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Sudan Annuls 63-Year-Old Israel Boycott Law as Part of Normalization Process | The Jewish Press - JewishPress com | Hana Levi Julian | 9 Iyyar 5781 – April 20, 2021

The country’s new Minister of Religious Affairs, Nasr Eldeen Mofarih approved a request by philanthropist Chaim Motzen to restore Sudan’s only Jewish cemetery, at his expense. The cemetery, in Khartoum, was all but destroyed after Jews were forced out in 1948, after the rebirth of the State of Israel. Then-President Donald Trump, who brokered the deal, had announced the new ties in October 2020. Sudan was required to pay a judgment settlement to the victims of the 1998 US embassy bombings in Africa. The attacks in Kenya and Tanzania were carried out by the Al-Qaeda terrorist organization while its leader, Osama bin Laden, was living in Sudan.

Sudan s Only Jewish Cemetery Restored: I Kept Thinking That These Were People s Families, Aunts, Uncles, and Parents

A fragment of a tombstone from the Jewish cemetery in Khartoum, Sudan. Photo: YouTube screenshot. “I kept thinking that these were people’s families, aunts, uncles and parents,” said Chaim Motzen of Sudan’s only Jewish cemetery, which he rediscovered and has successfully restored following decades of neglect and desecration. The cemetery is located in Khartoum, where there was once a small but thriving Jewish community mostly composed of Jews from Muslim countries. But after an eruption of antisemitism across the Muslim world following Israel’s creation in 1948 forced the Jews out, the cemetery was over time all but destroyed, and turned into something both garbage dump and public toilet.

Khartoum s secret cemetery: Piecing together fragments of a lost Jewish past in revolutionary Sudan

Rubbish-strewn grave yard emerges as symbol of immense social change after Islamist dictatorship swept away 18 April 2021 • 8:00am After the Arab-Israeli conflict began in the 1950s, Sudan’s Jews fled – there was almost no trace of the community left except the small Jewish graveyard in downtown Khartoum Credit: AFP  When people around the cemetery saw a student peering at the mass of broken graves they started yelling at him – “Jew, Jew, Jew.” Chaim Motzen had trekked through Khartoum to pay his respects at the city’s little known Jewish graveyard, but he could only stay a few minutes. The plucky Canadian student did not give up. He snuck back to the burial site at dawn to see how it had been turned into a rubbish dump, piled high with mounds of filth.

Israeli environmentalist nominated for Nobel Peace Prize by more than a dozen countries

Israeli environmentalist nominated for Nobel Peace Prize by more than a dozen countries
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