Jews in the Dominican Republic
The presence of Jews in the DR dates back to the time of Columbus. Though
Judaism was not allowed to be openly practiced in Spanish colonies, several
versions claim that among the first arrivals of Spanish settlers in the New
World there were Jews; some even indicate that Christopher Columbus himself
could have been Jewish. Later, several Jews settled in the DR during the mid
nineteenth century, of which there are vestigial families. The cemeteries of
several villages are populated with Star of David marked tombstones with names
like Cohen, Levi, Attias, Marchena, Henriquez, engraved on them. According to
some an incident in France, known as the Dreyfus Affair, in 1894 demonstrated
the openness of Dominicans towards Jews. The Dreyfus Affair exposed deeply held
Anti-Semitic sentiments in France; then Dominican president Gregorio Luperon
sent a letter to the Dominican diplomat in France asking about the situation of
Jews there. In the letter he urged Jews to come to the DR if the situation in
France turned troublesome. Though the presence of Jews in the DR is long
standing it wasn’t until WWII that the DR would have a Jewish community.
During one of the world’s darkest moments, when it seemed no one else was
willing to lend a hand, an unlikely “hero,” Rafael Leonidas Trujillo, stepped
into the international spotlight and offered Jews fleeing Nazi persecution a
haven. American and European politicians kept their arms crossed as many Jews
became victims of the increasing discrimination and persecution at the hands of
the Nazi regime; international forums provided proof that the world was more
willing to hide the issue at hand rather than deal with the mass displacement of
Jewish refugees.
By 1938 the situation in Europe, and in particular Germany, was increasingly
more dangerous. And then came the night when everything changed, when
discrimination turned from economic, political or social to physical abuse. On 9
November 1938 German mobs units ransacked and destroyed Jewish businesses, homes
and neighborhoods. Jews in many German cities were taken to concentration camps
and synagogues were burned. The event became known as Kristallnacht, the night
of broken glass, and it was caused as a response to the murder of Ernst Vom Rath
by a German-Polish Jew living in Paris. Kristallnacht exemplified Nazi Germany’s
policy towards Europe’s Jewish community and left many Jews with only two
options: flee Europe or become victims of the growing anti-Semitic violence. But
where would fleeing Jews go? Though the Jewish population in Europe numbered
into the millions there was no country willing to open its doors and accept
large scale resettlement of Jews within their boundaries. And so, at the bequest
of US President Franklyn D. Roosevelt, the Evian Conference was convened.
Between 6 July and 15 July 1938 representatives from 32 different countries met
at Evian-Les Bains, France to discuss the developing issue of European Jews who
were rapidly becoming displaced. For 9 days representatives discussed the issue
at hand. Sympathy for the Jews was plentiful, but solutions were not. The US was
unwillingly to allow large scale migration of the Jews and neither was France,
Britain or Austria. Some Latin American countries made minor concessions and
allowed for small amounts of visas to be granted, but no large scale solution
was passed. The Conference in itself provided no definite answers for the Jewish
issue and in light of the increasing problems only one country was willing to
open its doors and let Jewish settlers in.
Virgilio Trujillo Molina, diplomatic envoy to the Conference and brother of
dictator Trujillo, accompanied by Dr. Salvador E. Paredes, country
representative to the League of Nations, announced that the Dominican Republic
was willing to allow 100,000 Jews to enter the Dominican Republic. Though there
was no definite structure to the Dominican offer it was the only option of its
kind made during the Conference.
Ulterior Motives:
Reasons for the Dominican offer at the Evian Conference vary, but most
historians will agree that Trujillo made the offer not because he was a good
hearted soul, but rather for ulterior motives. By some accounts Trujillo used
the opportunity to import 100,000 Jews as a way to propagate his own racial
cleansing. By bringing in large amounts of young single Jewish men, the idea was
that they would marry Dominican women and “lighten” the race, weeding out the
“African” blood found in a majority of the Dominican population. By other
accounts Trujillo’s willingness to allow large scale entry of the Jews was more
of a political chess play.
In 1937 Trujillo ordered what is known as the “parsley massacre.” During a 5 day
period between 15,000 and 30,000 Haitians were murdered on the Haitian/Dominican
border. The reason given by the Dominican side was that Haitians on the borders
were stealing cattle from Dominican farmers. The mispronunciation of the Spanish
word for parsley (perejil) was a distinguisher between dark Dominicans and
Haitians. Those who would slightly mispronounce the word were rounded up on
trucks or taken into the heavily forested areas and murdered on site. The
massacres gave Trujillo a black eye within the international community and he
felt that by accepting the large scale migration of Europe’s fleeing Jews he
would gain back some of the support he had lost. Either way it was a welcome
offer, but one that was more story book than reality, and the execution of such
a plan was more difficult than just putting Jews on a boat and sending them
across the Atlantic.
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