How Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich became the richest Portuguese man alive, a thread.
In 1496, the King of Portugal Manuel I wanted to marry the daughter of the kings of Spain, Isabella, Princess of Asturias. She died shortly thereafter, in childbirth.
One of the requests of the King of Spain in the marriage negotiations was that Portugal would force Jews to convert to catholicism or be expelled, which Manuel did. Those that continued to practice in secret were burnt, most had to flee.
Many of these exiled Portuguese Jews fled to more tolerant places like the Netherlands or Britain. Educated, many of their descendants became prominent people in the arts and science: Baruch Spinoza, David Ricardo.
Fast forward to 2015. The Portuguese (centre-right) government changes its citizenship law to allow for descendants of the persecuted Jews to apply for citizenship, as a form of redemption after 500 years. publico.pt/2015/01/29/pol…
If you can claim a lineage to the expelled jews 500 years ago, you can qualify. This opens some business opportunities. Here, this Israeli company proposes (in Hebrew) to help you sort out how to obtain a Portuguese EU passport. portugalis.co.il
Meanwhile, Roman Abramovich, who owns Russian and Israeli passports, because of Brexit, is no longer an EU resident. In 2018, he withdrew a UK visa application. bbc.com/news/uk-443326…
Now Roman Abramovich is Jewish, but Abramovich is a typical name in the Ashkenazy community (from Eastern Europe). Portuguese Sefardic names would for instance be Da Costa (a prominent Dutch poet). en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_da_…
How does Portugal determine whether you qualify for citizenship as a descendant of Portuguese Jews? You need to have a certificate issued by a recognised Jewish community based in Portugal, so the state delegates this certification to a private entity. justica.gov.pt/Como-obter-nac…
Here the Jewish community of Porto explains the application procedure. They emphasise that they are impartial and strict. jewishcommunityofoporto.blogspot.com
However, this organisation in charge of certification also accepts donations for its activities. It happens that Roman Abramovich is one of the benefactors of the newly opened Holocaust Museum in Porto. nit.pt/fora-de-casa/n…
Strangely, the curator of this museum edited the Portuguese wikipedia page of Abramovich 18 times between June and November this year, notably editing the "family" bit. tvi24.iol.pt/mf-mundo/chels…
On this wiki page, the only hint at Abramovich's Sefardi lineage is a reference to ancestors from Hamburg, linking to an article in the Telegraph that doesn't talk about this. pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_Abr…
Abramovich did indeed donate to the rehabilitation of the Hamburg Altona cemetery, which received many Portuguese Jews. This was a partnership with the Portuguese Jewish community. But whether these were *his* ancestors is unclear. mazal.news/post/descendan…
Would you be able to document you lineage back 500 years? Maybe he could find an ancestor on his mothers's side with a name that was held by Sephardic Jews. We don't know.
Earlier this year, Roman Abramovich became a Portuguese citizen. He may well have Portuguese Sefardi ancestors (there may be evidence of his lineage that is not public), but... publico.pt/2021/12/18/des…
...the fact that he donated large amounts of money to the entity that determines whether he qualifies for citizenship is strange.
Another relevant element of context is that pressure has been building up for imposing sanctions on a number of Russian figures (including Abramovich) in the aftermath of the arrest of Alexei Navalny. Having an EU passport cannot hurt. google.com/amp/s/theathle…
Now Abramovich may be feel a close attachment to Portugal and Portuguese culture. He hired José Mourinho *twice* at Chelsea after all.
There is a fascinating historical precedent to the Abramovich naturalisation. This article by @VictorPereir1 shows how 180 Jews living in France escaped the Holocaust on account of their (contested) Portuguese citizenship. cairn.info/revue-guerres-…
It starts in Thessaloniki in 1913. 40% of its population was Jewish at the time, many of them descendants of expelled Sephardic Jews from the Iberian Peninsula. One of the biggest Jewish colonies in Europe. Under Ottoman rule, the city and its Jews were granted large autonomy.
In 1912 the Greek army occupies the city, and their status is under threat. The Jews ask protection from the international community. Many foreign powers offer assistance to attract them, their wealth and networks.
