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+Project Gutenberg Etext Native Life in South Africa, by Plaatje
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+Native Life in South Africa, Before and Since
+the European War and the Boer Rebellion
+
+By Solomon Tshekisho Plaatje
+
+September, 1998 [Etext #1452]
+
+
+Project Gutenberg Etext Native Life in South Africa, by Plaatje
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+
+
+
+
+
+Native Life in South Africa, Before and Since
+the European War and the Boer Rebellion
+By Solomon Tshekisho Plaatje
+
+
+[South African (ethnic Tswana) Editor, Author, Statesman. 1876?-1932.]
+First Secretary-General of the South African Native National Congress
+(forerunner of the ANC), 1912-1917. Author of "Mhudi",
+generally considered the first novel written by a black South African.
+
+
+[The two portraits are not available for this ASCII text. They are titled
+"The Author." and "Mrs. S. T. Plaatje. Without whose loyal co-operation
+this book would never have been written."]
+
+
+
+
+
+[Note on text: Italicized words or phrases are CAPITALIZED.
+Some obvious errors have been corrected (see Notes).]
+
+
+
+
+
+Native Life in South Africa, Before and Since
+the European War and the Boer Rebellion
+
+By Sol. T. Plaatje
+Editor of `Tsala ea Batho', Kimberley, S.A.
+Author of `Sechuana Proverbs and their European Equivalents'
+
+Fourth Edition
+
+
+
+
+Foreword (Native Life in South Africa electronic text):
+
+
+
+Sol Plaatje began work on `Native Life in South Africa' in 1914,
+while on his way to Britain to plead with the Imperial Government
+against the Natives' Land Act of 1913, as part of a deputation
+of the South African Native National Congress. The book was intended
+as a means of reaching the British public with the deputation's message.
+
+The method seemed sound enough -- it was quite similar in form
+to the successful deputation which had pleaded to keep Bechuanaland
+(modern Botswana) under direct Imperial control in 1895.
+But circumstances were different in 1914 -- South Africa
+had been granted self-government, and the First World War began
+shortly after the deputation's arrival in England and distracted all parties.
+This latter event also influenced the final form of the book,
+as Plaatje played to the patriotic sentiment so strong in Britain at the time.
+For all his appeals, Plaatje did not succeed: the Act went on to become
+one of the first steps toward the system of Apartheid. For all that,
+there is sometimes in defeat the seeds of victory -- these troubles
+united black South Africans like nothing before, and Plaatje's successors,
+in the form of the ANC, finally succeeded in the early 1990's.
+
+The Natives' Land Act of 1913, which forbade natives to buy or rent land,
+except in a few small reserves consisting largely of wasteland,
+was finally overturned in 1991.
+
+
+Thanks should be given to Neil Parsons, for his advice on this subject,
+and for being so kind as to research and write the introduction that follows.
+
+
+Alan R. Light
+ July, 1998.
+ Monroe, North Carolina (USA).
+
+
+
+
+
+Introduction, by Neil Parsons
+
+
+
+"Native Life in South Africa" is one of the most remarkable books on Africa,
+by one of the continent's most remarkable writers. It was written
+as a work of impassioned political propaganda, exposing the plight
+of black South Africans under the whites-only government of newly unified
+South Africa. It focuses on the effects of the 1913 Natives' Land Act
+which introduced a uniform system of land segregation between the races.
+It resulted, as Plaatje shows, in the immediate expulsion of blacks,
+as "squatters", from their ancestral lands in the Orange Free State
+now declared "white". But Native Life succeeds in being
+much more than a work of propaganda. It is a vital social document
+which captures the spirit of an age and shows the effects of rural segregation
+on the everyday life of people.
+
+Solomon Tshekeisho Plaatje was born in 1878 in the lands of
+the Tswana-speaking people, south of Mafeking. His origins
+were ordinary enough. What was remarkable was the aptitude he showed
+for education and learning after a few years schooling under the tuition
+of a remarkable liberal German Lutheran missionary, the Rev. Ludorf.
+At the age of sixteen Plaatje (using the Dutch nickname of his grandfather
+as a surname) joined the Post Office as a mail-carrier in Kimberley,
+the diamond city in the north of Cape Colony. He subsequently passed
+the highest clerical examination in the colony, beating every white candidate
+in both Dutch and typing.
+
+From Kimberley the young Plaatje went on to Mafeking, where he was
+one of the key players in the great siege of 1899-1900.
+As magistrate's interpreter he was the vital link between
+the British civil authorities and the African majority
+beleaguered inside the town's military perimeter. Plaatje's diaries
+from this period, published long after his death, are a remarkable record
+both of the siege and of his early prose experimentation --
+mixing languages and idioms, and full of bright humour.
+
+After the war Plaatje became a journalist, editor first
+of one Tswana language newspaper at Mafeking and then of another at Kimberley.
+Like other educated Africans he came out of the war optimistic that
+the British would enfranchise all educated and propertied males
+in the defeated Boer colonies (Transvaal and Orange Free State)
+without regard to race. But in this he, and the others,
+were soon sorely disappointed. The British gave a whites-only franchise
+to the defeated Boers and thus conceded power to a Boer or white Afrikaner
+parliamentary majority in the 1910 Union of South Africa
+which brought together the two Boer colonies with Cape Colony and Natal.
+Clinging to the old but diminished "colour blind" franchise of the Cape,
+Plaatje remained one of the few Africans in South Africa
+with a parliamentary vote.
+
+Plaatje's aggravation with the British government can be seen
+in an unpublished manuscript of 1908-09 titled "Sekgoma -- the Black Dreyfus".
+In this booklet he castigated the British for denying legal rights
+(specifically habeas corpus) to their African subjects
+outside the Cape Colony.
+
+Plaatje became politically active in the "native congress" movement
+which represented the interests of educated and propertied Africans
+all over South Africa. He was the first secretary-general
+of the "South African Native National Congress", founded in 1912
+(which renamed itself as the African National Congress or ANC
+ten years later).
+
+The first piece of major legislation presented to the whites-only
+parliament of South Africa was the Natives' Land Act, eventually passed
+in 1913, which was designed to entrench white power and property rights
+in the countryside -- as well as to solve the "native problem" of
+African peasant farmers working for themselves and denying their labour power
+to white employers.
+
+The main battle ground for the implementation of the new legislation
+was the Orange Free State. White farmers took the cue from the Land Act
+to begin expelling black peasants from their land as "squatters",
+while the police began to rigorously enforce the pass-laws
+which registered the employment of Africans and prescribed
+their residence and movement rights.
+
+The Free State became the cockpit of resistance by the newly formed SANNC.
+Its womens' league demonstrated against pass law enforcement
+in Free State towns. Its national executive sent a delegation to England,
+icluding Plaatje, who set sail in mid-1914. The British crown retained
+ultimate rights of sovereignty over the parliament and government
+of South Africa, with an as yet unexercised power of veto over
+South African legislation in the area of "native affairs".
+
+The delegation received short shrift from the government in London which was,
+after all, more than preoccupied with the coming of the Great War --
+in which it feared for the loyalty of the recently defeated Afrikaners
+and wished in no way to offend them. But, rather than return empty-handed
+like the rest of the SANNC delegation, Plaatje decided
+to stay in England to carry on the fight. He was determined to recuit,
+through writing and lecturing, the liberal and humanitarian establishment
+to his side -- so that it in turn might pressure the British government.
+
+Thus it was that Plaatje resumed work on a manuscript he had begun
+on the ship to England. "Native Life in South Africa".
+The book was published in 1916 by P. S. King in London.
+It was dedicated to Harriette Colenso, doughty woman camnpaigner
+who had inherited from her father, Bishop Colenso, the mantle of advocate
+to the British establishment of the rights of the Zulu nation in South Africa.
+
+While in England Plaatje pursued his interests in language and linguistics
+by collaborating with Professor Daniel Jones of the University of London --
+inventor of the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) and prototype for
+Professor Higgins in Shaw's "Pygmalion" and thus the musical "My Fair Lady".
+In the same year as Native Life was published, 1916, Plaatje published
+two other shorter books which brought together the European languages
+(English, Dutch and German) he loved with the Tswana language.
+"Sechuana Proverbs" was a listing of Tswana proverbs with
+their European equivalents. "A Sechuana Reader" was co-authored with Jones,
+using the IPA for Tswana orthography.
+
+Plaatje returned to South Africa but went once again to England
+after the war's end, to lead a second SANNC delegation keen to make its mark
+on the peace negotiations in 1919. This time Plaatje managed to get
+as far as the prime minister, Lloyd George, "the Welsh wizard".
+Lloyd George was duly impressed with Plaatje and undertook
+to present his case to General Jan Smuts in the South African government,
+a supposedly liberal fellow-traveller. But Smuts, whose notions of liberalism
+were patronizingly segregationist, fobbed off Lloyd George
+with an ingenuous reply.
+
+Disillusioned with the flabby friendship of British liberals,
+Plaatje was increasingly drawn to the pan-Africanism of W. E. B. Du Bois,
+president of the NAACP in the United States. In 1921 Plaatje sailed
+for the United States on a lecture tour that took him through
+half the country. He paid his own way by publishing and selling
+18,000 copies of a booklet titled "The Mote and the Beam: an Epic
+on Sex-Relationship 'twixt Black and White in British South Africa"
+at 25 cents each. In the following year, after Plaatje had left,
+this new edition of "Native Life in South Africa" was published,
+by the NAACP newspaper "The Crisis" edited by Du Bois.
+
+Plaatje returned home to Kimberley to find the SANNC a spent force,
+despite its name change to ANC, overtaken by more radical forces.
+At a time when white power was pushing ahead with an ever more intense
+segregationist programme, based on anti-black legislation,
+Plaatje became a lone voice for old black liberalism. He turned from politics
+and devoted the rest of his life to literature. His passion for Shakespeare
+resulted in mellifluous Tswana translations of five plays
+from "Comedy of Errors" to "Merchant of Venice" and "Julius Caesar".
+His passion for the history of his people, and of his family in particular,
+resulted in a historical novel, "Mhudi (An Epic of South African Native Life
+a Hundred Years Ago)", dedicated to his daughter Olive who had died
+in the influenza epidemic while Plaatje was overseas --
+described in the dedication as "one of the many victims of a settled system".
+
+"Mhudi" was published by the missionary press at Lovedale in 1930,
+in a somewhat bowdlerized version. It has since been republished
+in more pristine form and is today considered not just the first
+but one of the very best novels published by a black South African writer
+in English.
+
+Plaatje lived an extraordinary life but died a largely disappointed man.
+His feats of political journalism had been largely forgotten
+and his creative talents had hardly yet been recognised
+-- except in the confined world of Tswana language readership.
+But today Plaatje is regarded as a South African literary pioneer,
+as a not insignificant political actor in his time,
+and as a cogent commentator on his times. He was an explorer
+in a fascinating world of cultural and linguistic interaction,
+who was in retrospect truly a "renaissance man".
+
+
+Related Reading:
+
+Sol T. Plaatje (ed. John Comaroff with Brian Willan & Andrew Reed),
+"Mafeking Diary: a Black Man's View of a White Man's War",
+Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press & Cambridge Meridor Press, 1990.
+(1st edn. London: Macmillan, 1973, publ. as The Boer War Diary
+of Sol T. Plaatje).
+
+Sol. T. Plaatje (ed. Tim Couzens), "Mhudi", Cape Town: Francolin, 1996;
+definitive edition.
+
+Brian Willan, "Sol Plaatje: South African Nationalist, 1876-1932",
+London: Heinemann, 1984.
+
+Brian Willan (ed. & comp.), "Sol Plaatje: Selected Writings",
+Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press, 1996.
+
+
+
+Neil Parsons is a Professor of History at the University of Botswana.
+He is author of "King Khama, Emperor Joe, and the Great White Queen",
+which details the journey of the Batswana delegation to England of 1895,
+and other books relating to the history of the region.
+
+
+
+
+
+ To
+ Miss Harriette E. Colenso,
+ "Nkosazana Matotoba ka So-Bantu",
+ Daughter of the late Rt. Rev. J. W. Colenso
+ (In his life-time Bishop of Natal and "Father of the Zulus").
+
+ In recognition of her unswerving loyalty to
+ the policy of her late distinguished father
+ and unselfish interest in the welfare of
+ the South African Natives,
+
+ This Book is Dedicated.
+
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+
+
+ (A) Who is the Author?
+ (B) Prologue
+Chapter I A Retrospect
+Chapter II The Grim Struggle between Right and Wrong,
+ and the Latter Carries the Day
+Chapter III The Natives' Land Act
+Chapter IV One Night with the Fugitives
+Chapter V Another Night with the Sufferers
+Chapter VI Our Indebtedness to White Women
+Chapter VII Persecution of Coloured Women in the Orange Free State
+Chapter VIII At Thaba Ncho: A Secretarial Fiasco
+Chapter IX The Fateful 13
+Chapter X Dr. Abdurahman, President of the A.P.O. /
+ Dr. A. Abdurahman, M.P.C.
+Chapter XI The Natives' Land Act in Cape Colony
+Chapter XII The Passing of Cape Ideals
+Chapter XIII Mr. Tengo-Jabavu, the Pioneer Native Pressman
+Chapter XIV The Native Congress and the Union Government
+Chapter XV The Kimberley Congress / The Kimberley Conference
+Chapter XVI The Appeal for Imperial Protection
+Chapter XVII The London Press and the Natives' Land Act
+Chapter XVIII The P.S.A. and Brotherhoods
+Chapter XIX Armed Natives in the South African War
+Chapter XX The South African Races and the European War
+Chapter XXI Coloured People's Help Rejected / The Offer of Assistance
+ by the South African Coloured Races Rejected
+Chapter XXII The South African Boers and the European War
+Chapter XXIII The Boer Rebellion
+Chapter XXIV Piet Grobler
+ Epilogue
+ Report of the Lands Commission
+
+
+
+
+
+ -----------------------------
+
+ Native Life in South Africa
+
+ -----------------------------
+
+
+
+
+
+ (A) Who is the Author?
+
+
+
+After wondering for some time how best to answer this question,
+we decided to reply to it by using one of several personal references
+in our possession. The next puzzle was: "Which one?"
+We carefully examined each, but could not strike a happy decision
+until some one who entered the room happened to make use
+of the familiar phrase: "The long and the short of it".
+That phrase solved the difficulty for us, and we at once made up our mind
+to use two of these references, namely, the shortest and the longest.
+The first one is from His Royal Highness the Duke of Connaught,
+and the second takes the form of a leading article in the `Pretoria News'.
+
+==
+ Central South African Railways,
+ High Commissioner's Train.
+
+On February 1, 1906, Mr. Sol Plaatje acted as Interpreter
+when I visited the Barolong Native Stadt at Mafeking, and performed his duty
+to my entire satisfaction.
+
+ (Signed) Arthur.
+Mafeking,
+ February 1, 1906.
+==
+
+==
+We commence to-day an experiment which will prove a success
+if only we can persuade the more rabid negrophobes to adopt
+a moderate and sensible attitude. We publish the first of a series of letters
+from a native correspondent of considerable education and ability,
+his name is Solomon Tshekisho Plaatje. Mr. Plaatje was born
+in the district of Boshof, his parents being Barolongs,
+coming originally from Thaba Ncho, and trekking eventually to Mafeking.
+He attended the Lutheran Mission School at the Pniel Mission Station,
+near Barkly West, as a boy, under the Rev. G. E. Westphal;
+and at thirteen years he passed the fourth standard, which was as far
+as the school could take him. For the next three years he acted
+as pupil-teacher, receiving private lessons from the Rev. and Mrs. Westphal.
+At the age of sixteen he joined the Cape Government service as letter-carrier
+in the Kimberley Post Office. There he studied languages in his spare time,
+and passed the Cape Civil Service examination in typewriting,
+Dutch and native languages, heading the list of successful candidates
+in each subject. Shortly before the war he was transferred to Mafeking
+as interpreter, and during the siege was appointed Dutch interpreter
+to the Court of Summary Jurisdiction, presided over by Lord Edward Cecil.
