Via Mike
A flag made by a Boer prisoner of war, H.J. Steyn, in Diyatalawa camp,
Ceylon (now Sri Lanka). The flag is an example of the so-called ‘Unity’
flags of the Anglo-Boer War (1899-1902). These were unofficial flags
representing ‘Boer’ forces fighting the British during the Anglo-Boer
War.
South Africa 1899 – 1903
Boer is the Dutch/Afrikaans word for
“farmer” now applied to the mainly Dutch, German, and French Huguenot
early settlers in South Africa. About 2.6 million of the 4.6 million
whites in South Africa consider themselves ethnic Boers.
Once a majority, but because of massive migration of
Bantu tribes from western and central Africa and much higher black
birthrates, the white population is down to 8.4 percent of South
Africa’s 80 percent black 55 million people. Following World War II and
especially since the end of Apartheid in 1994, the Boers have considered
themselves and their culture under ethnic and political siege. To
understand their increasingly dangerous situation, it is good to know
some essential Boer history.
The South African movie District 9 is supposedly a partial reference to black migration into SA. I had suspected the whites had been a majority at one point, but I'm glad to read confirmation.
ReplyDeleteThe Boer argument was they were settling lands the blacks hadn't farmed. This makes sense to me that only the Khoisan speaking Bushmen are true natives.
only the Khoisan speaking Bushmen are true natives.
DeleteThanks.I wasn't cognizant of that.