The 'Secret Jews' of San Luis Valley
In Colorado, the gene linked to a virulent form of breast cancer found mainly in Jewish women is discovered in Hispanic Catholics
- By Jeff Wheelwright
- Photographs by Scott S. Warren
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
For the first time Wright connected this history to memories of conceivably Jewish customs, such as sweeping dust into the center of a room and covering mirrors while mourning a loved one's death. She read up on the Spanish "crypto-Jews" in the library and on the Internet. In 2001, she and her husband made an extended visit to the valley and northern New Mexico. Tracking down as many of her paternal relatives as she could find, she alerted them to their dangerous genetic legacy and their ethno-religious heritage. "I have 60 first cousins, some I never knew I had," she says. "So I went fact-finding. I made the trek because I needed to know where I was from. 'Did you know about our Jewish heritage?' I said. It wasn't a big deal to some of them, but others kind of raised an eyebrow like I didn't know what I was talking about."
Part of New Mexico Territory until the U.S. government delineated the Colorado Territory in 1861, the San Luis Valley lies between two chains of mountains, the San Juans to the west and the Sangre de Cristos to the east. The Rio Grande begins here. The town of San Luis—the oldest in Colorado—is the Spanish heart of the valley. With an old church on the central plaza and a modern shrine on a mesa overlooking the town, San Luis bristles with Catholic symbols. It seems a short step back in time to the founding of the New Mexico colony, when picaresque gold-hungry conquistadors, Franciscan friars and Pueblo Indians came together, often violently, in a spare and sunburnt land. As Willa Cather put it in Death Comes for the Archbishop, perhaps the best novel about the region, the sunsets reflected on the Sangre de Cristo Mountains are "not the colour of living blood" but "the colour of the dried blood of saints and martyrs."
The discovery of the 185delAG mutation in the valley and subsequently in New Mexico hints at a different story, with its own trail of blood and persecution. The significance of the genetic work was immediately recognized by Stanley M. Hordes, a professor at the University of New Mexico. During the early 1980s, Hordes had been New Mexico's official state historian, and part of his job was assisting people with their genealogies. Hordes, who is 59, recalls that he received "some very unusual visits in my office. People would drop by and tell me, in whispers, that so-and-so doesn't eat pork, or that so-and-so circumcises his children." Informants took him to backcountry cemeteries and showed him gravestones that he says bore six-pointed stars; they brought out devotional objects from their closets that looked vaguely Jewish. As Hordes began speaking and writing about his findings, other New Mexicans came forward with memories of rituals and practices followed by their ostensibly Christian parents or grandparents having to do with the lighting of candles on Friday evenings or the slaughtering of animals.
Hordes laid out his research in a 2005 book, To the End of the Earth: A History of the Crypto-Jews of New Mexico. Following the Jews' expulsion from Spain, crypto-Jews were among the early settlers of Mexico. The Spanish in Mexico periodically tried to root out the "Judaizers," but it is clear from the records of trials that Jewish practices endured, even in the face of executions. According to Hordes' research, settlers who were crypto-Jews or descended from Jews ventured up the Rio Grande to frontier outposts in New Mexico. For 300 years, as the territory passed from Spanish to Mexican to United States hands, there was almost nothing in the historical record about crypto-Jews. Then, because of probing by younger relatives, the stories trickled out. "It was only when their suspicions were aroused decades later," Hordes writes, "that they asked their elders, who reluctantly answered, 'Eramos judíos' ('We were Jews')."*
But were they? Judith Neulander, an ethnographer and co-director of the Judaic Studies Program at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, was at first a believer of Hordes' theory that crypto-Judaism had survived in New Mexico. But after interviewing people in the region herself, she concluded it was an "imagined community." Among other things, Neulander has accused Hordes of asking leading questions and planting suggestions of Jewish identity. She says there are better explanations for the "memories" of unusual rites—vestiges of Seventh-Day Adventism, for example, which missionaries brought to the region in the early 20th century. She also suggested that perhaps some dark-skinned Hispanics were trying to elevate their ethnic status by associating themselves with lighter-skinned Jews, writing that "claims of Judaeo-Spanish ancestry are used to assert an overvalued line of white ancestral descent in the American Southwest."
Hordes disagrees. "Just because there are some people who are wannabes doesn't mean everybody is a wannabe," he says. But he acknowledges that Neulander's criticisms have made him and other researchers more cautious.
Hordes, pursuing another line of evidence, also pointed out that some of the New Mexicans he was studying were afflicted by a rare skin condition, pemphigus vulgaris, that is more common among Jews than other ethnic groups. Neulander countered that the same type of pemphigus vulgaris occurs in other peoples of European and Mediterranean background.
