Die Boervolk Erfenis Stigting - Boernation Heritage Foundation
March 3 ·
Whomever wrote this article thank you. We have corrected it to be more factionally applicable to the people it happened to.
Please also read our added comment and Press Release thereunder.
Press Release - Media Release - Media Statement - Kennisgewing.
24 March 2018
The greatest nightmare in the history of South Africa
Bloukrans and Moordspruit
16-17 February 1838
The
story I tell tonight is the most dreadful tale in the history of my
people. It is a tale of sadness and a tale of unspeakable horror. An
account that was so terrible that the hand of history trembled violently
when it tried to write it down – and finally laid aside its pen when it
found the words too painful to record.
Yet, my family was there.
They saw it with their own eyes, just like all the others did. And
painful though it was, some of the survivors somehow told their tale.
The accounts live on because they wanted their children to know that
freedom is a priceless commodity that was bought with rivers of blood.
And so their voices continue to echo forever across the blood-stained
pages of South Africa’s troubled history.
Sometimes they speak
softly, sometimes they cry with pride. But through it all there is a
gentle sound which sounds a lot like rain. Only it is not rain. It is
the tears of a broken generation. If you read their history even after
all these years, you can hear it still. And when you close the chapter
finally, there follows a great silence which is louder than a waterfall.
It follows you for a long time, that silence. It follows you in the
manner of all profound things, after they had touched and left their
fingermarks upon your soul.
The tale that follows now is not for
sensitive people. If you are easily upset, do not read it. Africa is
beautiful, but she has an ugly side as well. Sometimes when you see that
side of her, the images remain forever. Think before you read. And if
you do, picture the scenes compassionately – because unless they are
softened by love, they still remain too sharp to touch.
Bloukrans and Moordspruit – “Blue Cliff” and “Spring of Murder”
There
was little to be seen on the night of the 16th of February 1838 for
there was no moon at all. It was a peaceful night along the Tugela River
and its tributaries, yet it would soon become the darkest night of
foulest murder. It was the greatest nightmare anyone had ever known.
Nobody
knew it yet, but more than a week ago the Voortrekker governor Piet
Retief and all 70 of his men and servants had been murdered by Dingane –
king of the Zulu. They had been invited to a banquet to celebrate a
peaceful land transaction when Dingane ordered his warriors to seize
them. Retief and all his men were clubbed to death and then cast away to
feed his vultures at KwaMatiwane – the place of killing.
Many miles
towards the north their families were waiting upon their return. They
were, in fact, expecting good news and were hoping to see their
returning men any day now. They had reason to feel relaxed. Northern
Natal was one of the most beautiful places in Africa. Framed by the
towering Drakensberg Mountains, the climate was mild and the rolling
landscapes made the world seem enchantingly lovely in a thousand
unfamiliar ways. It was a country more captivating than many of them had
ever seen in all their lives. A land which Piet Uys called, "the
fairest in all the world."
All along the Tugela River the
Voortrekkers families were stretched out across a distance of 56
kilometres . They had no reason to suspect trouble. Dingane had so far
sounded benevolent and friendly. There had been no news as yet, but
under the circumstances no news was considered good news. Their leader,
Gert Maritz, had nevertheless cautiously issued orders that the families
should assembly near his own laager. The Voortrekkers found it
impractical to be huddled together, however, and only a few families
obeyed the instruction.
The rest remained at their peaceful
encampments scattered across the valleys. That afternoon they brought
their livestock closer to their camps, set out guards against lions –
and prepared their pleasant suppers. Grandfathers read to their families
from the Bible, mothers tucked their little ones in and kissed them
each good night. One by one the voices all went quiet as the candles
were blown out and the campfires were allowed to slowly burn to embers.
Around
midnight, though, people began to stir. Some arose and started peering
into the darkness with anxious eyes. From far away down-river came the
sound of thunder. Yet, there was no lightning. And as they listened they
began to realize that what they heard was not thunder, but the noise of
distant gunfire. The sound of shots spread along the river frontage
until they gradually fell silent altogether.
