The Last Kabbalist of Lisbon
The Last Kabbalist of Lisbon is a novel by American-Portuguese author Richard Zimler. It was first published in Portuguese translation in 1996 after having been rejected by many American publishers. After reaching No. 1 on the Portuguese bestseller list, the book found success in other countries and has been a bestseller in 13, including the United States, the United Kingdom, Italy, Brazil and Australia. It has been published in 23 languages.
Based closely on the events of the Lisbon massacre of 1506, The Last Kabbalist of Lisbon is a locked-room mystery crossed with historical fiction about a pogrom of Portuguese Jews.
Plot
The novel is narrated by Berekiah Zarco, a 20-year-old kabbalist and manuscript illuminator. During the clandestine Passover celebrations held by the secret Jews of Lisbon, an anti-Semitic pogrom breaks out and Berekiah returns home to find the door to the family cellar locked. Inside, he discovers the naked and bloody body of his Uncle Abraham, his spiritual master. Berekiah endeavors to identify the murderer with the help of his Islamic friend and soul-mate Farid, although, as a kabbalist interested in the symbolic nature of the world, he grows more interested in learning the underlying meaning of his uncle’s murder for his family, the Jews of Lisbon and all humanity – and even for God.Berekiah's family lives in one of Lisbon's oldest quarters, the Alfama, and much of the action of the book takes place there.
One of the novels key themes is self-sacrifice in Jewish law, known as mesirat nefesh in Hebrew.