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The Jewish Community of Brazil

Brazil

República Federativa do Brasil - Federative Republic of Brazil

The largest country in both South America and Latin America. 

According to the census conducted by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) in 2010, there were 107,329 Jews living in Brazil, making it home to the second largest Jewish community in Latin America (after Argentina) and the 11th largest in the world. In addition to the over 100,000 acknowledged Jews, it is likely that there are others in Brazil with Jewish ancestors, though the precise numbers are unknown. According to research conducted in 1999 by the sociologist Simon Schwartzman, 0.2% of Brazilian respondents said they had Jewish ancestry, a percentage that in a population of about 200 million Brazilians, would represent about 400,000 people.

Jewish history in Brazil can be broken down into four distinct periods:

1) The arrival of New Christians and the Inquisition. This took place during the period when Brazil was a colony of Portugal (1500-1822);

2) The formation of a Jewish community during the 17th century in Recife, the capital of the state of Pernambuco in northeastern Brazil. This occurred during the invasion period and Dutch rule, when Jews were granted religious freedom;

3) The modern period (1822-1889), when there began to be wider acceptance of different religions, prompting immigration from a number of European and Arab countries (as well as from Japan). The first Jewish community in the modern period was formed in Belem (Bethlehem), in the state of Para; later, another community was formed in Rio de Janeiro. At the end of this period, in 1889, Brazil adopted a constitution that guaranteed religious freedom;

4) The contemporary period, when communities formed in agricultural colonies in Rio Grande do Sul during the first decade of the 20th century, and communities were established in some of the main cities in Brazil after the First World War.

THE COLONIAL PERIOD (1500-1822)

Thousands of Portuguese New Christians came to Brazil during the colonial period but did not establish organized Jewish communities. Indeed, with the exception of when Brazil was under Dutch rule, until Brazil proclaimed its independence in 1822, Catholicism was the state religion and the only religion that was officially allowed to be practiced. New Christians participated in the social, cultural and economic life of the colony, and were particularly active in the sugar mills in Bahia, Paraiba and Pernambuco. They could belong to official institutions such as the Brotherhood of Mercy as well as to municipal councils. Nonetheless, these New Christians faced social and economic restrictions; for example, they could not marry "Old Christians" because of the laws related to "blood purity".

During most of the colonial period, Brazil was active in the Holy Office of the Inquisition Court, which was originally established in Portugal in 1536 and eventually spread to Portugal's main colony, Brazil, where it officially functioned until 1821. The conversion of non-Catholics in the Americas (including indigenous and pre-Columbian tribes) was a central part of the process of expanding the Portuguese and Spanish Empires. The Inquisition sent representatives from Portugal to carry out investigations beginning in 1591 and delegated power to local bishops. The Inquisition's most prominent activities took place between 1591 and 1593 in the states of Bahia; between 1593 and 1595 in Pernambuco; in 1618, in Bahia; around 1627 in the southeast of Brazil; and between 1763 and 1769 in the Grand-Para (northern Brazil). In the 18th century, the Inquisition was also active in the states of Paraíba, Rio de Janeiro and Minas Gerais.

In 1773, during the administration of the Marquess of Pombal, the distinctions between "New" and "old" Christians were abolished and the Inquisition ceased its activities. New Christians were able to integrate socially and economically into Brazilian society, while may also maintained elements of their Jewish heritage.

According to Wiznitzer, during the two and a half centuries that the Inquisition was active in Brazil, about 25,000 people were prosecuted and 1,500 were sentenced to death. About 400 people were accused of "Judaizing practices" and most were given prison sentences; 18 were deported to Lisbon where they were sentenced to death. The anti-Semitism of the Inquisition remained seeped into Brazil's cultural consciousness, though the Jews who arrived in Brazil during the 19th and 20th centuries experienced significantly less anti-Semitism than many of their coreligionists throughout the world.

Three well-known New Christian writers have excelled in the colonial period whose work during the colonial period reveals Jewish elements were Bento Teixeira, who wrote Prosopopéia during the 16th century; Ambrose Fernandes Brandão, the author of Dialogues of the Magnitudes of Brazil who also wrote during the 16th century, and the playwright Antonio Jose da Silva, "the Jew", who lived in both Portugal and Brazil and was sentenced to death by the Inquisition in 1739.

FIRST JEWISH COMMUNITY

The first organized Jewish community was formed in Recife, Pernambuco, in the northeast of the territory region, between 1630 and 1654. It took place during the period of Dutch occupation of Brazil (1630-1654), when Brazilians were granted religious freedom and both Jews and New Christians were provided with legal protections. According to Wiznitzer, the number of Jews in Brazil in 1644 reached 1,450.
In 1636 the Jews of Recife founded Kahal Kadosh Zur Israel (Rock of Israel), the first synagogue not only in Brazil, but in the Americas. The country's first Jewish cemetery was established in 1848 in Manaus.

