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IN-DEPTH FEATURES
As we flew over the plains of central Africa my mind was on
the immigrants who had come to the Southern tip of Africa
more than a century ago. Yated Ne'eman ran a serial I
had written about three such young people, and later this had
been published as a book entitled South African
Journeys. This had resulted in a request for a talk on my
trip to SA, and I was wondering what to say.
We had been flying all night and now the sun rose over a
stretch of land and the unique blend of muted colors of
Africa rose below me, blues and browns and soft dark green. A
dry riverbed cut across the landscape. No sign of human
habitation could be seen for mile after mile.
The stunning grandeur hit me and then the thought of people
like my grandfather and my great-grandparents who had
hurriedly left all that was known to them, small intimate
villages filled with Jews, in eastern Europe (especially
Lithuania), and come to this alien lonely environment. They
had carved a good life for us and themselves in this place.
Now their grandchildren had left and those who had once been
immigrants remained alone, just as their parents had
remained, waiting for letters and talking of strange foreign
places.
Bloemfontein
Our first stop was to be Bloemfontein, the judicial capital
of the country. I had grown up there in a vibrant community
of 450 Jewish families. In 1965, a new shul opened for the
High Holy Days with seating for 1,200 and chairs had to be
brought in to accommodate the overflow.
Now the community had shrunk to a tenth of that size and the
large community hall and shul had been sold to be used as a
conference center by the Seventh Day Adventists. Was it a
mistake to revisit the place of my childhood? Each year I had
wanted to do this and each year I had decided against it. We
would land in Johannesburg and board a much smaller plane and
by midday we would arrive in Bloemfontein. I was filled with
trepidation.
I needn't have worried. The twenty-four hours that followed
were the highlight of my visit.
We arrived at midday and after lunch our tour began. The town
itself had changed beyond all recognition. With the
stranglehold of the apartheid laws now gone, the town is
booming. There are giant shopping centers and new educational
institutions. The once dusty sidewalks on the streets where I
once lived, are now covered with manicured lawns.
Once, Indians and Chinese had been banned from staying in
this Province. Even crossing the area in a train, a matter of
some hours, had necessitated going to the police station for
a special exemption certificate. Now there is a large
Taiwanese population making use of the opportunities of a
growing economy. In the small dorps, I was told, the Indian
community had moved in to fill the gap left by the Jews, as
shopkeepers, lawyers and doctors.
Unchanged is the Naval Hill Game Park, still situated in the
very center of the town. We didn't see the famous zebra,
arriving too early in the day, but we did see a tall giraffe
casually feeding from the very top of a tree. Unchanged also
the Arthur Nathan swimming pool. We saw it from Naval Hill
and then drove down to park before it. There it is, the same
unpainted facade, the same straggly bushes, the name of the
Jew who was honored, still there in bold black letters.
The Jewish community has adapted, not only by moving to
smaller, more convenient premises but also by making sure
that each and every member of the kehilla plays a
part. As a result there is a regular evening minyan, a
cheder, and a rota of rabbis from Johannesburg and
Israel to cover the yomim tovim.
We stayed with our friends, just a week before Pesach, which
gives some idea of the marvelous hospitality that remains
still quite firmly in place.
That evening we heard how tour hosts entertain people who are
on their own every Friday night, as well as inviting families
to join them. We saw how the husband is busy with communal
affairs, as from early in the morning the phone began to ring
with queries. We heard about the regular shiur the
wife gave for the ladies who would probably otherwise not go
to shul and simply stay home.
Early the next morning we saw the shul, the museum and the
archives. Each part of the shul brought memories to
me. In the archives we used the retrieval system to access my
parents' wedding certificate. In the museum we saw photos of
my father attending shul and Board of Deputies
meetings. In the garden we saw stones that had been in the
old shul, above the ark and a foundation stone, from
the new shul, and there, with the rest of the
committee, my father's name.
We saw also innovations. A mechitza with slates
reflecting the ceiling lights, giving clear vision on one
side and total opacity on the other. Everything was sparkling
clean and very much in use, from the bustling office. The
secretary told me about childhood friends, where they were
now and what they were doing . . . She showed me the kitchen
and told me of the cheder, the mikveh and the
keilim mikveh. I had been afraid to see a community in
decline. Instead I saw a vibrant active place and I was
pleased I had made the stopover.
