Simchat Torah is the time when Jewish children of all ages and from all denominations rejoice in celebration of a personal connection to the Torah and to their community. The festivities are often so exciting they’re recounted for months—and sometimes even years—afterwards. But for Spanish & Portuguese Jews living in England and elsewhere around the world, the story of one particular Simchat Torah celebration will be told again this year, exactly 350 years after it happened.
On Thursday night at London’s Spanish & Portuguese congregation, Bevis Marks Synagogue, the story recounted will be of renowned British diarist Samuel Pepys unexpectedly entering Congregation Shaar Hashamayim in London on Simchat Torah in 1663. Pepys’ account of his experience has become one of the most famous foundational stories in the narrative of Anglo-Jewry.
The modern Jewish community in England began in 1656, several hundred years after its expulsion in 1290 (though individual Jews had stayed and others visited during the intermediary centuries). During the 17th-century, famed Portuguese kabbalist and Rabbi Menasseh ben Israel tirelessly petitioned the British Parliament to allow for the re-establishment of an organized Jewish community in England, and Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector of the British Commonwealth, granted permission for the Jews to reenter. Almost immediately, a Portuguese-Jewish merchant named António Fernandez Carvajal, the first Jew to be re-admitted to England, established a synagogue that would worship in the Spanish & Portuguese traditions.
Within several months, on December 19th, 1656, Congregation Shaar Hashamayim opened in Creechurch Lane in the City of London. (A related Spanish & Portuguese congregation in New York City, Shearith Israel, was established two years earlier in 1654 and remains the oldest Jewish congregation in the United States.)
Just a few years later, Pepys found himself at Shaar Hashamayim during Simchat Torah, completely aghast at the joyous scene before his eyes. In his diary entry for Wednesday, October 14th, 1663, he recorded the event, forever capturing..Read more at Tablet Magazine