In places the glow of
fires lit up the sky, until these too slowly disappeared. Eyes turned
white in the suffocating darkness, for these were men who had already
known four generations of warfare. They had guessed what was going on –
and they knew were about to join a living nightmare. Little children
began to cry. Trembling lips began to pray in silence. They had seen it
before. They already knew what this meant – and they all silently
understood that the angel of death was on its way to visit them as well.
Down
river hardly anyone had heard the silent tread of 10,000 Zulu phantoms
as they marched through the long grass. Here and there a dog strained at
its rope and barked hysterically. The cattle milled and horses began to
whinny. The animals could sense the approach, but inside some of the
wagons the families were still sleeping soundly.
When the
restlessness roused them, they were still drugged by sleep and slow in
realizing what was happening. But then the long grass parted and a
figure leapt into the wagon – dark as the night – with only eyes and
teeth shining white. For a moment the moon gleamed upon a naked blade –
and then there was a scream – a long, drawn-out shriek that shattered
the night as if the entire sky was made of brittle glass. And then the
warriors were everywhere at once.
In many places men were quick to
leap to their feet and find their guns. By the light of stars alone
their shaking fingers poured powder down the barrels, and a little more
into the pan of their flintlocks. They hardly had to raise and aim –
some scarcely had the opportunity to fire more than one or two shots
before Zululand’s sharpest steel sliced into their backs and chests. In
some places there was more resistance. The lucky ones who had more
warning managed to find a little shelter – from where they fought a
fight that required no courage – when fighting for the ones you love
beyond reason itself – courage has no meaning. All men became lions and
every soul was turned into a hero. Circumstances simply made you one.
Every
man and women fought for their very lives that night. First with guns,
and then with axes, knives and any object that they could swing. When
these weapons were pried from their wounded arms, they fought with their
bare hands. Fathers fell across their children, and mothers huddled
around their crying infants. The blades found them all. The spears knew
no mercy of any kind. The blades went through the mothers and into their
children as if they were made from butter. Even the children who tore
loose and ran away were run down and caught. Not one of them was spared.
As
they threw their torches onto the tented wagons and the flames began to
dance – the warriors of Zululand made sure that all the men and women
were finished off. Then they took the children – every little child and
baby that still breathed. They held them by their feet and swung their
small heads against the wagons wheels. Each crying voice ended with a
hollow thud until every one of them was silent. Then they took
everything they wanted, and sliced the bellies open of the people they
had murdered.
Behind them they left utter carnage. Burning wood and
canvas, fluttering feathers from sliced open beds and pillows, and
scattered flour that looked like snow in all directions. Here and there a
life was still gurgling away while limbs contorted painfully. Glass
shattered, furniture smashed. Dogs, cats and chickens slaughtered.
Nothing left alive at all. And so they continued up the river to see who
else they could still overrun.
Lourens Christiaan de Klerk, who
survived the butchery, told that after they had listened to the firing
in the dark for some time, a bushman woman had come stumbling into their
laager. She was too shocked and traumatized to speak, and however hard
they tried, they could not get a word out of her. By this, however, they
knew what to expect.
Shortly after a white man came running from
the same direction. This was Daniel Bezuidenhout, bare-headed and
streaming with blood, and only dressed in shirt and trousers.
“All murdered!” he cried. “The Zulus are here!”
Gasping
with exhaustion, he told his dreadful story. When the barking of their
dogs woke him at 1 o’clock in the morning, he had risen to see whether
the livestock was wandering off or being threatened by a leopard. To his
surprise, he walked into a regiment of Zulus. Freezing in his tracks,
he heard the warriors’ shields going “zirrrr” through the grass, and
followed the noise as the Zulus stabbed at his dogs in the dark. Only
half-clad, he retreated stealthily. Then he stumbled into a second
regiment which was approaching from another direction. Under cover of
darkness he hastened to his waggon where his wife was sick with their
little baby of six days old. Handing him the child, she beseeched him to
flee to safety.
