Berliner Boersenzeitung - Trump spotlight divides S.Africa's Afrikaners

EUR -
AED 4.180066
AFN 81.374369
ALL 99.127782
AMD 444.211427
ANG 2.051077
AOA 1044.155795
ARS 1324.319325
AUD 1.775688
AWG 2.048471
AZN 1.939185
BAM 1.959915
BBD 2.297755
BDT 138.266391
BGN 1.957759
BHD 0.428908
BIF 3336.731889
BMD 1.13804
BND 1.495768
BOB 7.863615
BRL 6.475905
BSD 1.138004
BTN 97.143251
BWP 15.686143
BYN 3.723939
BYR 22305.574699
BZD 2.28593
CAD 1.580339
CDF 3274.140126
CHF 0.942454
CLF 0.027727
CLP 1064.010505
CNY 8.293695
CNH 8.294982
COP 4805.884014
CRC 576.017047
CUC 1.13804
CUP 30.158047
CVE 110.735677
CZK 25.011951
DJF 202.252832
DKK 7.476014
DOP 67.201681
DZD 150.666237
EGP 57.743325
ERN 17.070593
ETB 149.20139
FJD 2.569637
FKP 0.85379
GBP 0.854833
GEL 3.118673
GGP 0.85379
GHS 17.423829
GIP 0.85379
GMD 81.93925
GNF 9849.732497
GTQ 8.764518
GYD 238.085134
HKD 8.827989
HNL 29.365788
HRK 7.545548
HTG 148.598539
HUF 406.22365
IDR 19123.616186
ILS 4.117376
IMP 0.85379
INR 97.171335
IQD 1490.831778
IRR 47911.464422
ISK 145.498792
JEP 0.85379
JMD 180.09815
JOD 0.806988
JPY 163.505598
KES 147.380445
KGS 99.521994
KHR 4570.367133
KMF 492.206412
KPW 1024.245592
KRW 1636.922348
KWD 0.349094
KYD 0.948304
KZT 585.978093
LAK 24610.105135
LBP 101824.061928
LKR 340.989491
LRD 227.60089
LSL 21.252933
LTL 3.360335
LVL 0.688389
LYD 6.219431
MAD 10.5326
MDL 19.6415
MGA 5135.407632
MKD 61.572306
MMK 2388.970557
MNT 4038.134833
MOP 9.092211
MRU 45.044035
MUR 51.587762
MVR 17.537619
MWK 1973.28663
MXN 22.196896
MYR 4.977829
MZN 72.834921
NAD 21.259007
NGN 1830.787374
NIO 41.878484
NOK 11.885287
NPR 155.426664
NZD 1.909158
OMR 0.437635
PAB 1.138004
PEN 4.176041
PGK 4.612518
PHP 63.952175
PKR 319.732631
PLN 4.278176
PYG 9102.752983
QAR 4.143646
RON 4.987576
RSD 117.716476
RUB 93.623363
RWF 1611.463968
SAR 4.268716
SBD 9.507537
SCR 16.159791
SDG 683.396918
SEK 11.02502
SGD 1.495502
SHP 0.89432
SLE 25.83767
SLL 23864.101349
SOS 650.393756
SRD 41.972079
STD 23555.120484
SVC 9.956512
SYP 14796.582943
SZL 21.258999
THB 38.136125
TJS 12.040045
TMT 3.994519
TND 3.409609
TOP 2.665407
TRY 43.755304
TTD 7.730333
TWD 37.044368
TZS 3061.326705
UAH 47.591564
UGX 4171.594085
USD 1.13804
UYU 47.508291
UZS 14737.612235
VES 94.812258
VND 29613.495511
VUV 137.839101
WST 3.145459
XAF 657.351672
XAG 0.034379
XAU 0.000343
XCD 3.075609
XDR 0.818201
XOF 654.945838
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.937574
ZAR 21.255965
ZMK 10243.725458
ZMW 31.778143
ZWL 366.448263
  • BCC

    -0.5800

    95.51

    -0.61%

  • SCS

    -0.0600

    9.89

    -0.61%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.46

    +0.04%

  • RBGPF

    60.8800

    60.88

    +100%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.33

    -0%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    37.43

    -0.19%

  • JRI

    0.1400

    12.74

    +1.1%

  • BTI

    -0.4000

    42.05

    -0.95%

  • NGG

    -0.2200

    72.04

    -0.31%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    10.16

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.3600

    21.65

    -1.66%

  • RELX

    0.3800

    53.55

    +0.71%

  • VOD

    0.0400

    9.35

    +0.43%

  • RIO

    -1.1300

    60.56

    -1.87%

  • BP

    0.1900

    29.19

    +0.65%

  • AZN

    0.0200

    69.57

    +0.03%

Trump spotlight divides S.Africa's Afrikaners
Trump spotlight divides S.Africa's Afrikaners / Photo: MARCO LONGARI - AFP/File

Trump spotlight divides S.Africa's Afrikaners

Country music and the aroma of pancakes enveloped the "Boeremark", or farmer's market, outside South Africa's capital Pretoria where thousands of Afrikaners browsed on a Saturday morning.

