Your joo hatred has been noted years ago ....you camel jumper,...edit....”humper”.
You should know that I am a Christian by now, your reference to a camel is a sly attempt to get a shot in at Muslims. Almost a reflex action to the people that love Jews as that is the only group they are allowed to show a fondness for. So now that you are shown to be a racist already it stands to reason you would have an un-natural love for some group that would have helped you develop an un-natural hatred for some group that you have had no real contact with based on the welcome any non-Jews have gotten on this site
Bit stupid of you to mention my first encounter with this place and my introduction to how Jews act when in a group and an honest Gentile wanders in. You really should hang out a sign that says, 'This site is Israeli friendly.' That is much more civilized than the tactic that was used when a thread about the Holocaust started and I chipped in some information that is valid in the 21st century. If that thread was recreated today most members on the board would have been investigated for racist posts as well as gang activity as the normal way was for one member to open a person attack rather than prove the points were false and the rest of the collective would pile on using personal insults rather than links to some facts.
I didn't hate anybody before that thread, by the end of it anybody that threatened me on that thread was open for posts that showed they were on the stupid side of the line that divides reality from fantasy. Guess which world I am in and use that as a hint of how I can destroy your world and you can do squat to mine.
In your prison any research about South Africa would be anti-Semetic because certain moves were made to ensure that once the local population was killed off it would be white Jews who settled the land meaning they now owned the land and the people and their friends were elevated to the power levels and any opposition was killed off with the help of 'others from the same group that were used when extermination of people was required'. That might explain why steel knives were the first Jewish industry in South America. In some articles where they are patting themselves on how a very few number of people can run a country the size of South Africa unopposed for generations.
That would take several articles as putting it all in one would show how racist and blood thirsty you favorite group really is. Not at all pretty and you love the hell out of them so your morals must be as low as theirs are. Neither of you are to be envied or obeyed. Notice that German Jews are front and center is starting shit that gets worse the longer it goes on.
It appears that South Africa can be used as a living example of what the world would look like under the control of the Nazis.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Jews_in_South_Africa
The
history of the Jews in South Africa mainly began under the
British Empire, following a general pattern of increased
European settlement in the 19th century.
The early patterns of Jewish South African history are almost identical to the history of the Jews in the United States but on a much smaller scale, including the period of early discovery and settlement from the late 17th century to the early 19th century. The community grew tenfold between 1880 and 1914, from 4,000 to over 40,000. Jews were instrumental in promoting the extension of diplomatic military ties between Israel and South Africa.
[5] South Africa's Jewish community differs from its counterparts in other African countries in that the majority have remained on the continent rather than
emigrating to Israel (62% of the maximum 120,000 still remain). Among potential Jewish emigrants, many were likelier to select a destination popular among other South Africans, such as
Australia.
[6]
The 1820s through 1880s
Jews did not arrive in any significant numbers at Cape Town before the 1820s. The first
congregation in South Africa, known as the
Gardens Shul, was founded in Cape Town in November 1841, and the initial service was held in the house of one Benjamin Norden, at the corner of Weltevreden and Hof streets. Benjamin Norden, Simeon Markus, together with a score of others arriving in the early 1830s, were commercial pioneers, especially the Mosenthal brothers—Julius, Adolph (see
Aliwal North), and James Mosenthal—who started a major
wool industry. By their enterprise in going to
Asia and returning with thirty
Angora goats in 1856 they became the originators of the
mohair industry. Aaron and Daniel de Pass were the first to open up
Namaqualand, and from 1849 to 1886 they were the largest shipowners in Cape Town, and leaders of the
sealing,
whaling, and
fishing industries. Jews were among the first to take to
ostrich-farming and played a role in the early
diamond industry. Jews also played some part in early South African politics. Captain Joshua Norden was shot at the head of his Mounted Burghers in the
Xhosa War of 1846; Lieutenant Elias de Pass fought in the Xhosa War of 1849. Julius Mosenthal (1818–1880), brother of the poet
S. Mosenthal of
Vienna, was a member of the Cape Parliament in the 1850s. Simeon Jacobs, C.M.G. (1832–1883), who was a judge in the
Supreme Court of the Cape of Good Hope, as the acting attorney-general of Cape Colony he introduced and carried in 1872 the Cape Colony Responsible Government Bill and the Voluntary Bill (abolishing state aid to the
Anglican Church), for both of which bills Saul Solomon, the member for Cape Town, had fought for decades.
Saul Solomon (b.
St. Helena 25 May 1817; d. 16 October 1892), the leader of the
Cape Colony Liberal Party, has been called the "Cape Disraeli." He was invited into the first
Responsible government, formed by Sir
John Molteno, and declined the premiership itself several times. Like
Disraeli, too, he early left the ranks of
Judaism. At the same time, the Jews faced substantial
antisemitism. Though freedom of worship was granted to all residents in 1870, the revised
Grondwet of 1894 still debarred Jews and
Catholics from military posts, from the positions of president, state secretary, or magistrate, from membership in the First and Second
Volksraad ("parliament"), and from superintendencies of natives and mines. These positions were restricted to persons above 30 years of age with permanent property and a longer history of settlement. As a consequence of the fact that Boer republics were only in existence from 1857 to 1902, unfortunately many residents of the Boer republics had limited access to positions in the upper echelons of government. All instruction was to be given in a
Christian and
Protestant spirit, and Jewish and Catholic teachers and children were to be excluded from state-subsidized schools.[
citation needed] Before the
Boer War (1899–1902), Jews were often considered
uitlanders ("foreigners") and excluded from the mainstream of South African life.
However, a small number of Jews also settled among and identified with the rural white
Afrikaans-speaking population; these persons became known as
Boerejode (
Boer Jews). A measure of intermarriage also occurred and was generally accepted.