The Portuguese consul writes that the Jews of Thessaloniki could be a great asset for trade between Portugal and the East. Given that they are descendants of expelled Jews from Portugal, they could be "reinstated in their original Portuguese citizenship".
A provisional solution is to register them at the consulate; their status is unclear. Are they Portuguese? Greece thinks so, but Portugal doesn't recognise them formally. In the meantime, Portugal, then a Republic (1910-1926), becomes a dictatorship.
In 1917, Thessaloniki burns. 70,000 residents are made homeless, 52,000 of whom Jews. 32 synagogues, 10 rabbinical libraries, eight Jewish schools, and numerous Jewish philanthropies, businesses and clubs are destroyed. Many Jews emigrate, notably to France.
Fast forward to 1943 in France. These "Portuguese" Jews from Thessaloniki or their descendants ask protection from Portuguese diplomatic authorities to save them from impending deportation to death camps.
Portugal doesn't consider them Portuguese, and the Portuguese regime is ideologically close to the Axis powers, even if it remains neutral during the war.
Some Portuguese diplomats support them nevertheless - these are usually people from a high socio-economic background - and deliver them passports.
Between August 1943 and July 1944, 5 trains leave France for Portugal, transporting about 200 Jews from Thessaloniki. 3 days after the last train, another train leaves, this time headed for the death camps.
The evidence on the Abramovich naturalisation process in the thread draws on this investigative article in @Publico which uncovered the story publico.pt/2021/12/18/des…
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Interesting differences in naturalisation practices in Switzerland: 1) Man originally from Kosovo is denied citizenship because citizens of the town where he applied say he walks around in tracksuit bottoms. blick.ch/schweiz/basel/…
2) Woman originally from Germany, active on the neonazi scene, organising illegal demonstrations against corona measures and calling for revolution, was granted Swiss citizenship last year in Luzern. 20min.ch/story/corona-d…
3) Man, originally from Cape Verde, is denied Swiss citizenship because he had driven a car with a windshield that had only been *partially* de-iced. Got a fine, sufficient to fail his application. laliberte.ch/info-regionale…
Why are there no secessionist tensions in Switzerland while they are strong in Belgium? A thread in maps.
Here is a map of dominant languages in Switzerland and Belgium, namely French, German, Italian and Rumansh in Switzerland and French, Flemish and German in Belgium.
Now here is a map of average income by municipality in Belgium. As you can see, it doesn't track the language border absolutely perfectly, but there is nevertheless a fairly close correspondence between the two: Flanders is richer than Wallonia 3/
So here's are time series of the percentage of immigrants (% born abroad, except for some countries where I use % non-citizen) in a number of countries since 1850, suing census data, statistical yearbooks and other sources.
So for some countries finding this data is pretty easy, like in Canada.
For others I had to look in the Danish Statistisk Årbog 1896, luckily digitised.
Netherlands: All-time record number of coronavirus cases per day, hospital admissions ‘rising fast’ dutchnews.nl/news/2021/11/r…
This was the Dutch justice minister in July, singing a little song to wave goodbye to face masks forever
Generally the policy of the Dutch government on covid has been baffling, either being way too optimistic when things were looking up, planning to lift restrictions way ahead of time and then lifting them when infections were rising again.
Brexit has cut down EU red tape, so people who have been vaccinated in Spain will be able to enter the UK without quarantine, but not people vaccinated with the same vaccine in France because of the prevalence of the Beta variant in Indian Ocean Islands bbc.com/news/uk-578698…
Slight improvement on people vaccinated through the NHS not having to quarantine but people vaccinated with the same vaccines in another country having to.
Covid infections in the Netherlands by age and vaccination status: mostly the young, not vaccinated
83% of the people who tested positive in July were not vaccinated; 10% were partially vaccinated (1 dose) and 6% were fully vaccinated. rivm.nl/nieuws/aantal-…
This is the distribution of the whole Dutch population by vaccination status. You can clearly see that non-vaccinated are very overrepresented among the infected (source: ourworldindata.org/explorers/coro…