RABBI SHALOM EMANUEL MUYAL

Many of those who arrived at the end of the 19th century and established Jewish communities sought to take advantage of Brazil's booming rubber industry. Cametá, a city in the state of Pará, eventually had half of its white population consisting of Sephardic Jews.

With significant number of Moroccan Jews moving to the Amazon because of the rubber boom, rabbinic authorities in Morocco saw the need for that community to have some form of religious leadership. At the turn of the twentieth century religious authorities in Morocco decided to send a rabbi to the Amazon, ostensibly to raise funds for a yeshiva, but with the added mission of monitoring compliance among the Moroccan Jews of the Amazon with religious norms and precepts. Rabbi Shalom Emanuel Muyal arrived in Manaus, the capital of Amazonas, in 1908 or 1910 and died two years after his arrival, probably after contracting yellow fever. Interestingly, after his death local Catholics began to revere Rabbi Muyal as a saint. Because there was no local Jewish cemetery, Rabbi Muyal was buried in the Christian cemetery and his grave became a pilgrimage site. Jealous and uncomfortable with the attention that the grave was receiving, the rabbi of the Manaus synagogue built a wall around the tomb. Rather than reducing the number of pilgrims, however, this only served to intensify the numbers of visitors to Rabbi Muyal's graves; these pilgrims also began leaving offerings and prayers on the newly-built wall. "He became the Jewish saint of the Amazon Catholics," acknowledges Isaac Dahan of the Manaus synagogue. In the 1960s, when Rabbi Muyal's nephew (who was then a minister in the Israeli government of the State of Israel) tried to exhume his uncle's remains and reinter them in the Jewish cemetery, protests erupted and the Amazonas state government requested that the body not be moved. Finally, it was agreed that the grave of Rabbi Muyal would be moved to the adjoining Jewish cemetery and the rabbi continued to be venerated among the Catholics of the Amazon.

With the decline of the rubber boom, wealthier Jewish families moved from Amazonas in northwestern Brazil to Rio de Janeiro. These families, the vast majority of whom were Sefardic, brought with them many religious ideas and elements that they absorbed and integrated from the indigenous tribes and African slaves among whom they lived.

THE MODERN PERIOD (1822-1889)

After Brazil achieved independence in 1822, the subsequent Constitution of 1824 maintained Catholicism as the state religion, but proclaimed tolerance for other religions and permitted services to be held privately. A few dozen Jews came to Brazil in this period. Dom Pedro II, who ascended the throne in 1832 and is considered by some to be one of the greatest Brazilians of all time, was an intellectual who, among other topics, was interested in Judaism and knew how to read and speak Hebrew. His travels took him to Eretz Yisrael, and he corresponded with a number of distinguished Jews.

The country's second Jewish community was founded in Belem (Bethlehem), a city in the state of Para in northern Brazil, by Jewish immigrants from Morocco. Attracted by the rubber boom, they established the Shaar Hashamaim synagogue around 1824, which has become the oldest continuously running synagogue in Brazil. A cemetery was founded in Bethlehem in 1842.

Another rubber boom that took place between the late 19th and early 20th centuries attracted more immigrants. New Jewish communities were formed in various parts of the state of Amazon, including Itacoatiara, Cametá, Paratintins, Obidos, and Santarem Humaita. Jewish immigrants also arrived in cities including Rio de Janeiro, where they foundedthe Union Shel Guemilut Hassadim during the 1840s and the Alliance Israelite Universelle in 1867. São Paulo also experienced a small influx of immigrants from Alsace-Lorraine during this period.

The Republican Constitution of 1891 guaranteed the separation of church and state and freedom of religion; among its innovations was the introduction of civil marriage and of secular cemeteries. The first organized immigration of the 20th century was to Rio Grande do Sul. Through the Jewish Colonization Association (JCA) and agreements with the state government, hundreds of immigrants from Eastern Europe settled in agricultural colonies beginning in 1893; among the colonies that were established was one in Philippson, in the region of Santa Maria, where 37 families from Bessarabia settled on 4,472 hectares in 1904.

JEWISH POPULATION AND IMMIGRATION

Beginning in the late 19th century, and particularly after the abolition of slavery in 1888, Brazil became a "nation of immigrants," attracting immigrants by offering religious tolerance, the ability to fully integrate both socially and culturally, as well as opportunities for economic advancement, that were not prevented by prejudice and racism. Between the 1880s and the 1940s Brazil became home to approximately four million immigrants, 65,000 of whom were Jews.

