In the Shadow of The Alhambra: The Fate of Vidal and his Family in South of Sepharad
The Alhambra is a royal palace built atop Sabika hill in Granada, Spain. A sprawling complex with elaborate architecture and a commanding position over the city below, the Alhambra demands the attention of all visitors to Granada. Originally built in 1238 by Muhammad I Ibn al-Ahmar, the first Nasrid emir and founder of the Emirate of Granada, today the Alhambra is one of Spain's major tourist attractions and a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
It’s no wonder why, then, the Alhambra is a predominant feature in the lives of the characters in Eric Z. Weintraub’s novel, South of Sepharad. Set in Granada in 1492, South of Sepharad follows Vidal, a Jewish physician who, along with his family, lives in the Jewish sector of Granada called La Judería. When Granada, an Islamic state, is conquered by the Catholic Monarchs Isabella and Ferdinand, all Jews are told that they must leave Granada or convert to Catholicism.
Below is an excerpt from Weintraub’s novel. In it, Vidal has only just learned about the Catholic takeover. As he goes about his daily activities in the shadow of the Alhambra Palace, he worries about the future.
It is from that great palace looming over the city that Vidal’s fears were realized. On March 31, 1492, the Catholic monarchs signed the Alhambra Decree, an edict exiling all Jews from the Kingdom of Spain forcing them to become conversos—converts to the Catholic faith. Just a few weeks later, the Catholic monarchs signed another historic document from within the Alhambra. On April 17, they signed the contract which set the terms for the expedition of Christopher Columbus. From his vantage point on the streets of La Judería, Vidal could not have imagined how the world was about to change.
The Alhambra was never far from Vidal’s sight or his mind. As a palace of the Muslim rulers, it posed no threat to the Jews who were allowed to practice their faith without fear of persecution from the Islamic state. But, whether a Muslim or Christian palace, it also reminded Vidal that Granada was not his homeland. When the Alhambra decree was signed, the Jews of Spain were given four months to flee or convert. After learning about the ultimatum, Vidal stays awake at night pondering the history and future of his people and his faith.
Vidal, his family, and much of his community fled Spain never to return. For Vidal, the Alhambra receded into the background as his caravan of Jews traveled through the hot, dry climes of southern Spain, seeking the Mediterranean and North Africa. But the Alhambra, and its new Catholic inhabitants, were not done with Vidal’s family. Catalina, Vidal’s eldest daughter, stayed behind as a converso. For a while, she remained there in relative safety. But like all conversos she was faced with the Spanish Inquisition. Unbeknownst to Vidal, Catalina was asked to enter the Alhambra. But did she ever leave?
Indeed, the Alhambra Palace is a place of great historical significance and stunningly beautiful architecture. But it’s also a place of cultural significance that can have different meanings at different times and to different peoples. To the Jews of Granda it was their overseer and eventually their exiler. It looms over the city, ever-present, ever-beautiful—a reminder of all things past and all things yet to come.