Career
Victor endeavored to show his zeal for his new religion by writing against his former coreligionists. His work, Judenbüchlein, published in Cologne in 1508 or 1509 described the conditions and customs of Jews with a view toward aiding in their conversion. He disputed with learned Jews before the Archbishop of Cologne at Bonn, and secured the expulsion of Jews from Brühl, Deutz, and other towns in the Diocese of Cologne.
He was chiefly concerned in exonerating himself from the accusation of having apostatized for the sake of worldly advantages.
And in view of this, he paid the Jews a gratuitous compliment when he asserted that they, of all the people of the earth, are the most difficult to convert, their attachment to their Law being so strong that neither riches nor fear of persecution can cause them to abandon their faith. In his old age Victor became a priest.
And after his death the following epitaph was engraved on the door of the church of Sainte-Ursule at Cologne: "Victor, formerly a Jew, wrote in the year 1509 four works against the errors of the Jews.".