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The Jew in King Shaka鈥檚 court: How a 19th-century castaway shaped a Zulu leader鈥檚 legacy

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a view of Anderson Academic Commons in fall

Gales tore at the Mary鈥檚 sails, and surf crashed across the brig鈥檚 deck. Seventeen-year-old Nathaniel Isaacs tied himself to a railing to avoid being washed overboard. The Mary鈥檚 rudder soon splintered against a rocky bar at the entrance to Natal Bay 鈥 what is now Durban, South Africa. Helpless to maneuver, the ship took on water.

It was Oct. 1, 1825. Isaacs, a Jewish apprentice merchant from England, loosed the rope around his waist and jumped for his life, landing on the edge of the Zulu kingdom.

Though his name is virtually unknown today, Isaacs went on to play a pivotal role during the period of first contact between the Zulu and Europeans. His widely reviewed 1836 memoir, 鈥,鈥 offers an eyewitness account of the Zulu under the indomitable King Shaka, who reigned from the 1810s to 1828. As I learned while researching my 2025 book, 鈥,鈥 Isaacs鈥 writing shaped the mythology around Shaka Zulu, who endures as a Black nationalist icon.

A is named after Shaka, and is held on the supposed date of his assassination. But his fame stretches far beyond.

He has been name-checked in hip-hop culture for decades, including by and . marks the now defunct Shaka Zulu nightclub in London, while keeps his name alive in Germany. In the U.S. he lends his name to , and his fearsome scowl adorns stickers and T-shirts. Recently, a South African miniseries, , has revived his legacy for a new generation.

鈥楲ost tribe鈥 speculation

The fact that an Anglo-Jewish castaway helped forge Shaka鈥檚 legend seems surprising today. But in 19th-century England, this unlikely pairing would have made perfect sense.

The prevailing pseudoscience of the time concluded that Jews and Africans shared the . Given this fanciful equivalency, British voyagers and missionaries 鈥渇ound鈥 the lost tribes of Israel wherever they looked, whether among or .

Isaacs himself suspected the Zulu of having a Jewish origin. In one letter, he described Shaka as possessing facial features that revealed 鈥渁 Hebrew expression鈥 鈥 wishful thinking that echoed a wider cultural belief.

In other ways, Isaacs was a sober observer, describing Zulu politics, military tactics, family dynamics and rituals. In his memoir he describes Shaka as who shrewdly assimilated conquered tribes and territory into his realm 鈥 large portions of what is today eastern South Africa. Oral histories confirm Isaacs鈥 assessment, with one Zulu witness noting that Shaka 鈥渆stablished colonies like the Europeans.鈥 According to another, and 鈥渄eliberately made friends of the first settlers鈥 who washed up on Zulu lands.

鈥楽avage鈥 stereotypes

Isaacs made the most of Shaka鈥檚 hospitality 鈥 a sharp contrast to the king鈥檚 supposed ferocity, which remains a core part of Shaka鈥檚 legend.

On ,鈥 as Isaacs referred to Shaka, he witnessed the king order the seizure of three disobedient subjects. Their necks were broken and they were dragged away to the bush to be impaled, their bowels punctured. Some scholars 鈥 such as historian 鈥 yet assert that 鈥淭ravels and Adventures鈥 remains one of the most valuable sources of Shakan history.

Zulu witnesses also emphasized Shaka鈥檚 brutality. According to Magidigidi, who was born during Shaka鈥檚 reign and served as a mat-bearer, a kind of military page, the king was known as 鈥.鈥

Europeans commonly exaggerated the cruelties of African leaders, often portraying them as 鈥渟avages.鈥 To many colonial writers of the time, reason, science, private property and commerce marked 鈥渃ivilization.鈥 Irrationality, superstition, communal living and barter marked 鈥渟avagery鈥 鈥 though they believed cultures and individuals could progress from one state to the other.

Isaacs detailed Shaka鈥檚 鈥,鈥 indicating that he saw his own culture as superior. Chauvinism can, of course, easily transmute into coarse racism. Yet he also treated the Zulu with admiration, praising men and women for their athleticism, agility, bravery, cleanliness, discipline and hospitality.

Racial pseudoscience

Perhaps Isaacs鈥 praise of the Zulu derived in part from his Jewish identity; he too would have been . As historian writes, Jews were imagined as 鈥, lacking honor and virtue, in thrall to a slave religion or unrestrained passion.鈥

The presumed inferiority of Jews meant that European Christians often considered them 鈥渂lack,鈥 both metaphorically and physically. Physician and early anthropologist James Cowles Prichard wrote that depending on the climate in which Jews lived they could become swarthy, even black. One implication of Prichard鈥檚 belief was that , which was thought to be a more mutable category of identity than people often consider it today.

Cultural historian : 鈥淚n the eyes of the non-Jew who defined them in Western society the Jews became the blacks.鈥

H. Rider Haggard, the English novelist and former civil servant in South Africa, played on this imagined connection between Jews and Black Africans. 鈥,鈥 published in 1885, depicts a breakaway Zulu enclave as the source for the biblical King鈥檚 riches.

Isaacs鈥 鈥溾 avoids such wild speculation, but he does note King Shaka鈥檚 fascination with Judeo-Christian theology. One night, Shaka invited him to speak about faith. 鈥淭he religion of our nation taught us to believe in a Supreme Being,鈥 Isaacs explained, a god who 鈥渃reated all things, and was the giver of light and life.鈥 Shaka 鈥渟eemed as if struck with profound astonishment鈥 when Isaacs regaled him with the biblical account of creation.

Kingly legacy

Isaacs was equally spellbound by the Zulu. He hunted elephants for ivory, established a homestead and distinguished himself in battle. Shaka rewarded him with a praise name 鈥 a great honor 鈥 and the title of 鈥渋nduna,鈥 a chieftain or headman.

Isaacs, in turn, lauded Shaka鈥檚 highly disciplined and militarized kingdom. Following his lead, Haggard , noting that the Zulu military was among 鈥渢he most wonderful that the world has seen.鈥 More recently, 鈥 features a former king of an isolationist African state jealously guarding its military supremacy. The king鈥檚 name? T鈥機haka.

African writers have likewise shrouded Shaka in legends of martial prowess. Zulu scholar, author and exiled African National Congress activist Mazisi Kunene鈥檚 epic 鈥,鈥 published in 1979, hews to Isaacs鈥 depiction of a fierce yet noble Shaka.

Isaacs even appears in Kunene鈥檚 work, which advanced Zulu nationalism in the face of apartheid. The titular King Shaka declares that Isaacs 鈥減ossessed true humanity,鈥 and one of Shaka鈥檚 advisers counsels that Isaacs should be considered a Zulu and no longer be treated as 鈥渁 foreigner or white man.鈥

Two hundred years after Isaacs鈥 shipwreck, much of Shaka鈥檚 legend can still be traced back to the travels and adventures of a teenage Jewish Zulu chief.The Conversation

, Director of the Center for Judaic Studies,

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