+The Magistrate's clerks having taken up arms, Mr. Plaatje became
+confidential clerk to Mr. C. G. H. Bell, who administered Native affairs
+during the siege. Mr. Plaatje drew up weekly reports on the Native situation,
+which were greatly valued by the military authorities,
+and in a letter written to a friend asserted with some sense of humour
+that "this arrangement was so satisfactory that Mr. Bell was created a C.M.G.
+at the end of the siege."
+
+Had it not been for the colour bar, Mr. Plaatje, in all probability,
+would have been holding an important position in the Department
+of Native Affairs; as it was, he entered the ranks of journalism
+as Editor, in the first place, of `Koranta ea Becoana', a weekly paper
+in English and Sechuana, which was financed by the Chief Silas Molema
+and existed for seven years very successfully. At the present moment
+Mr. Plaatje is Editor of the `Tsala ea Batho' (The People's Friend)
+at Kimberley, which is owned by a native syndicate, having its headquarters
+in the Free State. Mr. Plaatje has acted as interpreter
+for many distinguished visitors to South Africa, and holds autograph letters
+from the Duke of Connaught, Mr. Chamberlain, and other notabilities.
+He visited Mr. Abraham Fischer quite lately and obtained from him
+a promise to introduce a Bill into Parliament ameliorating the position
+of the Natives of the Orange River Colony, who are debarred by law
+from receiving titles to landed property. Mr. Plaatje's articles
+on native affairs have been marked by the robust common sense and moderation
+so characteristic of Mr. Booker Washington. He realizes
+the great debt which the Natives owe to the men who brought
+civilization to South Africa. He is no agitator or firebrand,
+no stirrer-up of bad feeling between black and white. He accepts
+the position which the Natives occupy to-day in the body politic
+as the natural result of their lack of education and civilization.
+He is devoted to his own people, and notes with ever-increasing regret
+the lack of understanding and knowledge of those people,
+which is so palpable in the vast majority of the letters and leading articles
+written on the native question. As an educated Native with liberal ideas
+he rather resents the power and authority of the uneducated native chiefs
+who govern by virtue of their birth alone, and he writes and speaks
+for an entirely new school of native thought. The opinion of such a man
+ought to carry weight when native affairs are being discussed.
+We have fallen into the habit of discussing and legislating
+for the Native without ever stopping for one moment to consider
+what the Native himself thinks. No one but a fool will deny
+the importance of knowing what the Native thinks before we legislate for him.
+It is in the hope of enlightening an otherwise barren controversy
+that we shall publish from time to time Mr. Plaatje's letters,
+commending them always to the more thoughtful and practical of our readers.
+-- `Pretoria News', September, 1910.
+==
+
+(The writer of this appreciation, the Editor of the Pretoria evening paper,
+was Reuter's war correspondent in the siege of Mafeking.)
+
+
+
+
+ (B) Prologue
+
+
+
+We have often read books, written by well-known scholars,
+who disavow, on behalf of their works, any claim to literary perfection.
+How much more necessary, then, that a South African native workingman,
+who has never received any secondary training, should in attempting authorship
+disclaim, on behalf of his work, any title to literary merit.
+Mine is but a sincere narrative of a melancholy situation,
+in which, with all its shortcomings, I have endeavoured to describe
+the difficulties of the South African Natives under a very strange law,
+so as most readily to be understood by the sympathetic reader.
+
+The information contained in the following chapters is the result
+of personal observations made by the author in certain districts of
+the Transvaal, Orange "Free" State and the Province of the Cape of Good Hope.
+In pursuance of this private inquiry, I reached Lady Brand
+early in September, 1913, when, my financial resources being exhausted,
+I decided to drop the inquiry and return home. But my friend,
+Mr. W. Z. Fenyang, of the farm Rietfontein, in the "Free" State,
+offered to convey me to the South of Moroka district,
+where I saw much of the trouble, and further, he paid my railway fare
+from Thaba Ncho back to Kimberley.
+
+In the following November, it was felt that as Mr. Saul Msane,
+the organizer for the South African Native National Congress,
+was touring the eastern districts of the Transvaal,
+and Mr. Dube, the President, was touring the northern districts and Natal,
+and as the finances of the Congress did not permit an additional traveller,
+no information would be forthcoming in regard to the operation
+of the mischievous Act in the Cape Province. So Mr. J. M. Nyokong,
+of the farm Maseru, offered to bear part of the expenses if I would undertake
+a visit to the Cape. I must add that beyond spending six weeks
+on the tour to the Cape, the visit did not cost me much,
+for Mr. W. D. Soga, of King Williamstown, very generously
+supplemented Mr. Nyokong's offer and accompanied me on a part of the journey.
+
+Besides the information received and the hospitality enjoyed
+from these and other friends, the author is indebted, for further information,
+to Mr. Attorney Msimang, of Johannesburg. Mr. Msimang toured
+some of the Districts, compiled a list of some of the sufferers
+from the Natives' Land Act, and learnt the circumstances of their eviction.
+His list, however, is not full, its compilation having been undertaken
+in May, 1914, when the main exodus of the evicted tenants
+to the cities and Protectorates had already taken place,
+and when eyewitnesses of the evils of the Act had already fled the country.
+But it is useful in showing that the persecution is still continuing,
+for, according to this list, a good many families were evicted
+a year after the Act was enforced, and many more were at that time
+under notice to quit. Mr. Msimang, modestly states in an explanatory note,
+that his pamphlet contains "comparatively few instances
+of actual cases of hardship under the Natives' Land Act, 1913,
+to vindicate the leaders of the South African Native National Congress
+from the gross imputation, by the Native Affairs Department,
+that they make general allegations of hardships without producing
+any specific cases that can bear examination." Mr. Msimang,
+who took a number of sworn statements from the sufferers,
+adds that "in Natal, for example, all of these instances
+have been reported to the Magistrates and the Chief Native Commissioner.
+Every time they are told to find themselves other places,
+or remain where they are under labour conditions. At Peters and Colworth,
+seventy-nine and a hundred families respectively are being ejected
+by the Government itself without providing land for them."
+
+Some readers may perhaps think that I have taken the Colonial Parliament
+rather severely to task. But to any reader who holds
+with Bacon, that "the pencil hath laboured more in describing
+the afflictions of Job than the felicities of Solomon," I would say:
+"Do, if we dare make the request, and place yourself in our shoes."
+If, after a proper declaration of war, you found your kinsmen
+driven from pillar to post in the manner that the South African Natives
+have been harried and scurried by Act No. 27 of 1913, you would,
+though aware that it is part of the fortunes of war, find it difficult
+to suppress your hatred of the enemy. Similarly, if you see
+your countrymen and countrywomen driven from home, their homes broken up,
+with no hopes of redress, on the mandate of a Government
+to which they had loyally paid taxation without representation --
+driven from their homes, because they do not want to become servants;
+and when you know that half of these homeless ones have perforce
+submitted to the conditions and accepted service on terms
+that are unprofitable to themselves; if you remember
+that more would have submitted but for the fact that no master has any use
+for a servant with forty head of cattle, or a hundred or more sheep;
+and if you further bear in mind that many landowners are anxious
+to live at peace with, and to keep your people as tenants,
+but that they are debarred from doing so by your Government
+which threatens them with a fine of 100 Pounds or six months' imprisonment,
+you would, I think, likewise find it very difficult to maintain a level head
+or wield a temperate pen.
+
+For instance, let us say, the London County Council decrees
+that no man shall rent a room, or hire a house, in the City of London
+unless he be a servant in the employ of the landlord, adding that
+there shall be a fine of one hundred pounds on any one who attempts
+to sell a house to a non-householder; imagine such a thing and its effects,
+then you have some approach to an accurate picture of the operation
+of the South African Natives' Land Act of 1913. In conclusion,
+let me ask the reader's support in our campaign for the repeal of such a law,
+and in making this request I pray that none of my readers may live
+to find themselves in a position so intolerable.
+
+When the narrative of this book up to Chapter XVIII was completed,
+it was felt that an account of life in South Africa,
+without a reference to the war or the rebellion would be
+but a story half told, and so Chapters XIX-XXV were added.
+It will be observed that Chapters XX-XXIV, unlike the rest of the book,
+are not the result of the writer's own observations.
+The writer is indebted for much of the information in these five chapters
+to the Native Press and some Dutch newspapers which his devoted wife
+posted to him with every mail. These papers have been
+a source of useful information. Of the Dutch newspapers
+special thanks are due to `Het Westen' of Potchefstroom,
+which has since March 1915 changed its name to `Het Volksblad'.
+Most of the Dutch journals, especially in the northern Provinces, take up
+the views of English-speaking Dutch townsmen (solicitors and Bank clerks),
+and publish them as the opinion of the South African Dutch.
+`Het Westen' (now `Het Volksblad'), on the other hand,
+interprets the Dutch view, sound, bad or indifferent, exactly as we ourselves
+have heard it expressed by Dutchmen at their own farms.
+
+Translations of the Tipperary Chorus into some of the languages
+which are spoken by the white and black inhabitants of South Africa
+have been used here and there as mottoes; and as this book is a plea
+in the main for help against the "South African war of extermination",
+it is hoped that admirers of Tommy Atkins will sympathize with
+the coloured sufferers, who also sing Tommy Atkins' war songs.
+
+This appeal is not on behalf of the naked hordes of cannibals
+who are represented in fantastic pictures displayed
+in the shop-windows in Europe, most of them imaginary;
+but it is on behalf of five million loyal British subjects who shoulder
+"the black man's burden" every day, doing so without looking forward
+to any decoration or thanks. "The black man's burden" includes
+the faithful performance of all the unskilled and least paying labour
+in South Africa, the payment of direct taxation to the various Municipalities,
+at the rate of from 1s. to 5s. per mensum per capita (to develop and beautify
+the white quarters of the towns while the black quarters remain unattended)
+besides taxes to the Provincial and Central Government, varying from
+12s. to 3 Pounds 12s. per annum, for the maintenance of Government Schools
+from which native children are excluded. In addition to these
+native duties and taxes, it is also part of "the black man's burden" to pay
+all duties levied from the favoured race. With the increasing difficulty
+of finding openings to earn the money for paying these multifarious taxes,
+the dumb pack-ox, being inarticulate in the Councils of State,
+has no means of making known to its "keeper" that the burden
+is straining its back to breaking point.
+
+When Sir John French appealed to the British people for more shells
+during Easter week, the Governor-General of South Africa
+addressing a fashionable crowd at the City Hall, Johannesburg,
+most of whom had never seen the mouth of a mine, congratulated them
+on the fact that "under the strain of war and rebellion
+the gold industry had been maintained at full pitch,"
+and he added that "every ounce of gold was worth many shells
+to the Allies." But His Excellency had not a word of encouragement
+for the 200,000 subterranean heroes who by day and by night,
+for a mere pittance, lay down their limbs and their lives
+to the familiar "fall of rock" and who, at deep levels ranging from
+1,000 feet to 1,000 yards in the bowels of the earth, sacrifice their lungs
+to the rock dust which develops miners' phthisis and pneumonia --
+poor reward, but a sacrifice that enables the world's richest gold mines,
+in the Johannesburg area alone, to maintain the credit of the Empire
+with a weekly output of 750,000 Pounds worth of raw gold.
+Surely the appeal of chattels who render service of such great value
+deserves the attention of the British people.
+
+Finally, I would say as Professor Du Bois says in his book
+`The Souls of Black Folk', on the relations between
+the sons of master and man, "I have not glossed over matters
+for policy's sake, for I fear we have already gone too far
+in that sort of thing. On the other hand I have sincerely sought
+to let no unfair exaggerations creep in. I do not doubt
+that in some communities conditions are better than those I have indicated;
+while I am no less certain that in other communities they are far worse."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter I A Retrospect
+
+ I am Black, but comely, O ye daughters of Jerusalem, as the tents of Kedar,
+ as the curtains of Solomon.
+ Look not upon me because I am black, because the sun hath looked upon me:
+ my mother's children were angry with me; they made me
+ the keeper of the vineyards; but mine own vineyard have I not kept.
+ The Song of Songs.
+
+
+
+Awaking on Friday morning, June 20, 1913, the South African Native
+found himself, not actually a slave, but a pariah in the land of his birth.
+
+The 4,500,000 black South Africans are domiciled as follows:
+One and three-quarter millions in Locations and Reserves,
+over half a million within municipalities or in urban areas,
+and nearly a million as squatters on farms owned by Europeans.
+The remainder are employed either on the public roads or railway lines,
+or as servants by European farmers, qualifying, that is,
+by hard work and saving to start farming on their own account.
+
+A squatter in South Africa is a native who owns some livestock and,
+having no land of his own, hires a farm or grazing and ploughing rights
+from a landowner, to raise grain for his own use and feed his stock.
+Hence, these squatters are hit very hard by an Act which
+passed both Houses of Parliament during the session of 1913,
+received the signature of the Governor-General on June 16,
+was gazetted on June 19, and forthwith came into operation.
+It may be here mentioned that on that day Lord Gladstone signed no fewer
+than sixteen new Acts of Parliament -- some of them being rather voluminous --
+while three days earlier, His Excellency signed another batch of eight,
+of which the bulk was beyond the capability of any mortal to read and digest
+in four days.
+
+But the great revolutionary change thus wrought by a single stroke of the pen,
+in the condition of the Native, was not realized by him
+until about the end of June. As a rule many farm tenancies expire
+at the end of the half-year, so that in June, 1913, not knowing
+that it was impracticable to make fresh contracts, some Natives
+unwittingly went to search for new places of abode, which some farmers,
+ignorant of the law, quite as unwittingly accorded them.
+It was only when they went to register the new tenancies
+that the law officers of the Crown laid bare the cruel fact
+that to provide a landless Native with accommodation was forbidden
+under a penalty of 100 Pounds, or six months' imprisonment.
+Then only was the situation realized.
+
+Other Natives who had taken up fresh places on European farms
+under verbal contracts, which needed no registration, actually founded
+new homes in spite of the law, neither the white farmer nor the native tenant
+being aware of the serious penalties they were exposed to
+by their verbal contracts.
+
+In justice to the Government, it must be stated that no police officers
+scoured the country in search of lawbreakers, to prosecute them
+under this law. Had this been done, many 100 Pound cheques
+would have passed into the Government coffers during that black July,
+the first month after Lord Gladstone affixed his signature
+to the Natives' Land Act, No. 27 of 1913.
+
+The complication of this cruel law is made manifest by the fact
+that it was found necessary for a high officer of the Government
+to tour the Provinces soon after the Act came into force,
+with the object of "teaching" Magistrates how to administer it.
+A Congress of Magistrates -- a most unusual thing -- was also called
+in Pretoria to find a way for carrying out the King's writ
+in the face of the difficulties arising from this tangle of the Act.
+We may add that nearly all white lawyers in South Africa,
+to whom we spoke about this measure, had either not seen the Act at all,
+or had not read it carefully, so that in both cases they could not tell
+exactly for whose benefit it had been passed. The study of this law
+required a much longer time than the lawyers, unless specially briefed,
+could devote to it, so that they hardly knew what all the trouble was about.
+It was the Native in the four Provinces who knew all about it,
+for he had not read it in books but had himself been through its mill,
+which like an automatic machine ground him relentlessly
+since the end of the month of June. Not the least but one of
+the cruellest and most ironical phases -- and nearly every clause of this Act
+teems with irony -- is the Schedule or appendix giving the so-called
+Scheduled Native Areas; and what are these "Scheduled Native Areas"?
+
+They are the Native Locations which were reserved for the exclusive use
+of certain native clans. They are inalienable and cannot be bought or sold,
+yet the Act says that in these "Scheduled Native Areas" Natives only
+may buy land. The areas being inalienable, not even members of the clans,
+for whose benefit the locations are held in trust, can buy land therein.