One thought welled up inside me. My father had been against
tearing down the historic old shul and putting so much
money into a new shul complex. He felt strongly that
education was as important, if not more important, than
buildings. When he lost the argument he threw himself into
fundraising activities for the buildings. However, he
continued to push for expanding the educational facilities
for the children, particularly the girls of the community. I
heard stories of intermarriage. Are these true and could
these have been prevented if a vigorous education program had
been pursued?
Now, all the time and energy that the committee had expended
was enjoyed by the Seventh Day Adventists.
They had the beautiful buildings. By a strange quirk of fate,
the minister of this community had been one of my father's
patients. After some weeks, he ordered his entire community
to use my father as their doctor.
This man had only one irritating characteristic. Each year a
special preacher would come to speak to his community and
each year he would beg my father to attend. One year my
father spoke very frankly to him, explaining why this request
was quite out of order. The man spoke out equally frankly,
explaining that he had not meant to insult my father, but to
help him. However, thereafter these invitations ceased.
When taken to view the building where I had once davened,
I felt a terrible sadness steal over me. Probably there
was no reason for this. The community continues in another
building. As my father pointed out all those years ago, it is
the community that is important, not the building.
By midday we were again airborne. The meal consisted of uncut
fruit. The stewardess explained that since their was no
kosher kitchen, the airlines had decided that this was the
only way they could provide suitable food. We were impressed
by their knowledge and their thoughtful attitude.
Cape Town
Cape Town held a new challenge for me: public speaking. To
say I was quaking in my shoes would be an understatement.
However the warmth of the audience put me at ease. They threw
a clear light on the story of this community. Many had come
as young children, as immigrants. They told of their
experiences, the varied reasons they had left, the conditions
they had found in South Africa, and the lives they had
created in the new land.
They told also of their children and grandchildren living far
away. It became clear to me that this society, once so
isolated, now has international links with children and
grandchildren scattered around the globe, visiting and being
visited. The earlier immigrants knew they would never see
their families again, but this new immigration is quite
different. Family ties are maintained, with many happy re-
unions, particularly for simchas.
However, just as they grew up far away from their
grandparents, in a land and culture quite different, so too
are their grandchildren living far away, experiencing a
different milieu.
History tries to tie things up into neat categories. That
evening showed me that real life is quite different, quite
unclassifiable. Why did Jews come to South Africa from
Lithuania? Each person had a different answer. "My Aunty was
already here," said one. "My father was going to Australia.
When they stopped at Cape Town and he saw how beautiful it
was, he decided to stay," said another. Each person told a
different story and every experience was unique.
The Shul
The following day we went again to the shul complex.
First we visited the library. Like everything else in the
complex, it is impressive. There are books of every variety.
The chief librarian showed me a new collection, a number of
shelves of Yiddish books. Once Yiddish was considered the
language spoken by the older generation, not of much use in
the new country. For most Jews, English became the language
they spoke at home. Now there is a new interest in both the
heritage of the shtetl and consequently an interest in
its language.
A collection of Yiddish books was donated to the library by
two families some time ago and the classification process
began. Then one day, a call was received by a congregant who
wanted a large number of prayer books collected so they could
be taken to the sheimos box. Fortunately the lady who
went to collect them was a well-known Yiddish expert and she
realized that the books were in good condition and
represented a lost trove of Yiddish books. So, instead of the
books being buried, they were sorted out. The library
retained some and others, sent to the Yiddish Book Center at
Amherst, Massachusetts.
People heard the story and they brought Yiddish books from
their homes. So the collection grew. The shelves of these
newly-collected books are a remnant of a lost age. They are
now being catalogued and some will be translated.
Next we went to the visit the South African Jewish Museum.
The old shul, the first shul built in South Africa,
has been totally changed to house the entrance to the museum.
The walls are clean and smooth, the floors shining new wood,
The Aharon Hakodesh is empty, and a few token wooden
seats are before it. I liked the old museum better, with its
atmosphere of days gone by. However, many people prefer this
new high tech version with its videos and fancy glass
cabinets displaying marvelous silver shul ornamentation.
We saw a cart filled with hawker's goods that was once
trundled through the veldt. We saw the recreation of a
shtetl, marvelously atmospheric, but did they really
have such fine plates and silverware and abundance of food in
that place of poverty?
We saw a video recreation of the meeting to establish the
first community in Cape Town, wonderfully done, but sad to
reflect that none of those families of German and English
extraction retained their Jewish heritage.