Text size:

Signs written in Afrikaans advertised traditional foods: braided "koeksister" doughnuts, cinnamon-sprinkled "melkkos" porridge, strips of "biltong" cured meat.

There were stands of books in Afrikaans, a language linked to Dutch, and racks of khaki clothes associated with Afrikaner farmers known as "boere".

The peaceful scene was a far cry from claims of fear and persecution that have reached Washington, leading President Donald Trump to offer refugee status to the white Afrikaner minority in February and thousands to apply.

But, despite the mellow mood, many at the market told AFP they did feel threatened in post-apartheid South Africa.

As "a white person and a boer", she was a victim of "reverse racism", said jewellery vendor Cesere Smith, 54. "There is trouble coming," she told AFP vaguely, welcoming Trump's intervention.

"Every person should be proud of who they are, but here we must feel guilty -- and that’s not right," Smith told AFP.

White Afrikaners are predominantly descendants of Dutch settlers who arrived at the tip of Africa more than three centuries ago. Today they make up most of South Africa's 7.3 percent white population.

Mainly Afrikaner-led governments imposed the race-based apartheid system that denied the black majority political and economic rights until it was voted out in 1994.

Under apartheid, whites benefited from reserved access to jobs, education, land and markets.

The privilege has a legacy. For example, unemployment among white South Africans stands at more than six percent compared to more than 35 percent for the black population.

- 'Phantom pain' -

Prominent journalist and author, Max du Preez, was scathing of complaints of persecution among his fellow Afrikaners.

"Afrikaners are far better off materially and culturally today than in 1994," he told AFP.

Afrikaans culture is thriving, he said, adding that it is the only local language with four television channels and an array of newspapers, magazines and festivals.

The fear of white persecution "is a phantom pain: it's not about what is actually happening, but about what could happen", he said.

"Nothing is coming. The last thing that will happen here is a race war."

Afrikaner "disillusion" grew as the post-apartheid economy struggled with corruption and governance, said professor Christi van der Westhuizen, author of several books on Afrikaner identity.

This made many susceptible to "divisive" narratives pushed by right-wing groups with roots in apartheid, even if "significant sections of Afrikaners remain vehemently opposed" to these ideas, she said.

Such groups have found a sympathetic audience in the United States, where Trump is close to conservative South African-born billionaire Elon Musk.

Their claims that white farmers are targeted for murder -- despite official data that most victims of killings are young black men in urban areas -- have morphed into a myth of a "white genocide", repeated by Trump at the weekend.

Another sore point is an education bill that some believe will limit Afrikaans learning at schools. Also under fire are government attempts to redress apartheid-era discrimination through regulations on business, labour and property ownership.

- Integration -

On a recent Monday, five men -- black and white -- sat around a plate of biltong in a church room in Johannesburg while discussing their mission to bring South Africa's races together.

"This narrative of victimhood makes me sick. The people who were victims here are millions of black people," said Trevor Ntlhola, 57, a pastor and former anti-apartheid activist.

"It takes me back to the 1980s when I preached in white churches against apartheid," said pastor Alexander Venter, 70, his voice breaking.

"The dismantling of apartheid let white people off lightly. A lot of racial conditioning was just buried, and now it’s all resurfacing," he said.

"Trump has given a microphone to radical whites all over the world," added Schalk van Heerden, 47, co-founder of the Betereinders ("Better Enders") movement of Afrikaners which has the slogan "Be better not bitter".

Right-wing groups think Afrikaans culture can only be preserved through self-governance and separation, said Betereinders co-founder Johan Erasmus, ideas that evoke apartheid principles of "separateness".

"Our solution is integration," he said. Many Afrikaners want to be part of "the story of the South African project" of post-apartheid reconciliation.

"People have been betting against us (South Africa) for the last 30 years," he said. But "we are still here."

(O.Joost--BBZ)