Tribu Ka

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tribu Ka (Tribe Ka) was a racist , anti-Semitic and ethnocentric group of black Africans and people of black African descent in France founded in December 2004 .

The Tribu Ka founded by Kémi Séba (Stellio Gilles Robert Capo Chichi), a Frenchman of Benin descent, called on the "people of blacks " to be guided by Kémitism and, for some French, symbolized the emergence of a new black extremism. Tribu Ka had several hundred members.

Tribu Ka was inspired by the New Black Panther Party and the Nation of Islam . In contrast to the Rastafarian movement, which propagated a return to Ethiopia , Tribu Ka assumed that the riches of the African continent had been carried off to Europe over centuries and could now naturally be used there. Mingling was called an "infection" leading to degeneration, although they rejected the term "black" as slave-owner language. The peoples of the ancient Egyptian and Nubian civilizations were "Kemiten" (black Africans), whose descendants are now, as a chosen people, natural leaders of humanity.

Jews blamed Tribu Ka for the enslavement of the "Kemites" since ancient times; the deaths of the Holocaust cannot be compared with the 150 million black victims.

When the group engaged in violent clashes with the right-wing extremist Ligue de défense juive (LDJ, Jewish Defense League) in Paris in May 2006 , it was banned in July for anti-Semitism on the initiative of then Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy . Kémi Séba achieved some notoriety through interviews in French media ( Canal + , RFO , France Soir ).

The comedian Dieudonné M'bala M'bala played an important role in spreading the ideas of Séba, who later turned away from the group because it was too radical for him too.

Kémi Saba was sentenced to prison and has lived in Senegal since his release . He is a member of the Nation of Islam , distances himself from some of his earlier ideas, but declares that he does not regret his commitment. Some former members of Tribu Ka later founded the movement of the damned of imperialism (Mouvement des Damnés de l'impérialisme), which promoted the return of all blacks to Africa to prevent the "mixing" of the races, and also formed alliances with right-wing extremists and racists Grouping of white French.

literature

  • Géraldine Faes & Stephen Smith: Noir et Français! Editions du Panama, 2006, ISBN 2755701064 ( excerpts from the La France Multiraciale blog , April 30, 2006)

Footnotes

  1. ^ Bernard Schmid : Black anti-Semites: The "Tribu K" . In: haGalil . June 14, 2006
  2. ^ Bernard Schmid : Black and white racists - alliance of opposites or mirror images? In: Telepolis . June 17, 2008