These immigrants, their culture, and their social and economic dynamism, contributed significantly to the country's development. In addition to the official religious freedom, Brazilian legislation was tolerant of European immigrants, and there were legislation gaps that let in increasing numbers of immigrants, in spite of the necessary legal wrangling and the requirement to obtain "call letters" to enter in the country. Brazil became a particularly desirable destination for immigrants during the 1920s, given the immigration restrictions and quotas imposed by the United States, Canada and Argentina. During the 1920s more than 10% of Jews who emigrated from Europe chose Brazil as their destination, and between 1920 and 1930 about half of the immigrants from Eastern Europe who came to Brazil were Jews.

During the First World War (1914-1918) and the interwar period, Jewish immigrants from Eastern and Western Europe and the Middle East established organized communities in São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Porto Alegre, Curitiba, Belo Horizonte, Recife, and Salvador. Small Jewish communities were formed in dozens of towns, especially following the economic cycles that Brazil experienced since its colonization (the sugar, gold, coffee, and rubber booms). In many places, they had the support of international organizations, particularly the JCA, the Joint, Emigdirect and HIAS.

The country's Jewish population was between 5,000 and 7,000 during World War I. Approximately 30,000 Jews immigrated to Brazil during the interwar period, and the Jewish population reached about 56,000 during the 1930s.

Following are official statistics indicating the Jewish population for the years 1900, 1940 and 1950:

São Paulo: 226; 20,379; 26,443

Rio de Janeiro: 25; 22,393; 33,270

Rio Grande do Sul: 54; 6,619; 8,048

Bahia: 17; 955; 1076

Paraná: 17; 1033; 1,340

Minas Gerais: 37; 1,431; 1,528

Pernambuco: in 1920 there were about 150 Jewish families

JEWISH COMMUNITY DURING THE INTERWAR PERIOD

Communal organizations were majorly important in the successful integration of Jewish immigrants. In urban centers such as Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Porto Alegre, Salvador, Recife, Belém and Santos had charitable organizations, synagogues, schools (in 1929 there were 25 Jewish schools in Brazil), cemeteries, cultural and recreational organizations, political movements and a thriving press, which together became the center of community life. In São Paulo, for example, there were six different charities operating in the community during the 1920s, offering support to Jewish immigrants from the moment they arrived at the port, assistance to pregnant women, and even aid to those hoping to begin to work as peddlers.

In many urban centers Jewish immigrants worked as peddlers, artisans, and merchants; others worked in the textiles and furniture industries. Later, beginning in the the 1960s, a significant portion of the Jewish population entered the professional classes, and began working as doctors, managers, engineers, university professors, journalists, editors, and psychologists, among other professions.
Women also became very active in the community, particularly in institutions such as WIZO and Naamat Pioneer. They founded and directed charities that served women and children, and worked as volunteers in places such as the Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein.

Communities tended to be very politically active, and leftists and Zionist movements were especially prolific. The 1st Zionist Congress in Brazil took place in 1922 and brought together four different movements: Ahavat Sion (São Paulo), Tiferet Sion (Rio de Janeiro, established in 1919), Shalom Sion (Curitiba), and Ahavat Sion (Pará); together they formed the Zionist Federation of Brazil. A year earlier, in 1921, a Brazilian delegate attended the 12th Zionist Congress in Karlbad. In 1929, during the election to choose the Brazilian delegate to the 16th Zionist Congress the two candidates received a total of 1,260 votes; in 1934 elections to the 18th Congress, garnered a total of 2,647 votes.

Leftist movements were also significant within Jewish life in São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Porto Alegre, Salvador, and Belo Horizonte. In Rio de Janeiro these movements centered around the Sholem Aleichem Library, the Brazkcor (Brazilian Society Pro-Jewish Colonization in the Soviet Union), and the Morris Vinchevsky Labor Center. São Paulo had active cultural and progressive groups; in 1954, the Israeli Cultural Brazilian Institute (ICIB), the House of the People, a communist organization affiliated with the Brazilian Jewish Art Theatre (TAIB) were established. Yiddish language and culture was important in connecting these movements. The first Jewish newspaper published in Yiddish in Brazil was Porto Alegre's Di Menscheit, which was first published in 1915 in Porto Alegre. Other Brazilian Jewish writers were Eliezer Levin, Samuel Malamud, Moacyr Scliar.

In São Paulo, Porto Alegre and Rio de Janeiro Jews were concentrated in the neighborhoods of Bom Retiro (before slowly moving to the Higienopolis neighborhood in São Paulo), Bonfim and Praça Onze.

