Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Colombian Jews, Christians slam appointment of anti-Israel ‘rabbi’ to top religion post

Richard Gamboa Ben-Eleazar, appointed head of the religions department at the Columbian Interior Ministry, has inveighed on X against “Israeli Nazism” and called for “standing in solidarity with the Palestinian people.”

Members of the Jewish Community of Medelllin, Colombia listen to a talk by Israeli diplomats on Nov. 29, 2024. Photo Credit: Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the State of Israel
Members of the Jewish Community of Medelllin, Colombia listen to a talk by Israeli diplomats on Nov. 29, 2024. Photo Credit: Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the State of Israel

Evangelical Christians in Colombia joined the country’s Jewish community in criticizing the appointment of an anti-Israel rabbi with dubious credentials as the country’s Director of Religious Affairs.

The Evangelical Confederation of Colombia, Cedecol, which represents more than 7,000 Christian churches in the country, voiced its alarm on Wednesday over the appointment of Richard Gamboa Ben-Eleazar as head the Interior Ministry’s religions department, which was announced last week.

“There are doubts over his legitimacy within his own faith community, as well as his suitability to represent all faiths in an official capacity,” Pastor Lyda Elena Arias, who heads Cedecol, told the Semana newspaper Wednesday.

This was a reference to claims that Gamboa, who would be responsible for allocating funds and coordinating government action with religious institutions in his new post, had purchased his rabbinical degree from the Florida-based Esoteric Theological Seminary, which is not widely recognized as a rabbinical certifier, and which has advertised such degrees for $160.

The Confederation of Jewish Communities of Colombia last week said that the country’s Jewish communities have not received “the necessary guarantees” as to the suitability of Gamboa, who last month inveighed on X against “Israeli Nazism” and called for “standing in solidarity with the Palestinian people.”

Colombia’s tiny Jewish community of about 4,500 people has had a strained relationship with Colombian President Gustavo Petro, a left-wing populist who last year broke diplomatic relations with Israel over its war against Hamas in Gaza. The evangelical church’s protest over Gamboa’s appointment, however, could pose more of an issue for the government.

Gamboa has posted to social media pictures of himself with an anti-Israel rabbi of the Neturei Karta, an anti-Zionist sect whose leaders have maintained friendly relations with Iran.

In a video on X, Gamboa on Tuesday denied that he’d bought the Esoteric Theological Seminary rabbinical certificate. “I did not pay for it,” he said in the video, in which he presented to the camera various diplomas he said he’d received. The other certificate connected to Judaism that Gamboa presented was described by him as a doctorate from the “Hebrew Theological Seminary” in Bolivia. JNS was not able to immediately locate a website or address for this institution.

Gamboa thanked Petro for the appointment and assured the Jewish community “and all other religious communities” that he will “be a voice for all of you.”

Gamboa, 47, has said that he is the son of “secular Sephardic Jews” in Tolima, Colombia, El Pais reported.

Canaan Lidor is an award-winning journalist and news correspondent at JNS. A former fighter and counterintelligence analyst in the IDF, he has over a decade of field experience covering world events, including several conflicts and terrorist attacks, as a Europe correspondent based in the Netherlands. Canaan now lives in his native Haifa, Israel, with his wife and two children.
“School districts, like colleges and universities, must take prompt and effective action to address antisemitic harassment,” stated Harmeet Dhillon, assistant U.S. attorney general for civil rights.
Just one Democratic congressman voted against the measure to require U.S. forces to be withdrawn from the conflict with Iran.
“This tool makes it easier to confront and understand family histories connected to the Nazi era,” Die Zeit stated in its introduction of the database.
The owners of La Chatelaine French Bakery & Bistro stated that they had relatives who suffered under Nazism, “will not host individuals who are at odds with our stance” against extremism.
Twenty honorees, including Julian Edelman, Omri Casspi and Bruce Pearl, will be inducted June 29 in Israel, highlighting global Jewish achievement across sports.
“In order to achieve peace between their countries, they will formally begin a 10-day ceasefire at 5 p.m. Eastern,” the president wrote on social media.