Then the 185delAG mutation surfaced. It was just the sort of objective data Hordes had been looking for. The findings didn't prove the carriers' Jewish ancestry, but the evidence smoothly fit his historical theme. Or, as he put it with a certain clinical detachment, it's a "significant development in the identification of a Jewish origin for certain Hispano families."
"Why do I do it?" Hordes was addressing the 2007 meeting, in Albuquerque, of the Society for Crypto-Judaic Studies, a scholarly group he co-founded. "Because the fabric of Jewish heritage is richer in New Mexico than we thought." His research and that of others, he said at the gathering, "rip the veneer off" the accounts of Spanish-Indian settlement and culture by adding a new element to the conventional mix.
One conference attendee was a Catholic New Mexican who heartily embraces his crypto-Jewish heritage, the Rev. Bill Sanchez, a local priest. He says he has upset some local Catholics by saying openly that he is "genetically Jewish." Sanchez bases his claim on another genetic test, Y chromosome analysis. The Y chromosome, handed down from father to son, provides a narrow glimpse of a male's paternal lineage. The test, which is promoted on the Internet and requires only a cheek swab, is one of the more popular genealogy probes. Sanchez noted that the test suggested he was descended from the esteemed Cohanim lineage of Jews. Still, a "Semitic" finding on this test isn't definitive; it could also apply to non-Jews.
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Related topics: DNA Disease and Illnesses Judaism Colorado
Additional Sources
"Identification of Germline 185delAG BRCA1 Mutations in Non-Jewish Americans of Spanish Ancestry From the San Luis Valley, Colorado," Lisa G. Mullineaux et al., Cancer, August 1, 2003









Comments (64)
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It's posible that about 20% of the Spanish population have Jewish DNA although many Spanish including Spaniards with the Jewish DNA findings are to this day Jew-hating. The last time I visited Spain (Malaga)In 1972 I asked a passerby who happened to be a Priest where the Synagogue was (at that time it was in an appartment block) he ther priest insulted me, he spat at the ground and intimated that there were no longer any Jews in Spain (there were 12,000 then now around 50,000). I would never viit that country again.
Posted by Samir S. Halabi on April 28,2013 | 05:55 AM
I'm sorry to say this is tabloid at best, look at the genetic studies. Hispanics have a great Mediterranean component, to which both Sephardic and Askenazi Jews share. Here's the genetic dilemma Ashkenazi and Sephardic Jewish people are not as related to each other as they are with other host populations. There are plenty of studies that show this, Behar, Avshalom Zoossmann-Diskin 2010 "The origin of Eastern European Jews revealed by autosomal, sex chromosomal and mtDNA polymorphisms" shows that Ashkenazi Jews are related to Italians, at least 40%. And another study by Underhill et al... This then becomes an easy connection, Italians are most related to Spaniards. Ash are most related to Italians... Spaniards have a large historical connection with Rome... There is no need to create a complicated secret history to explain this medical issue.
Posted by Aaron on March 31,2013 | 12:54 AM
I was born in Alamosa, 1939. The Catholic Encyclopedia identifies which names are Jewish and De Herrera and Herrera are Jewish (Saphardic not Ashkenazi Jews) I have read. There is NEVER any talk of 'Jewish origin' in any of the Spanish families. We arrived in New Mexico in 1598 (Onati Expedition). I don't recall any 'breast cancer' in the De Herreras. My mother died of breast cancer, her family was "King or Konig" of Swiss origin. jdh
Posted by John De Herrera on March 3,2013 | 10:34 PM
Palestine is the roman designation for the land of Israel.
Posted by Anthony on July 21,2012 | 11:53 PM
VERY INTERESTING ARTICLE. I'M A REGISTERED SONOGRAPHER. THE HOSPITAL HAS AN OUTPATIENT CLINIC WHICH OFFERS MAMMOGRAM AND BREAST SONOGRAM DIAGNOSTIC SERVICES. THE FEMALE SONOGRAPHERS ASSIGNED TO THIS CLINIC OFTEN EXPRESS THEIR CONCERNS OF POSITIVE BREAST CA ON THE MOSTLY HISPANIC PATIENTS SENT FOR THESE EXAMS. IT'S A FACT THAT THE SEPHARDIC JEWS SETTLED HERE IN THE TEXAS RIO GRANDE VALLEY BEFORE MIGRATING NORTH. MAYBE SOMEONE MIGHT BE INTERESTED IN COMING DOWN TO SOUTH TEXAS AND DO SOME RESEARCH ON THESE FINDINGS. I FEEL VERY CONFIDENT THAT SOMEONE WILL FIND A LINK BETWEEN THESE WOMEN AND THOSE IN SAN LUIS VALLEY. TKS JOSE A. LUNA , DESCENDANT OF THE SEPHARDIC JEWS.
