The African Nakba: If Zion Had Taken Root in East Africa Audiolibro Por Yemi Adesina arte de portada

The African Nakba: If Zion Had Taken Root in East Africa

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The African Nakba: If Zion Had Taken Root in East Africa

De: Yemi Adesina
Narrado por: Virtual Voice
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What if the Jewish state had been founded not in Palestine—but on African soil?

The African Nakba is a daring, imaginative, and deeply researched investigation into one of the most extraordinary and overlooked “what if” moments in modern history: the 1903 British offer to establish a Jewish homeland in East Africa, now known as the Uganda Proposal.

In this powerful work, Yemi Adesina unearths the buried story of how Zionist leaders, desperate for refuge from European antisemitism, nearly accepted British East Africa—modern-day Kenya—as an alternative to Palestine. But this wasn’t just a humanitarian gesture. It was a colonial blueprint—one that would have placed Jewish settlers on fertile land already inhabited by Indigenous African communities like the Maasai, Kikuyu, and Kalenjin.

What would have happened if the Zionists had said yes?
Adesina tackles this haunting question with intellectual courage and moral clarity. Weaving together African anti-colonial resistance, the internal debates of early Zionism, and Britain’s imperial ambitions, The African Nakba imagines a counter-history that is disturbingly plausible and deeply revealing. Would the Kikuyu have faced a Nakba of their own? Would Jewish settlers, driven by trauma and hope, have become agents of African dispossession? And what does this untaken path teach us about Israel-Palestine, empire, and the politics of land today?

From the railroads of imperial Kenya to the refugee crises of Europe, from Herzl’s vision to Mandela’s legacy, this book travels through time and across continents to offer a fresh and provocative lens on the global history of settler colonialism. It also asks uncomfortable but necessary questions about memory, justice, and what it means to build a homeland on someone else’s ancestral soil.

Why this book matters now:
As Palestine remains at the center of global political conscience, The African Nakba reminds us that the current conflict is not a singular tragedy but part of a larger historical pattern—one that connects African decolonization, Jewish survival, and the legacies of European empire. It speaks to readers who want to understand not only what happened, but what could have happened—and why it still matters.

Perfect for readers of:

  • African history and politics

  • Jewish studies and Middle Eastern history

  • Decolonial theory and postcolonial thought

  • Global justice, refugee studies, and historical fiction fans drawn to alternative history

The African Nakba is more than a counterfactual. It is a mirror held up to our world—reflecting both the violence of the past and the urgent moral questions of the present.

Dare to ask: What if Zion had taken root in Africa? And what can that untaken path teach us about the one we are on

Israel y Palestina Oriente Medio África
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