During the 1920s and 1930s Jewish communities were concentrated in a few urban centers and became active economic, social and cultural centers. This rendered Brazilian Jews one of the more visible immigrant groups within Brazil. Many of the agricultural settlements that had been established by Jewish immigrants at the turn of the century challenged the perception of Jews as unproductive, or capable of working only in finance; these settlements and the goodwill they generated (in spite of their ultimate failure), helped remove restrictions on Jewish immigration to Brazil.

NEW STATE AND WORLD WAR II (1937-1945)

On the other hand, during the dictatorship of Getulio Vargas (1930-1945), Jewish visibility did become a liability, with restrictions and laws that formally prohibited Jewish immigration to Brazil; secret letters from the Foreign Ministry were revealed that discussed restricting Jewish immigration during the Second World War. The coup in 1937 that established the New State led by Vargas occurred under the false pretext of a potential communist plot, conveniently named the "Cohen Plan."

Anti-Semitism was part of a general climate of xenophobia during the period of the New State and the Second World War that was present in government circles and among the political and intellectual elites. Teaching and publishing newspapers in foreign languages was banned, and immigrant organizations had to "Brazilianize" their names and elect native Brazilians as directors. However, in spite of the dictatorship and the xenophobic nationalist environment, Jewish organizations managed to adapt to the changing political climate, and attempted to work within the restrictions imposed on them. Schools continued to teach Hebrew and Jewish culture, synagogues continued their services, radio programs persisted in playing Jewish music, and a number of organizations were even founded during this period. The period's anti-Semitism did not result in public actions taken against the Jews of Brazil or those who managed to immigrate.

Between 1933 and 1938 Brazil's fascist movement, the Brazilian Integralist Action (AIB), became active, led by Pliny Salgado, Gustavo Barroso and Miguel Reale. Anti-Semitism was part of the Integralist platform, with Barroso, the head of the militia, as the main proponent of anti-Semitism within the party. He translated "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion" and wrote anti-Semitic books, including "The Paulista Synagogue", "Brazil, Colony Bankers," and "The Secret History of Brazil." Barroso also wrote a column in the main Integralist newspaper titled "International Judaism." Nevertheless, there are no records of anti-Jewish violence during this period. Jews also fought back against the Integralists' anti-Semitism; in Curitiba, Baruch Schulman wrote an article titled "In Self Defense" in 1937 to defend Brazil's Jews. In Belo Horizonte, Isaiah Golgher created the Anti-Integralist Committee. A group of Brazilian intellectuals, supported by the Jewish Colonization Association (JCA) and the Klabin Company, published a book in in 1933 in defense of the Jews titled "Why Be Anti-Semitic? A Survey Among Brazilian Intellectuals."

Nonetheless, Jewish immigration managed to continue, mainly through negotiations that occurred on a case by case basis. About 17,500 Jews entered the country between 1933 and 1939, though many refugees from occupied Europe were denied visas and perished during the Holocaust. During this period, the Brazilian ambassador to France, Souza Dantas, saved approximately 800 people, at least 425 of whom were Jewish. In 2003 he was recognized among the Righteous of the Nations.

Brazil was neutral during World War II until 1941; the country officially entered the war against Germany and Italy in August of 1942. The Jewish communities of São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro participated in the war effort. In 1942, the Jewish community of Brazil donated five aircraft for the newly created Military Aviation of Brazil, created several committees to help war refugees, and led several campaigns for refugees in Europe. Forty-two of the 30,000 men who left for Italy in July 1944 were Jewish. Jews in the Brazilian Expeditionary Force (FEB), included the artist Carlos Scliar and the author Boris Schnaiderman, both of whom used their experiences in the FEB in their work.

POSTWAR

The Jewish Federation of São Paulo State was founded in São Paulo in 1946 to organize the postwar immigration of Jewish refugees from Europe to Brazil. The Zionist movement in Brazil, which had been inactive during the war years, began to renew its activities. Jewish leftists also returned to being active, particularly in connection to the Communist Party. The Confederation of Organizations Representing the Jewish Collectivity in Brazil (later renamed the Jewish Confederation of Brazil, CONIB), was founded in 1948. Jewish institutional life flourished; the Hebrew Club was founded in São Paulo in 1953, and the Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein was opened in 1971.

The Brazilian diplomat Oswaldo Aranha presided over the meeting of the Assembly of the United Nations in 1947 when the vote was taken to recognize the creation of the State of Israel; Brazil was among those who voted for the creation of the Jewish State. Brazil recognized the State of Israel in 1949 and opened an embassy in Tel Aviv in 1952.

Between 1956 and 1957 thousands of Jews immigrated to Brazil from Egypt, North Africa (mainly Morocco), and Hungary.

