Jewish Children of São
Tomé
This is a brief resumé of information on what was
then a work-in-progress during the period from about 2000 to 2003. I present it
here as a pendant piece to a longer essay on dolor, the painful lingering of the trauma of separation of children from
parents, an instance of multi-generational PTS syndrome over close to five
hundred years, a case study much longer than available to modern scientific
researchers.
To a certain degree the history of the
children who were forcibly removed from their parents, then hastily baptized,
and sent to the Portuguese island colony of São Tomé in 1493 is highly
speculative after the initial event in Lisbon.
The first two facts—kidnapping and forced conversion—have general
agreement amongst historians; however, how many children were involved and
their ages is still subject to some debate.
More significantly, what happened to them during the sea voyage to
Africa and how many survived the trip and the first months and years in the
tropical heat and subsequently over the next several generations down to the
late sixteenth century is not agreed on—and often contested vociferously.
During the
past two years, thanks to Dr. Moshé Liba, former Israeli Ambassador to São Tomé
y Principe, with whom I have collaborated in editing a forthcoming anthology of
documents and essays, more of the actual history of these children and their
descendants can now be verified, although, to be sure, any interpretation of
how their pains and grief were passed on for more than three generations
remains speculative.[i] Nevertheless, when we line up, as it were,
the data from archival sources—chronicles, ecclesiastical and administrative
reports, and wills, along with early historical works—along with fairly certain
outcomes of the trauma this group of individuals underwent, we can start to get
much closer to a probable set of events.
For these two thousand children between the ages of two and twelve for
the most part to have been taken from their mothers and fathers clearly
constitutes an abusive event, and we can be fairly certain that each child
experienced those moments as traumatic.
The state records of the Portuguese crown, as well as Jewish chronicles
and memorial writings, further clarifies that these children were not
originally Portuguese, but belonged to the families of Jews from Castile
expelled by the Catholic Monarchs the previous year in 1492, and hence formed
part of the Sephardic community that most resisted conversion over the previous
hundred years, since the persecutions and pogroms following the 1391
riots.
Moreover,
these Jewish children belonged to those families who could not pay the required
transit tax imposed by the Portuguese government and consequently were declared
slaves of the king. In brief, these
young Jews, whether they were intellectually aware or not, grew up into
circumstances of tension, anxiety, fear and dislocation, a situation in which
it is likely that parents would become either overly distant and harsh to their
offspring, imposing non-traditional modes of discipline in order to maintain
some semblance of control on the family, or, which can be as harmful,
smothering the boys and girls with excessive sentimental care. It is known that on such occasions as the
actual removal of the children by soldiers and priests that many Jewish parents
either killed their children or themselves or both, increasing the horror of
the scene for those who survived the day.
While some
scholars object to the number of deported children as two thousand on the
grounds that the ships available to the São Tomé captains—who were granted the
priveledge of taking this cargo as slaves to be brought up as future workers or
administrators of the sugar industry—were too small for so many passengers. But surely the fact that only about six
hundred children survived the voyage is an indication of the cruelty involved
in stuffing them into cramped and unhygienic quarters for the duration of the
voyage; and thus another reinforcing aspect of the trauma, the pains, physical
and psychological, being stored up in the minds and bodies of the victims.
Other
historians are skeptical of the claim that Jews were made slaves by the
Portuguese government, and yet the documents that Dr. Liba and I have examined
show that this is exactly what happened, first to the families that had crossed
over to Portugal from Castile and could not pay their transit tax: they were
claimed by the king as his property and distributed to his vassals around the
country. He also handed over the young
children to the Captains appointed to govern São Tomé, and some twenty-five
years later they were explicitly manumitted in the wills of these
officers. Given that economic motives is
only one of the rationales for slavery, we have to take into account the other
reasons, albeit a motive that is not stated in legal terms but is spoken of in
private letters: namely, cruelty, or to be more accurate, as a means of
expressing outwardly the rage, frustration, and lust that should not be meted
out on one’s family. Thus from Roman
times social commentators have recommended having slaves in the household to
beat rather than a wife or a child, of venting one’s sexual desires and anger
on a serving girl or boy rather than incestuously on one’s own sons and daughters,
or, which sometimes amounts to the same thing, to abuse and humiliate one’s
slaves merely to clear the mind of bad feelings.
This kind of
constant violence is indicated indirectly in the subsequent behaviour and
attitude of the children when they grew up and their descendants as they
inherited their parents internalized anger and fears, that is, the somatized
and probably inarticulate memories of the original trauma of the kidnapping and
exile, a trauma reinforced with each subsequent act of cruelty and abuse. After marrying with African slaves brought to
São Tomé, the Jewish children produced a mestizo population notorious
for both its obstreperousness and cruelty.
São Tomé became known as Portugal’s least manageable tropical colony,
one where the native elite, mostly the mestizo landowners, still called
New Christians way into the eighteenth century, resisted rule from the
metropolis both by the Crown and the Church.
The island was also feared as one of the worst places for slaves, either
those kept in camps before being trans-shipped to the New World or those
working on the sugar plantations or other enterprises. Though later settlers and government agents
came to the island from the metropolis or territories of Portugal, the
character of São Tomé was set by the traumatized Jewish children who arrived in
1493, and this character bears the hallmarks of victims of massive abuse:
projected violence against others, resistance to authority, dissociation of
feelings of sympathy to one’s family and friends, and a general
restlessness.
