual - interrupted by massively cruel events; a story of persecution, escape and renewal, carrying us from the Iberian Peninsula across Europe to the Holy Land and Central America. And the Pere(i)ras whose lives we enter are both fascinating in themselves and emblematic of the Sephardic diaspora created by the Inquisition and the Expulsion - some of them, under threat of torture and execution, capitulating to the Cross or becoming Marranos, crypto-Jews who practiced their ancestral religion in secret; others remaining loyal to the pear tree that became their symbol and crest. Among the Marranos: Ana Pereira, a merchant's daughter, a Sephardic convert in Portugal who, at age fifteen, was sentenced to wear penitential raiment and undergo spiritual penances in prison, where, under torture, she incriminated fifteen of her close relations. Among the reclaimed: the fabulously wealthy magnate and author Abraham Israel Pereira, who participated in the excommunication of philosopher Baruch Spinoza; and the beautiful Maria Nunes, who was abducted to Shakespeare's England, and rejected the marriage proposal of a duke and Queen Elizabeth's entreaties on his behalf, marrying instead a cousin in Amsterdam's first Jewish wedding. In nineteenth-centuryFrance we follow the meteoric rise of the brothers Emile and Isaac Pereire, who founded the French railroads and the Credit Mobilier banking system. Over the centuries, the stories of Pereras in all walks of life - among them rabbis and Kabbalistic scholars in the Holy Land - unfold |
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Abendana Abraham Pereira accused Alexandria Amsterdam ancestors Arabs arrived Ashkenazic asked Aunt Lottie Aunt Rachel Aunt Rebecca Aunt Simha's became Becky Bilboul brothers Catholic century Christian converso converted cousin daughter deaf-mutes death died early Eliachar Emile Evora Expulsion eyes father grandfather grandfather's Guatemala Guatemala City Halevi Hasan Hebrew Hebron Holy Land Iberian Iberian Peninsula Inquisition inquisitor Isaac Isaac Pereire Israeli Jacob Pereira Jerusalem Jewish Jewish community Jews Judaizing Lacandon Ladino later Levi Levinger Lisbon lived look Lopes Pereira Maimonides Manuel Lopes Maria Nunes Marrano married memory Mishkenot Montefiore Moses Mother Muslim Nehama Nissim Oded Old City Palestinians Portugal Portuguese prayer Rabbi Reina religious Rodrigues Pereira Sabbath Salonika says Sephardic community Sephardim sheikh Simha sister Spain Spanish Spinoza synagogue Talmud tion Toledo Torah traveled tribunals turned Uncle Isidoro Uncle Moshe Victor Perera wife Yehuda Burla Yitzhak Moshe