The best moment of the tour came when my friend, guiding us,
told the following story. "You see that large photo of
immigrants arriving in Cape Town? Well, really only the
central bit is historically correct. It is a collage. The
outer two parts are photos of immigrants arriving in New
York. I brought my mother here and as we passed she said, `Oh
look. There is my Uncle Nathan.' She pointed to a short man
squashed between two very tall men. My mother continued, `He
fell as a child and hurt his back and he never grew very tall
and he developed a hunched back. He joined his brothers in
Johannesburg. They did well there so they sent for a bride
for Nathan, but they were afraid that his photo wouldn't have
appeal, so instead they sent a photo of his tall, handsome,
older brother.' I said, `How could they do such a thing? How
dishonest. What on earth did the poor girl do when she met
him?' My mother replied, `Well, apparently she was a bit
disappointed, but she did marry him and they had eight
children and the house always seemed to be a very cheerful
place. It was different in those days.' So, now you know a
story of that giant collage that no one else knows."
We used the time in Cape Town for visiting the beauty spots.
Tourists now flock to Cape Town, considering it safer than
Far East destinations, so there is a vast choice of companies
and tours. We chose the Hylton Ross full-day tour of the Cape
Peninsula. We were collected in front of the President Hotel
and driven along the coast along the beaches of Clifton and
Camps Bay to Hout Bay. There we packed onto a small boat,
together with tourists from all over the world, to visit the
seal colony. Once before, I had done this trip, on a simpler,
less crowded craft. Now the gabble of strange languages and
the constant clicking of cameras somewhat spoiled the visit
for me, but the sight of so many seals on the crowded rock is
still impressive.
We left the sea to go inland to Kistenbosch, the botanical
gardens with the magnificent backdrop of the Devil's Peak
Mountains. Even with the crowds of people entering the
turnstiles, the park is big enough to absorb them and still
retain its beauty.
Next we returned to the sea, driving onwards past Muizeberg,
the place where once Jews congregated for their annual summer
holidays, past the summer cottage of the diamond millionaire
Cecil John Rhodes (the creator of Rhodesia), past the small
seaside communities that run along this stretch of fine white
sand, to Fish Hoek. There we sat on the beach and ate our
picnic lunch, while our companions made use of the beachside
cafe.
Then we traveled through Simonstown, once a British Naval
base but now firmly in South African hands, and on to the
Boulders beach to view the penguins.
If the seals had been a letdown for me, this was devastation.
Long ago, we had spent glorious days on this isolated empty
beach. A penguin colony had arrived there and set up home.
After a swim we would walk a small distance and quietly view
these exotic creatures. Once it had been just the penguins
and us. Now we joined thousands of other tourists, streaming
past tourist stalls, walking in through a purpose-built
museum, striding along a massive boardwalk with penguins on
all sides gazing passively at the strange throng. We waited
patiently to take up the one spot at the end of the walk
where there was an uninterrupted view of penguins without
people.
Now the pleasant memory of penguins and beach has been
replaced. Instead I have the memory of tourists, the gabble
of languages and the concrete of the museum. I should have
remained in the van.
We went next to Cape Point, the rocky outcrop into the ocean,
the southernmost tip of Africa where the warm Benguela
current from the east meets up with the cold Atlantic current
from the west. Once again, change: steps built into the
hillside, tourists puffing their way up and down. There is
now a funicular ride to the peak, as an alternative to
walking. There are restaurants and tourist shops. All quite
spoiled this once wild place for me, but others on the bus
were well satisfied.
Walking down we were stopped by a cheery, "Shalom."
When we looked around this was repeated: "Shalom. Shalom
Aleichem." Jewish tourists from France. They were
spending Pesach in South Africa.
How did they know we were Jewish? They laughed when we asked
them.
We made our way back home along the recently reopened
Chapman's Peak drive. It is stunningly beautiful; a narrow
road clawed high into a mountainside, a turquoise-blue sea
below. I must tell you though, in all honesty, for someone
who doesn't like heights, and who has the knowledge that a
rock fall had killed a driver leading to years of closure and
reconstruction, there were moments of fear.
We returned home exhilarated by the beauty that we had driven
though that day. Early the following morning, we caught a bus
from the main road of Sea Point to the Castle. The bus route
along the sea front going to the waterfront shopping area is
good and regular and filled with tourists. The buses along
the main road are chancy, arriving at random times, often an
hour apart. However we were lucky and within five minutes we
were traveling on a nearly empty bus in the direction of the
city center.