As he jumped into the darkness and forced his way
through the Zulus he could hear them stab his aged father to death. With
the child in his arms, he managed to break through after being
encircled three times. On each occasion they had been drawn to him by
the crying of the baby. They first managed to stab him while he was
crouched over the child, so that the spear entered his shoulder blade
and went down his chest along his rib cage before killing the little
baby in his arms. He did not notice it immediately, though, until after
he had been wounded twice more.
When he finally managed to escape, he
hid himself among the cattle. He was now safely in the darkness behind
the Zulu lines. From here he could hear how the Zulus were stabbing the
dogs and chickens to death, the tearing of the tent canvass and the
destruction of the waggons.
At this point the bereaved father
discovered that the helpless child was lifeless in his arms. Realizing
that there was nothing more that he could do for his exterminated
family, he hid the little body under a bush, and ran through the night
to warn the other pioneers. In so doing, he gave priceless warning to
the Van Dijks, the Scheepers family, as well as the Roets and Van Vuuren
families and the family of Karel Geer. This saved many lives.
Even
while Bezuidenhout was still telling his dreadful tale, the thundering
of hooves brought Heila Petronella Roberts and her two daughters into
their laager. Unbeknown to Heila, her husband had already been murdered
with Piet Retief. Having been warned by the shots from a single man that
night, she and her children had barely managed to reach their horses
and escape in time. She confirmed that all the Bezuidenhouts had been
killed.
Her own story was just as terrible. As she was fleeing from
her waggons, she said she saw the neighbouring Greyling and Engelbrecht
families – all 36 of them – running for the safety of her waggons.
Moments later she saw them being overwhelmed and butchered to the last
man, woman and child. There would be many more stories which were
similar to these.
Gun battles were raging through the night in all
directions. Nearly everywhere the fights were desperate to the extreme.
The need was so severe that even children had to fight. One example was
the little ten year old son of Gert Maritz who had to fire and load just
like all the grown men. It is impossible to imagine the utter chaos of
that night as thousands of warriors shouted, oxen and livestock
scattered in all directions, guns blazed away at sounds and shadows, and
the cry of murdered people rent the sky.
It was a night in which
heroes were made. At Rensburg koppie, Willem van Rensburg held his gun
upside down to indicate that they were out of ammunition.
“Help people! There is powder and lead in Willem Pretorius’ waggon!” he cried.
Nobody
thought it possible, but a small group of men fought their way through
the Zulu ranks. A young man of 18 years old, Martinus Jacobus
Oosthuizen, or Tinie, as he was called, made the desperate race to the
Pretorius waggons on his horse, “Swartjie” (Blackie).
Laden with shot
and powder, the boy then had to run the gauntlet all the way back
again. With desperate fascination the men watched as he stormed right
into the ranks of 1,500 warriors – dodging clubs and spears as best he
could. For a moment it seemed, lost, but then he burst through and
completed his five minute death run in safety. His was just one more act
of heroism that saved many lives that day. The women who survived the
battle with their men showered him with kisses of appreciation
afterwards.
Further away, the laagers which had been spared rallied
themselves and went flying into the darkness – riding as hard as they
could to try and aid whomever they might. In the darkness, however, they
could not do very much. They were among the bravest of the brave to
attack like that, but it was already far too late for most. The scale of
the attack was just too big and the speed had been too great.
When
the sun rose that morning, it fell across the valleys of a blood-soaked
country. What the men saw on that day was something that most would not
see again in their entire lives – a scene that few would ever want to
talk about. The carnage was beyond description. Entire families had been
wiped out. Waggon encampments were still smoking – with the wagons
standing like coal-black skeletons upon the lonely landscape.
