Earlier this month Joshua S. Weitz from the Georgia Institute of Technology published a paper (preprint) Let my people go (home) to Spain: a genealogical model of Jewish identities since 1492 (pdf).
In it he demonstrates that the Spanish government's recently announced fast-track path to citizenship for any individual who is Jewish and whose ancestors were expelled from Spain during the inquisition-related dislocation of Spanish Jews in 1492 means that most Jews qualify.
"The basis for this conclusion is that not having a link to an ancestral
group must be a property of all of an individual's ancestors, the probability of which declines (nearly) superexponentially with each successive generation. These findings highlight unexpected incongruities induced by genealogical dynamics between present-day and ancestral identities."
Although the details vary a parallel argument can be made for royal ancestry, and for descent from elite, and much less than elite groups in history.
No comments:
Post a Comment