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Judaism

Why the star of David is rising across Africa

The growth of African Judaism is the subject of a conference in London this weekend

October 28, 2010 10:31
Jews from Putti village, eastern Uganda

BySimon Rocker, Simon Rocker

3 min read

Timbuktu: the name is so steeped in mystique that many people think it is an imaginary rather than a real place. Historically, the city in the republic of Mali has been a centre of Islamic civilisation in Africa. It is also home to an emerging Jewish community.

According to local lore, some of the Jewish traders who crossed the Sahara centuries ago settled there but their descendants were forcibly converted to Islam. Now a new generation wants to return to their roots and openly identify as Jews. They have taken the Hebrew name Zakhor, "remember".

The Zakhor are by no means unique. Across the continent, similar communities have been forming in Ghana, Nigeria, the Congo - there are even Tutsi Jews in Rwanda. The dramatic airlift of Ethiopian Jews to Israel, far from closing the book on black African Judaism, has led to a new chapter.

"Throughout Africa, the idea of Judaism is becoming more and more important, as is identification with Israel," says Tudor Parfitt, professor of Hebrew at London University's School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS). "Actual practice of Judaism is also becoming more common."