In the sparsely populated Karoo desert in the heart of South
Africa’s Northern Cape, apartheid lives on.
I spent a few days in Orania, one of just a few black people
to have set foot in the whites-only town since its establishment in 1991.
Part of a BBC crew, including Zimbabwean journalist Stanley
Kwenda, we were given permission to visit.
And during that time, Stanley and I were the only black
people in the town of 1,000 – an unusual experience in latter-day South Africa.
Racial interaction is not welcome in the Afrikaner-only
town, where only Afrikaans is spoken, because of fears about “diluting
culture”.
Zimbabwe-born Stanley Kwenda takes a tour of South Africa’s
all-white town of Orania
“We do not fit in easily in the new South Africa. It
[Orania] was an answer to not dominating others and not being dominated by
others,” says Carel Boschoff Jr, the community leader.
Mr Boschoff inherited the town from his father Carel Boschoff
Snr, an Afrikaner intellectual and son-in-law of apartheid architect, Hendrik
Verwoerd.
Mr Verwoerd’s grandson tells me that his people were faced
with a tough question about their future when the black government was elected
in 1994.
“In terms of Afrikaners who had been standing very close to
the state, when the policies such as black economic empowerment and affirmative
action came into place, Afrikaners needed to seriously think about their
future. It wouldn’t make sense not to,” he said.
Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) was introduced to encourage
more black participation in business.
We
were taken on a guided tour of the town’s facilities by John Strydom, a retired
doctor, whose main message was: “We are not against black people. We are for
ourselves.”
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