The
deeds of valiant bravery that occurred that night were many, yet most
are lost to history because the heroes fought until they perished and no
one was left to tell the tale. The few who lived were scarred for life.
They must have had nightmares for as long as they lived, and more than
likely seldom spoke about that night.
One little girl, Johanna van
der Merwe, was just 12 years old. She escaped the Van der Merwe laager
and managed to reach the Prinsloo family which was encamped elsewhere.
But here also, death found the families. Elizabeth (Betta) De Beer could
only grab the youngest of her three children, a nine months old baby.
She sought shelter beneath a waggon, but her baby was assaulted through
the spokes of a wheel. Being left for dead, she managed to flee into the
darkness, still clutching her bloody little baby in her arms. At the
Bloukrans River she discovered the little child was dead, so she left
its body there.
Together with Johanna van der Merwe and a Prinsloo
girl they were found in a tree, which they climbed during the night of
terror. There they were so weakened that they could not make a sound.
After the sun had risen, two Zulus had passed beneath the tree. Drawn by
the sight of blood that was dripping from the branches, they proceeded
to stab at the girls as far as they could reach. One climbed into the
thorn tree and grabbed Betta De Beer by her long hair. She became stuck
in a fork of the tree, which prevented him from pulling her down.
When
they were satisfied that the girls were probably dead, they moved on.
They were only discovered by the pioneers when the vultures began
circling the tree. Little Johanna had no less than 21 stab wounds.
Catherina Prinsloo, was stabbed 23 times. The young Betta De Beer died a
few days later. Elsewhere, Gert Lucas Joubert was also found with 21
wounds. His body was retrieved from beneath a pile of mutilated corpses.
He, however, somehow managed to survive.
Another tale of survival
is so dreadful that it almost cannot be repeated. One woman had been
huddled against the trunk of a tree, desperately trying to shelter her
baby with her body. After having stabbed her in the arms and legs, a
Zulu ripped the baby from her clutch and disemboweled it with one
thrust. Upon stabbing the mother in the back, she collapsed unconscious.
When she came to a little while later, the Zulu was laughing as he
stabbed at her other child in the tree above her. The warrior laughed
while the child wailed with fear. At long last the tormented child fell
from the tree, nearly on top of its mother, where she lay with racing
heart while pretending to be dead. The poor mother survived the deadly
ordeal, probably to be haunted by nightmares for the rest of her life.
All
through that day, the pioneers followed the sight of circling vultures
in search of their scattered loved ones. Often they found the bodies of
dead or dying Zulus – which they dispatched at once. Sometimes they
found the bodies of their own – and wept with bitter anguish.
One
man by the name of Du Preez was just returning from a hunting trip. When
he reached his laager, he found his wife and every one of his seven
children cold and lifeless. An entire family wiped out, with only he
himself that had been spared by circumstances. Besides that, he had lost
everything he owned, except the clothes that he was standing in. Some
of the scenes were so dreadful that those who wrote down their memories
many years later repeatedly declared that they were too terrible to
record in detail.
The scent of death hung heavily across the bloody
tapestry of that night. Ferdinand Paulus van Gass, who was just a young
man at the time, wrote that, “all had been murdered in this gruesome
way; children had stakes driven into their mouths and out the back of
their heads, women were sliced open and their entrails were torn out,
while the men were similarly treated in a manner that I am not able to
recount.”
In the bush and long grass, bearded pioneers must have
fallen to their knees and sobbed as they recognized friends and family,
or familiar faces and neighbours. Van Gass recounted that at one laager
they could not find a single gun that was not broken. The men had fought
until they were out of ammunition, and had then fought with guns used
as clubs until they were overwhelmed. Everywhere they collected little
bundles – the castaway and crumpled figures of terrified little
children, or women and servants who had died while trying to escape.
Most were mutilated. Their bodies were strewn across the veld like so
much rubbish. Even the dogs, cats, chickens and domestic animals were
all butchered.
