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South Africa
history
South Africa has always been
a nation of separate and unequal peoples. The
English separated from the early Dutch settlers (Afrikaners),
the Afrikaners from the English, and both
remained as far apart as possible from the blacks.
South African Jews spent the first half of the 20th
century trying to find their place in the white
community, appealing alternately to British and
Afrikaner leaders for political recognition.
Though Jews accompanied some of the first white
colonizers to South Africa in the mid-1800s, most
Jewish immigrants after the 1880s were from
Lithuania. Both the British and Afrikaners
exhibited substantial anti-Semitism against the
Lithuanian Jews and kept them on the edge of
white society.
Before the Anglo-Boer war (1899-1901)
the Afrikaners (also known as the Boers) called
Jews uitlanders (foreigners);
they did not allow uitlanders
to vote or to attend Dutch Protestant schools.
After the British defeated the Boers they allowed
Jews the right to practice and granted the newly
formed Jewish Board of Deputies substantial
autonomy to determine their affairs. From its
inception in 1903, the Jewish Board of Deputies
chose to stay out of all political decisions that
didnt directly affect the Jews. South
Africa became a nation in 1910 and began to make
policies to prohibit "undesirables" to
immigrate. Specifically, the white government
wanted to stop Indians from immigrating but since
they were British subjects they couldnt do
so directly. The British therefore developed a
language test as a criterion for citizenship,
which excluded most Indians, as well as Yiddish-speaking
Eastern Europeans, from immigrating. The Jewish
communitys protests convinced the
government to both add a second criterion for
immigration -- economic viability -- and allow
for prospective immigrants to take the language
test in Yiddish. The Jews fought for their own
interests, but did nothing to improve the
immigration chances of the Indians.
This disregard for non-white
"undesirables" was characteristic of a
pre-World War II South African Jewish community
that struggled for English and Afrikaner
acceptance. Though
some Jews were involved in anti-apartheid leftist
entities like the Socialist party and the labor
movement, most pre WWII South African Jews
identified with the white ruling parties of Botha
and Smuts. In the years leading up to World War
II many Afrikaner nationalists became sympathetic
to German National Socialism, joining anti-Semitic
organizations like Louis Weichardts "Grayshirts"
who advocated reversing Jewish emancipation:
"We cannot throw them out as Hitler did, but
we can make it impossible for them to live here."
The Grayshirts closely identified Jews with both
Communists and "the Black peril." This
pervasive anti-Semitism calmed but did not
disappear after the war ended.
After the war many South African Jews
emigrated to the newly-formed state of Israel.
South African Jewry had always demonstrated
strong Zionist characteristics, and despite its
overt anti-Semitism the South African government
was consistent in its support of Israel. Some
historians suggest that the South Africans, both
Jewish and non-Jewish, felt a kinship with Israel,
a primarily white nation born on the land of
unwilling non-whites. Jewish emigration increased
in the 50s as blacks started to rebel
against apartheid en masse. Some Jews fled to
avoid the rising black masses, while others left
to avoid persecution for their own anti-apartheid
views; some remaining South Africans pejoratively
called this emigration "the Chicken Run."
Jews were active on all sides of the
apartheid struggle, some in support of racial
separation, others (like noted activists Helen
Suzman, Joe Slovo, Ronnie Kasrils, Albie Sachs)
standing with Nelson Mandela. Throughout, the
Jewish Board of Deputies and most South African
rabbis were deafeningly silent on the immorality
of state policy. Israel itself was not as
reluctant; its parliament spoke out against
apartheid in the 60s and voted against
South Africa often in the United Nations, causing
white leaders to accuse Jews of being anti-apartheid
rabble-rousers. Israel resumed cordial relations
with South Africa only when most other African
nations broke off diplomatic contact after the
Six Day War of 1967.
Anti-apartheid violence tore South Africa
apart throughout the 70s and 80s. In
1980, after 77 years of neutrality, South Africas
National Congress of the Jewish Board of Deputies
passed a resolution urging "all concerned [people]
and, in particular, members of our community to
cooperate in securing the immediate amelioration
and ultimate removal of all unjust discriminatory
laws and practices based on race, creed, or
colour." This inspired some Jews to
intensify their anti-apartheid activism, but the
bulk of the community either emigrated or avoided
public conflict with the National Party
government.
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