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The Jewish Community of Brazil

Brazil

República Federativa do Brasil - Federative Republic of Brazil

The largest country in both South America and Latin America. 

According to the census conducted by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE) in 2010, there were 107,329 Jews living in Brazil, making it home to the second largest Jewish community in Latin America (after Argentina) and the 11th largest in the world. In addition to the over 100,000 acknowledged Jews, it is likely that there are others in Brazil with Jewish ancestors, though the precise numbers are unknown. According to research conducted in 1999 by the sociologist Simon Schwartzman, 0.2% of Brazilian respondents said they had Jewish ancestry, a percentage that in a population of about 200 million Brazilians, would represent about 400,000 people.

Jewish history in Brazil can be broken down into four distinct periods:

1) The arrival of New Christians and the Inquisition. This took place during the period when Brazil was a colony of Portugal (1500-1822);

2) The formation of a Jewish community during the 17th century in Recife, the capital of the state of Pernambuco in northeastern Brazil. This occurred during the invasion period and Dutch rule, when Jews were granted religious freedom;

3) The modern period (1822-1889), when there began to be wider acceptance of different religions, prompting immigration from a number of European and Arab countries (as well as from Japan). The first Jewish community in the modern period was formed in Belem (Bethlehem), in the state of Para; later, another community was formed in Rio de Janeiro. At the end of this period, in 1889, Brazil adopted a constitution that guaranteed religious freedom;

4) The contemporary period, when communities formed in agricultural colonies in Rio Grande do Sul during the first decade of the 20th century, and communities were established in some of the main cities in Brazil after the First World War.

THE COLONIAL PERIOD (1500-1822)

Thousands of Portuguese New Christians came to Brazil during the colonial period but did not establish organized Jewish communities. Indeed, with the exception of when Brazil was under Dutch rule, until Brazil proclaimed its independence in 1822, Catholicism was the state religion and the only religion that was officially allowed to be practiced. New Christians participated in the social, cultural and economic life of the colony, and were particularly active in the sugar mills in Bahia, Paraiba and Pernambuco. They could belong to official institutions such as the Brotherhood of Mercy as well as to municipal councils. Nonetheless, these New Christians faced social and economic restrictions; for example, they could not marry "Old Christians" because of the laws related to "blood purity".

During most of the colonial period, Brazil was active in the Holy Office of the Inquisition Court, which was originally established in Portugal in 1536 and eventually spread to Portugal's main colony, Brazil, where it officially functioned until 1821. The conversion of non-Catholics in the Americas (including indigenous and pre-Columbian tribes) was a central part of the process of expanding the Portuguese and Spanish Empires. The Inquisition sent representatives from Portugal to carry out investigations beginning in 1591 and delegated power to local bishops. The Inquisition's most prominent activities took place between 1591 and 1593 in the states of Bahia; between 1593 and 1595 in Pernambuco; in 1618, in Bahia; around 1627 in the southeast of Brazil; and between 1763 and 1769 in the Grand-Para (northern Brazil). In the 18th century, the Inquisition was also active in the states of Paraíba, Rio de Janeiro and Minas Gerais.

In 1773, during the administration of the Marquess of Pombal, the distinctions between "New" and "old" Christians were abolished and the Inquisition ceased its activities. New Christians were able to integrate socially and economically into Brazilian society, while may also maintained elements of their Jewish heritage.

According to Wiznitzer, during the two and a half centuries that the Inquisition was active in Brazil, about 25,000 people were prosecuted and 1,500 were sentenced to death. About 400 people were accused of "Judaizing practices" and most were given prison sentences; 18 were deported to Lisbon where they were sentenced to death. The anti-Semitism of the Inquisition remained seeped into Brazil's cultural consciousness, though the Jews who arrived in Brazil during the 19th and 20th centuries experienced significantly less anti-Semitism than many of their coreligionists throughout the world.

Three well-known New Christian writers have excelled in the colonial period whose work during the colonial period reveals Jewish elements were Bento Teixeira, who wrote Prosopopéia during the 16th century; Ambrose Fernandes Brandão, the author of Dialogues of the Magnitudes of Brazil who also wrote during the 16th century, and the playwright Antonio Jose da Silva, "the Jew", who lived in both Portugal and Brazil and was sentenced to death by the Inquisition in 1739.

FIRST JEWISH COMMUNITY

The first organized Jewish community was formed in Recife, Pernambuco, in the northeast of the territory region, between 1630 and 1654. It took place during the period of Dutch occupation of Brazil (1630-1654), when Brazilians were granted religious freedom and both Jews and New Christians were provided with legal protections. According to Wiznitzer, the number of Jews in Brazil in 1644 reached 1,450.
In 1636 the Jews of Recife founded Kahal Kadosh Zur Israel (Rock of Israel), the first synagogue not only in Brazil, but in the Americas. The country's first Jewish cemetery was established in 1848 in Manaus.

