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Afrikaner

Afrikaner: Encyclopedia - Afrikaner

Paul Kruger, a notable Afrikaner Western Cape Province: 0.55 million, North West Province: 0.2 million, Free State Province: 0.2 million (2001 est. 1) Afrikaners are South Africans of predominantly Dutch Calvinist, French Huguenot, German Protestant, Frisian, Flemish, and Walloon descent who speak Afrikaans. Afrikaners are also sometimes referred to as Boers (Afrikaans for farmer) as a significant percentage are descended from cultural Boers, but many Afrikaners now view this ...

Including:

Afrikaner, Afrikaner - Afrikaner versus Boer, Afrikaner - History, Afrikaner - Notable contemporary Afrikaners, Afrikaner - Notable historic Afrikaners, Afrikaner - Today, Afrikaner Calvinism, Anglo-Africans, Boers, Cape Coloureds, Cape Dutch, Cape Malay, Culture of South Africa, Orania, South African Farmer Murders, Trekboers, Volkstaat, Voortrekkers

Afrikaner: Encyclopedia - Afrikaner



Afrikaner

Paul Kruger, a notable Afrikaner

Western Cape Province: 0.55 million, North West Province: 0.2 million, Free State Province: 0.2 million (2001 est. 1)

Afrikaners are South Africans of predominantly Dutch Calvinist, French Huguenot, German Protestant, Frisian, Flemish, and Walloon descent who speak Afrikaans. Afrikaners are also sometimes referred to as Boers (Afrikaans for farmer) as a significant percentage are descended from cultural Boers, but many Afrikaners now view this as a derogatory term.

Afrikaner - History

Afrikaners are mainly descended from northwestern European settlers and religious refugees who lived in the Cape of Good Hope during the period of administration (1652-1795) by the Dutch East India Company (Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie or VOC) and the subsequent period of British rule. The original colony at the Cape, which was started as a refreshment station for the VOC, was first settled by the Dutch in 1652. The arrival in 1688 of a small group of French Huguenots who were fleeing religious persecution in France infused new blood and swelled the settlers' numbers. Some settlers from other parts of Europe (e.g. Scandinavia and the British Isles) also joined the ranks of the Afrikaners. Non-Europeans (including Malay, Malagasy, South Indian, Khoi and Bantu) makeup around 5-7% of Afrikaner origins.

The Afrikaans language changed over time from the Dutch spoken by the first white settlers at the Cape. From the late 17th century, the form of Dutch spoken at the Cape developed differences in pronunciation and accidence and, to a lesser extent, in syntax and vocabulary, from that of the Netherlands, although the languages are still similar enough to be mutually intelligible (with some effort). Settlers who arrived speaking German and French soon shifted to using Dutch and later Afrikaans. The process of language change was influenced by the languages spoken by slaves, Khoikhoi and people of mixed descent, as well as by Cape Malay and Portuguese. While the Dutch of the Netherlands remained the language of officialdom, the new dialect, often known as Cape Dutch, African Dutch or "Kitchen Dutch", developed into a separate language by the 19th century. In 1925 this new language replaced standard Dutch as one of the two official languages of the Union of South Africa

The term Afrikaner encompasses disparate communities of white Afrikaans speakers. Originally it distinguished those Dutch speakers who saw themselves as local, i.e. "African", from those who still primarily identified with Europe; it was later used to distinguish between Afrikaans speakers and English speakers among the white population. Its earliest use dates from 1707 but was not widely used until after the Second Anglo-Boer War of the early 20th century. Prior to then, the various white Afrikaans speaking communities were known under different names. A significant number were known as Boers (farmers). The semi-nomadic/migrating farmers of the eastern frontier were known as Trekboers. Those who lived in the western Cape and did not trek eastward were known as the Cape Dutch. The isolated pioneers from the eastern Cape frontier who trekked (migrated into the interior) en masse in a series of migrations later known as the Great Trek (Groote Trek) were known as Voortrekkers (which may be translated as 'forerunners'). A small number of Voortrekkers came from the western Cape as well.