+The areas could only be sold if the whole clan rebelled; in that case
+the location would be confiscated. But as long as the clans of the location
+remain loyal to the Government, nobody can buy any land within these areas.
+Under the respective charters of these areas, not even a member of the clan
+can get a separate title as owner in an area -- let alone a native outsider
+who had grown up among white people and done all his farming
+on white man's land.
+
+If we exclude the arid tracts of Bechuanaland, these Locations
+appear to have been granted on such a small scale that each of them
+got so overcrowded that much of the population had to go out and settle
+on the farms of white farmers through lack of space in the Locations.
+Yet a majority of the legislators, although well aware of all
+these limitations, and without remedying any of them, legislate,
+shall we say, "with its tongue in its cheek" that only Natives may buy land
+in Native Locations.
+
+Again, the Locations form but one-eighteenth of the total area of the Union.
+Theoretically, then, the 4,500,000 Natives may "buy" land in only
+one-eighteenth part of the Union, leaving the remaining seventeen parts
+for the one million whites. It is moreover true that, numerically,
+the Act was passed by the consent of a majority of both Houses of Parliament,
+but it is equally true that it was steam-rolled into the statute book
+against the bitterest opposition of the best brains of both Houses.
+A most curious aspect of this singular law is that even the Minister,
+since deceased, who introduced it, subsequently declared himself against it,
+adding that he only forced it through in order to stave off something worse.
+Indeed, it is correct to say that Mr. Sauer, who introduced the Bill,
+spoke against it repeatedly in the House; he deleted the milder provisions,
+inserted more drastic amendments, spoke repeatedly against
+his own amendments, then in conclusion he would combat
+his own arguments by calling the ministerial steam-roller
+to support the Government and vote for the drastic amendments.
+The only explanation of the puzzle constituted as such by these
+"hot-and-cold" methods is that Mr. Sauer was legislating for an electorate,
+at the expense of another section of the population which was without
+direct representation in Parliament. None of the non-European races
+in the Provinces of Natal, Transvaal and the "Free" State
+can exercise the franchise. They have no say in the selection of members
+for the Union Parliament. That right is only limited to white men,
+so that a large number of the members of Parliament who voted for this measure
+have no responsibility towards the black races.
+
+Before reproducing this tyrannical enactment it would perhaps be well
+to recapitulate briefly the influences that led up to it.
+When the Union of the South African Colonies became
+an accomplished fact, a dread was expressed by ex-Republicans
+that the liberal native policy of the Cape would supersede
+the repressive policy of the old Republics, and they lost no time
+in taking definite steps to force down the throats of the Union Legislature,
+as it were, laws which the Dutch Presidents of pre-war days,
+with the British suzerainty over their heads, did not dare enforce
+against the Native people then under them. With the formation of the Union,
+the Imperial Government, for reasons which have never been
+satisfactorily explained, unreservedly handed over the Natives
+to the colonists, and these colonists, as a rule, are dominated
+by the Dutch Republican spirit. Thus the suzerainty of Great Britain,
+which under the reign of Her late Majesty Victoria, of blessed memory,
+was the Natives' only bulwark, has now apparently been withdrawn or relaxed,
+and the Republicans, like a lot of bloodhounds long held in the leash,
+use the free hand given by the Imperial Government not only to guard against
+a possible supersession of Cape ideals of toleration, but to effectively
+extend throughout the Union the drastic native policy pursued by the Province
+which is misnamed "Free" State, and enforce it with the utmost rigour.
+
+During the first year of the Union, it would seem that General Botha
+made an honest attempt to live up to his London promises,
+that are mentioned by Mr. Merriman in his speech (reproduced elsewhere)
+on the second reading of the Bill in Parliament. It would seem
+that General Botha endeavoured to allay British apprehensions and concern
+for the welfare of the Native population. In pursuance of this policy
+General Botha won the approbation of all Natives by appointing Hon. H. Burton,
+a Cape Minister, to the portfolio of Native Affairs. That the appointment
+was a happy one, from the native point of view, became manifest
+when Mr. Burton signalized the ushering in of Union, by releasing
+Chief Dinizulu-ka-Cetywayo, who at that time was undergoing
+a sentence of imprisonment imposed by the Natal Supreme Court,
+and by the restoration to Dinizulu of his pension of 500 Pounds a year.
+Also, in deference to the wishes of the Native Congress,
+Mr. Burton abrogated two particularly obnoxious Natal measures,
+one legalizing the "Sibalo" system of forced labour, the other prohibiting
+public meetings by Natives without the consent of the Government.
+These abrogations placed the Natives of Natal in almost the same position
+as the Cape Natives though without giving them the franchise.
+So, too, when a drastic Squatters' Bill was gazetted early in 1912,
+and the recently formed Native National Congress sent a deputation
+to interview Mr. Burton in Capetown; after hearing the deputation,
+he graciously consented to withdraw the proposed measure,
+pending the allotment of new Locations in which Natives evicted
+by such a measure could find an asylum. In further deference
+to the representations of the Native Congress, in which they were supported
+by Senators the Hon. W. P. Schreiner, Colonel Stanford, and Mr. Krogh,
+the Union Government gazetted another Bill in January, 1911,
+to amend an anomaly which, at that time, was peculiar to the "Free" State:
+an anomaly under which a Native can neither purchase nor lease land,
+and native landowners in the "Free" State could only sell their land
+to the white people.
+
+The gazetted Bill proposed to legalize only in one district
+of the Orange "Free" State the sale of landed property by a Native
+to another Native as well as to a white man, but it did not propose
+to enable Natives to buy land from white men. The object of the Bill
+was to remove a hardship, mentioned elsewhere in this sketch,
+by which a "Free" State Native was by law debarred from inheriting
+landed property left to him under his uncle's will. But against
+such small attempts at reform, proposed or carried out by the Union Government
+in the interest of the Natives, granted in small instalments of a teaspoonful
+at a time -- reforms dictated solely by feelings of justice and equity --
+ex-Republicans were furious.
+
+From platform, Press, and pulpit it was suggested that
+General Botha's administration was too pro-English and needed overhauling.
+The Dutch peasants along the countryside were inflamed by hearing
+that their gallant leader desired to Anglicize the country.
+Nothing was more repellent to the ideas of the backveld Dutch,
+and so at small meetings in the country districts resolutions were passed
+stating that the Botha administration had outlived its usefulness.
+These resolutions reaching the Press from day to day
+had the effect of stirring up the Dutch voters against the Ministry,
+and particularly against the head. At this time General Botha's sound policy
+began to weaken. He transferred Hon. H. Burton, first Minister of Natives,
+to the portfolio of Railways and Harbours, and appointed General Hertzog,
+of all people in the world, to the portfolio of Native Affairs.
+
+The good-humoured indulgence of some Dutch and English farmers towards
+their native squatters, and the affectionate loyalty of some of these
+native squatters in return, will cause a keen observer, arriving at
+a South African farm, to be lost in admiration for this mutual good feeling.
+He will wonder as to the meaning of the fabled bugbear anent the alleged
+struggle between white and black, which in reality appears to exist
+only in the fertile brain of the politician. Thus let the new arrival go
+to one of the farms in the Bethlehem or Harrismith Districts for example,
+and see how willingly the Native toils in the fields; see him
+gathering in his crops and handing over the white farmer's share of the crop
+to the owner of the land; watch the farmer receiving his tribute
+from the native tenants, and see him deliver the first prize
+to the native tenant who raised the largest crop during that season;
+let him also see both the Natives and the landowning white farmers
+following to perfection the give-and-take policy of "live and let live",
+and he will conclude that it would be gross sacrilege to attempt to disturb
+such harmonious relations between these people of different races and colours.
+But with a ruthless hand the Natives' Land Act has succeeded
+in remorselessly destroying those happy relations.
+
+First of all, General Hertzog, the new Minister of Native Affairs,
+travelled up and down the country lecturing farmers on their folly
+in letting ground to the Natives; the racial extremists of his party
+hailed him as the right man for the post, for, as his conduct showed them,
+he would soon "fix up" the Natives. At one or two places
+he was actually welcomed as the future Prime Minister of the Union.
+On the other hand, General Botha, who at that time seemed
+to have become visibly timid, endeavoured to ingratiate himself
+with his discontented supporters by joining his lieutenant
+in travelling to and fro, denouncing the Dutch farmers for not
+expelling the Natives from their farms and replacing them with poor whites.
+This became a regular Ministerial campaign against the Natives,
+so that it seemed clear that if any Native could still find a place
+in the land, it was not due to the action of the Government.
+In his campaign the Premier said other unhappy things which were
+diametrically opposed to his London speeches of two years before;
+and while the Dutch colonists railed at him for trying to Anglicize
+the country, English speakers and writers justly accused him of speaking
+with two voices; cartoonists, too, caricatured him as having two heads --
+one, they said, for London, and the second one for South Africa.
+
+The uncertain tenure by which Englishmen in the public service
+held their posts became the subject of debates in the Union Parliament,
+and the employment of Government servants of colour was decidedly precarious.
+They were swept out of the Railway and Postal Service
+with a strong racial broom, in order to make room for poor whites,
+mainly of Dutch descent. Concession after concession
+was wrung from the Government by fanatical Dutch postulants for office,
+for Government doles and other favours, who, like the daughters of
+the horse-leech in the Proverbs of Solomon, continually cried, "Give, give."
+By these events we had clearly turned the corner and were pacing backwards
+to pre-Union days, going back, back, and still further backward,
+to the conditions which prevailed in the old Republics,
+and (if a check is not applied) we shall steadily drift back
+to the days of the old Dutch East Indian administration.
+
+The Bill which proposed to ameliorate the "Free" State cruelty,
+to which reference has been made above, was dropped like a hot potato.
+Ministers made some wild and undignified speeches, of which
+the following spicy extract, from a speech by the Rt. Hon. Abraham Fischer
+to his constituents at Bethlehem, is a typical sample --
+
+"What is it you want?" he asked. "We have passed all the coolie* laws
+and we have passed all the Kafir laws. The `Free' State
+has been safeguarded and all her colour laws have been adopted by Parliament.
+What more can the Government do for you?" And so the Union ship
+in this reactionary sea sailed on and on and on, until she struck an iceberg
+-- the sudden dismissal of General Hertzog.
+
+--
+* A contemptuous South African term for British Indians.
+--
+
+To the bitter sorrow of his admirers, General Hertzog,
+who is the fearless exponent of Dutch ideals, was relieved of
+his portfolios of Justice and Native Affairs -- it was whispered
+as a result of a suggestion from London; and then the Dutch extremists,
+in consequence of their favourite's dismissal, gave vent to their anger
+in the most disagreeable manner. One could infer from their platform speeches
+that, from their point of view, scarcely any one else had any rights
+in South Africa, and least of all the man with a black skin.
+
+In the face of this, the Government's timidity was almost unendurable.
+They played up to the desires of the racial extremists, with the result that
+a deadlock overtook the administration. Violent laws like the Immigration Law
+(against British Indians and alien Asiatics) and the Natives' Land
+were indecently hurried through Parliament to allay
+the susceptibilities of "Free" State Republicans. No Minister found time
+to undertake such useful legislation as the Coloured People's Occupation Bill,
+the Native Disputes Bill, the Marriage Bill, the University Bill, etc., etc.
+An apology was demanded from the High Commissioner in London
+for delivering himself of sentiments which were felt to be too British
+for the palates of his Dutch employers in South Africa, and the Prime Minister
+had almost to apologize for having at times so far forgotten himself
+as to act more like a Crown Minister than a simple Africander.
+"Free" State demands became so persistent that Ministers seemed
+to have forgotten the assurances they gave His Majesty's Government in London
+regarding the safety of His Majesty's coloured subjects within the Union.
+They trampled under foot their own election pledges, made during
+the first Union General Election, guaranteeing justice and fair treatment
+to the law-abiding Natives.
+
+The campaign, to compass the elimination of the blacks
+from the farms, was not at all popular with landowners,
+who made huge profits out of the renting of their farms to Natives.
+Platform speakers and newspaper writers coined an opprobrious phrase
+which designated this letting of farms to Natives as "Kafir-farming",
+and attempted to prove that it was almost as immoral as "baby-farming".
+But landowners pocketed the annual rents, and showed no inclination
+to substitute the less industrious "poor whites" for the more
+industrious Natives. Old Baas M----, a typical Dutch landowner
+of the "Free" State, having collected his share of the crop of 1912,
+addressing a few words of encouragement to his native tenants,
+on the subject of expelling the blacks from the farms, said in the Taal:
+"How dare any number of men, wearing tall hats and frock coats,
+living in Capetown hotels at the expense of other men, order me
+to evict my Natives? This is my ground; it cost my money, not Parliament's,
+and I will see them banged (barst) before I do it."
+
+It then became evident that the authority of Parliament
+would have to be sought to compel the obstinate landowners to
+get rid of their Natives. And the compliance of Parliament with this demand
+was the greatest Ministerial surrender to the Republican malcontents,
+resulting in the introduction and passage of the Natives' Land Act of 1913,
+inasmuch as the Act decreed, in the name of His Majesty the King,
+that pending the adoption of a report to be made by a commission,
+somewhere in the dim and unknown future, it shall be unlawful
+for Natives to buy or lease land, except in scheduled native areas.
+And under severe pains and penalties they were to be deprived
+of the bare human rights of living on the land, except as servants
+in the employ of the whites -- rights which were never seriously challenged
+under the Republican regime, no matter how politicians raved
+against the Natives.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter II The Grim Struggle between Right and Wrong,
+ and the Latter Carries the Day
+
+ Woe unto them that decree unrighteous decrees, and that write grievousness
+ which they have prescribed;
+ To turn aside the needy from judgment, and to take away the fruit
+ from the poor of my people, that widows may be their prey,
+ and that they may rob the fatherless.
+ Isaiah.
+
+
+
+On February 18, 1913, General L. Lemmer, member for Marico, Transvaal,
+asked the Minister of Lands: -- (a) How many farms or portions of farms
+in the Transvaal Province have during the last three years been registered
+in the names of Natives; (b) what is the extent of the land so registered;
+and (c) how much was paid for it?
+
+The Minister of Lands replied: (a) 78 farms; (b) 144,416 morgen;
+and (c) 94,907 Pounds.
+
+Some very disturbing elements suggest themselves in this question
+and in its prompt answer. A question of the kind should have taken
+some time to reach Pretoria from the seat of Parliament; more time
+to search for and compile the necessary information, and further time
+to get the answer to the Table of the House of Assembly in Capetown.
+For instance, on March 11 Mr. T. L. Schreiner called for an explanation
+in connexion with the same return. He had to ask again on April 1,
+the answer in each instance being that the required "information
+had been telegraphed for and would be laid on the table when it is available"
+(vide Union Hansard, pp. 777 and 1,175). It was only on May 13
+-- two months and two days after -- that an answer to Mr. Schreiner's
+question of March 11 could be furnished.
+
+Again, on May 20 Mr. Schreiner called for a similar return,
+embracing the four Provinces of the Union.* If it were so easy
+for General Lemmer to get a reply in regard to the Transvaal,
+where most of the registration took place, it should have been
+relatively more easy to add the information from the Cape and Natal,
+since no registration could have taken place in the Orange "Free" State,
+where Natives cannot buy land. But strange to say, all that Mr. Schreiner
+could get out of the Minister was a promise to furnish a reply
+when it is available, and it does not appear to be on record
+that it was ever furnished during that session. Therefore, a Native
+cannot be blamed for suspecting that when General Lemmer asked his question,
+the return was "cut and dried" and available to be laid on the table
+as soon as it was called for.
+
+--
+* It does not appear to have occurred to any one to call for a return
+ showing transfers of land from blacks to whites.