RABBI SHALOM EMANUEL MUYAL

Many of those who arrived at the end of the 19th century and established Jewish communities sought to take advantage of Brazil's booming rubber industry. Cametá, a city in the state of Pará, eventually had half of its white population consisting of Sephardic Jews.

With significant number of Moroccan Jews moving to the Amazon because of the rubber boom, rabbinic authorities in Morocco saw the need for that community to have some form of religious leadership. At the turn of the twentieth century religious authorities in Morocco decided to send a rabbi to the Amazon, ostensibly to raise funds for a yeshiva, but with the added mission of monitoring compliance among the Moroccan Jews of the Amazon with religious norms and precepts. Rabbi Shalom Emanuel Muyal arrived in Manaus, the capital of Amazonas, in 1908 or 1910 and died two years after his arrival, probably after contracting yellow fever. Interestingly, after his death local Catholics began to revere Rabbi Muyal as a saint. Because there was no local Jewish cemetery, Rabbi Muyal was buried in the Christian cemetery and his grave became a pilgrimage site. Jealous and uncomfortable with the attention that the grave was receiving, the rabbi of the Manaus synagogue built a wall around the tomb. Rather than reducing the number of pilgrims, however, this only served to intensify the numbers of visitors to Rabbi Muyal's graves; these pilgrims also began leaving offerings and prayers on the newly-built wall. "He became the Jewish saint of the Amazon Catholics," acknowledges Isaac Dahan of the Manaus synagogue. In the 1960s, when Rabbi Muyal's nephew (who was then a minister in the Israeli government of the State of Israel) tried to exhume his uncle's remains and reinter them in the Jewish cemetery, protests erupted and the Amazonas state government requested that the body not be moved. Finally, it was agreed that the grave of Rabbi Muyal would be moved to the adjoining Jewish cemetery and the rabbi continued to be venerated among the Catholics of the Amazon.

With the decline of the rubber boom, wealthier Jewish families moved from Amazonas in northwestern Brazil to Rio de Janeiro. These families, the vast majority of whom were Sefardic, brought with them many religious ideas and elements that they absorbed and integrated from the indigenous tribes and African slaves among whom they lived.

THE MODERN PERIOD (1822-1889)

After Brazil achieved independence in 1822, the subsequent Constitution of 1824 maintained Catholicism as the state religion, but proclaimed tolerance for other religions and permitted services to be held privately. A few dozen Jews came to Brazil in this period. Dom Pedro II, who ascended the throne in 1832 and is considered by some to be one of the greatest Brazilians of all time, was an intellectual who, among other topics, was interested in Judaism and knew how to read and speak Hebrew. His travels took him to Eretz Yisrael, and he corresponded with a number of distinguished Jews.

The country's second Jewish community was founded in Belem (Bethlehem), a city in the state of Para in northern Brazil, by Jewish immigrants from Morocco. Attracted by the rubber boom, they established the Shaar Hashamaim synagogue around 1824, which has become the oldest continuously running synagogue in Brazil. A cemetery was founded in Bethlehem in 1842.

Another rubber boom that took place between the late 19th and early 20th centuries attracted more immigrants. New Jewish communities were formed in various parts of the state of Amazon, including Itacoatiara, Cametá, Paratintins, Obidos, and Santarem Humaita. Jewish immigrants also arrived in cities including Rio de Janeiro, where they foundedthe Union Shel Guemilut Hassadim during the 1840s and the Alliance Israelite Universelle in 1867. São Paulo also experienced a small influx of immigrants from Alsace-Lorraine during this period.

The Republican Constitution of 1891 guaranteed the separation of church and state and freedom of religion; among its innovations was the introduction of civil marriage and of secular cemeteries. The first organized immigration of the 20th century was to Rio Grande do Sul. Through the Jewish Colonization Association (JCA) and agreements with the state government, hundreds of immigrants from Eastern Europe settled in agricultural colonies beginning in 1893; among the colonies that were established was one in Philippson, in the region of Santa Maria, where 37 families from Bessarabia settled on 4,472 hectares in 1904.

JEWISH POPULATION AND IMMIGRATION

Beginning in the late 19th century, and particularly after the abolition of slavery in 1888, Brazil became a "nation of immigrants," attracting immigrants by offering religious tolerance, the ability to fully integrate both socially and culturally, as well as opportunities for economic advancement, that were not prevented by prejudice and racism. Between the 1880s and the 1940s Brazil became home to approximately four million immigrants, 65,000 of whom were Jews.