On my instructions, we carefully sat far away from a very
disreputable looking young man, as they say in these times,
"of color." We were to relearn on this journey the principle
of "dan lekaf zchus," as he rang the bell for an old
Jewish lady. He helped her down the steps and inquired if she
needed help to get to her destination, assuring her that the
bus would wait for him a few moments longer.
The bus ended its journey exactly opposite the Castle gates.
This imposing building, with its pentagon shape and five
protruding defensive towers, once housed the entire
population of white South Africa.
Jan Van Riebeeck arrived in 1669, with his wife Maria and a
contingent of sailors and craftsmen, in three ships, to found
a halfway station to the Indies for the Dutch East India
Company. The Castle was built by 1679. Soldiers and sailors
lived there and so too did the next governor, Simon van der
Stel, who followed Jan van Riebeeck. He built a marvelous
swimming pool next to his quarters.
Generations of soldiers -- Dutch, and in later years, British
-- relieved their monotony by drinking too much, being
incarcerated in the prison cells and carving their name on
the wooden doors. Jews arrived with this first contingent,
but were lost to our faith, though one of the towers still
resonates with its Jewish name: Katzenellenbogen.
The Castle is relatively unchanged. The approach to tourists
has changed. There are guides and a staged Changing of the
Guard ceremony and two well-labeled interesting museums.
There is a cafe. (Always ask for Appletizer when worried
about kashrus. Most other fruit juices are mixed with
grape juice.) There is a gift shop. The staff is helpful, the
building is permeated with history. This is a worthwhile
visit.
Shabbos found us in the growing Ohr Somayach shul. The
American Rabbi is originally from Cape Town and by all
accounts is succeeding in bringing a vibrant orthodoxy to the
Jews of Sea Point.
The most memorable part of our visit took place in an office
building. My uncle wanted us to attend the regular
shiur hosted for the past nine years by the firm of
accountants that he established many years ago. We sat in a
smart boardroom and ate kosher food from paper plates and
then listened as Rabbi Kornblum went into the Tanach
and discussed the very relevant issue of antisemitism.
This group is clearly made of dedicated individuals, top
businessmen who take time off to learn on a regular basis.
Unlike the Jewish immigrants from England and Germany who
first came to the tip of Africa, these children of the later
Lithuanian immigrants have retained a love of learning.
Again there was no feeling of despair, in spite of reduced
numbers. The community has regrouped and concentrated its
many functions in one place. There kosher meals are served;
people meet for study and to celebrate.
Everywhere there is activity. Everyone seems to be
participating. Like the visit to Bloemfontein, I left in an
upbeat mood. Next stop, Johannesburg!
Johannesburg
We flew to Johannesburg two days before Pesach. I am always
nervous to travel erev chag. Just as well, as it
turned out. Our flight was an hour later than we thought.
Apparently they had changed to a winter timetable a few days
earlier and the travel agent was supposed to inform us. Then
the flight was delayed. If we had been worrying about the
times of candle lighting we would have been in total panic.
This way we spent time in the bookshop and bought and wrote
postcards.
Arriving at the airport we were introduced to some of the
negative aspects of the new legislation that determines
precisely how many people of each race group work in an
organization. We had learned not to accept cab drivers who
come up asking for your destination, but instead to go to the
counter where the money is paid and then the ticket is handed
to an official driver. The two young men at the counter were
smiling and helpful but totally unable to work out what the
fare should be. After a struggle, my daughter offered to help
with the computer and once this was done we were able to
pay.
Now the young men did something that the efficient Afrikaner
girl we had dealt with previously had not done. They carried
our cases to the taxi for us. So I guess it is: "You win
some, you lose some."
Johannesburg is a place of contradiction. The Jewish
community has shrunk, with everyone having someone in a far-
flung place. Canada, Australia, England, New Zealand and
Israel -- all pop up in casual conversation. Yet the
community has a vibrancy that was lacking when the society
was large and stable and when very few people went abroad
except maybe on retirement for the almost-compulsory "six-
week overseas tour."
The community has concentrated itself into one fairly large
geographical location. Perhaps there is a Jewish child who
doesn't attend a Jewish school, but I didn't come across any.
Educationally, there is a choice. Religious schools don't
restrict pupils to those who fit precisely into their
standards and the result is children who bring what they have
learned in school into their homes with determination and
enthusiasm that pulls their parents along. Homes that were
lackadaisical about kashrus now have the highest
standards, because of their children's eagle eye on every
item entering the house.