+--
+
+Another significant point is that the questioner did not want to know
+the extent of land bought by Natives, but of the land
+"registered in their names" during the period; and Mr. Schreiner
+was able to show later in the session by an analysis of the return
+that it mainly comprised land awarded to Native tribes
+by the Republican Government, some of it when they conquered the country.
+They include farms bought or awarded to Natives as long ago
+as the early 60's and 70's, but the owners were not able to obtain titles
+as the late Republican Government did not allow Natives to register land
+in their own names. They had been held in trust for them
+by European friends or missionaries, and it was only during
+the last three years that the owners claimed direct titles,
+which right was restored to them since the British occupation.
+
+But the Lemmer Return did its fell work. It scared every white man
+in the country. They got alarmed to hear that Natives had
+during the past three (!) years "bought" land to the extent of 50,000 morgen
+per annum.
+
+Thanks to Mr. Schreiner's questions, however, the misleading features
+of the statistical scarecrow were revealed -- but, unfortunately too late.
+
+
+ Origin of the Trouble
+
+On February 28, 1913, Mr. J. G. Keyter (a "Free" State member) moved:
+That the Government be requested to submit to the House
+DURING THE PRESENT SESSION a general Pass and Squatters Bill
+to prohibit coloured people (1) from WANDERING ABOUT WITHOUT A PROPER PASS;
+(2) from SQUATTING ON FARMS; and (3) from SOWING ON THE SHARE SYSTEM.
+
+Mr. T. P. Brain,* another "Free" Stater, seconded the motion.
+
+--
+* This gentleman died during 1913.
+--
+
+Mr. P. G. W. Grobler,* a Transvaaler, moved (as an amendment)
+to add at the end of the motion: "and further TO TAKE EFFECTIVE MEASURES
+TO RESTRICT THE PURCHASE AND LEASE OF LAND BY NATIVES."
+
+--
+* Mr. Grobler forfeited his seat when he was convicted of complicity
+ in the recent rebellion.
+--
+
+Mr. Schreiner strongly protested against both the motion and the amendment.
+
+The Minister for Native Affairs* spoke somewhat against Mr. Keyter's motion
+but promised to comply with Mr. Grobler's amendment, which promise he redeemed
+by introducing a Natives' Land Bill.
+
+--
+* Hon. J. W. Sauer, Minister of Native Affairs, died a month after the Bill
+ became law.
+--
+
+Before the Bill was introduced, the Minister made the unprecedented
+announcement that the Governor-General had given his assurance
+that the Royal Assent would not be withheld from the Natives' Land Bill.
+Section 65 of the South African Constitution provides that the King
+may disallow an Act of Parliament within twelve months
+after the Governor-General signed it. And the abrogation of the Constitution,
+as far as this Bill is concerned, literally gave licence
+to the political libertines of South Africa; as, being thus freed
+from all legislative restraint, they wasted no further time
+listening to such trifles as reason and argument.
+
+The following are extracts from the debates on the Natives' Land Bill
+as reported in the Union Hansard of 1913.
+
+==
+The adjourned debate on the motion for the second reading
+of the Natives Land Bill was resumed by
+
+MR. J. X. MERRIMAN (Victoria West). It was with very great reluctance
+(the right hon. gentleman said) that he rose to speak on this measure.
+It would have been more convenient to have given a silent vote,
+but he felt, and he was afraid, that after many years of devoted attention
+to this question of the native policy of South Africa, he would not
+be doing his duty if he did not give this House -- for what it was worth --
+the result of his experience through these years.
+
+He should like to emphasize a brighter side of the question,
+and that was to point out that the Natives, if they were well managed,
+were an invaluable asset to the people of this country. (Hear, hear.)
+Let them take our trade figures and compare them with
+the trade figures of the other large British Dominions.
+Our figures were surprising when measured by the white population,
+but if they took the richest Dominion that there was under the British Crown
+outside South Africa, and took the trade value of those figures
+per head of the white population, and multiply those figures
+by our European population, then they might very well apply
+any balance they had to our native population, and then they would see,
+strangely enough, that upon that basis it worked out that
+the actual trade of three Natives was worth about that of one white man.
+That, of course, was a very imperfect way of looking at
+the value of these people, because the trade value of some of these Natives
+was far greater than the trade value of some of our white people.
+He had merely indicated these trade figures to show what an enormous asset
+we had in the Natives in that respect. Let them think
+what the industry of the Natives had done for us. Who had built our railways,
+who had dug our mines, and developed this country as far as it was developed?
+Who had been the actual manual worker who had done that? The Native:
+the coloured races of this country. We must never forget
+that we owed them a debt in that respect -- a debt not often acknowledged
+by what we did for them. Proceeding, he said that they ought to think
+what they owed to the docility of the Natives, and the wonderfully easy way
+in which they had been governed when treated properly. He also paid a tribute
+to the honesty of the Natives.
+
+What must strike any one was the fact that though this Bill was really,
+to a certain extent, a beginning, or was thought to be in certain quarters,
+of a revolution in their dealing with the native races,
+it was not even mentioned in the speech of the Governor-General.
+It fell upon them like a bolt from the blue. He remembered the afternoon.
+They had heard a very impassioned and very heated speech
+from the hon. member for Ficksburg on the enormous danger of squatting
+in the Free State, and that was the occasion for introducing
+a general statement of the policy of the Government towards the Natives
+and the introduction of this Bill. He did not think that that was the way
+they liked to see a thing of this magnitude approached.
+They often heard demands for what was called a general declaration of policy
+with regard to native affairs -- a policy which should be applied
+to the highest civilized Native, the owner of a farm, and the naked barbarian.
+They could not do it. People who demanded a general declaration of that kind
+had not had the experience which some of them had had.
+The hon. member who spoke before him said that he was in favour
+of the underlying principle of the Bill. What was the underlying principle?
+The underlying principle was what one read into the Bill.
+One hon. member read into it that it was the separation of the two races.
+That might have been done when the two races first came in contact
+at the Fish River, but it could not be done now. Since then
+they had been developing the country with the labour of these people.
+They had been advancing by our aid. They had mixed themselves up
+with these people in an inextricable fashion and then some said
+"Haul your native policy out of the drawer and begin with
+a policy of separation." He was sure that the hon. member
+who had brought in the Bill had no idea of that sort in his mind.
+Another person had the idea that they were going to set up a sort of pale --
+a sort of kraal in which they were going to drive these people.
+Then another gentleman sneered at the policy hitherto adopted,
+and he said that one side said that the policy towards the Natives
+should be firm and just, while the other side said that it should be
+just and firm.
+
+It seemed to him that they had not got sufficient information.
+Beyond the bald statistics which were given by the Minister
+in the course of his interesting and moderate speech, they had nothing.
+They were going into a thing that would stir South Africa from end to end,
+and which affected hundreds of thousands of both races.
+They had no information as to what were the ideas of the Natives.
+It was unfortunate that, owing to this lack of information,
+wrong ideas had got about with regard to this Bill. It was difficult
+to find out what the Native thought about these things; he doubted
+whether anybody could say that he had got at the mind of the Native.
+The only way, and he must say that he did not take it as a real indication,
+was what they wrote in their newspapers. He was alarmed, but not surprised,
+at some of the articles in their newspapers, because they took their views
+from the heated speeches and writings in party newspapers
+all over the country, and they were very much alarmed. He thought
+that before a Bill of this sort was passed, there should be some attempt made
+to get their views. As far as one section was concerned,
+the Bill was going to set up a sort of pale -- that there was going to be
+a sort of kraal in which all the Natives were to be driven,
+and they were to be left to develop on their own lines. To allow them
+to go on their own lines was merely to drive them back into barbarism;
+their own lines meant barbarous lines; their own lines were cruel lines.
+All along they had been bringing them away from their own lines.
+It reminded him of what an English writer said about a similar policy
+in Ireland, because when the English went to Ireland
+they regarded the Native Irish in the way some extreme people here
+regarded the Natives of South Africa. They thought they would root them out.
+They treated them as dogs, and thought that they were dogs.
+They set up a pale. They set the Irish within that pale,
+to develop upon their own lines, but there were always Englishmen
+living in that pale, just as in the same way they found Europeans
+living among Natives. Sir George Davis in describing this policy wrote
+that it was the intention of the Government to set up a separation
+between English and Irish, intending in time that the English should
+root out the Irish. If they changed the Irish for Natives they would see
+how the illustration would apply. A policy more foredoomed to failure
+in South Africa could not be initiated. It was a policy that
+would keep South Africa back, perhaps for ever. (Hear, hear.)
+What would be the effect of driving these civilized Natives
+back into reserves? At the present time, every civilized man
+-- if they treated him properly -- every civilized man
+was becoming an owner of land outside native reserve, and therefore
+he was an asset of strength to the country. He was a loyalist.
+He was not going to risk losing his property. He was on
+the side of the European. If they drove these people back into reserve
+they became our bitterest enemies. Therefore, he viewed anything
+that tended that way with the gravest suspicion. Again, in this Bill
+there was not sufficient distinction between those Natives
+who tried to educate themselves and the ordinary raw barbarian.
+They were all classed under the word "Native".
+
+He came now to what was the main object of the Bill, and that was:
+to do away with the squatting evil. Why was there a squatting evil?
+Was it the fault of the Native? (An hon. member: No.)
+Was it the fault of the law? (No.) They had got the most stringent
+laws concerning Natives of all the laws in the whole country,
+in the Province of which his hon. friend (Mr. Keyter) was a member.
+He did not think anything was more surprising than when they came to look
+at the increases in the native population in the Orange Free State.
+They had a huge native population in the Cape, and the increase
+during the census periods from 1904 to 1911 -- he wanted hon. members
+to pay some attention to this, because it showed the value of legislation --
+the increase in the Cape Province during that period was 8.33 per cent.
+In Natal, which had a huge -- in fact, an overwhelming -- native population,
+curiously enough, the increase was the same, even to the actual
+decimal figure, viz., 8.33 per cent.: but some allowance must be made,
+because a large number of Natives were out at work in the mines.
+Now, in the Transvaal -- and in taking the Transvaal figures
+these did not apply as regarded squatting, because the increase was mainly due
+to the number of Natives employed in the mines. In the Transvaal
+the Natives increased by 30.1 per cent. Now, when they came
+to his friend's little State, where the most stringent laws were made
+to keep out the Natives, how much did they suppose the Natives increased
+in the Free State? By no less than 44 per cent. (Opposition cheers.)
+Was that the fault of the Natives? No, it was because
+-- having the most stringent laws -- the people found it best
+to evade those laws. (Hear, hear.) He hoped his hon. friend
+would be a little tolerant. Do let him pick the mote out of his own eye
+before he tried to pick the beam out of other people's. (Hear, hear.)
+In the Free State these laws were very severe; for instance,
+punishments -- amazing punishments -- were given, and yet the result
+was the increase in five years by 44 per cent. of their native population.
+This was something that they should take a warning by. They were going
+to do away with the squatter in appearance, but he would still survive
+as a labour tenant. They might do away with the labour tenant,
+and he would still be surviving as a labour servant. How was the Government
+to distinguish between these? They had in the Cape a law which stated
+how many labour tenants a man should have upon his farm.
+
+What they wanted in this country was administration and not more legislation,
+and if they were to put the laws which they had into force in the Free State
+at the present time he had no doubt that there would be a rebellion.
+(Hear, hear.) They would have platforms swarming with people
+who would say that they could not grow one bag of mealies without the Natives.
+But they had the laws to do it. Now they went and tried in this Bill
+to make a uniform law. Turning towards the Minister, Mr. Merriman said:
+"My poor friend! that after all the years we had laboured together
+he of all people should be the author of a uniform law on native matters!
+(Laughter.) I say this more in sorrow than in anger -- (laughter) --
+because the conditions were totally different in the four Provinces."
+
+In the Free State, proceeded Mr. Merriman, the people had most excellent laws
+from their point of view for keeping out the Natives --
+stringent, Draconian, and violent laws, but they were not carried out,
+and the Natives had flooded the country. All they wanted to do
+was to turn the Native from a tenant to a labour tenant, and then salvation
+would be at hand. He could not see very much difference between the two,
+except that one was a contented advancing man and the other a discontented man
+approaching very closely to the Russian serf -- he was a soul.
+Shortly we should hear of a farm being up for sale with so many souls.
+
+In the Transvaal the problem had been complicated by
+the decisions of the Court and the curious way in which some ground
+had been given out in the Zoutpansberg district, where, he was told,
+farms had been given out on which the Natives had been living for years,
+and these farms -- with the Natives on them -- had come into
+the possession of companies and individuals, and now it was proposed
+to turn the Natives off. That would not be an agreeable thing,
+but he would not offer an opinion now as to the justice of it.
+
+He would like to revert to the state of things which had grown up
+under the Draconian laws of the Free State. According to
+a very interesting Blue-book containing reports of magistrates,
+one magistrate had reported that "the pernicious system of squatting
+was detrimental to the working farmer, the Native reaping
+the whole of the benefit." The man who worked generally reaped
+the whole benefit in the long run. In the Harrismith district
+there were some 40,000 Natives against some 8,000 Europeans.
+How did they get there? Having been a Free State burgher
+he knew that the Natives had not forced their way in.
+These Natives ploughed on the half-shares, and he would like to know
+whether they were labour tenants or squatters. If they were squatters
+it would require very little dexterous management to convert them
+into labour tenants. The Magistrate of Hoopstad, went on Mr. Merriman,
+had referred to the pernicious system of native squatters.
+But why did not the Free State magistrates do something and put the law
+in force? That was the principal reason why the House was forced
+to pass that Bill without information, and without giving
+any opportunity to people who had the deepest interest in this matter
+to have their views heard, or to let them know what the House was going to do
+because the magistrates in the Free State would not enforce the law.
+He did think that was rather hard. In conclusion Mr. Merriman said:
+I dare say I may have said a great many things which may be distasteful
+to my hon. friends, but I do claim their attention because at a time
+when they were not in such a dominant position as they are now,
+I pleaded for right and justice for them. Therefore, they should not
+take it amiss from me, because now they are in a dominant position,
+I plead also for justice, toleration, moderation, and delay in this matter.
+
+MR. H. MENTZ (Zoutpansberg) said the right hon. gentleman
+had earned their gratitude for the high tone in which he had carried
+the debate. The speech which he had delivered was a most instructive one,
+and although the speaker was not in entire agreement with him on all points,
+he was in agreement on the point that the matter was one to be handled
+with prudence, but it was to be regretted that under the Bill
+a Commission was to be appointed. The Minister should not listen
+to the request for a postponement of the question, by referring it
+to a Select Committee. If they were to refer the Bill to a Select Committee,
+it would never be passed this year.
+
+MR. G. L. STEYTLER (Rouxville) expressed his thanks to the Government
+for bringing forward the Bill. He said he felt that it was not
+a complete solution of the whole question, but it was certainly
+a step in the right direction.
+
+MR. A. FAWCUS (Umlazi) said that as the representative of 70,000 Natives
+in Natal, not one of whom so far as he knew had a vote, he should like,
+on their behalf, to thank the right hon. member for Victoria West
+for the manner in which he had handled this question.
+In the course of his speech the right hon. gentleman asked,
+what did the Natives think about this Bill before the House?
