Ghana was the first African country to recognize the statehood of Israel and became the gateway for Israel-Africa relations. At this time, Ghana’s first president, Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, was extremely pro-Israel.
The Israeli water planning authority assisted with water infrastructure development. The Israeli construction firm Solel Boneh helped establish the Ghana National Construction Company, and a Ghanaian‒Israeli shipping company was established.
By 1963, Israel had 22 embassies in Africa. The only two countries that achieved independence at the time south of the Sahara and did not establish ties with it were Mauritania and Somalia.
Amid the Cold War, many independent African states saw Israel as a partner to learn and benefit from through its technical expertise in diverse fields.
However, by the mid-'60s, Egypt's Gamal Nasser also began a "competition for Africa." Nasser urged various African states to adopt a resolution, denouncing Israel as "an instrument of imperialism and neo-colonialism in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia."
Following the Yom Kippur War, several vital countries cut diplomatic relations with Israel and adopted a "pro-Palestinian" stance. Israel lost its status as an observer member of the African Union.
In the present day, however, poor relations between Israel and African nations are being reset, and a rapprochement is flourishing.
Julius Nyerere wrote to David Ben-Gurion in 1963. “It is in this spirit, we are working towards African Unity, and we have no desire to isolate ourselves from the rest of the world or build a hostile continent.”
This same spirit can flourish between Israelis and Palestinians.
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The ideology of a “return to Africa” from the African diaspora was called Black Zionism in the first half of the twentieth century, indicating an affinity with Jewish Zionism. (1)
Just like Zionism, Black Zionism was a reaction to persecution, racism, degradation and discrimination, particularly a reaction to slavery. Black Zionism reflected profound disappointment with emancipation and reconstruction in the American South. (2)
Yesterday an anti-Zionist Jew decided to allude I couldn't be Jewish since I am Jamaican. I've decided to do a brief history thread on Jamaican Jews, their influence, and the relationship between Jamaica & Israel.
Spain officially decreed that “Moors, Jews, heretics, and New Christians were not allowed to go to the Indies.”
However, in 1508, the bishop of Cuba reported, “practically every ship [arriving in Havana] is filled with Hebrews and New Christians.”
Jews were allowed to settle in Jamaica by the English after capturing the Island in 1655.
By 1720, an estimated 20 percent of residents of the capital, Kingston, were descendants of Spanish-Portuguese Jews.
My alma mater's student union passed a BDS motion last night which would do the following,
(1) The motion requires the student union to “refrain from engaging with organizations, services, or participating in events that further normalize Israeli apartheid
(2)The student union will post a list of blacklisted companies and organizations on their website.
(3)The motion defines antisemitism for the Jewish students on campus, and explicitly differentiates between [bad] Jewish students “inherently in violation of the BDS policy” through their support of Israel, and good Jewish students who reject Israel’s oppression.