Posted by JOSE A. LUNA on May 6,2012 | 03:50 PM
Fascinating article. To further expand your research and to bolster the connection between the humanities and the sciences, I would recommend looking into cases of thalassemia in the San Luis Valley and the linguistic particulars of the people of this region. The language has been preserved, to some extent, and shows a strong connection to that of Ladino or "Djudeo espanyol."
Posted by Francisco Macias on May 3,2012 | 08:09 AM
I was just reunited with my brother in northern new Mexico after being separated for 50 years. I was given the family tree with the name Valdez and Martinez on the family tree. My birth mother was a Valdez. This is an important article and I appreciate knowing this since I have two daughters. Read our article in the Seattle times. "a brothers search, a family reunited" Thank you, J Kach
Posted by Janna Kach on March 30,2012 | 12:44 AM
Shortly after my father passed away last year I came across of a sephardic TANAKH that he was studying in Hebrew and Spanish. This made me investigate some more into my family history in northern New Mexico, particularly Taos and Arroyo Hondo and Arroyo Seco. To my surprise my grandmother casually mentioned that we were Jews once, and that my grandfather (who descends from the original Silva family that settled New Mexico in the 1690s) was a secretly practicing Jew. I recently converted to Judaism and am now practicing. Whenever I visit my father's grave in Arroyo Seco I place a rock there as is the Jewish custom. The last time I visited his grave I was surprised to see that along with the rocks I've placed there, dozens more were placed as well.
Posted by Silva on February 13,2012 | 12:13 AM
just to add to the interesting info, I seem to remember Dr. Stan Hordes saying he was looking into a link between gallbladder cancer (common to Jews) & northern NM people.
Posted by marsha on December 17,2011 | 07:03 PM
I am a decendent of the Martinez - Gomes bloodline that lived in the San Luis Valley specifically "Las Mesitas". I have a cousin who did research into this and told our family we may very well be Crypto-Jews. I am interested in finding out how to get this test done to find out if I have this marker. If someone could contact me regarding obtaining the test i can be reached at: Spokegal@frontiernet.net
Posted by Jessica Martinez Brown on July 20,2011 | 05:50 PM
Go to www.facingourrisk.org and you will find all the information you need regarding the gene and where you can get tested. It's important to do the testing thru a genetic specialist and you can plug your zip code in and the website will tell you where you can find a specialist in your area.
Posted by Roberta Smith on May 23,2011 | 09:48 AM
everyone should know about the data on vitamin D in the prevention and possible treatment of breast cancer. www.vitaminD3world.com has some good summaries of the data
Posted by toby lee on April 24,2011 | 07:41 AM
My parents were born in "El Valle", my father in San Luis and my mother in San Pablo. My Christian pastor teaches that after the Assyrian captivity the "ten lost tribes" of Israel migrated over the Caucasus Mountains into Europe. The tribe of Manasseh eventually settled into Canada and the United States of America. In Hebrew Manasseh means "causing to forget". 35 miles SW of Albuquerque, NM at Hidden Mountain the Ten Commandments are scribed in rock in Paleo-Hebrew. This implies that a Hebrew-Schemetic people inhabited this area about 100 years before Christ was born. On the internet type in Hidden Mountain,NM!
Posted by John Trujillo on February 14,2011 | 07:46 PM
When I was 12 or 13 years old, I overheard my mother and one of her female cousins discussing our Jewish roots. It turned out that I wasn't supposed to find out about them. To this day, if I mention our Jewish ancestry to my mother, she'll just ignore me. I later found out that in many families there are designated bearers of the "secret", often exclusively women. Others in the family are kept in the dark. This level of secrecy, excluding even family members, may seem strange, but it's a kind of habitual discretion left over from centuries of living in fear of the Inquisition.
As an adult I learned that whispered hints of Jewish ancestry have long been a part of life for many Hispanic families in New Mexico and south Texas, particularly those with roots in Monterrey or Saltillo. I did some genealogical research a while back and was astounded by how many branches of my family tree lead back to one of those two cities. It got to be almost absurd after a while.
Posted by Phil on September 29,2010 | 03:57 AM
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