+His (Mr. Fawcus') opinion was that the Natives did not think anything at all
+about it. He should not think there was one Native in a thousand
+in South Africa who was aware that this matter, so vitally affecting
+their future, was at present at issue. The hon. member for Middelburg
+had referred to the Natives as "schepsels".* He believed
+the day was rapidly passing away when we should refer to Natives
+as "schepsels". They were an easy-going folk, and they thought little
+about title deeds and land laws. So great was the Native's attachment
+to the land on which he lived, in many instances, that they could not
+rackrent him off it. These were the people that the Bill wished
+to dispossess and drive off the land. The figures placed before them
+showed that THE LAND HELD BY EUROPEANS PER HEAD WAS FIFTY TIMES THE AMOUNT
+HELD PER HEAD BY THE NATIVES. Surely there was no need at the present time
+for legislation which would prevent Natives getting a little more land
+than they now had. He did not think it could be put down
+to the fault of the Native if he was willing to buy and live on land
+rather than pay rent. The figures given in this connexion
+were very instructive. EIGHT ACRES PER HEAD WERE HELD BY THE NATIVES
+IN THE CAPE, SIX ACRES IN NATAL, ABOUT 1 1/2 ACRES in the Transvaal,
+and about one-third of an acre in the Free State. He thought this Bill
+was perhaps coming on a little before there was any necessity for it.
+
+--
+* Creatures.
+--
+
+MR. C. G. FICHARDT (Ladybrand) said he felt very much
+that the Bill that was before the House did not carry out
+all that should be carried out, and that was equality of justice.
+IF THEY WERE TO DEAL FAIRLY WITH THE NATIVES OF THIS COUNTRY,
+THEN ACCORDING TO POPULATION THEY SHOULD GIVE THEM FOUR-FIFTHS OF THE COUNTRY,
+OR AT LEAST A HALF. How were they going to do that? As he said
+in the earlier part of his remarks, he was prepared to accept the Bill
+as something to go on with, but he hoped that in the future
+it would not constitute a stumbling-block. He would much rather have seen
+that the matter had been gone into more fully, and that some scheme
+had been laid before them so that they might have more readily been able
+to judge how the Bill would work. It was because of all these difficulties
+that he felt that they could only accept the Bill if it laid down
+that there was no intention of taking the country from the white people
+and handing it over to the blacks.
+
+MR. J. G. KEYTER (Ficksburg) said he wished to openly denounce, and most
+emphatically so, that the people or the Government of the Orange Free State
+had treated the coloured people unreasonably or unjustly,
+or in any way oppressively. On the contrary, the O.F.S. had always treated
+the coloured people with the greatest consideration and the utmost justice.
+The O.F.S. had made what Mr. Merriman called stringent laws.
+He (Mr. Keyter) called them just laws. They TOLD THE COLOURED PEOPLE PLAINLY
+THAT THE O.F.S. WAS A WHITE MAN'S COUNTRY, AND THAT THEY INTENDED
+TO KEEP IT SO. (Hear, hear.) THEY TOLD THE COLOURED PEOPLE
+THAT THEY WERE NOT TO BE ALLOWED TO BUY OR HIRE LAND,
+and that they were not going to tolerate an equality of whites and blacks;
+and he said that they were not going to tolerate that in the future,
+and if an attempt were made to force that on them, they would resist it
+at any cost to the last,* for if they did tolerate it,
+they would very soon find that they would be a bastard nation.
+His experience was that the Native should be treated firmly,
+kept in his place and treated honestly. They should not give him
+a gun one day and fight him for it the next day. They should tell him,
+as the Free State told him, that IT WAS A WHITE MAN'S COUNTRY,
+THAT HE WAS NOT GOING TO BE ALLOWED TO BUY LAND THERE OR TO HIRE LAND THERE,
+AND THAT IF HE WANTED TO BE THERE HE MUST BE IN SERVICE.
+
+--
+* By passing the Bill, the Government conceded all the extravagant demands
+ of the "Free" Staters; yet, a year later they took up arms
+ against the Government.
+--
+
+MR. J. A. P. VAN DER MERWE (Vredefort) deprecated sending the Bill
+to a Select Committee, arguing that the House itself should decide it.
+He referred to the difficulties experienced by farmers in the Free State.
+If a farmer refused to allow a Native to farm on the share system
+he simply refused to work. There were thousands of Natives on the farms there
+who hired ground and did little work. The farmers had to keep their children
+at home to do the work. Some of the Natives hired ground, did some sowing,
+then went to work in Johannesburg, and paid the owner of the farm
+half what he reaped from the harvest. That was not satisfactory.
+He was pleased to see the provisions the Minister proposed to make
+in this regard, and expressed the hope that the Native
+would only be tolerated among the whites as a labourer. The Bill would meet
+what he considered a great want, and, as it was an urgent matter,
+he hoped the proposal for a Select Committee would not be agreed to.
+
+
+ Third Reading Debate.
+
+SIR LIONEL PHILLIPS (Yeoville): But why should a Bill of this sort
+be brought before them now? The Government in the past had not been bashful
+in the appointing of Commissions, and one question he would ask was why,
+in this important matter, the Government had not appointed a Commission
+to take all the evidence and then come to the House with a measure which
+the House would have to approve of. Instead of that, they were cancelling
+the rights the Natives had in South Africa, and creating a very awkward hiatus
+between the time the Commission would be appointed and the time the Commission
+could define the areas which would be regarded as white areas and the areas
+which would be regarded as native areas. That was the one serious blot
+upon this measure.
+
+He could see no justification, except that the hon. Minister,
+yielding to pressure from a certain section on that side of the House,
+had hastily brought on this measure. He thought from the speeches
+made in the House it was the consensus of opinion that Natives
+should not have farms in areas that were essentially white,
+just as it was desirable that white men should not be found in areas
+essentially native. And especially when they told the native population
+that they were taking away from them a right they had to-day,
+and they were going to substitute that right by appointing a Commission,
+they were giving them very little justification for being satisfied
+with this measure. He did not think they were going to gain anything
+by putting the cart before the horse. He did not know
+if Mr. Schreiner was accurate, but he told them that, roughly,
+in the Transvaal, where the matter was most acute, the Native population
+had bought something like 12,000 or 15,000 morgen of land in twelve years.
+That, he thought, showed there was no extreme urgency for the measure.
+To that extent he agreed entirely with the hon. member, and he believed
+the Minister would be well advised to send the Bill to a Select Committee,
+so that many of the details, which were extremely complicated and difficult,
+might be thrashed out in that atmosphere, rather than on
+the floor of the House. (Opposition cheers.)
+
+MR. E. N. GROBLER (Edenburg) said: The present was one of the best measures
+that the Government had so far brought forward, and it appeared clear
+that they had a Government which truly represented the wishes of the public.
+It was impossible to delay the solution of the Native problem,
+and legislation on the subject had for a long time past been asked for.*
+At the same time, he did not entirely agree with the methods,
+proposed to be applied, and he did not like the system of allocating reserves
+for Natives. When once those reserves had been allocated, would it not result
+in injury to agriculture and cattle breeding? The farmers would suffer
+from lack of labour, and that deficiency would be a growing one.
+Neither could he agree to the principle of expropriation of land
+belonging to whites in order to increase the size of the native reserves.
+He considered the Bill was a complicated one. The matter should be settled
+by way of taxation, in the following way. All Natives who
+were in the service of whites should be exempted from taxation,
+and treated as well as possible, and other Natives should be encouraged
+to take similar service. There were enormous reserves where the Natives
+could go and live,** and if they refused to go there they should be required
+to pay a stiff tax. Then they would go and work for white people.
+The hon. member for Tembuland had offered many objections to the Bill.
+They should make that hon. member king of Tembuland.
+In a country of the blind a man with one eye would be king.
+
+--
+* By a "solution of the Native problem", "Free" State farmers generally mean
+ the re-establishment of slavery.
+** It will be observed that these and similar mythological disquisitions
+ subsequently formed General Botha's assurances to Mr. Harcourt.
+ See Chapter XVI. But some light is thrown on the subject
+ of these visionary Native Reserves by Mr. Fawcus' speech
+ based on official statistics (page 36 [above -- last Fawcus quote]).
+--
+
+MR. P. DUNCAN (Fordsburg) said he hoped the Minister would not take
+the view of the last speaker. Under the Bill it would be possible
+for farmers to accumulate on their land as many Natives as they could get,
+so long as they could use them as servants. (Labour cheers.)
+So far as he could see, even if it were carried out to the extent
+that it was proposed to go, it would not very much reduce the social contact
+which at present existed between whites and natives.
+
+SIR W. B. BERRY (Queenstown) said he would like to know why the Minister
+had run away from the Bill that had passed the second reading,
+and now tabled another Bill in the shape of many amendments.
+One would naturally complain that, seeing that they had in that House
+a Native Affairs Committee, a non-party committee, specially chosen
+to consider all matters relating to native affairs, that Bill,
+which was a most important matter and dealt with native affairs from A to Z,
+should have been referred to that committee. The same thing
+happened last session in reference to a Bill the Minister of Native Affairs
+kept on the paper until nearly the end of the session, and the House
+had to take the very unusual step almost on the last day of moving
+that committee proceedings on that Bill be taken that day six months.
+He (Sir W. B. Berry) proposed to move a similar amendment
+to the motion now before the House. In the remarks he addressed
+when the Bill came up for second reading he had ventured to say
+that there was no call for a bill of that nature at all;
+there was no need for a Bill revolutionizing the attitude of the Union
+with respect to the natives generally. The only clue they could get
+to the reason why the Bill was introduced was that a few die-hards
+on the other side of the House had given the Minister to understand that
+unless he brought in a Bill of that kind, or of a similarly drastic nature,
+the position of the Government was in danger. He hoped
+some of these die-hards would come forward that evening
+and tell them plainly and bluntly why they wanted that Bill,
+why they were going to thrust it on the country without any notice,
+and why they were calling on the House to revolutionize
+the whole tenour and the whole order of things in regard to land matters
+as far as the Natives were concerned. Proceeding, the hon. member said
+the only justification that had been offered for this Bill was that
+a large amount of land had been transferred from Europeans to Natives.
+An analysis of the return, however, showed that only sixteen farms
+in the Transvaal had been so transferred during the last three years.
+Surely that was not any justification why the European people of the Union
+should get into a panic and why the administration of the day
+were seeking to place on the Statute Book this most drastic legislation.
+Another reason why he objected to this Bill was that it purported to appoint
+a Commission to investigate to what extent and in what parts and in what time
+land should be selected by the Commission for the purpose of being reserved
+as additional native areas within the Union. They were not given
+any guarantee that the Commission was going to be appointed
+nor any guarantee that it would ever report, but at the same time
+whilst these indefinite assurances were attempted to be given to the House
+there was no getting over this fact, that there was no time limit in the Bill
+by which the real enacting clause in the Bill was to have any cessation.
+When he spoke on this Bill before he supported it only on the understanding
+that a time limit was to be put in, or that it should be an annual Bill.
+He said unhesitatingly that the whole tendency of the Bill,
+as it stood at the second reading, and more especially as it stood
+with the amendments by the Minister on the notice paper,
+was to drive the Native peasant off the land. The only refuge
+that that Native had was the town.
+
+The country had not been prepared in any way for a Bill of this kind.
+A cry had been heard throughout the land against the iniquities
+proposed in the Bill. If it had been found absolutely necessary
+that legislation of this kind should be introduced, the least
+that could be expected was that ample time should be given to the Natives
+to thoroughly acquire a knowledge of the contents of the measure.
+That opportunity had not been given them, and in this respect
+there was a very serious grievance. For the good order and peace of the Union
+there was a very great danger ahead. He had understood from those
+well versed in native affairs that one of the greatest dangers
+that could threaten us was to give the Natives anything
+in the shape of a common grievance. Divide and rule had been
+a wise precaution in the government of the Natives. When a common grievance
+was found by four or five million people one could understand how great
+that grievance must be. One amendment the Minister had put on the paper
+must give serious pause. The late Minister of Native Affairs
+issued to members last session a Squatters Bill. The greatest objection
+to that measure, and one which he thought led to its withdrawal,
+was that it proposed to remove thousands upon thousands of natives
+from land which they had been in the occupation of for scores of years.
+It was in consequence of the disturbance which that Bill caused
+throughout the Union that it was withdrawn. In one of the amendments
+on the paper the present Minister of Native Affairs brought back
+in a somewhat clandestine manner the most objectionable feature of the Bill
+that was withdrawn.
+
+Mr. Speaker: The amendment is not yet before the House.
+
+SIR W. B. BERRY: What Bill is it then that is to go into Committee?
+(Hear, hear.) Is it the Bill which was read a second time
+or the Bill comprised in the Minister's amendments? He moved that the House
+go into committee on the Bill this day six months.
+
+MR. T. L. SCHREINER (Tembuland), in seconding the amendment,
+said that sufficient notice had not been given of the provisions of the Bill,
+although the Natives, thanks to the time which had elapsed
+since the second reading, were better acquainted with the measure
+than they were a little while ago.
+
+Mr. Schreiner proceeded to quote opinions from native newspapers on the Bill.
+The `Tsala ea Batho', of Kimberley, said: "We are standing on the brink
+of the precipice. We appealed to certain members of Parliament against
+the suspension clause in Mr. Sauer's Land Bill, and the result of our appeal
+has been an agreement between Sir Thomas Smartt and the Minister
+to the effect that the first part of the Bill only be proceeded with.
+The effect of this agreement is infinitely worse than the whole Bill.
+In its entirety, there were certain saving clauses, one of them
+practically excluding the Cape Province from the operation of the Bill.
+Under the present agreement, all these clauses are dropped,
+and section 1 of the Bill, which prohibits the sale of land
+between Europeans and Natives (pending the report of a future Commission)
+is applicable to all parts of the Union, including the Cape Province.
+Now, then, if this suspension clause becomes law, what is going to happen?
+It is simply this: That the whole land policy of the Union of South Africa
+is the land policy of the Orange Free State, and it will be as difficult
+to abrogate that suspension as it is difficult to recall a bullet,
+once fired through some one's head, and resuscitate the victim.
+Our object then should be to prevent the pistol being fired off,
+as prevention is infinitely better than cure." One paper
+that he was quoting from was (Mr. Schreiner went on to say) pleased,
+because it believed that this Bill was going to Select Committee.
+There was another native paper, published in Natal, which acknowledged
+the efforts which the missionaries had made on behalf of the Natives
+in regard to this Bill. There was a native paper, published at Dundee,
+which said that, if the Bill were in the interests of the Natives,
+and the Government were actuated by a sincere regard for them,
+they would not have hesitated to publish it broadcast, instead of being
+in such haste to push the matter through the House.*
+
+--
+* All efforts to induce the South African Government to circulate
+ translations of the Natives' Land Act among the Natives of the Union
+ have proved fruitless. -- Author.
+--
+
+Mr. Schreiner (continuing) referred to the resolution passed
+by the Natal Missionary Conference, and the views expressed
+by the Chairman of the Transvaal Missionary Conference in opposition
+to the Bill. He mentioned that it had been decided in Johannesburg
+to call a meeting of missionary societies throughout the Union,
+to determine what action could be taken in case clause 1 was proceeded with.
+He had also received a telegram from the Witwatersrand Church Council,
+stating that a telegram had been sent to the Minister strongly protesting
+against section 1 being enacted before the proposed Commission
+had thoroughly investigated the whole question of alternative areas.
+Mr. Schreiner urged that, if they proceeded with this Bill,
+and passed clause 1 of the old Bill, and appointed a Commission,
+these restrictions with regard to purchase and sale, which the Natives
+had feared, and which the missionaries, on behalf of the Natives,
+feared and protested against, would become a fact. For that reason,
+he said they should rather put off the Bill.
+
+Every one was feeling the pressure of their legislative duties. Was this
+the time, therefore, for passing a measure of such a far-reaching character,
+and where every clause demanded the most careful consideration and scrutiny?
+Was it the right thing because he had a majority at his back
+for the Minister to say that they must get this Bill through this session?
+He held that this was not right. It was not fair to those who had
+the solution of the question at heart. (Cheers.)
+
+SIR E. H. WALTON (Port Elizabeth, Central) said he entirely supported
+the amendment of the hon. member for Queen's Town. He had a telegram
+from a mass meeting of Natives held in Port Elizabeth, in which they hoped
+that the House would postpone decision on this question until the Commission
+had sat and reported. That seemed to him an entirely reasonable request,
+and it seemed all the more necessary that this should be done
+on account of the very large alterations that it had been found necessary
+to make in the Bill.
