(JTA) — Spanish authorities dispensed with language and culture tests for elderly applicants for citizenship under the country’s law of return for Sephardi Jews.

The Spanish Justice Ministry decided to offer the dispensation from tests on the Spanish language and heritage, which were mandated for citizenship applicants under the 2013 law, after it emerged that the tests effectively barred hundreds of elderly Turkish Jews from exercising their right to a Spanish passport, El Pais reported last week.

Spain has naturalized 4,919 applicants for citizenship by Sephardim since the law went into effect last year, according to the daily. However, only 387 applicants were granted citizenship based on the actual law. Others were naturalized by a royal decree and not through the non-discretionary procedure devised for the law.

Applicants are required to take the tests in Spain, further complicating the ability even of elderly applicants who do speak Spanish and know the country’s culture to be tested, according to El Pais.

Karen Gerson Sharon of the Sephardic Center of Istanbul said the dispensation was “very welcome.”

She said many Sephardi Jews opt for applying for a Portuguese passport instead of a Spanish one because of the exams. Portugal passed its law of return for Sephardi Jews several months before Spain. Unlike the Spanish legislation, it does not require applicants to speak Portuguese or take exams.

Another 84-year-old would-be applicant from Turkey, Sharon said, has given up on asking for Spanish citizenship because he is not well enough to travel.

The governments of both countries said they were passing the law as a symbolic rectification for the murder, mass deportations and forced conversions to Christianity of their Jews during the 15th and 16th centuries, during what came to be known as the Spanish and Portuguese Inquisition.