Granted there
are no documents to prove this in a conclusive way and no attempt has been made
to exhume the bodies of the families known to have belonged to these despised
New Christians to see if there are any signs or patterns of particular
wounding, disease, or demographic tendencies, such as excessive early death of
young females or males, age-related deformations due to malnutrition against
known records of good and bad harvests, sexual diseases in very young children,
and so forth. Nevertheless, the unusual
behaviour of the island’s population as a whole registered in the history of
its first two centuries of development does alert us to a search for other
kinds of evidence.
This mestizo
elite that we have spoken of seems to have moved away from São Tomé in
large part in the final years of the sixteenth century, at the very time when
Brazilian records speak of “Jews”, meaning New Christians, arriving from the
island to set up and develop the incipient sugar industry in that South
American colony. The economic and social
motivations are clear. Dutch, English
and French pirates, privateers and naval forces raided and temporarily occupied
São Tomé, making it difficult for the colony to sustain its earlier successes
as a major supplier of sugar and slaves.
It was also known by then that a higher quality of sugar and at cheaper
cost would be produced in Brazil.
Meanwhile, because of the instability of the island regime, exacerbated
by both the increasing interference by foreign powers and the growing incidence
of slave rebellions, Portugal transferred its main slave supply station to the
mainland of Africa at La Miña. It is no
wonder that the great-grandchildren or even great-great-grandchildren of the
Children of São Tomé decided to emigrate to the New World.
What is
remarkable, however, is that certain facets of their past, probably lost
insofar as conscious memories were concerned, surface again in Brazil. Here again we have to rely on speculations
rather than hard facts, but the “fit” of the actions with what we expect of
long-term repressed memories at least makes a case for further research. Though successful in the sugar industry under
colonial rule by the Portuguese, when the Dutch conquered the northeast quadrant
near Recife and set up its short-lived Protestant regime, many New Christians
in the area—and perhaps from further afield—took the opportunity to leave the
jurisdiction of the Portuguese Crown and the Inquisition to return to Judaism
and join the small and growing Jewish community that was fostered by the
Amsterdam synagogues. At the same time,
in a paradoxical action that again alerts us to possible explanations in the
bizarre behaviours of the children of trauma victims, the migrants from São
Tomé, black slaves and mestizos included, were active in the guerilla
war against Dutch rule and the call for the return of the Catholic Church and
its Holy Office. It will be difficult to
prove either the historical connections and even more so the possible psychohistorical
dimension to the events in the mid-seventeenth century in this area of the
world. Yet again I believe there is a
case to be answered: in other words, the questions raised are worthy of further
research.
[i]
This book did finally come out as Jewish Child Slaves in São Tomé
(Wellington: New Zealand Jewish Chronicle Publications, 2003), the editor was
named as Moshe Liba, while my name was placed in subordinate position as “with
the assistance of Norman Simms.” Most of
my behind-the-scenes work is lost to public view, as well as my written
contribution, except for one brief essay.
Dr. Liba died shortly after the book came out. I did, however, publish several scholarly
articles on the subject over the next ten years, such as “Bishop Lobo’s Night-mare” Sefarad: The
Sephardic Newsletter (23 September 2003) 12:8, part 4 (Sea12.8.4) pp. 1-13;
“Children among the Marranos: A Psychohistorical Problem” The Queens College
Journal of Jewish Studies vol. VII
(Spring 2005) 35-43; “Did any of the Captive Jewish Orphans of São Tomé
ever leave the Island?” Sefarad, the
Sephardic Newsletter Vol. 15 Nos 10-11, Part III (SEA15.10-11.3)
(October-November 2006) pp. 11-17; and “Devoured
by Wild Animals: Trauma and Post-Traumatic Stress in the Children of São Tomé” Revista Lusófona das Religiões 5:9/10
(2006) 164-179.
Fascinating stuff, Dr Simms (it was hard to find your name on this page!). I will look up the two articles to which have referred in the footnotes. St Tome & Principe has issued a series of stamps on the Holocaust - do you have any idea what prompted them to do so?
ReplyDeleteHas there been any further research carried out since 2003?
I would appreciate if you could reply to me by email keedad@gmail.com
Hi,
ReplyDeleteI still haven't had the chance to read the book, but I was wondering if you'll tell if there is any any Jewish liturgy about what happened to those children in 1493?
Thanks for your question on the article (not a book). I have never seen any liturgical reference to the event. If it appears at all, it might be in some Italian piyuttim, sicne many of the children as grown-ups made it there.
ReplyDeleteThanks for you quick answer. I was asking because yesterday we read on many kino, I heard a friend saying there was one composed by the jewish community about this tragic event.
ReplyDeleteInteresting article. What fascinated me was the comment. "After marrying with African slaves brought to São Tomé, the Jewish children produced a mestizo population notorious for both its obstreperousness and cruelty." Do you know any historical texts that describe these marriages with African slaves?
ReplyDeleteThank you very much for this eye-opening article. How sad our history is full of abuse of the minority, weak, indefensible... I am doing a paper on Luis de Almeida, the first to introduce western medicine including surgery Yasuo Ishida MD. Thank you again!
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comment. Love to your paper when it is ready.
ReplyDeleteNorman Simms