+
+They had native protests from all parts of South Africa against this measure,
+and when one saw what was proposed in this Act, they could not wonder
+at these protests. (Hear, hear.) Therefore he put it that these protests
+should receive fair consideration from members on all sides of the House.
+Legislation of this kind was unfortunate from the point of view
+of the Natives. The more intelligent of the Natives in this country
+were asking for time. They said: "You are putting this thing upon us,
+give us time to consider it. Allow this Commission to get to work,
+allow this Commission to put before us the provisions you are going to make
+for us, and when this is done we will submit to anything that is fair."
+No man, and the Native was just a man like the rest of us,
+liked the old arrangements to be disturbed, because it upset him,
+and the Native might oppose it, because he was frightened.
+They must admit that they had not given the native leaders and chiefs
+an opportunity to come down to Cape Town and give their views.
+It was unfortunate that this measure had been more or less rushed.
+There was no mention of it in the Governor-General's speech, and therefore
+the Natives were not prepared for the consideration of the question.
+
+MR. M. ALEXANDER (Cape Town, Castle) said he was still of opinion
+that a very dangerous principle was introduced in the Bill,
+especially so far as the Cape was concerned. In the speech
+delivered by the Governor-General at the opening of the session
+there was not the slightest reference to the present measure,
+which apparently had been brought in as an afterthought, and something
+must have occurred after the Governor-General's speech was delivered,
+otherwise one could not conceive of such an important Bill being omitted
+from the speech. As it was the Bill would simply hang things up
+until the Commission reported, and now the House would be legislating
+in the dark. The vast majority of Natives had declared themselves
+to be against the Bill. He had had no desire whatever that party capital
+should be made out of the measure -- (hear, hear) -- but he desired
+to see a measure which would bear the mark of statesmanship,
+and not of panic and hurry. Their Commission could report
+before next session, and then in the early stages of the session
+a Bill could be introduced and be adopted on its merits.
+In the interests of South Africa, in the interests of the Natives,
+and in the interests of just legislation let the Government withdraw the Bill,
+and appoint a Commission, and then justice and not injustice would be done.
+(Hear, hear.)
+
+DR. A. H. WATKINS (Barkly) said that there was a tacit understanding
+that the Minister would refer this Bill, if he were not prepared
+to accept a purely temporary measure, to a Select Committee.
+During the three years of the Union Parliament every matter
+practically dealing with Natives had been brought before
+the Select Committee on Native Affairs and their opinion had been asked.
+For some reason, which it was difficult for him to understand,
+the Minister had not seen fit to carry out that course.
+Sixteen days had elapsed since the second reading of this Bill was taken
+on which the Select Committee could have sat morning after morning
+and dealt with the Bill.
+
+The necessity of passing only a temporary measure instead of appearing
+to pass a measure which would permanently deal with this question,
+was more evident to-night than when they took the second reading.
+
+MR. H. M. MEYLER (Weenen) said that he would support
+the motion of Sir Bisset Berry. He thought it would be
+a great injustice to the Natives, and especially the Natives of Natal,
+who really knew nothing of this measure, to force it through now.
+Since the second reading, his attention had been drawn to certain provisions
+in this Bill, which made it more dangerous still to hurry legislation,
+because he found that, although there was an exemption in the Bill as regarded
+agreements lawfully entered into, the vast majority of the agreements
+at present in force amongst the Natives of Natal were not strictly lawful,
+according to their Statute law. As they had no less than 380,000 Natives
+squatting on private lands in Natal, according to the Minister's own figures,
+it would be a fatal mistake to do anything to upset these people,
+until they had something ready to provide for them instead.
+The difficulty was that under the Natal law no oral contract was binding
+for more than twelve months, and many of those squatters
+had not got oral contracts, but were more or less on sufferance on the farms.
+It would be a great danger to pass legislation which would lead to
+the moving of a large portion of these people before they got an inch of land
+provided for their use. He objected to legislation being brought forward
+too hurriedly, and when they had got 4 1/2 millions of Natives, only an
+infinitesimal portion of whom could possibly know the nature of the Bill,
+and seeing that it affected them as well as the white population,
+they had a perfect right to have it explained to them
+by the Government officials and let their members of Parliament
+for the divisions in which they lived give their opinions on the question.
+That would take months, and it was impossible to get a proper
+opinion of the Natives until hon. members had been away from the House
+for some time. The Right Hon. the Prime Minister admitted
+they should stand as the guardians of the Natives, and admitted
+that they should go slowly, and he hoped the hon. Minister would be willing
+to reconsider the Bill and allow it to be put off, and let them have
+an interim report, at any rate, from the Commission, before they were asked
+to pass legislation in that matter.
+==
+
+The Bill was contested at every stage and numerous divisions were challenged.
+In each instance, the Speaker would put the Question, and the "steam-roller"
+would go to work with the inevitable result. The division lists ranged
+from 17 against 71 to 32 against 60, the majority in each case
+being in favour of repression. It would be just as well
+to give at least one of these division lists. The English names
+in the majority are those of some Natal members (Ministerialists)
+or representatives of purely Dutch constituencies: --
+
+
+ DIVISION
+
+Dr. A. H. Watkins (Barkly) called for a division, which was taken
+with the following result.
+
+
+ AYES -- 32.
+
+Andrews, William Henry
+Baxter, William Duncan
+Berry, William Bisset
+Blaine, George
+Boydell, Thomas
+Brown, Daniel Maclaren
+Creswell, Frederic Hugh Page
+Duncan, Patrick
+Fawcus, Alfred
+Fitzpatrick, James Percy
+Henderson, James
+Henwood, Charlie
+Hunter, David
+Jagger, John William
+King, John Gavin
+Long, Basil Kellett
+Macaulay, Donald
+Madeley, Walter Bayley
+Meyler, Hugh Mowbray
+Nathan, Emile
+Oliver, Henry Alfred
+Quinn, John William
+Rockey, Willie
+Runciman, William
+Sampson, Henry William
+Schreiner, Theophilus Lyndall
+Searle, James
+Smartt, Thomas William
+Walton, Edgar Harris
+Watkins, Arnold Hirst
+
+Morris Alexander and J. Hewat tellers.
+
+
+ NOES -- 57.
+
+Alberts, Johannes Joachim
+Becker, Heinrich Christian
+Bosman, Hendrik Johannes
+Botha, Louis
+Brain, Thomas Phillip
+Burton, Henry
+Clayton, Walter Frederick
+Cronje, Frederik Reinhardt
+Currey, Henry Latham
+De Beer, Michiel Johannes
+De Jager, Andries Lourens
+De Waal, Hendrik
+Du Toit, Gert Johan Wilhelm
+Geldenhuys, Lourens
+Graaff, David Pieter de Villiers
+Griffin, William Henry
+Grobler, Evert Nicolaas
+Grobler, Pieter Gert Wessel
+Joubert, Christiaan Johannes Jacobus
+Joubert, Jozua Adriaan
+Keyter, Jan Garhard
+Kuhn, Pieter Gysbert
+Lemmer, Lodewyk Arnoldus Slabbert
+Maasdorp, Gysbert Henry
+Malan, Francois Stephanus
+Marais, Johannes Henoch
+Marais, Pieter Gerhardus
+Merriman, John Xavier
+Meyer, Izaak Johannes
+Myburgh, Marthinus Wilhelmus
+Neethling, Andrew Murray
+Neser, Johannes Adriaan
+Nicholson, Richard Granville
+Oothuisen, Ockert Almero
+Orr, Thomas
+Rademeyer, Jacobus Michael
+Sauer, Jacobus Wilhelmus
+Serfontein, Hendrik Philippus
+Smuts, Jan Christiaan
+Smuts, Tobias
+Steyl, Johannes Petrus Gerhardus
+Steytler, George Louis
+Theron, Hendrik Schalk
+Theron, Petrus Jacobus George
+Van der Merwe, Johannes Adolph P.
+Van der Walt, Jacobus
+Van Eeden, Jacobus Willem
+Van Heerden, Hercules Christian
+Venter, Jan Abraham
+Vermaas, Hendrik Cornelius Wilhelmus
+Vintcent, Alwyn Ignatius
+Vosloo, Johannes Arnoldus
+Watt, Thomas
+Wilcocks, Carl Theodorus Muller
+Wiltshire, Henry
+
+H. Mentz and G. A. Louw, tellers.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter III The Natives' Land Act
+
+ I blush to think that His Majesty's representative signed a law like this,
+ and signed it in such circumstances.
+ Rev. Amos Burnet
+ (Chairman and General Superintendent of
+ the Transvaal and Swazieland District,
+ Wesleyan Methodist Church).
+
+
+
+Up to now we have dealt with the history of the Land Act
+from its commencement, and all the speeches and official documents
+we have mentioned hitherto say nothing about restricting Europeans
+in their ownership of land. And no matter what other principles
+one might read into the Act, it would be found that the principles
+underlying it were those of extending the "Free" State land laws
+throughout the Union -- an extension by which Natives would be prohibited
+from investing their earnings in land whereon they could end their days
+in peace.
+
+There seems to be good reason for believing that the Government were advised,
+by the legal advisers of the Crown, that the Natives' Land Bill
+would be class legislation of a kind that would never be allowed
+by His Majesty's Government. The originators of the Bill, however,
+were determined so to circumvent the constitutional quibble
+raised by the legal advisers as to seal our doom; and by adroitly manipulating
+its legal phrases, it seems that it was recasted in such a manner
+as to give it a semblance of a paper restriction on European encroachment
+on native rights. But class legislation the Act is, for whereas
+in his travels about South Africa, since the passing of this Act,
+the author has met many a native family with their stock,
+turned out by the Act upon the roads, he never met one white man so hounded
+by the same Act, and debarred from living where he pleased.
+
+The squatters form a particular section of the community specifically affected
+by the Land Act; and there is no such person in South Africa
+as a white squatter. Although it is insistently affirmed that the law applies
+both to Europeans and Natives, the conclusion cannot be avoided that
+it is directed exclusively against the Native. This is the naked truth that
+turns all other explanations of the fact into mere shuffling and juggling.
+And the reader will find that in Section 11, at the end of the statute
+which is here reproduced (whether the omission of Europeans
+was a mistake of the Parliamentary draftsmen, or the printers, we know not),
+it is expressly stated that "this Act may be cited for all purposes
+as the NATIVES' Land Act, 1913." Who, then, will continue to argue
+that it was intended for Europeans as well?
+
+==
+No. 27, 1913.]
+
+ ACT
+ TO
+Make further provision as to the purchase and leasing of Land
+ by Natives and other Persons in the several parts of the Union and for
+ other purposes in connection with the ownership and occupation of Land
+ by Natives and other Persons.
+
+Be it enacted by the King's Most Excellent Majesty,
+the Senate and the House of Assembly of the Union of South Africa,
+as follows: --
+
+1. (1) From and after the commencement of this Act,
+land outside the scheduled native areas shall, until Parliament,
+acting upon the report of the commission appointed under this Act,
+shall have made other provision, be subjected to the following provisions,
+that is to say: --
+
+Except with the approval of the Governor-General --
+
+ (a) a native shall not enter into any agreement or transaction
+ for the purchase, hire, or other acquisition from a person
+ other than a native, of any such land or of any right thereto,
+ interest therein, or servitude thereover; and
+
+ (b) a person other than a native shall not enter into
+ any agreement or transaction for the purchase, hire,
+ or other acquisition from a native of any such land
+ or of any right thereto, interest therein, or servitude thereover.
+
+ (2) From and after the commencement of this Act, no person other than
+a native shall purchase, hire or in any other manner whatever acquire any land
+in a scheduled native area or enter into any agreement or transaction for
+the purchase, hire or other acquisition, direct or indirect, of any such land
+or of any right thereto or interest therein or servitude thereover,
+except with the approval of the Governor-General.
+
+ (3) A statement showing the number of approvals granted
+by the Governor-General under sub-sections (1) and (2) of this section
+and giving the names and addresses of the persons to whom
+such approvals were granted, the reasons for granting the same,
+and the situation of the lands in respect of which they were granted,
+shall, within six weeks after the commencement of each ordinary session
+of Parliament, be laid upon the Tables of both Houses of Parliament.
+
+ (4) Every agreement or any other transaction whatever entered into
+in contravention of this section shall be null and void ab initio.
+
+2. (1) As soon as may be after the commencement of this Act
+the Governor-General shall appoint a commission whose functions shall be
+to inquire and report --
+
+ (a) what areas should be set apart as areas within which natives
+ shall not be permitted to acquire or hire land or interests in land;
+
+ (b) what areas should be set apart as areas within which
+ persons other than natives shall not be permitted to acquire or hire
+ land or interests in land.
+
+The commission shall submit with any such report --
+
+ (i) descriptions of the boundaries of any area which it proposes
+ should be so set apart; and
+
+ (ii) a map or maps showing every such area.
+
+ (2) The commission shall proceed with and complete its inquiry
+and present its reports and recommendations to the Minister
+within two years after the commencement of this Act, and may present
+INTERIM reports and recommendations: Provided that Parliament
+may by resolution extend (if necessary) the time for the completion
+of the commission's inquiry. All such reports and recommendations
+shall be laid by the Minister, as soon as possible after the receipt thereof,
+upon the Tables of both Houses of Parliament.
+
+3. (1) The commission shall consist of not less than five persons,
+and if any member of the commission die or resign or, owing to
+absence or any other reason, is unable to act, his place shall be filled
+by the Governor-General.
+
+ (2) The commission may delegate to any of its members
+the carrying out of any part of an inquiry which under this Act
+it is appointed to hold and may appoint persons to assist it or to act
+as assessors thereto or with any members thereof delegated as aforesaid,
+and may regulate its own procedure.
+
+ (3) The reports and recommendations of the majority of the commission
+shall be deemed to be the reports and recommendations of the commission:
+Provided that any recommendations of any member who dissents
+from the majority of the commission shall, if signed by him,
+be included in any such report aforesaid.
+
+ (4) The commission or any member thereof or any person acting
+as assistant, or assessor, or secretary thereto may enter upon any land
+for the purposes of its inquiries and obtain thereon the information necessary
+to prosecute the inquiries. The commission shall without fee or other charge
+have access to the records and registers relating to land in any public office
+or in the office of any divisional council or other local authority.
+
+4. (1) For the purposes of establishing any such area as is described
+in section TWO, the Governor-General may, out of moneys which Parliament
+may vote for the purpose, acquire any land or interest in land.
+
+ (2) In default of agreement with the owners of the land
+or the holders of interests therein the provisions of the law in force
+in the Province in which such land or interest in land is situate
+relating to the expropriation of land for public purposes
+shall apply and, if in any Province there be no such law,
+the provisions of Proclamation No. 5 of 1902 of the Transvaal
+and any amendment thereof shall mutatis mutandis apply.
+
+5. (1) Any person who is a party to any attempted purchase,
+sale, hire or lease, or to any agreement or transaction which
+is in contravention of this Act or any regulation made thereunder
+shall be guilty of an offence and liable on conviction to a fine
+not exceeding one hundred pounds or, in default of payment, to imprisonment
+with or without hard labour for a period not exceeding six months,
+and if the act constituting the offence be a continuing one,
+the offender shall be liable to a further fine not exceeding five pounds
+for every day which that act continues.
+
+ (2) In the event of such an offence being committed by a company,
+corporation, or other body of persons (not being a firm or partnership),
+every director, secretary, or manager of such company, corporation, or body
+who is within the Union shall be liable to prosecution and punishment and,
+in the event of any such offence being committed by a firm or partnership,
+every member of the firm or partnership who is within the Union
+shall be liable to prosecution and punishment.
