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・ Natalya Yermolovich
・ Natalya Yevdokimova
・ Natalya Yevgenevna Semper
・ Natalya Yurkevich
・ Natalya Zasulskaya
・ Natalya Zhedik
・ Natalya Zhukova
・ Natalândia
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・ Natan Bernot
・ Natan Brand
・ Natan Carneiro de Lima
・ Natan David Rabinowitz
・ Natan Eidelman
Natan Gamedze
・ Natan Gofman
・ Natan Ilyich Zabara
・ Natan Karczmar
・ Natan Panz
・ Natan Peled
・ Natan Pereira
・ Natan Rakhlin
・ Natan Shalem
・ Natan Sharansky
・ Natan Slifkin
・ Natan Spigel
・ Natan Yonatan
・ Natan'el al-Fayyumi
・ Natana J. DeLong-Bas


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Natan Gamedze : ウィキペディア英語版
Natan Gamedze

Natan Gamedze (born 1963, Swaziland) is a Haredi rabbi and lecturer. Born to the royal lineage of the Gamedze clan of the Kingdom of Swaziland, he converted to Judaism, received rabbinic ordination, and now lectures to Jewish audiences all over the world with his personal story as to how an African prince became a Black Haredi Jewish rabbi.
==Family background==
Gamedze's grandfather was the king of Swaziland. But the British, who had colonized southern Africa and created the states of Swaziland, Basutoland, and Bechuanaland, drew their own borders which lumped diverse ethnic groups into the same state. The British also chose a rival royal family to rule Swaziland, compensating the Gamedze clan with ministerial positions. Gamedze's father lost the title of "king" but became known as "paramount chief", and was also named minister of education and ambassador to the EEC countries.〔
Scholarly history of Swaziland shows that the independent chiefdom or small kingdom ruled by members of the Gamedze clan was initially conquered and incorporated into the growing Ngwane kingdom ruled by members of the Dlamini clan sometime in the late 18th or early 19th century, long before British colonization. The Gamedze clan is classified among the ''Emakhandzambile'' category of clans ("those found ahead") according to Swazi royalist tradition, meaning that they were on the land prior to Dlamini immigration and conquest, as opposed to the ''Bomdzabuko'' ("true Swazi") who accompanied the Dlamini kings, and the ''Emafikemuva'' ("those who came behind") who joined the kingdom later. ''Emakhandzambile'' clans initially were incorporated with wide autonomy, and often in part by granting them special ritual and political status, but the extent of their autonomy was drastically curtailed by King Mswati II, including the Gamedze, whom Mswati attacked and subdued in the 1850s.〔 See especially pp. 60, 85–88.〕

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