Baldassarre Bonifacio was a prominent Christian cleric who had been a guest at Sarra and her husband's receptions. In 1621, he wrote a
treatise ''Dell’Immortalità dell'anima (On the Immortality of the Soul)''. According to Bonifacio's account, two years before that, Sarra had caused him to realize that she did not believe in the
immortality of the soul. This was a very serious accusation of a crime of belief which could have resulted in a trial by
inquisition. In response, Sarra at once wrote a work entitled, ''Manifesto di Sarra Copia Sulam hebrea Nel quale è da lei riprovate, e detestata l'opinione negante l'Immortalità dell'Anima, falsemente attribuitale da SIG. BALDASSARE BONIFACIO
(The Manifesto of Sarra Copia Sulam, a Jewish woman, in which she refutes and disavows the opinion denying immortality of the soul, falsely attributed to her by Signor Baldassare Bonifacio''). The Manifesto was dedicated to her beloved father, who died when she was 16 years old. In this work she defended her points of view, and attacked Bonifacio. At the beginning of her response to Bonifacio's accusation was the following poem: Sarra sent a copy of the
Manifesto to Cebà, but he responded to her only after a few months delay, and instead of offering her help, he once again urged her to convert to Christianity. This was the last letter that Cebà, who died soon after, wrote to Sarra. Sarra Copia Sulam was the victim of a sordid “gaslighting” plot, which is recorded in the
Avviso di Parnaso, an unpublished document preserved in the Correr Museum in the Napoleonic Wing of the Piazza San Marco in Venice. The lady had hired a villain named Numidio Paluzzi as a tutor and he, together with Alessandro Berardelli and others, committed a series of thefts in Copia’s house. Paluzzi then made her believe that the thefts were the work of ghosts, and, in addition, sent her a fake love letter from a Frenchman with whom she was supposedly in love, revealing to her the presence of a spirit capable of establishing contact with her lover in Paris. In a short time the affair was on everyone’s lips and finally it reached the ears of Copia herself, who reported everything to the
Signori della Notte al Criminàl, the criminal court of Venice which held its sessions during the night. Berardelli was arrested, and Copia fired Paluzzi. This was not enough to stop the wickedness of the two men, who disseminated a satire against her entitled
La Sarreide (The Lost Woman). Berardelli later published a collection of rhymes by Paluzzi, who had died some time before, including the sonnets sent by Copio to Cebà because, according to the slanders of Berardelli, the real author was Paluzzi himself, whom Copia had robbed of his works while he was on his deathbed. After this event, there is no further information about him. The date of Copia’s death is attested by the
Necrologio Ebrei of the
Provveditori alla Sanità. Many of her friends and teachers stopped supporting her during her time of need in 1621. Not until 1625 did an anonymous author publish papers in her defense. Sarra died in February 1641, after a three-month illness. ==References==