[8]
The South African gold rush began after 1886, attracting many Jews. In 1880, the Jewish population of South Africa numbered approximately 4,000; by 1914 it had grown to more than 40,000.
[9] So many of them came from Lithuania that some referred to the population as a colony of Lithuania; Johannesburg was also occasionally called "Jewburg".
[10]
From Union through World War II
Although the Jews were allowed equal rights after the Boer War, they again became subject to persecution in the days leading up to
World War II. In 1930, the
Quota Act of 1930 was intended to curtail the entry of Jews into South Africa. The vast majority of Jews immigrating to South Africa came from diaspora communities in Lithuania. The 1937
The Aliens Act, motivated by a sharp increase the previous year in the number of
German Jewish refugees coming to South Africa, brought the migration to almost a complete halt. Some Jews were able to enter the country, but many were unable to do so. A total of approximately six-and-a-half thousand Jews came to South Africa from Germany between the years 1933 and 1939.
[13] Many
Afrikaners (i.e., Boers) felt sympathy for
Nazi Germany, and organizations like
Louis Weichardt’s "
Grayshirts" and the pro-Nazi
Ossewabrandwag were openly anti-Semitic. During
World War I, many
Afrikaners, who had little respect for Britain, objected to the use of
"Afrikaner women and children from the British concentration camps" in fighting the German territory of South West Africa on behalf of Britain. This had the effect of drumming up pro-German sentiment among a population of Afrikaners. The opposition
National Party argued that the Aliens Act was too lenient and advocated a complete ban on Jewish immigration, a halt in the naturalization of Jewish permanent residents of South Africa and the banning of Jews from certain professions.
[14] After the war, the situation began to improve, and a large number of South African Jews, generally a fairly
Zionist community,
[7] made
aliyah to
Israel. While it is understandable that many South African Jews would feel uncomfortable with formerly pro-Nazi Afrikaners rising to power in 1948, many leading apartheid-era Afrikaner politicians publicly apologized to the South African Jewish community for their earlier anti-semitic actions and assured it of its continued safety in South Africa.[
citation needed]
During this time, there were also two waves of Jewish immigration to Africa from the island of
Rhodes, first in the 1900s and then after 1960.
[15][16]
Post World War II
See also:
Israel–South Africa relations
South African Jews and Israel
Abba Eban, born in
Cape Town, was Foreign Minister of Israel from 1966 to 1974.
When the
Afrikaner-dominated
National Party came to power in 1948 it did not adopt an anti-Jewish policy despite its earlier position. In 1953 South Africa's Prime Minister,
D. F. Malan, became the first foreign head of government to visit Israel though the trip was a "private visit" rather than an official
state visit.
[17] This began a long history of cooperation between Israel and South Africa on many levels. The proudly Zionistic South African Jewish community, through such bodies as the
South African Zionist Federation and a number of publications, maintained a cordial relationship with the South African government even though it objected to the policies of Apartheid being enacted. South Africa's Jews were permitted to collect huge sums of money to be sent on as official aid to Israel, in spite of strict exchange-control regulations. Per capita, South African Jews were reputedly the most financially supportive Zionists abroad.
[18]
Settlement of South African Jews in Israel
Main article:
South African Jews in Israel
Savyon in Israel was built principally by South African Jews
A number of South African Jews settled in Israel, forming a South African community in Israel. Perhaps the most famous South African community founded in Israel is
Savyon, which remains the wealthiest suburb in Israel. Large houses were built in the style that the community was accustomed to from their life in South Africa, each with a pool, and developed around a country club.
[19]
South Africa and Israel
Main article:
Israel-South Africa relations
Most African states broke ties after the 1973
Yom Kippur War, and Israel began to view the similarly isolated South Africa cordially.
[20] Ethan A. Nadelmann claimed that the relationship developed due to the fact that many African countries broke diplomatic ties with Israel during the 1970s following the
Six-Day War and
Yom Kippur War, causing Israel to deepen relations with other isolated countries.
[21]
By the mid-1970s, Israel's relations with South Africa were warm. In 1975, the
Israel–South Africa Agreement was signed, and increasing economic cooperation between Israel and South Africa was reported, including the construction of a major new railway in Israel, and the building of a desalination plant in South Africa.
[22] In April 1976 South African Prime Minister
John Vorster was invited to make a state visit, meeting Israeli Prime Minister
Yitzhak Rabin.
[20][23] Later in 1976, the 5th Conference of
Non-Aligned Nations in Colombo, Sri Lanka, adopted a resolution calling for an oil embargo against France and Israel because of their arms sales to South Africa.
[22] In 1977, South African Foreign Minister
Pik Botha visited Israel to discuss South African issues with Israeli Prime Minister
Menachem Begin and Foreign Minister
Moshe Dayan.
Benjamin Beit-Hallahmi, a controversial Israeli professor of psychology,
[24] wrote in 1988 that the alliance between South Africa and Israel was one of the most underreported news stories of the past four decades and that Israel played a crucial role in the survival of the South African regime.
[25] Israel's collaboration with Apartheid South Africa was mentioned and condemned by various international organizations like the UN General Assembly (several times since 1974).
[26] In 1987 Israel announced that it would be implementing sanctions against South Africa. By the beginning of the 1990s, military and economic ties between the two countries had been lost.
(in part)
There is enough in the last bit to require a pause so those items can be explored to verity what is fact and what is fiction about the Jews as you and Walnut are fanatics whether you admit it or not. You are holding onto fiction so the error is on you end rather than on mine. When I'm wrong I admit it and adjust my thinking, you are locked into a mindset that is error filled and you refuse to make the needed corrections. I love implosions and the longer they are resisted the bigger then ebd up being so please do carry on.