+
+6. In so far as the occupation by natives of land outside
+the scheduled native areas may be affected by this Act, the provisions thereof
+shall be construed as being in addition to and not in substitution for any law
+in force at the commencement thereof relating to such occupation;
+but in the event of a conflict between the provisions of this Act
+and the provisions of any such law, the provisions of this Act shall,
+save as is specially provided therein, prevail:
+
+Provided that --
+
+ (a) nothing in any such law or in this Act shall be construed
+ as restricting the number of natives who, as farm labourers,
+ may reside on any farm in the Transvaal;
+
+ (b) in any proceedings for a contravention of this Act
+ the burden of proving that a native is a farm labourer
+ shall be upon the accused;
+
+ (c) until Parliament, acting upon the report of the said commission,
+ has made other provision, no native resident on any farm
+ in the Transvaal or Natal shall be liable to penalties
+ or to be removed from such farm under any law,
+ if at the commencement of this Act he or the head of his family
+ is registered for taxation or other purposes
+ in the department of Native Affairs as being resident on such farm,
+ nor shall the owner of any such farm be liable to the penalties
+ imposed by section FIVE in respect of the occupation of the land
+ by such native; but nothing herein contained shall affect any right
+ possessed by law by an owner or lessee of a farm to remove
+ any native therefrom.
+
+7. (1) Chapter XXXIV of the Orange Free State Law Book and Law No. 4 of 1895
+of the Orange Free State shall remain of full force and effect,
+subject to the modifications and interpretations in this section provided,
+and sub-section (1) (a) of the next succeeding section shall not apply
+to the Orange Free State.
+
+ (2) Those heads of families, with their families, who are described
+in article TWENTY of Law No. 4 of 1895 of the Orange Free State
+shall in the circumstances described in that article be deemed to fall under
+the provisions of Ordinance No. 7 of 1904 of that Province or of any other law
+hereafter enacted amending or substituted for that Ordinance.
+
+ (3) Whenever in Chapter XXXIV of the Orange Free State Law Book
+the expressions "lease" and "leasing" are used, those expressions
+shall be construed as including or referring to an agreement or arrangement
+whereby a person, in consideration of his being permitted to occupy land,
+renders or promises to render to any person a share of the produce thereof,
+or any valuable consideration of any kind whatever other than
+his own labour or services or the labour or services of any of his family.
+
+8. (1) Nothing in this Act contained shall be construed as, --
+
+ (a) preventing the continuation or renewal (until Parliament
+ acting upon the report of the said commission has made
+ other provision) of any agreement or arrangement lawfully
+ entered into and in existence at the commencement of this Act
+ which is a hiring or leasing of land as defined in this Act; or
+
+ (b) invalidating or affecting in any manner whatever
+ any agreement or any other transaction for the purchase of land
+ lawfully entered into prior to the commencement of this Act,
+ or as prohibiting any person from purchasing at any sale
+ held by order of a competent court any land which was hypothecated
+ by a mortgage bond passed before the commencement of this Act; or
+
+ (c) prohibiting the acquisition at any time of land or interests in land
+ by devolution or succession on death, whether under
+ a will or on intestacy; or
+
+ (d) preventing the due registration in the proper deeds office
+ (whenever registration is necessary) of documents giving effect
+ to any such agreement, transaction, devolution or succession
+ as is in this section mentioned; or
+
+ (e) prohibiting any person from claiming, acquiring,
+ or holding any such servitude as under Chapter VII,
+ of the Irrigation and Conservation of Waters Act, 1912,
+ he is specially entitled to claim, acquire, or hold; or
+
+ (f) in any way altering the law in force at the commencement of this Act
+ relating to the acquisition of rights to minerals,
+ precious or base metals or precious stones; or
+
+ (g) applying to land within the limits in which a municipal council,
+ town council, town board, village management board,
+ or health committee or other local authority
+ exercises jurisdiction; or
+
+ (h) applying to land held at the commencement of the Act by any society
+ carrying on, with the approval of the Governor-General,
+ educational or missionary work amongst natives; or
+
+ (i) prohibiting the acquisition by natives from any person whatever
+ of land or interests in land in any township lawfully established
+ prior to the commencement of this Act, provided it is
+ a condition of the acquisition that no land or interest in land
+ in such township has at any time been or shall in future be,
+ transferred except to a native or coloured person; or
+
+ (j) permitting the alienation of land or its diversion from
+ the purposes for which it was set apart if, under section
+ ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY-SEVEN of the South African Act, 1909,
+ or any other law, such land could not be alienated or so diverted
+ except under the authority of an Act of Parliament; or
+
+ (k) in any way modifying the provisions of any law whereby
+ mortgages of or charges over land may be created
+ to secure advances out of public moneys for specific purposes
+ mentioned in such law and the interest of such advances,
+ or whereunder the mortgagee or person having the charge
+ may enter and take possession of the land so mortgaged or charged
+ except that in any sale of such land in accordance with such law
+ the provisions of this Act shall be observed.
+
+ (2) Nothing in this Act contained which imposes restrictions
+upon the acquisition by any person of land or right thereto,
+interests therein, or servitudes thereover, shall be in force
+in the Province of the Cape of Good Hope, if and for so long
+as such person would, by such restrictions, be prevented from
+acquiring or holding a qualification whereunder he is or may become
+entitled to be registered as a voter at parliamentary elections
+in any electoral division in the said Province.
+
+9. The Governor-General may make regulations for preventing
+the overcrowding of huts and other dwellings in the stadts,
+native villages and settlements and other places in which natives
+are congregated in areas not under the jurisdiction of any local authority,
+the sanitation of such places and for the maintenance of the health
+of the inhabitants thereof.
+
+10. In this Act, unless inconsistent with the context, --
+
+"scheduled native area" shall mean any area described in the Schedule
+to this Act;
+
+"native" shall mean any person, male or female, who is a member of
+an aboriginal race or tribe of Africa; and shall further include
+any company or other body of persons, corporate or unincorporate,
+if the persons who have a controlling interest therein are natives;
+
+"interest in land" shall include, in addition to other interest in land,
+the interest which a mortgagee of, or person having charge over, land acquires
+under a mortgage bond or charge;
+
+"Minister" shall mean the Minister of Native Affairs;
+
+"farm labourer" shall mean a native who resides on a farm and is bona fide,
+but not necessarily continuously employed by the owner or lessee thereof
+in domestic service or in farming operations:
+
+Provided that --
+
+ (a) if such native reside on one farm and is employed
+ on another farm of the same owner or lessee he shall be deemed
+ to have resided, and to have been employed, on one and the same farm;
+
+ (b) such native shall not be deemed to be bona fide employed
+ unless he renders ninety days' service at least
+ in one calendar year on the farm occupied by the owner or lessee
+ or on another farm of the owner or lessee and no rent is paid
+ or valuable consideration of any kind, other than service,
+ is given by him to the owner or lessee in respect of residence
+ on such farm or farms.
+
+A person shall be deemed for the purposes of this Act
+to hire land if, in consideration of his being permitted
+to occupy that land or any portion thereof --
+
+ (a) he pays or promises to pay to any person a rent in money; or
+
+ (b) he renders or promises to render to any person a share of the produce
+ of that land, or any valuable consideration of any kind whatever
+ other than his own labour or services or the labour or services
+ of his family.
+
+11. This Act may be cited for all purposes as the Natives' Land Act, 1913.
+==
+
+The foregoing result of a legislative jumble is "the law",
+and this law, like Alexander the coppersmith, "hath done us much harm".
+Mr. Sauer carried his Bill less by reason than by sheer force of numbers,
+and partly by promises which he afterwards broke. Among these broken promises
+was the definite assurance he gave Parliament that the Bill
+would be referred to the Select Committee on Native Affairs,
+so that the Natives, who are not represented in Parliament,
+their European friends and the Missionary bodies on behalf of the Natives,
+could be able at the proper time to appear before this committee and state
+any objection which they might have to the Bill. But when that time came,
+the Minister flatly refused to refer it to the committee.
+This change of front is easily explained, because the weight of evidence
+which could have been given before any Parliamentary committee
+would have imperilled the passage of the Bill.
+
+As might have been expected, the debate on the Bill created the greatest alarm
+amongst the native population, for they had followed its course
+with the keenest interest. Nothing short of a declaration of war against them
+could have created a similar excitement, although the hope was entertained
+in some quarters, that a body of men like the Ministerialists in Parliament
+(a majority of whom are never happier than when attesting
+the Christian character of their race) would in course of days
+attend the Holy Communion, remember the 11th Commandment,
+and do unto others as they would that men should do unto them.
+Our people, in fact a number of them, said amongst themselves
+that even Dutchmen sing Psalms -- all the Psalms, including the 24th;
+and, believing as they did that Dutchmen could have no other religion
+besides the one recommended in the New Testament and preached by
+the predikants of the Dutch Reformed Church, were prepared
+to commend their safety to the influence of that sweet and peaceable religion.
+However, some other Natives, remembering what took place before
+the South African war, took a different view of these religious incidents.
+Those Natives, especially of the old Republics, knew that
+the only dividing fence between the Transvaal Natives and complete slavery
+was the London Convention; they, therefore, now that the London Convention
+in fact had ceased to exist, had evil forebodings regarding
+the average Republican's treatment of the Natives, which was seldom influenced
+by religious scruples, and they did not hesitate to express their fears.
+
+Personally we must say that if any one had told us at the beginning of 1913,
+that a majority of members of the Union Parliament were capable of passing
+a law like the Natives' Land Act, whose object is to prevent the Natives
+from ever rising above the position of servants to the whites,
+we would have regarded that person as a fit subject for the lunatic asylum.
+But the passing of that Act and its operation have rudely
+forced the fact upon us that the Union Parliament is capable of producing
+any measure that is subversive of native interests; and that
+the complete arrest of native progress is the object aimed at
+in their efforts to include the Protectorates in their Union.
+Thus we think that their sole reason for seeking to incorporate Basutoland,
+Swaziland and Bechuanaland is that, when they have definitely eliminated
+the Imperial factor from South Africa, as they are unmistakably trying to do,
+they may have a million more slaves than if the Protectorates were excluded.
+
+In this connexion, the realization of the prophecy of an old Basuto
+became increasingly believable to us. It was to this effect, namely:
+"That the Imperial Government, after conquering the Boers,
+handed back to them their old Republics, and a nice little present
+in the shape of the Cape Colony and Natal -- the two English Colonies.
+That the Boers are now ousting the Englishmen from the public service,
+and when they have finished with them, they will make a law
+declaring it a crime for a Native to live in South Africa,
+unless he is a servant in the employ of a Boer, and that from this
+it will be just one step to complete slavery." This is being realized,
+for to-day we have, extended throughout the Union of South Africa,
+a "Free" State law which makes it illegal for Natives
+to live on farms except as servants in the employ of Europeans.
+There is another "Free" State law, under which no Native
+may live in a municipal area or own property in urban localities.
+He can only live in town as a servant in the employ of a European.
+And if the followers of General Hertzog are permitted
+to dragoon the Union Government into enforcing "Free" State ideals
+against the Natives of the Union, as they have successfully done
+under the Natives' Land Act, it will only be a matter of time
+before we have a Natives' Urban Act enforced throughout South Africa.
+Then we will have the banner of slavery fully unfurled (of course,
+under another name) throughout the length and breadth of the land.
+
+When the Natives' Land Bill was before Parliament, meetings were held
+in many villages and locations in protest against the Ministerial surrender
+to the Republicans, of which the Bill was the outcome.
+At the end of March, 1913, the Native National Congress met in Johannesburg,
+and there a deputation was appointed to go to Capetown
+and point out to the Government some, at least, of the harm
+that would follow legislation of the character mapped out in Parliament
+on February 28 when the Land Act was first announced. They were to urge
+that such a measure would be exploitation of the cruelest kind, that it
+would not only interfere with the economic independence of the Natives,
+but would reduce them for ever to a state of serfdom, and degrade them
+as nothing has done since slavery was abolished at the Cape.
+Missionaries also, and European friends of the Natives, did not sit still.
+Resolution after resolution, telegraphic and other representations,
+were made to Mr. Sauer, from meetings in various parts of the country,
+counselling prudence. Even such societies as the Transvaal Landowners,
+who had long been crying for a measure to separate whites from blacks,
+and vice versa, urged that the Bill should not be passed during
+the same session in which it was introduced, that the country should be given
+an opportunity to digest it, in order, if necessary, to suggest amendments.
+The Missionary bodies, too, represent a following of Natives
+numbering hundreds of thousands of souls, on whose behalf
+they pleaded for justice. These bodies urged that before passing a law,
+prohibiting the sale and lease of land to Natives, and expelling squatters
+from their homes, the Government should provide locations
+to which the evicted Natives could go. But all these representations
+made no impression upon the Government, who, instead, preferred to act
+upon the recommendation of thirteen diminutive petitions
+(signed in all by 304 Dutchmen in favour of the Bill)* than to be guided
+by the overwhelming weight of public opinion that was against its passage.
+Thus it became clear that the Native's position in his own country
+was not an enviable one, for once a law was made prohibiting
+the sale of landed property to Natives, it would be almost impossible
+to get a South African Parliament to amend it.
+
+--
+* One of these thirteen petitions had only four signatures,
+ which was but one better than that of the Tooley Street tailors.
+--
+
+The Government, which at the beginning assured Parliament of their
+humane intentions, proceeded to delete the mildest clauses of the measure
+and to insert some very harsh ones; and almost each time
+that the Bill came before the House, one or two fresh drastic clauses
+were added. But it is comforting to note that even Parliament
+was not entirely satisfied with this, its heroic piece of legislation.
+Thus Mr. Meyler of Natal did, as only a lawyer could with a view
+to recasting the Bill, some very useful work in pointing out
+the possible harm with which the Bill was fraught. We wish that
+his clever speeches and observations (much of which have come true),
+might yet be sifted out of the big Parliamentary Reports,
+and published in a concise little pamphlet.
+
+Sir David Hunter, another member of Natal, expressed himself as follows: --
+
+==
+While every one seemed animated with a desire to do what was right and just
+to the Natives, there was a feeling that certain of the details of the measure
+required amendment. He was more than pleased when the Minister
+closed the debate by a speech in which he seemed to be willing to meet
+the wishes of those in the House who thought that amendment was required.
+He could not have imagined that the Bill would develop into the shape
+into which it had developed, and had he known that so great an alteration
+would take place in the general effect of the measure
+from what was foreshadowed by the hon. Minister when he had made
+that interesting speech on the second reading he (the speaker)
+could not have conscientiously voted for the second reading.
+He would have been better pleased had a resolution been taken
+not to bring in a Bill until the Commission had reported.
+That was the position he had taken up all through and he would much rather now
+that the matter should be dealt with in that way. If, however,
+the Bill was to be pressed through there should be guarantees in it
+which should allay all suspicion. Anything affecting the native people
+required to be done gradually and should be placed before them
+a long time before the change took place. He hoped there would yet be
+some steps taken to give them a greater sense of security.
+To give some idea of the feeling in the minds of the Natives
+he read a letter from a gentleman in Natal, largely interested
+in the Natives, which had expressed the opinion that the Natives
+stood uncompromisingly against any change in their present status
+until the Commission had reported. He hoped the hon. Minister
+would even yet endeavour to do something to meet their views.
+
+Mr. C. H. Haggar (Roodepoort) said that from the point of those
+who had worked successfully in turning the uncivilized man
+into the civilized man the Bill was bound to be a failure.
+It was necessary not only to have legislation theoretically just,
+but also practically right and good. But there were many who felt
+that so far from the effect of that Bill being good it would be disastrous
+to a very large extent. The great sin which they had been committing
+was that they had always been legislating ahead of the people,
+and there had not been sufficient preparation for the changes
+which were proposed in that Bill; the Natives were not ready for it.
+The hon. member for Victoria West had said that there was a disposition
+in certain directions to repress the Natives. He (the speaker) believed
+that there was a feeling that white men had some divine right
+to the labour of the black, that the black people were to be
+hewers of wood and drawers of water, and he wanted to say that while men
+were obsessed with that feeling they would never be able to legislate fairly.