It is not just the observance of halacha that has seen an
upsurge, but also the enthusiasm of the people, old and
young. Ohr Somayach found that young singles who were not yet
fully-observant felt less than comfortable in their services,
so a new community was founded especially for them, where
they can grow into a new way of life at their own pace. There
is a respect for religious observance, even by those who are
not totally involved, that is a model for other countries.
South African hospitality, already legendary, when coupled
with the principle of hachnosas orchim is something to
behold.
The ten days in Johannesburg were either chag or
Shabbos or a public holiday. So we spent most of the time
being entertained. We sat in wonderful houses, gazing at
landscapes of lawn, trees and flowers surrounding a
glistening blue swimming pool, and listened to divrei
Torah given by young and old.
I thought of my great-grandparents and how it must have been
to live in Lithuania and to live in a vibrant Jewish
community and to wonder if it would be better to stay on with
the familiar, though it had many difficulties, or to venture
abroad as others had done. The community now seems solid and
settled, but no one wants to predict the future.
We had two days that were not chag, not holiday. On
one we decided to buy presents (on the afternoon before
Pesach). My sister took us to the large Pick and Pay where
there is a large clothing section and there we bought
presents for all the family in one great swoop.
The other day we were taken to the Museum of Apartheid. We
went with two children who were visiting from Cape Town. They
were twelve and ten and it was amazing to think that neither
had any experience of the time when every race was rigidly
classified and rigidly separated. After purchasing our
tickets we found that we had been given a card marked either
"white" or "non-white" and the entrance had two gates with
similar signs above and we had to go in according to our
"classification." The children found this totally weird.
We soon spotted a group of Jews ahead of us. They told us
they were from the Oxford Road shul and a member of
the shul was the chief architect of the museum and he
was giving them a special conducted tour. Because of this,
the museum became a special experience. I am not too sure of
just how interesting it would be simply going around without
such guidance.
There are photos, videos, and a film showing the years of
apartheid. For me, there was nothing new or dramatic, nothing
I didn't know or hadn't seen before. However this is a place
for tourists and perhaps for them the material is new and
interesting.
We were there at the same time as a group of tourists from
Nigeria. They were all dressed in tie-dyed bright green
shirts, "so we don't lose each other," they explained to me.
The adults walked around looking at the exhibits, but the
children seemed bored.
My sister teaches at a school for the deaf. When she taught
history she wanted to make it interesting, so on the section
covering the apartheid years she organized a special program.
On one day, Helen Suzman, the Jewish MP so well known for her
lone anti-apartheid stand in parliament, was invited to give
a talk and she accepted and captured the audience with her
usual aplomb.
On another day, the children were taken to the Apartheid
Museum. The one exhibit that totally attracted the children
was the bench marked "Whites only." My sister has a marvelous
photo of four little colored children sitting on it, pointing
at the sign with an air of grave defiance.
The awful days of prejudice and discrimination have gone. The
question is whether the change is in time to create a stable
society where each person has the basic necessities of life.
The question is whether crime can be tamed, because there are
always evil people who want to grab what they have not
earned. The question is whether this Southern, most part of
Africa can escape the corruption and violence that has
plagued the rest of the continent.
The most important question for the Jews is if they will be
left to live their lives in peaceful coexistence within the
"rainbow' nation without being turned into scapegoats for any
ills that befall the nation.
The government is anti-Israel, in no uncertain terms. This
can and does spill over into antisemitism. The press is a
problem, and the large and increasingly radical Moslem
population in Cape Town is another factor that cause a degree
of worry for the future.
However, for the present, Jewish life is rich and rewarding
and each day was a pleasure and a delight.
Cape Town Hylton Tours : 021 511 1784
Boulders Penguin Park: 021 786 2329
The Cape of Good Hope and Cape Point: 021 701 8692
The Castle: 021 787 1249
Johannesburg Apartheid Museum: 011 309 4762
Beware of baboons when touring the Cape. Remember these are
wild animals and they act in unpredictable ways, so stay
inside your car, keep windows closed, and do not offer
food.
Always take extra food when traveling. We were nearly lulled
into a false sense of security as on each trip the
mehadrin food appeared. Then on our final trip home we
only received one mehadrin meal. The airline company
told us that mehadrin meals cannot be ordered for
internal flights. However, all the meals we received from
South African Airways were mehadrin.
Remember that fruit juice in South Africa almost always has
grape juice added, because it is cheap and plentiful. So
fruit juice requires a hechsher.
