Some of Israel’s strongest supporters today are found nearly 10,000 miles from Jerusalem.
On June 2, 2026, as Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar opened Israel’s new embassy in Fiji, he was marking more than a diplomatic milestone. In recent years, Fiji and several Pacific nations have emerged as some of Israel’s most reliable supporters at the United Nations, often standing with the Jewish state when much of the world has turned against it.
There is a certain irony in those votes. Israel was reborn in 1948, before the independence of most countries represented at the United Nations today, including many that now question its legitimacy.
At the center of this story stands Fiji’s Prime Minister, Sitiveni Rabuka.
Rabuka was born in 1948, the same year the modern State of Israel emerged from war and declared independence. Fiji itself would not become independent until 1970. Few leaders are better positioned to appreciate the journey of a small nation seeking to preserve its identity, security, and place in the world.
A former military commander and peacekeeper who served in Lebanon, Rabuka has become one of Israel’s strongest friends in the Pacific. The path that led him there reveals much about the bond between Israel and many Pacific nations.
Like generations of indigenous Fijians, Rabuka grew up in a deeply Christian society where the stories of the Bible shaped daily life. Jerusalem, Bethlehem, the Jordan River, and the Sea of Galilee were familiar long before they appeared in headlines. The history of the Jewish people, the kings of Israel, the prophets, and the life of Jesus formed part of a shared spiritual inheritance passed from one generation to the next.
For many Pacific Christians, the Holy Land is more than a place where sacred events occurred. It is the landscape where their faith began. Jerusalem is the city of David, the site of the ancient Temples, and the place where Jesus taught, died, and was resurrected.
Rabuka later encountered the region through military service. Fiji has contributed peacekeepers to the Middle East for decades, with soldiers serving in Lebanon, the Sinai, and the Golan Heights. Those missions transformed biblical geography into lived experience, creating connections between Pacific Islanders and a region they had long known through scripture.
Those experiences help explain why Rabuka has spoken so forcefully about Israel’s right to defend itself and why his government opened an embassy in Jerusalem in 2025, at the time, the seventh country to do so. His support reflects a worldview shaped by faith, military service, and an understanding that small nations must often fight to preserve their security, identity, and future.
“The people of Fiji share a very close religious and cultural connection to the Holy Land. We deeply value your great nation, which is the birthplace of Christianity. Our similarities, faith and common values continue to strengthen us together in unity and solidarity, as witnessed here this afternoon.” – Fiji PM Sitiveni Rabuka September 18, 2025
That perspective resonates across the Pacific. Countries such as Papua New Guinea, Tonga, Palau, Nauru, and the Federated States of Micronesia understand the challenge of preserving sovereignty and culture in a world dominated by larger powers. Israel’s story speaks to concerns that many of these nations know well: preserving identity, protecting sovereignty, and carrying an ancient heritage into the future.
Their support for Israel in international forums reflects more than diplomacy. They see a people who returned to their ancestral homeland, revived an ancient language, rebuilt national institutions, and defended their independence against repeated challenges. Those themes resonate deeply among nations that have worked to preserve their own cultures and sovereignty across generations.
It is a remarkable journey: a Pacific leader born in 1948, shaped by the Bible and military service in the Middle East, helping forge a friendship with the country whose modern story began the year his own life did. Across oceans and continents, the connection endures because both nations understand that a people secures its future by remaining rooted in its past.





