In the 1830s and 1840s an estimated 12,000 Voortrekkers penetrated the future Natal, Orange Free State and Transvaal provinces putting themselves beyond the reach of British authority in order to escape relentless border wars, British colonialism including its Anglicization polices, as well as to ease pressure on an overcrowding frontier where land was becoming scarce. While some historians claim that these series of mass migrations, later known as the Great Trek, were caused because the Boers did not agree with the British restrictions on slavery, the fact of the matter is most Trekboers did not own slaves, unlike the Cape Dutch, their more affluent cousins in the western Cape who did not trek eastward and migrate or participate in the Great Trek. The vast majority of Voortrekkers were Trekboers from the eastern Cape who engaged in pastoralism. Nevertheless, the British promulgation of Ordinance 50 in 1828, which guaranteed equal rights before the law to all "free persons of colour", was indeed a factor in Boer discontent, as is well documented by numerous contemporary sources; the various republics founded by the Voortrekkers while prohibiting slavery itself would all enshrine inequality by race into their constitutions.

The Great Trek was mainly the result of the "bursting of the dam" of pent up population migration and population pressures, as Trekboer migrations eastward had come to a virtual stop for at least three decades (though some Trekboers did migrate beyond the Orange River prior to the Great Trek). During the Great Trek they fought with the Zulus after Voortrekker leaders Piet Retief and Gerhard Maritz, along with almost half of their followers, were lured under the pretence of a land treaty and massacred by King Dingane and his warriors, who occupied the best land in some of the areas the Boers were attempting to trek into. Although in revenge the forces of Andries Pretorius killed about 3,000 Zulus after the Boers initially came under attack in the Battle of Blood River in a classic mismatch between guns and spears. Retief and the local Voortrekkers had performed several deeds for Dingane and came to finalise the treaty in which the Voortrekkers were granted lands in Dingan's kingdom before Dingane changed his mind kiling Retief, his delegation, and half of the Natal contingent of Voortrekkers. The Zulu resistance changed the direction of the Trek. The emphasis moved from occupying lands which the Zulu held sway over east of the Drakensberg mountains to the west of them and onto the high veld of the Transvaal and Transorangia which was lighty occupied due to the devastation of the Mfecane.

The Boers created independent states in what is now South Africa: the Natalia Republic, the Transvaal Republic (the South African Republic) and the Orange Free State. The British wish to appropriate the diamonds mines in the Boer areas led to the two Boer Wars of 1880-1881 and 1899-1902, which ended with the inclusion of the Boer areas in the British colonies. The Boer's won the first war, but lost the second after being one of the first people in modern times to employ guerilla tactics. Canada participated in this war being requested by its motherland. One of the first concentration camps in the modern era were built for women, the elderly, and children of the Boers and their black allies. An estimated twenty seven thousand Boer civilians (mainly children under sixteen) died in the concentration camps marking a death of about 15 % of the local Boer population. About fifteen thousand black allies died in other concentration camps as well. A large number of the prisoners died under the British administration of the camps. Following the British annexation of the Boer republics, the creation of the Union of South Africa (1910) went some way towards blurring the division between British settler and Afrikaner. The black majority, however, was excluded from equal participation in the affairs of the State and country, except for the states which were self governed (Qwaqwa, Zululand, Ciskei, Transkei, Venda, Bophutatswana) until 1994, owing first to the British colonial policies and then later to an Afrikaner-led political party's policy of apartheid, (the Afrikaans word for "aparthood" or "separation"), particularly under the National Party from 1948.

Afrikaner Calvinism, Anglo-Africans, Boers, Cape Coloureds, Cape Dutch, Cape Malay, Culture of South Africa, Orania, South African Farmer Murders, Trekboers, Volkstaat, Voortrekkers

Afrikaner - Today

In recent years there has been an movement by some Afrikaners to support the mixed race ("coloured") population of South Africa, most of whom speak Afrikaans as their first language, to consider themselves Afrikaners. The Afrikaans word for the coloured people of South Africa and Namibia is "kleurlinge" but sometimes they are called "bruin afrikaners" or "bruinmense", meaning brown people. This has seen some success despite the history of exclusion during the colonial and apartheid eras. However, many Afrikaans-speaking coloureds feel they have developed a separate identity from white Afrikaans speakers due to the strict racial segregation policies of the apartheid years.

Recently, some liberal Afrikaans-speaking South Africans and Namibians have started rejecting the label 'Afrikaner', because of its negative connotations of racism, conservatism and religious intolerance. Some use the racially neutral term "Afrikaanses" to refer to themselves as persons whose mother tongue is Afrikaans, disregardingly of racial identity or apartheid-era categorisation.