In places the bodies of victims and attackers were
still entwined as they had died in mortal combat. Abraham Carel Bothma,
who was the brother of Stephanus Bothma who had been hung at
Slagtersnek, was found in this way. He had a large spear through his
chest while the Zulu at his side had a knife wound in his heart. Bothma
still had both legs wrapped around the Zulu from their deathly contest,
but his body had been slit open and disembowelled from top to bottom.
Around
him his coloured servant lay similarly mutilated, while in their camp
all the women were found with their clothes torn off. They had been
sliced open similarly. Above each place of slaughter the vultures were
circling patiently – or rattling the branches of the thorn trees before
jumping to a hurried feast.
In many places families were found
inside their waggons. Some of the little children had suffocated to
death beneath the weight of their dead relatives. In one waggon, 21
corpses were piled, plus one little eight year old girl who was dragged
from under them, still alive.
The 12 year old Hannie van der Merwe
was found with 21 spear wounds beneath a heap of 20 bodies. She
astonished everyone by surviving. In places the blood scratch-marks
showed how frightened women had been dragged from underneath their beds.
The savageness defied all description. It was too much to witness women
of all ages, their clothes stripped, their breasts cut off, and impaled
with spears, before being disembowelled. Some had their Achilles
tendons cut off. One such victim, Catharina Prinsloo, had hers cut also.
She survived this mutilation, and altogether 17 spear wounds, and lived
as a crippled until she died in 1892. Servants shared the same fate –
butchered without mercy.
The survivors stared with hollow eyes, and
drawn expressions. They were the toughest people in the Colony. Most of
these men had grown up on the Eastern Border. They had known nothing but
border raids all their lives. Most of them had known war since they
were born. Blood was nothing new to them. But this was by far - without
comparison - the bloodiest scene that anyone had ever witnessed. They
stared at the limbs of little children which had been hacked off and
cast into the trees like morbid decorations. All the dreadful memories
that they ever had paled into insignificance compared to the unspeakable
horror of one single night.
They still found survivors along the
rivers and valleys, but not many. In one place, the astonished rescuers
heard a whimper. At their approach they discovered a woman that lay
sprawled with a spear still protruding from her back. When they rolled
her over they found that the blade had sliced right through her, and
also through the body of her baby, it was buried in the ground. The
mother was cold and dead, but to their amazement they found the child
was still alive. They removed the blade with the greatest care and still
the little one did not perish. She was one of the few who were destined
to survive that night. She would later marry and live until a good old
age.
In the regions of Bloukrans and Moordspruit the sad pioneers
collected the remains of those whom they had loved. Many of their names
were recorded, but some were simply lost upon the vastness of the land.
Together with their servants, the list of those who were butchered in
that single night numbered 525 although it was impossible to be precise
as so many families had been wiped out entirely, and so many had
vanished without a trace.
The number of Zulus who had been killed
was estimated at 500, while an unknown additional number had drowned in
the rivers during the night. There were so many orphan children that the
pioneers scarcely knew what to do with them afterwards. Funerals were
held for ten days afterwards as more and more bodies continued to be
discovered. Many were buried in two mass graves of 7 by 7 metres. On top
of everything, the news was then received that Piet Retief and all his
men had been massacred by Dingane. Not a single one had escaped.
When
it was over, a spirit of great defeat and desolated descended upon the
traumatized survivors. They had lost more than the mind could
comprehend, for besides the many deaths of their loved ones, they had
been robbed of a multitude of cattle which had either been driven off or
been killed and mutilated.
With the death of the popular and
charismatic Piet Retief, they also found themselves leaderless. Anxious
laagers were drawn while false reports came in that more Zulus were on
their way to continue the attacks. Some wanted to return back to the
Colony. Most of the others, however, had now been steeled in their
resolve.
During this dreadful time something occurred which seems
peculiar to what would later become the Boer nation. When desperation
was so deep that even the stoutest hearts would lose their courage, it
was remarkable how women often took a stand.
