Become a Member
Life

Rembrandt’s gift

At Shavuot we celebrate the giving of the Ten Commandments. But why do some shuls display tablets which seem to have 11?

May 13, 2021 11:55
Rembrandt_Harmensz._van_Rijn_079.jpg
3 min read

When we finally travel again, what’s the nearest destination offering eco-friendly rail credentials as well as unparalleled historic and cultural appeal, notwithstanding a haunting Shoah background? Amsterdam, undoubtedly. And there are strong Shavuot connections too.

By 1675, when the city’s Portuguese Jewish community celebrated completion of its “Esnoga”, their majestic synagogue, (mercifully saved somehow from the Nazis hundreds of years later), with its exquisitely carved heichal (Torah ark) and teivah (bimah), its gracious gallery colonnade, its stunning chandeliers holding a thousand candles, they enjoyed civic and religious freedoms unparalleled in Europe.

Thriving in the comparatively tolerant Dutch Republic, they were prominent in developing Amsterdam as the greatest trading centre of the time, a far cry from their families’ earlier sufferings. Faced in 1497 with baptism on pain of death, or expulsion provided they abandoned their children in Portugal, (a barbaric refinement dreamt up by Manuel I which hadn’t occurred even to the Spaniards five years earlier), many opted with heavy heart for fake Catholicism, determined to keep their families both intact and secretly Jewish.

Not until the early 17th century did sufficient numbers of “conversos” find a safe haven in Calvinist Amsterdam to “come out” as its first Jewish community. How does a group of Jews, clandestinely keeping its learning and practice alive underground for more than a century, then produce scholars like Menasseh ben Israel and before long build the first of our world’s great synagogues? It’s a miracle of commitment and fortitude which we haven’t perhaps acknowledged as we should.