Spanish Village To Hold Referendum Over 'Kill Jews' Name
A Spanish village is to hold a referendum over whether to
change its name of Castrillo Matajudios, which translates as "Kill
Jews"
The tiny Spanish village of Castrillo Matajudios, whose
second name means "Kill Jews," will hold a referendum next month to
decide if it should change the name that offends outsiders and embarrasses some
residents, its mayor said on Tuesday.
The village's 56 registered voters will be asked on May 25
whether they want to keep the name or change it to the similar, but
non-offensive name the town once had, Mayor Lorenzo Rodriguez Perez said.
Historical studies show the town's original name was
Castrillo Motajudios. The second name of that translates to "Jews
Hill" and dates back to 1035 when 66 Jews were killed in a nearby town and
those expelled settled on the hill.
The earliest records found with the name changed to
"Kill Jews" is from 1627, more than a century after the 1492 edict by
Spain's royalty that required Jews to leave the country, convert to Catholicism
or face being burned at the stake during the Spanish inquisition.
Although Jews were killed in the area, researchers believe
the town got its current name from Jewish residents who converted to
Catholicism and wanted to convince Spaniards they opposed Jews, Rodriguez said.
Others think it might have simply come from a slip of the pen.
The idea of a referendum grew from moves to document
Castrillo Matajudios' Jewish past and attract tourists.
"There are always the stories of people from here
travelling to Israel with a passport that says Matajudios and wishing they
didn't have to show it," Rodriguez said.
Other residents of the village, near Burgos in the province
of Castile and Leon, tell outsiders they are from Castrillo without mentioning
the second name, he said.
No Jews live in the town but Rodriguez said many residents
have ancient Jewish roots. The town's official shield includes the Star of
David.
Spain's government earlier this year apologised to Jews by
offering citizenship to descendants of those who were forced to flee.
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