These immigrants, their culture, and their social and economic dynamism, contributed significantly to the country's development. In addition to the official religious freedom, Brazilian legislation was tolerant of European immigrants, and there were legislation gaps that let in increasing numbers of immigrants, in spite of the necessary legal wrangling and the requirement to obtain "call letters" to enter in the country. Brazil became a particularly desirable destination for immigrants during the 1920s, given the immigration restrictions and quotas imposed by the United States, Canada and Argentina. During the 1920s more than 10% of Jews who emigrated from Europe chose Brazil as their destination, and between 1920 and 1930 about half of the immigrants from Eastern Europe who came to Brazil were Jews.

During the First World War (1914-1918) and the interwar period, Jewish immigrants from Eastern and Western Europe and the Middle East established organized communities in São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Porto Alegre, Curitiba, Belo Horizonte, Recife, and Salvador. Small Jewish communities were formed in dozens of towns, especially following the economic cycles that Brazil experienced since its colonization (the sugar, gold, coffee, and rubber booms). In many places, they had the support of international organizations, particularly the JCA, the Joint, Emigdirect and HIAS.

The country's Jewish population was between 5,000 and 7,000 during World War I. Approximately 30,000 Jews immigrated to Brazil during the interwar period, and the Jewish population reached about 56,000 during the 1930s.

Following are official statistics indicating the Jewish population for the years 1900, 1940 and 1950:

São Paulo: 226; 20,379; 26,443

Rio de Janeiro: 25; 22,393; 33,270

Rio Grande do Sul: 54; 6,619; 8,048

Bahia: 17; 955; 1076

Paraná: 17; 1033; 1,340

Minas Gerais: 37; 1,431; 1,528

Pernambuco: in 1920 there were about 150 Jewish families

JEWISH COMMUNITY DURING THE INTERWAR PERIOD

Communal organizations were majorly important in the successful integration of Jewish immigrants. In urban centers such as Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Porto Alegre, Salvador, Recife, Belém and Santos had charitable organizations, synagogues, schools (in 1929 there were 25 Jewish schools in Brazil), cemeteries, cultural and recreational organizations, political movements and a thriving press, which together became the center of community life. In São Paulo, for example, there were six different charities operating in the community during the 1920s, offering support to Jewish immigrants from the moment they arrived at the port, assistance to pregnant women, and even aid to those hoping to begin to work as peddlers.

In many urban centers Jewish immigrants worked as peddlers, artisans, and merchants; others worked in the textiles and furniture industries. Later, beginning in the the 1960s, a significant portion of the Jewish population entered the professional classes, and began working as doctors, managers, engineers, university professors, journalists, editors, and psychologists, among other professions.
Women also became very active in the community, particularly in institutions such as WIZO and Naamat Pioneer. They founded and directed charities that served women and children, and worked as volunteers in places such as the Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein.

Communities tended to be very politically active, and leftists and Zionist movements were especially prolific. The 1st Zionist Congress in Brazil took place in 1922 and brought together four different movements: Ahavat Sion (São Paulo), Tiferet Sion (Rio de Janeiro, established in 1919), Shalom Sion (Curitiba), and Ahavat Sion (Pará); together they formed the Zionist Federation of Brazil. A year earlier, in 1921, a Brazilian delegate attended the 12th Zionist Congress in Karlbad. In 1929, during the election to choose the Brazilian delegate to the 16th Zionist Congress the two candidates received a total of 1,260 votes; in 1934 elections to the 18th Congress, garnered a total of 2,647 votes.

Leftist movements were also significant within Jewish life in São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Porto Alegre, Salvador, and Belo Horizonte. In Rio de Janeiro these movements centered around the Sholem Aleichem Library, the Brazkcor (Brazilian Society Pro-Jewish Colonization in the Soviet Union), and the Morris Vinchevsky Labor Center. São Paulo had active cultural and progressive groups; in 1954, the Israeli Cultural Brazilian Institute (ICIB), the House of the People, a communist organization affiliated with the Brazilian Jewish Art Theatre (TAIB) were established. Yiddish language and culture was important in connecting these movements. The first Jewish newspaper published in Yiddish in Brazil was Porto Alegre's Di Menscheit, which was first published in 1915 in Porto Alegre. Other Brazilian Jewish writers were Eliezer Levin, Samuel Malamud, Moacyr Scliar.

In São Paulo, Porto Alegre and Rio de Janeiro Jews were concentrated in the neighborhoods of Bom Retiro (before slowly moving to the Higienopolis neighborhood in São Paulo), Bonfim and Praça Onze.