A very small group of Afrikaners has settled in the town of Orania, with the goal of ultimately gaining a homeland for Afrikaners as a result of Afrikaner demographic consolidation.

Afrikaner - Afrikaner versus Boer

Currently, a number of white Afrikaans-speaking people, mainly with "conservative" political views, prefer to be called "Boers", rather than "Afrikaners". They feel that there were many people of Voortrekker descent who were not co-opted or assimilated into what they see as the Cape-based Afrikaner identity which began emerging after the Second Anglo-Boer War and the subsequent establishment of the Union of South Africa.

They contend that the Boers of the South African (ZAR) and Orange Free State republics were recognized as a separate people or cultural group under international law by the Sand River Convention (which created the South African Republic in 1852), the Bloemfontein Convention (which created the Orange Free State Republic in 1854), the Pretoria Convention (which re-established the independence of the South African Republic 1881), the London Convention (which granted the full independence to the South African Republic in 1884) and the Vereeniging Peace Treaty, which formally ended the Second Anglo-Boer War on 31 May 1902. Others contend, however, that these treaties dealt only with agreements between governmental entities and do not imply the recognition of a Boer cultural identity per se.

The supporters of these view feel that the Afrikaner designation (or label) was used from the 1930s onwards as a means of unifying (politically at least) the white Afrikaans speakers of the Western Cape with those of Trekboer and Voortrekker descent (whose ancestors began migrating eastward during the 1690s and throughout the 1700s and later northward during the Great Trek of the 1830s) in the north of South Africa, where the Boer Republics were established.

The supporters of the "Boer" designation view the Afrikaner designation as an artificial political label which usurped their history and culture turning "Boer" achievements into "Afrikaner" achievements. They feel that the Western-Cape based Afrikaners — whose ancestors did not trek eastwards or northwards — took advantage of the republican Boers' destitution following the Anglo-Boer War and later attempted to assimilate the Boers into a new politically-based cultural label as "Afrikaners".

Afrikaner - Notable historic Afrikaners

  • Andries Hendrik Potgieter Voortrekker leader
  • Andries Pretorius Voortrekker leader
  • D.F. Malan Prime minister (1948 - 1954), elected on Apartheid platform
  • Eugene Marais Poet
  • Hendrik Verwoerd Prime minister (1958 - 1966) and considered architect of Apartheid
  • J.B.M. Hertzog Prime minister (1920 - 1921), (1924 - 1939)
  • J.G. Strijdom Prime minister (1954 - 1958)
  • Jan Smuts Statesman (1870 - 1950)
  • Louis Botha First prime minister of South Africa (1910 - 1919) and former Boer general
  • Olive Schreiner Author (1855 - 1920)
  • Paul Kruger President of the Transvaal Republic
  • Petrus Jacobus Joubert Boer general and cabinet member of the Transvaal Republic government
  • Piet Retief Voortrekker leader
  • Sailor Malan World War II RAF fighter pilot (1910 - 1963)
  • Sarel Cilliers Voortrekker leader
  • Siener van Rensburg Prophet

Afrikaner - Notable contemporary Afrikaners

  • André P Brink Author
  • Andre Stander Notorious bank robber
  • Antjie Krog Author
  • Arnold Vosloo Actor (The Mummy, 24) (1962 -)
  • Athol Fugard Playwright (1922 - )
  • Beyers Naudé Cleric, theologian and anti-apartheid activist
  • Bram Fischer Advocate and fugitive leader of the South African Communist Party
  • Breyten Breytenbach Poet (1938 - )
  • Casper de Vries Comedian
  • Charlize Theron Academy-Award winning actress (1975 - )
  • Christiaan Barnard Performed the first heart transplant (1922 - 2001)
  • Constand Viljoen Former head of the SADF (1980 - 1985) and leader of the Freedom Front (1994 - 2001)
  • Ernie Els Golfer (1969 - )
  • Ernst van Heerden Poet
  • Ettienne le Roux Author (1922 - 1989)
  • Eugène Terre'Blanche Controversial Boer irredentist / former White supremacist
  • F.W. de Klerk Statesman (1936 - ) President of the Republic of South Africa from 1989 - 1994.
  • Francois Pienaar Springboks rugby captain during the team's victory in the 1995 Rugby Union World Cup
  • Frederik van Zyl Slabbert Politician
  • Hestrie Cloete (1978 - ) High jumper
  • J.M. Coetzee Nobel-Prize winning author (1940 - )
  • Jan Breytenbach Founder of the South African Special Forces Brigade
  • Johan Degenaar Philosopher
  • Johan Heynz Theologian
  • Koos du Plessis Singer songwriter
  • Koos Kombuis Singer songwriter
  • Laurens van der Post Author (1906-1996)
  • Leon Schuster Comedian
  • Lina Spies Poet (1939 - )
  • Okkert Brits Pole-vaulter
  • P.W. Botha Prime minister (1978 - 1984), first executive president of the Republic of South Africa (1984 - 1989)
  • Retief Goosen Golfer
  • Richard E. Grant Actor (1957 - ) (Born Richard Grant Esterhuysen)
  • T.T. Cloete Poet
  • Zola Budd Long distance athelete

