About Beth Hatefutsoth – The Jewish Community of Cape Town, South Africa
Founded in 1652 by the Dutch East India Company as a victualing station at the Cape Of Good Hope, southernmost tip of Africa, on the sea route to India and the Far East. The town had Jews among its early settlers. The rules of the company, however, allowed only Protestants as settlers; two Jews were converted to Christianity in Cape Town as early as 1669. After the British occupation of the Cape in 1806, a steady flow of Jewish immigrants came from Central Europe and England and later, in larger numbers, from Eastern Europe.