Venezuelan exodus swells Panama Jewish community

THE  EXODUS of Venezuelan citizens  has helped double Panama’s Jewish community in recent years says David Perets, the rabbi of Panama’s largest synagogue Shevet Ahim.

He was speaking  during a ceremony at the Spanish Embassy  in which 23 Sephardic Jews, mostly from Venezuela, received Spanish nationality, reports El Siglo

“We started leaving  Venezuela during the first years of the  (Hugo) Chavez government  but have lately come out en masse,” said  Armando Garzon, whose parents were born in Tetuan, when Morocco was a Spanish protectorate, and later migrated to Panama.

Garzon and five other members of his family received Spanish nationality, on Wednesday, March 16,  following the adoption in 2015 of a law allowing  all those who prove to be descendants of those expelled from Spain in 1492, to get  Spanish citizenship.

“We will not return until things change in Venezuela socially and economically,” said Sara Behar Morhain, who  also swore allegiance to the Spanish Constitution and the king of Spain.

Panama has is the only country ouside Israel  that has had two Jewish presidents: Levy-Max Delvalle Maduro (1967) and his nephew Eric Arturo Delvalle (1985-1989).

The Jewish community today, owns some of the most important companies in Panama, says El Siglos  including supermarkets, airlines, commercial and construction companies and  also have a strong  presence in the Colon Free Zone.

According to Isaac Btesh,  president of the Central Hebrew Council of Panama, the presence of Jews in Panama dates back to the 15th century when the Catholic Monarch expelled from Spain all those who refused to convert to Christianity, Their numbers intensified with the 1849 Californian gold rush and the construction of the Panama Canal.

85% of Jews living in Panama are Sephardim, that is, descendants of Spanish Jews, unlike other countries in Latin America where the community is overwhelmingly Ashkenazi.