This was perhaps the
first of these occasions when a group of women addressed their men and
boldly declared: “If you are not man enough, then we as women will
attack the Zulus!”
Their bravery inspired others who similarly
declared that they would “expressly not trek home again, but would
remain here to avenge this great injustice or to perish as their
bothers.” A few turned back, but the vast majority stubbornly remained.
Many felt that under these desperate circumstances, they had only the
most desperate option left to them – and that was to regroup and find
some way to attack their vastly superior enemy.
They could not have
known it, but a dreadful time of siege and fear lay yet ahead for the
shocked survivors. They would still be ravaged by cold and hunger and
deadly disease epidemics while they huddled together and waited out
months of siege and never-ending rains in squelching mud.
This would
become one of the two darkest hours in the history of their budding
nation. Indeed, much more blood was still to flow before the Zulu might
would finally be cracked at Blood River and then be brushed away at
Ulundi. They was destined to become a pioneer generation that was formed
in the crucible of severest trauma. These experiences forged them into
an indescribably tough people with a strength of faith that seemed
unique in all their generations.
Our own Labuschagne trek was there
that night, but they were among the lucky ones. Although no historical
records about their movements have been found, it is believed that they
were laagered at Labuschagnesdrift near Potgieters drift, where in 1899
the Spioenkop battles would be fought. Somehow the Zulus probably just
did not chance to find their laager in that night. We were undeservedly
lucky for from my own people apparently not a single one of them was
lost. Other families, however, were wiped out entirely. Thousands of men
and women never lived because of the lives that were lost that day.
People
still remember the names of Bloukrans and Moordspruit today, and they
know that the names are synonymous with some old tragedy of the past.
What they do not realize, however, is that some of history’s traumas
were so dramatic that people could not talk about them. And because they
could not talk about them, they were not written down to the same
degree of detail as other events were. They were just too terrible to
tell frequently. And because there was less detail, they are not so well
remembered now.
I look outside my window tonight and watch the moon
as silver clouds spill across the sky. The charcoal branches of a tree
reaches knottily, like the bones of some ancient hand that reaches to
pluck it form the sky. It makes the scene alive before my mind eye. And I
think about Natal, for I had known it well enough myself. I have been
where these events had taken place. I have walked across the rolling
plains of the Tugela basin. I have walked with outstretched hands, so
that the long grass passed lovingly through my fingers.
Along those
same very hills my ancestors fought in the desperate modern battles of
the Anglo-Boer War, hardly sixty years later. This land holds so much
meaning. Sometimes I think that the grass grows so beautiful in that
land because it has been fed by so much blood. This is the land of my
fathers. It was the land that they had dreamed about. For many it became
their nightmare. But still, there is an element of loveliness that
continues to this very day.
When the mighty Drakensberg lies
snow-capped beneath a cobalt sky at twilight – when the turpentine grass
is long and golden and smells like pine – and when the Tugela gurgles
like a sleeping child – that’s when the land is so beautiful that it
hurts your eyes and makes them water.
You think about this night and
close your eyes and shudder. But when you open your eyes again the land
is smiling. In the early morning when the sun rises and the gentle
mists lie lazily upon the valleys – the pleading screams and helpless
cries begin to fade. And all you hear is the total silence that whispers
that Africa still loves her children – and that she wishes none of this
had ever happened.
Image 1: "The Battle of Blaukranz" by Charles Bell.
Image
2: Cornelia du Preez, one of the survivors of Bloukrans. The
description of her image in the National Archive reads: Cornelia D du
Preez (tweede huwelik, eerste huwelik met komdt. Pretorius). Geb. 1825
en was teenwoordig met die Moord van Bloukrans. TAB MHG 13267
Image
3: Johanna van der Merwe survived multiple spear wounds during the night
attacks at Bloukrans as a 13 year old girl. In Johanna’s laager, the
women tried to save their children by lying on top of them when the
attackers reached them. The attempt was futile. The attackers dragged
them all out screaming, and cut them all to shreds. They stabbed Johanna
21 times. She was to be the only survivor. Generations later the South
African navy named a submarine after her – the SAS Johanna van der
Merwe. The name was changed to SAS Assegai by the new dispensation.