Hundreds of Afrikaner South Africans have represented South Africa at rugby union. The most famous include Paul Roos (original Springbok captain), Boy Morkel, Boy Louw, Chris Koch, Frik du Preez, Danie Craven (widely considered the greatest Springbok ever), Morne du Plessis, Naas Botha, Francois Pienaar, Joost van der Westhuizen, Corné Krige, Os du Randt, Joe van Niekerk, Marius Joubert, Schalk Burger and current Springbok captain John Smit.

See also

  • Afrikaner Calvinism
  • Anglo-Africans
  • Boers
  • Cape Coloureds
  • Cape Dutch
  • Cape Malay
  • Culture of South Africa
  • Orania
  • South African Farmer Murders
  • Trekboers
  • Volkstaat
  • Voortrekkers

Other related archives

1652, 1707, 1795, 1828, 1830s, 1840s, 1852, 1854, 1880, 1881, 1884, 1899, 1902, 1910, 1930s, 1948, 1994, 1995 Rugby Union World Cup, 20th century, 31 May, 24, The Mummy, Academy-Award, Afrikaans, Afrikaner Calvinism, Andre Stander, Andries Hendrik Potgieter, Andries Pretorius, André P Brink, Anglo-Africans, Antjie Krog, Apartheid, Arnold Vosloo, Athol Fugard, Bantu, Battle of Blood River, Beyers Naudé, Boer Wars, Boers, Bophutatswana, Bram Fischer, Breyten Breytenbach, British, British Isles, Calvinist, Cape, Cape Coloureds, Cape Dutch, Cape Malay, Cape of Good Hope, Charlize Theron, Christiaan Barnard, Ciskei, Constand Viljoen, Culture of South Africa, D.F. Malan, Danie Craven, Dingane, Drakensberg, Dutch, Dutch East India Company, Ernie Els, Ernst van Heerden, Eugene Marais, Eugène Terre'Blanche, F.W. de Klerk, Flemish, Francois Pienaar, Frederik van Zyl Slabbert, Free State Province, Freedom Front, French, Frik du Preez, Frisian, German, Great Trek, Hendrik Verwoerd, Hestrie Cloete, Huguenot, Huguenots, J.B.M. Hertzog, J.G. Strijdom, J.M. Coetzee, Jan Breytenbach, Jan Smuts, Joe van Niekerk, John Smit, Joost van der Westhuizen, Khoi, Laurens van der Post, Leon Schuster, Louis Botha, Malagasy, Malay, Marius Joubert, Mfecane, Naas Botha, Natalia Republic, National Party, North West Province, Okkert Brits, Olive Schreiner, Orange Free State, Orania, Os du Randt, P.W. Botha, Paul Kruger, Paul Roos, Petrus Jacobus Joubert, Piet Retief, Pole-vaulter, Prime minister, Protestant, Qwaqwa, RAF, Retief Goosen, Richard E. Grant, SADF, Sailor Malan, Sarel Cilliers, Scandinavia, Schalk Burger, Second Anglo-Boer War, Siener van Rensburg, South African, South African Communist Party, South African Farmer Murders, South African Republic, South African Special Forces Brigade, South Africans, South Indian, Springboks, Transkei, Transvaal, Transvaal Republic, Trekboers, Union of South Africa, Venda, Vereeniging Peace Treaty, Volkstaat, Voortrekker, Voortrekkers, Walloon, Western Cape Province, World War II, Zola Budd, Zululand, Zulus, apartheid, coloured, concentration camps, heart transplant, homeland, racial segregation, rugby union, slavery, white



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Afrikaner", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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