The Beth Din sticker does not necessarily mean "Cholov
Yisroel" unless specifically stated.
It is possible to travel on the tourist "Blue Train," or by
"Premier Class" on a normal train and receive mehadrin
food, if arranged well in advance through your travel
agent.
At the airports they are extremely strict about the 20 kg
limitation of luggage and overweight means a lot of extra
money. Arguing gets you precisely nowhere. So pack carefully.
If you find you will have a lot of excess luggage then it is
worth contacting Baggage Solutions, a firm that deals with
sending unaccompanied luggage. Tel: 011 397 7690
South Africa is generally reasonably safe as long as you
carefully follow local advice. This is not a country for
walking around in the dark, or going off the tourist track,
or showing off expensive jewelry or cameras. Before going to
shul on a Friday night check with the local rabbi that you
will be using a safe route on your return journey.
When leaving your car at large car parks (parking lots), you
will notice attendants in uniform. They help you unload your
parcels. The uniforms are from the supermarkets in the area.
These attendants pay a fee for the uniform each day, but get
no salary. The tip they receive from you is their salary. So,
even if you don't really need their help it is probably
better to accept assistance from them and pay them a ten rand
tip. This small amount of money could make the difference to
them and to their family, of food for the day or going
hungry.
by D. Saks, South Africa
This year, the Nairobi Hebrew Congregation, in the central
African state of Kenya celebrates its 100th anniversary.
Given the great antiquity of Jewish life on the African
continent as a whole (after all, Egypt is in Africa), this
event would not appear to be particularly significant, but
for Africa south of the Sahara it is a genuine milestone. The
majority of Africa's fast-dwindling Jewish communities are
unlikely to reach their centenaries, or if they do will by
then be in such reduced circumstances as to be de facto
defunct. At around 260 souls, Kenyan Jewry remains
relatively viable, although it is probably only half the size
it was at its height in the 1950s.
The highwater mark of Jewish settlement in Southern Africa
was the 1890-1960 period, roughly beginning with the
commencement of white colonialism and ending when the various
African countries attained their independence.
Post-independence Africa has not been antisemitic or even,
with the notable exception of Zimbabwe, particularly anti-
white. However, the general trend towards economic
disintegration, ruinous despotism and frequent civil war has
resulted in most Jews, and indeed most Europeans, relocating
to better places. There was no similar exodus from post-
independence West Africa, since even during the colonial
period there was little or no Jewish settlement in this part
of the continent.
The mass exodus of Jews from the North African countries was
primarily a result of the establishment of the State of
Israel. Within two decades after 1948, the ancient Jewish
communities of Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, Morocco and Algeria had
been reduced to a fraction of their former size -- in the
case of Libya, eliminated altogether.
Most North African Jews (with the exception of those from
Algeria, who primarily settled in France) went to Israel, in
large part because of the anti-Jewish persecution that
resulted from the Arab world's humiliating defeats at
Israel's hands. Mass aliyah saw the disappearance, under more
inspiring circumstances, of the equally ancient Falasha
community of Ethiopia which had some Jewish connection,
nearly all of whom had been brought to Israel by the early
1990s.
Today, outside of South Africa (with an estimated Jewish
population of 75,000), there are fewer than 10,000 Jews still
living elsewhere in Africa. More than two- thirds of these
are located in two North African countries, namely Morocco
and Tunisia, with 5,600 and 1,500 respectively according to
the 2001 figures.
A hundred Jews remain in the Democratic Republic of the
Congo, down from 2,500 at the community's height under
Belgian rule. Both Zambia, once a thousand- strong, and
Namibia, previously over four hundred, now have only a few
dozen Jews remaining. Perhaps the saddest story is the demise
of Jewish Zimbabwe, now reduced to 400, mainly very elderly
members, after peaking at around 7,500 in the mid-1960s.
Not all African Jewish communities are in terminal decline.
While still very small, the Jewish presence in Botswana,
bordering South Africa to the west, is steadily increasing
and the community is preparing to build its first shul.
The island of Mauritius has also seen a modest increase
in its Jewish residents.
Last year, Rabbi Moshe Silberhaft, spiritual leader to the
African Jewish Congress, officiated at the first bar mitzvah
there in more than two decades.
The small Mozambique Jewish community is also showing signs
of revival after closing down altogether in the years
immediately following the overthrow of Portuguese colonial
rule in the early 1970s.
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