During the 1920s and 1930s Jewish communities were concentrated in a few urban centers and became active economic, social and cultural centers. This rendered Brazilian Jews one of the more visible immigrant groups within Brazil. Many of the agricultural settlements that had been established by Jewish immigrants at the turn of the century challenged the perception of Jews as unproductive, or capable of working only in finance; these settlements and the goodwill they generated (in spite of their ultimate failure), helped remove restrictions on Jewish immigration to Brazil.

NEW STATE AND WORLD WAR II (1937-1945)

On the other hand, during the dictatorship of Getulio Vargas (1930-1945), Jewish visibility did become a liability, with restrictions and laws that formally prohibited Jewish immigration to Brazil; secret letters from the Foreign Ministry were revealed that discussed restricting Jewish immigration during the Second World War. The coup in 1937 that established the New State led by Vargas occurred under the false pretext of a potential communist plot, conveniently named the "Cohen Plan."

Anti-Semitism was part of a general climate of xenophobia during the period of the New State and the Second World War that was present in government circles and among the political and intellectual elites. Teaching and publishing newspapers in foreign languages was banned, and immigrant organizations had to "Brazilianize" their names and elect native Brazilians as directors. However, in spite of the dictatorship and the xenophobic nationalist environment, Jewish organizations managed to adapt to the changing political climate, and attempted to work within the restrictions imposed on them. Schools continued to teach Hebrew and Jewish culture, synagogues continued their services, radio programs persisted in playing Jewish music, and a number of organizations were even founded during this period. The period's anti-Semitism did not result in public actions taken against the Jews of Brazil or those who managed to immigrate.

Between 1933 and 1938 Brazil's fascist movement, the Brazilian Integralist Action (AIB), became active, led by Pliny Salgado, Gustavo Barroso and Miguel Reale. Anti-Semitism was part of the Integralist platform, with Barroso, the head of the militia, as the main proponent of anti-Semitism within the party. He translated "The Protocols of the Elders of Zion" and wrote anti-Semitic books, including "The Paulista Synagogue", "Brazil, Colony Bankers," and "The Secret History of Brazil." Barroso also wrote a column in the main Integralist newspaper titled "International Judaism." Nevertheless, there are no records of anti-Jewish violence during this period. Jews also fought back against the Integralists' anti-Semitism; in Curitiba, Baruch Schulman wrote an article titled "In Self Defense" in 1937 to defend Brazil's Jews. In Belo Horizonte, Isaiah Golgher created the Anti-Integralist Committee. A group of Brazilian intellectuals, supported by the Jewish Colonization Association (JCA) and the Klabin Company, published a book in in 1933 in defense of the Jews titled "Why Be Anti-Semitic? A Survey Among Brazilian Intellectuals."

Nonetheless, Jewish immigration managed to continue, mainly through negotiations that occurred on a case by case basis. About 17,500 Jews entered the country between 1933 and 1939, though many refugees from occupied Europe were denied visas and perished during the Holocaust. During this period, the Brazilian ambassador to France, Souza Dantas, saved approximately 800 people, at least 425 of whom were Jewish. In 2003 he was recognized among the Righteous of the Nations.

Brazil was neutral during World War II until 1941; the country officially entered the war against Germany and Italy in August of 1942. The Jewish communities of São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro participated in the war effort. In 1942, the Jewish community of Brazil donated five aircraft for the newly created Military Aviation of Brazil, created several committees to help war refugees, and led several campaigns for refugees in Europe. Forty-two of the 30,000 men who left for Italy in July 1944 were Jewish. Jews in the Brazilian Expeditionary Force (FEB), included the artist Carlos Scliar and the author Boris Schnaiderman, both of whom used their experiences in the FEB in their work.

POSTWAR

The Jewish Federation of São Paulo State was founded in São Paulo in 1946 to organize the postwar immigration of Jewish refugees from Europe to Brazil. The Zionist movement in Brazil, which had been inactive during the war years, began to renew its activities. Jewish leftists also returned to being active, particularly in connection to the Communist Party. The Confederation of Organizations Representing the Jewish Collectivity in Brazil (later renamed the Jewish Confederation of Brazil, CONIB), was founded in 1948. Jewish institutional life flourished; the Hebrew Club was founded in São Paulo in 1953, and the Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein was opened in 1971.

The Brazilian diplomat Oswaldo Aranha presided over the meeting of the Assembly of the United Nations in 1947 when the vote was taken to recognize the creation of the State of Israel; Brazil was among those who voted for the creation of the Jewish State. Brazil recognized the State of Israel in 1949 and opened an embassy in Tel Aviv in 1952.

Between 1956 and 1957 thousands of Jews immigrated to Brazil from Egypt, North Africa (mainly Morocco), and Hungary.

Written by researchers of ANU Museum of the Jewish People