Do
you think this could be why white people do not trust so easy and still
hate so much? This is in our oldest history books not in such details
and openly available. To read about these real life events you need
access to state archives as these accounts are kept under lock and key.
Have the Boers done anything like this to black people at all?
So
why do farm murders keep escalating and people like Malema en now even a
"respected" Cyral Ramaphosa make such a bad judgement call as land
expropriation without compensation?
The Boer people found their
Identity here in the Southern part of Africa and thus is an indigenous
people and as such should be treated with respect and the same support
as any other indigenous peoples get from the United Nations.
Absolutely
nobody who makes any tipe of deal or negotiation for a piece of land
that by default belongs to the Boer as an indigenous anyway does not
represent the Boervolk/ Boer Nation in any way shape or form.
Any
agreements signed purporting those who entered into it represent my
people the Boervolk or Boer People after 1902 that comes down or boils
down to us working with those who do not have historical claims of
support given to my people will be recognised or accepted in any way
shape or form.
We do not negotiate or sign agreements over our
sovereign territories nor that of the other nations usurped and
destroyed by the British war machine during the Anglo Boer war.
We
ask that all organisations who are doing this to stop this immediately
or stand accused of being complacent to dealing with those who have
historically committed acts of Genocide against the Boervolk/ Boernation
and will also be seen as committing treason against the Boernation /
Boervolk / Boer People.
I can only speak for myself as a Boer.
Those
who support what i am saying please add your name surname and email
address below to show that you agree.and support this NGO to act on
behalf of you in aposing any succession of people claiming to be Boer
people from the rest of what is his and has been recognised over more
that 5 conventions and treaties as the SovereinTerritories of the
Boervolk.
We do not partake and we disapprove of any and all acts
such as these by any and all organisations unless it be a decision made
in a Volks Vergadering. To carry such a command the Boer People will
need an internationally recognised body such as the IEC to hold its own
elections and chose its own leaders to represent it as Boer People and
not a mixed nation of people or Afrikaners as they call themselves.
Also
hereby note that we do not have a Volksraad and have not chosen or
given consent as a people to be included or seen as being Afrikaner
people. Therefore we also openly do not recognise the so called
Boere-Afrikanervolk where in the documentation and founding
documentation no reverence of the Boervolk are cited or made. These
people should immediately disband and cease any and all actions or also
be added to the list of organisations who have become complacent and
committing Genocide against the Boer people stating a Boer an Afrikaner
are one people. We are not and we vehemently reject such notions or
claims. The Afrikaner was never mentioned in any war correspondence
between the Boer leader and the crown during the Anglo Boer war that
lasted until 1902 and was ended with a treaty to restore the Republics
and territories of the Boer people. This treaty still stands to this day
and is the only thing that we base our request of enabling us to lay
charges against the crown of genocide by implementing the Rome Statute
Mr..Thabo Mbekhi ratified on behalf of the ANC led Government. You have
not abided by your agreement by not adding the abilities for our people
to lay charges at a police station of genocide on your MAS system. This
is seen as a blatant contravention of treaty law which is international
law. South Africa can not now want to withdraw from the Rome statute
because it has not complied to its promised commitment and treaty signed
to do so.
Barend Kruger
Boer Nation (people) Heritage Foundation.
NGO-NPO
mytelefoon@gmail.com if you feel like sending us a letter of support instead of adding email adress to your name surname below.
Barend Kruger mytelefoon@gmail.com;
https://www.facebook.com/Boervolk.Erfenis/posts/1502187656556477
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