Afrikaner Essays

  • Apartheid and Afrikaner Nationalism

    2420 Words  | 5 Pages

    cultural and political beliefs of Afrikaners, the minority of whites that descended from early Dutch colonizers. In light of this knowledge, it is clear that Afrikaner nationalism was the main force behind Apartheid. The development of Afrikaner nationalism led to the creation of Apartheid. Afrikaner nationalism was a combination of the cultural and political beliefs of Afrikaners in South Africa. The philosophy not only reflected the beliefs of Afrikaners, but it eventually embodied the ethnic

  • South Africa: A Case Study Analysis

    1270 Words  | 3 Pages

    under the apartheid have contributed to the stunting of South Africa’s economic development. South Africa was initially colonized by the Dutch, who arrived at the Cape of Good Hope in 1652. Albeit, the tellers of South African history, mainly the Afrikaners, claim that the area was essentially unoccupied at the time the Dutch arrived, there were actually indigenous tribes already there which the Dutch then enslaved. Moving forward to 1795, the Dutch colony was seized by the British. Because of the

  • The White Man's Fear Depicted in Cry, the Beloved Country by Alan Paton

    823 Words  | 2 Pages

    The time of the 1940’s in South Africa was defined by racial oppression of the native inhabitants of the country by the Dutch Boers, also known as the Afrikaners. These people were the demographic minority yet also the political majority. They executed almost complete control over the lives of the natives through asinine rules and harsh punishments. The highly esteemed novel Cry, the Beloved Country tells a story of Stephen Kumalo, a black priest dealing with the struggles of living in the South

  • Apartheid In South Africa

    1362 Words  | 3 Pages

    Apartheid was a system of segregation implemented in 1948 by the Afrikaner National Party in South Africa. It put into laws the dissociation of races that had been practiced in the area since the Cape Colony's founding in 1652 by the Dutch East India Company. This system served as the basis for white domination in South Africa for forty-six years until its abolition in 1994. Apartheid's abolition was brought on by resistance movements and an unstable economy and prompted the election of South America's

  • South African Apartheid In South Africa

    831 Words  | 2 Pages

    After world war one and two the African population in cities tripled. Most of the people lived in terrible living conditions like small and cramped shacks. More segregation laws were enforced and everything became more unequal. In the 1940’s the Afrikaner National Party ca... ... middle of paper ... ...C, South African Indian Congress, South African Congress of Democrats and many more. One of the many acts of resistance was the Freedom Charter. It was made by South African Congress of Democrats

  • British Imperialism

    1511 Words  | 4 Pages

    eventually achieved its main goals. It protected its holding at Cape Town, which was essential in order to control the southern trade route to India, and resisted the threats of increased European presence in South Africa as well as the threat of Afrikaner nationalism in Cape Colony and in the Boer Republics that bordered it. British investors held about half the stock of the mining industries in the Boer Republics, so the protection of the industry was vital not only to the interests of those particular

  • Nonviolent Resistances to South African Apartheid

    1663 Words  | 4 Pages

    after the Boer War as the Afrikaner National Party overtook the government following the country’s independence from Great Britain. The Afrikaners, or Dutch descendants, won the majority in 1948 in the first election for the country’s government. Only a short time after were apartheid laws initiated by the minority white descendants. In the Afrikaans language, apartheid’s literal meaning is “separateness,” which is exactly what the laws were designed for. The Afrikaner National Party initiated the

  • Human Rights Violation in Country of My Skull by Antjie Krog

    1220 Words  | 3 Pages

    during the South African Apartheid. The South African Apartheid, meaning separate or apart, was a system of racial motivated segregation in South Africa. Under this corrupt system of racial segregation, the minority group of South Africa or the White Afrikaners unjustly dominated the majority group, the black South Africans. During this period Black South Africans were unjustly subjected to punishments such as torture, kidnapping, murder, and other horrifying gross violations of human rights. However,

  • Language Development: Afrikaans

    1207 Words  | 3 Pages

    When people need to communicate even though there is no common ground, they have to find and develop a certain system of a simplified communication to interact. This introduces us to a pidgin. A pidgin arises for the communication between two or more social groups. There is one dominant language and one less dominant. A pidgin is not aimed at learning but rather it is used as a bridge to connect people with different language backgrounds. The less dominant language is the one that develops this ‘restricted

  • The Apartheid in South Africa

    1270 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Apartheid started in 1948 when Dr. Malan’s National Party beat the United Party who wanted integration. After the National Party won they had been given the Sauer report, which said that they had to choose between integration or an Apartheid. They chose the Apartheid which meant racial segregation of all of the races. They were split into 3 groups black, coloured and white and they were forced to move to an area specifically designated to their colour. There was petty Apartheid introduced so

