Reverend Abraham Lopes Cardozo (1914-2006)


92 YEAR OLD HAZAN OF THE FAMOUS SPANISH AND
PORTUGUESE CONGREGATION SHEARITH ISRAEL (FOUNDED 1654)



By Shelomo Alfassa



Reverend Abraham Lopes Cardozo, Hazan Emeritus of the Spanish and Portuguese
Synagogue in the City of New York passed away Feb. 21, 2006 at the age of
92. Reverend Cardozo was one of the spiritual leaders of Congregation
Shearith Israel for 60 years, he was a leading figure of Sephardic Jewry
around the world.



Born in Amsterdam, Holland, Cardozo was the great-grandson of the Chief
Rabbi of the Sephardic Congregation and the son of Joseph Lopes Cardozo,
musician, and leader of the boy's choir of the Spanish and Portuguese
Synagogue. Reverend Cardozo was a link in the chain of Sephardic Jewry that
stretched back to pre-Inquisition Iberia.



In the years after 1497, numerous Portuguese Jews converted, (many under
duress to save their lives). Over succeeding decades, many Jews made every
attempt to slip out of the country that had locked them in. Some made it to
France, others to Brazil (then a Portuguese colony) and yet others to the
Dutch Netherlands. It was in the Netherlands that the Spanish and Portuguese
Jews could openly return to Judaism without fear of persecution. Because of
their Iberian origins and Portuguese language, the Jews of Amsterdam are
known as Spanish-Portuguese Jews.



In September 1654, shortly before the Jewish New Year, 23 Jews that were
fleeing growing anti-Jewish intolerance in Brazil, arrived in New York City.
At the time, the Dutch colony known as New Amsterdam was nothing more than a
small port for ships with a few storehouses surrounded by the forest. This
was the beginning of the history of Sephardic Jews in North America. These
23 refugees founded a congregation known as Shearith Israel, the Remnant of
Israel. This was the congregation that Reverend Abraham Lopes Cardozo served
prominently from 1946-2006.



The members of Shearith Israel, friends, family, and members of the public
all came together to pay their last respects and to express their love and
gratitude to a man that was revered on the highest level. The funeral was
held inside the magnificent synagogue of Congregation Shearith Israel in New
York, surely the grandest of all synagogues outside of Europe. Inside the
stately sanctuary, Reverend Cardozo's casket was draped with his Tallit
(prayer shawl) as a single candle solemnly burned at the head end which is
Jewish tradition.



Facing the teva (readers desk), eulogies were given by several rabbis as
well as family members. Most notably, how in 1939, Reverend Cardozo was
appointed by Queen Wilhemina of the Netherlands to be the Rabbi of the
Sephardic Congregation in Paramaribo, capital of the country of Suriname in
northern South America.



Reverend Cardozo became a faculty member of the Yeshiva University Sephardic
Studies Program, where he taught as a Sephardic hazzan. Thirteen years after
coming to the United States, Reverend Cardozo published, Music of the
Sephardim. In the early 1960's he participated in recording the melodies of
the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue. In 1987 his major work, Sephardic
Songs of Praise, was published, as well as Selected Sephardic Chants in
1991.



Rabbi Albert Gabbai, the rabbi of Congregation Mikveh Israel of Philadelphia
gave a touching tribute to Reverend Cardozo, speaking about him with the
reverence of a son. He endeared the late Hazan as one of his teachers,
someone who helped teach him learn the Spanish and Portuguese tradition.
Someone who was an influence in his life.



Rabbi Mark Angel, long time leader of Congregation Shearith Israel spoke
eloquently and from his heart, of the man who he said was influential on him
becoming rabbi of the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue. Rabbi Angel used the
Hebrew term shaliah sibur to describe Reverend Cardozo. He said the
rabbinical sages of the past dictated that the man chosen as the shaliah
sibur, the emissary of the congregation, had to be of upstanding character
with a high reverence to his community and his faith, this describes
Reverend Cardozo.



Reverend Cardozo was a remnant of a community in the Netherlands that was
devastated by the Nazis. In 1939 there were some 140,000 Dutch Jews living
in the Netherlands. In 1941, the majority of them were living in Amsterdam.
By 1945 only about 35,000 of them were still alive. Reverend Cardozo proudly
represented, taught and kept alive a culture and musical tradition that had
come with the refugees of the Iberian Peninsula and had once again been
taken with Jewish refugees, this time from those fleeing Holland.



Rabbi Angel's touching words still resonate as he called Reverend Cardozo,
an ember. He said Reverend Cardozo was an ember that survived the ashes of
the Holocaust. Making his way to New York, Reverend Cardozo rebuilt his life
after losing his entire family in Europe. He then reinstituted his
traditions, subsequently passing them along to countless others.



Toward the end of the funeral, the crowded synagogue rose in honor of
Reverend Cardozo as the congregation leaders, in their stately black bowler
hats, circled the bier several times, as is their tradition. Jews of every
stream and philosophy, including leaders of Jewish organization, professors,
and colleagues of the late Hazan, together, mourned over the loss of this
statesman and elder of the community.



Reverend Cardozo is survived by his wife, the former Irma Miriam Robles of
Suriname (former president of the Central Sephardi Jewish Community of
America), two daughters, Deborah and Judith, and many grandchildren.



____________________________________
Shelomo Alfassa
Executive Director
International Sephardic Leadership Council
http://www.sephardiccouncil.org
New York City 347-350-7695

Publisher of the International Sephardic Journal
www.SephardicJournal.org


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