  • Theme Of Apartheid In J. M. Coetzee's Disgrace

    995 Words  | 2 Pages

    than 300 years ago, with the first meetings of white settlers and indigenous black tribes in an unequal relationship that was destined one day to become unsustainable” (116). Apartheid was considered a necessary arrangement in South Africa, as the Afrikaner National Party gained a strong majority political control of the country after the 1940’s and the economic dependence on their fertile natural resources, such as diamond and gold mines and other metals such as platinum. This required intense labor

  • The History of Apartheid in South Africa

    740 Words  | 2 Pages

    seventeenth century. English domination of the Dutch descendents (known as Boers or Afrikaners) resulted in the Dutch establishing the new colonies of Orange Free State and Transvaal. The discovery of diamonds in these lands around 1900 resulted in an English invasion which sparked the Boer War. Following independence from England, an uneasy power-sharing between the two groups held sway until the 1940's, when the Afrikaner National Party was able to gain a strong majority. Strategists in the National

  • A critique of the Truth and Reconciliation in South Africa

    2936 Words  | 6 Pages

    The Truth and Reconciliation Commission was an independent legal body which was established after the abolition of apartheid in order to assist South Africa’s society to achieve a peaceful transition. Based on the two main concepts of healing and forgiveness, the TRC accomplished its goal by three committees: The Human Rights Violations Committee, The Reparation and Rehabilitation Committee and The Amnesty Committee. The participants who were identified as the victims of racial injustice and gross

  • Spanish Influenza: Devastating Impact on South Africa

    910 Words  | 2 Pages

    the military, which in turn was the cause, the devastating affects that the Spanish influenza had on South African society. This creation of colonial trade and transport was responsible for not only the emergence of the influenza in South Africa, but then for the spread of the Spanish influenza amongst South Africans along these modes of trade and transport. When evaluating the Spanish influenza’s impact on all of the countries in the world, it is clear that South Africa suffered the greatest per-capita

  • The Apartheid of Music in South Africa

    724 Words  | 2 Pages

    from thriving in any way, through racial segregation. Amandla! Focuses on the apartheid that took place in South Africa, primarily from 1948 to 1994 (1). This segregation was headed by the National Party government, which was run by a group of Afrikaner nationalists. The National Party government segregated non-whites into contained, separate neighborhoods, which were generally in very poor condition with strict laws. These laws prohibited non-white South Africans to come in contact with white South

  • Athol Fugard Biography

    2292 Words  | 5 Pages

    Athol Fugard Athol Fugard was born on the 11th of June 1932 in Middleburg Northern Cape, to a below average income household. His mother, Elizabeth Magdalena an Afrikaner, operated first a general store and then a boarding house; his father, Harold, was a disabled former jazz pianist of Irish, English and French Huguenot blood. In 1935, his family moved to Port Elizabeth. He attended Marist Brothers College in 1938, thereafter going to university of Cape Town to study philosophy. After his second

  • The Legacy of Apartheid in South Africa

    1631 Words  | 4 Pages

    The strength of a nation is not established by the force of its military, economic standing, or government, but rather how its citizens are regarded. In order to attain strength, a nation must respect the principle of solidarity; the power of one voice. For without a defined sense of unity, a society is likely to crumble. Unfortunately, as seen throughout history, civilization has often made it their mission to seek out the differences in one another instead of accepting them. This fear of the unknown

  • HOW THE MOTIF OF BALLROOM DANCING DOES SHOWS THE SOCIAL CHANGE AND THE POINT OF VIEW OF EACH CHARACTER?

    776 Words  | 2 Pages

    “Master Harold and the boys” written by Athol Fugard is play set in the apartheid of South Africa in the 1950. This reflect the racism abuse black people suffered from white people. Regarding the effort that was being made by the community, they still lost the discrimination and inequality kept growing until a point where people started to fight for their liberty. I this essay I’m going to focus on the different ways ballroom dancing reflects and describes the constant roughness there was in South

  • Essay On Transformative Constitutionalism

    1315 Words  | 3 Pages

    Dr. Alex Borraine once said, “ I still believe that goodness and beauty, compassion and new beginnings, can triumph over the evil which seems to be all-persuasive.” Archbishop Desmond Tutu is an incredibly controversial man, with this being said his speech at Stellenbosch in August 2011 made headlines around the world. His speech was about the fact that the white population, being the beneficiaries of the apartheid system, should pay a “wealth tax”. This caused heavy debate within our country and

  • Master Harold And The Boys by Athol Fugard

    901 Words  | 2 Pages

    The play Master Harold and the Boys by Athol Fugard takes place in a small Tea House in Port Elizabeth in South Africa. The play starts off with Sam and Willie, two black servants at the restaurant cleaning and talking about a ballroom dance tournament coming up. Hally, a teenage white boy whose parents own the restaurant walks in after coming from school and begins to have a conversation with Sam and Willie. In the period of only an hour and a half or so, Sam, Willie, and Hally give a small glimpse