+They had no more divine right to the labour of the black people
+than they had to the labour of the white. To his mind the great point was,
+should their policy be one of repression or a policy of inspiration?
+They had inspired the Natives to a certain extent, but no sooner
+had they created an appetite than they had told the Natives
+they should go no further. Their policy was the policy of Tantalus.
+That Bill would create a feeling of insecurity in the minds of the Natives.
+There were those who said that if the Natives would not submit to dictation
+they should be wiped out. But that should not be their policy.
+They must cease the policy of repression and let it be
+one of wide inspiration.
+==
+
+But alas! these and similar pleadings had about as much effect
+upon the Ministerial steam-roller as the proverbial water on a duck's back.
+With a rush the Natives' Land Bill was dispatched from the Lower House
+to the Senate, adopted hurriedly by the Senate, returned to the Lower House,
+and went at the same pace to Government House, and there receiving
+the Governor-General's signature, it immediately became law.
+As regards the Governor-General's signature, His Excellency,
+if Ministers are to be believed, was ready to sign the Bill
+(or rather signified his intention of doing so) long before it was introduced
+into Parliament. This excited haste suggests grave misgivings
+as to the character of the Bill. Why all the hurry and scurry,
+and why the Governor-General's approval in advance? Other Bills
+are passed and approved by the Governor, yet they do not come into operation
+until some given day -- the beginning of the next calendar year,
+or of the next financial year. But the Natives' Land Act
+became law and was operating as soon as it could be promulgated.
+
+After desperately protesting, with individual members of Parliament
+and with Cabinet Ministers, and getting nothing for their pains,
+the delegates from the Native Congress wrote Lord Gladstone,
+from an office about two hundred yards distant from Government House,
+requesting His Excellency to withhold his assent to the Natives' Land Bill
+until the people mostly concerned (i.e. the Natives) had had a chance
+of making known to His Majesty the King their objection to the measure.
+His Excellency replied that such a course "was not within
+his constitutional functions." Thereby the die was cast,
+and the mandate went forth that the land laws of the Orange "Free" State,
+which is commonly known as "the Only Slave State", shall be
+the laws of the whole Union of South Africa. The worst feature in the case
+is the fact that, even with the Governments of the late Republics,
+the Presidents always had the power to exempt some Natives
+from the operation of those laws, and that prerogative had been liberally used
+by successive Presidents. Now, however, without a President,
+and with the prerogative of the King (by the exercise of which
+the evils of such a law could have been averted) disowned by
+the King's own Ministers on the spot, God in the heavens alone
+knows what will become of the hapless, because voteless, Natives,
+who are without a President, "without a King", and with a Governor-General
+without constitutional functions, under task-masters whose national traditions
+are to enslave the dark races.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IV One Night with the Fugitives
+
+ Es ist unkoeniglich zu weinen -- ach,
+ Und hier nicht weinen ist unvaeterlich.
+ Schiller.
+
+
+
+"Pray that your flight be not in winter," said Jesus Christ;
+but it was only during the winter of 1913 that the full significance
+of this New Testament passage was revealed to us. We left Kimberley
+by the early morning train during the first week in July,
+on a tour of observation regarding the operation of the Natives' Land Act;
+and we arrived at Bloemhof, in Transvaal, at about noon.
+On the River Diggings there were no actual cases representing
+the effects of the Act, but traces of these effects were everywhere manifest.
+Some fugitives of the Natives' Land Act had crossed the river in full flight.
+The fact that they reached the diggings a fortnight before our visit
+would seem to show that while the debates were proceeding in Parliament
+some farmers already viewed with eager eyes the impending opportunity
+for at once making slaves of their tenants and appropriating their stock;
+for, acting on the powers conferred on them by an Act signed
+by Lord Gladstone, so lately as June 16, they had during that very week
+(probably a couple of days after, and in some cases, it would seem,
+a couple of days before the actual signing of the Bill)
+approached their tenants with stories about a new Act which makes it criminal
+for any one to have black tenants and lawful to have black servants.
+Few of these Natives, of course, would object to be servants,
+especially if the white man is worth working for, but this is where
+the shoe pinches: one of the conditions is that the black man's
+(that is the servant's) cattle shall henceforth work for the landlord
+free of charge. Then the Natives would decide to leave the farm
+rather than make the landlord a present of all their life's savings,
+and some of them had passed through the diggings in search of a place
+in the Transvaal. But the higher up they went the more gloomy
+was their prospect as the news about the new law was now penetrating
+every part of the country.
+
+One farmer met a wandering native family in the town of Bloemhof
+a week before our visit. He was willing to employ the Native
+and many more homeless families as follows: A monthly wage
+of 2 Pounds 10s. for each such family, the husband working in the fields,
+the wife in the house, with an additional 10s. a month for each son,
+and 5s. for each daughter, but on condition that the Native's cattle
+were also handed over to work for him. It must be clearly understood,
+we are told that the Dutchman added, that occasionally the Native
+would have to leave his family at work on the farm, and go out
+with his wagon and his oxen to earn money whenever and wherever
+he was told to go, in order that the master may be enabled to pay
+the stipulated wage. The Natives were at first inclined to laugh at the idea
+of working for a master with their families and goods and chattels,
+and then to have the additional pleasure of paying their own small wages,
+besides bringing money to pay the "Baas" for employing them.
+But the Dutchman's serious demeanour told them that his suggestion
+was "no joke". He himself had for some time been in need
+of a native cattle owner, to assist him as transport rider
+between Bloemhof, Mooifontein, London, and other diggings,
+in return for the occupation and cultivation of some of his waste lands
+in the district, but that was now illegal. He could only "employ" them;
+but, as he had no money to pay wages, their cattle would have
+to go out and earn it for him. Had they not heard of the law before?
+he inquired. Of course they had; in fact that is why they left
+the other place, but as they thought that it was but a "Free" State law,
+they took the anomalous situation for one of the multifarious aspects
+of the freedom of the "Free" State whence they came; they had scarcely thought
+that the Transvaal was similarly afflicted.
+
+Needless to say the Natives did not see their way to agree
+with such a one-sided bargain. They moved up country, but only to find
+the next farmer offering the same terms, however, with a good many more
+disturbing details -- and the next farmer and the next --
+so that after this native farmer had wandered from farm to farm,
+occasionally getting into trouble for travelling with unknown stock,
+"across my ground without my permission", and at times
+escaping arrest for he knew not what, and further, being abused
+for the crimes of having a black skin and no master, he sold some of his stock
+along the way, beside losing many which died of cold and starvation;
+and after thus having lost much of his substance, he eventually worked his way
+back to Bloemhof with the remainder, sold them for anything they could fetch,
+and went to work for a digger.
+
+The experience of another native sufferer was similar to the above,
+except that instead of working for a digger he sold his stock
+for a mere bagatelle, and left with his family by the Johannesburg night train
+for an unknown destination. More native families crossed the river
+and went inland during the previous week, and as nothing had since
+been heard of them, it would seem that they were still wandering somewhere,
+and incidentally becoming well versed in the law that was responsible
+for their compulsory unsettlement.
+
+Well, we knew that this law was as harsh as its instigators were callous,
+and we knew that it would, if passed, render many poor people homeless,
+but it must be confessed that we were scarcely prepared
+for such a rapid and widespread crash as it caused in the lives of the Natives
+in this neighbourhood. We left our luggage the next morning
+with the local Mission School teacher, and crossed the river
+to find out some more about this wonderful law of extermination.
+It was about 10 a.m. when we landed on the south bank of the Vaal River --
+the picturesque Vaal River, upon whose banks a hundred miles farther west
+we spent the best and happiest days of our boyhood. It was interesting
+to walk on one portion of the banks of that beautiful river --
+a portion which we had never traversed except as an infant in mother's arms
+more than thirty years before. How the subsequent happy days at Barkly West,
+so long past, came crowding upon our memory! -- days when
+there were no railways, no bridges, and no system of irrigation.
+In rainy seasons, which at that time were far more regular and certain,
+the river used to overflow its high banks and flood the surrounding valleys
+to such an extent, that no punt could carry the wagons across.
+Thereby the transport service used to be hung up, and numbers of wagons
+would congregate for weeks on both sides of the river
+until the floods subsided. At such times the price of fresh milk
+used to mount up to 1s. per pint. There being next to no competition,
+we boys had a monopoly over the milk trade. We recalled
+the number of haversacks full of bottles of milk we youngsters often carried
+to those wagons, how we returned with empty bottles and with just
+that number of shillings. Mother and our elder brothers
+had leather bags full of gold and did not care for the "boy's money";
+and unlike the boys of the neighbouring village, having no sisters of our own,
+we gave away some of our money to fair cousins, and jingled the rest
+in our pockets. We had been told from boyhood that sweets were injurious
+to the teeth, and so spurning these delights we had hardly any use for money,
+for all we wanted to eat, drink and wear was at hand in plenty.
+We could then get six or eight shillings every morning
+from the pastime of washing that number of bottles,
+filling them with fresh milk and carrying them down to the wagons;
+there was always such an abundance of the liquid that
+our shepherd's hunting dog could not possibly miss what we took,
+for while the flocks were feeding on the luscious buds of the haak-doorns
+and the orange-coloured blossoms of the rich mimosa and other wild vegetation
+that abounded on the banks of the Vaal River, the cows, similarly engaged,
+were gathering more and more milk.
+
+The gods are cruel, and one of their cruellest acts of omission
+was that of giving us no hint that in very much less
+than a quarter of a century all those hundreds of heads of cattle,
+and sheep and horses belonging to the family would vanish
+like a morning mist, and that we ourselves would live
+to pay 30s. per month for a daily supply of this same precious fluid,
+and in very limited quantities. They might have warned us
+that Englishmen would agree with Dutchmen to make it unlawful
+for black men to keep milch cows of their own on the banks of that river,
+and gradually have prepared us for the shock.
+
+Crossing the river from the Transvaal side brings one
+into the Province of the Orange "Free" State, in which,
+in the adjoining division of Boshof, we were born thirty-six years back.
+We remember the name of the farm, but not having been
+in this neighbourhood since infancy, we could not tell its whereabouts,
+nor could we say whether the present owner was a Dutchman,
+his lawyer, or a Hebrew merchant; one thing we do know, however:
+it is that even if we had the money and the owner was willing to sell the spot
+upon which we first saw the light of day and breathed the pure air of heaven,
+the sale would be followed with a fine of one hundred pounds.
+The law of the country forbids the sale of land to a Native.
+Russia is one of the most abused countries in the world,
+but it is extremely doubtful if the statute book of that Empire contains a law
+debarring the peasant from purchasing the land whereon he was born,
+or from building a home wherein he might end his days.
+
+At this time we felt something rising from our heels along our back,
+gripping us in a spasm, as we were cycling along; a needlelike pang, too,
+pierced our heart with a sharp thrill. What was it? We remembered
+feeling something nearly like it when our father died eighteen years ago;
+but at that time our physical organs were fresh and grief was easily
+thrown off in tears, but then we lived in a happy South Africa
+that was full of pleasant anticipations, and now -- what changes for the worse
+have we undergone! For to crown all our calamities, South Africa has by law
+ceased to be the home of any of her native children whose skins are dyed
+with a pigment that does not conform with the regulation hue.
+
+We are told to forgive our enemies and not to let the sun go down
+upon our wrath, so we breathe the prayer that peace may be to the white races,
+and that they, including our present persecutors of the Union Parliament,
+may never live to find themselves deprived of all occupation and
+property rights in their native country as is now the case with the Native.
+History does not tell us of any other continent where the Bantu lived
+besides Africa, and if this systematic ill-treatment of the Natives
+by the colonists is to be the guiding principle of Europe's scramble
+for Africa, slavery is our only alternative; for now it is only as serfs
+that the Natives are legally entitled to live here. Is it to be thought
+that God is using the South African Parliament to hound us
+out of our ancestral homes in order to quicken our pace heavenward?
+But go from where to heaven? In the beginning, we are told,
+God created heaven and earth, and peopled the earth,
+for people do not shoot up to heaven from nowhere. They must have had
+an earthly home. Enoch, Melchizedek, Elijah, and other saints,
+came to heaven from earth. God did not say to the Israelites
+in their bondage: "Cheer up, boys; bear it all in good part
+for I have bright mansions on high awaiting you all." But he said:
+"I have surely seen the affliction of my people which are in Egypt,
+and have heard their cry by reason of their taskmasters;
+for I know their sorrows, and I am come down to bring them
+out of the hands of the Egyptians, and to bring them up out of that land
+unto a good land and a large, unto a land flowing with milk and honey."
+And He used Moses to carry out the promise He made to their ancestor Abraham
+in Canaan, that "unto thy seed will I give this land." It is to be hoped
+that in the Boer churches, entrance to which is barred against coloured people
+during divine service, they also read the Pentateuch.
+
+It is doubtful if we ever thought so much on a single bicycle ride
+as we did on this journey; however, the sight of a policeman ahead of us
+disturbed these meditations and gave place to thoughts of quite another kind,
+for -- we had no pass. Dutchmen, Englishmen, Jews, Germans,
+and other foreigners may roam the "Free" State without permission --
+but not Natives. To us it would mean a fine and imprisonment
+to be without a pass. The "pass" law was first instituted
+to check the movement of livestock over sparsely populated areas.
+In a sense it was a wise provision, in that it served to identify
+the livestock which one happened to be driving along the high road,
+to prove the bona fides of the driver and his title to the stock.
+Although white men still steal large droves of horses in Basutoland
+and sell them in Natal or in East Griqualand, they, of course,
+are not required to carry any passes. These white horse-thieves,
+to escape the clutches of the police, employ Natives
+to go and sell the stolen stock and write the passes for these Natives,
+forging the names of Magistrates and Justices of the Peace.
+Such native thieves in some instances ceasing to be hirelings
+in the criminal business, trade on their own, but it is not clear
+what purpose it is intended to serve by subjecting native pedestrians
+to the degrading requirement of carrying passes when they are not
+in charge of any stock.
+
+In a few moments the policeman was before us and we alighted
+in presence of the representative of the law, with our feet
+on the accursed soil of the district in which we were born.
+The policeman stopped. By his looks and his familiar "Dag jong"
+we noticed that the policeman was Dutch, and the embodiment of affability.
+He spoke and we were glad to notice that he had no intention
+of dragging an innocent man to prison. We were many miles
+from the nearest police station, and in such a case
+one is generally able to gather the real views of the man on patrol,
+as distinct from the written code of his office, but our friend
+was becoming very companionable. Naturally we asked him about
+the operation of the plague law. He was a Transvaaler, he said,
+and he knew that Kafirs were inferior beings, but they had rights,
+and were always left in undisturbed possession of their property
+when Paul Kruger was alive. "The poor devils must be sorry now," he said,
+"that they ever sang `God save the Queen' when the British troops
+came into the Transvaal, for I have seen, in the course of my duties,
+that a Kafir's life nowadays was not worth a ----, and I believe that no man
+regretted the change of flags now more than the Kafirs of Transvaal."
+This information was superfluous, for personal contact
+with the Natives of Transvaal had convinced us of the fact.
+They say it is only the criminal who has any reason to rejoice over
+the presence of the Union Jack, because in his case the cat-o'-nine-tails,
+except for very serious crimes, has been abolished.
+
+"Some of the poor creatures," continued the policeman,
+"I knew to be fairly comfortable, if not rich, and they enjoyed
+the possession of their stock, living in many instances just like Dutchmen.
+Many of these are now being forced to leave their homes.
+Cycling along this road you will meet several of them in search of new homes,
+and if ever there was a fool's errand, it is that of a Kafir
+trying to find a new home for his stock and family just now."
+
+"And what do you think, Baas Officer, must eventually be the lot of a people
+under such unfortunate circumstances?" we asked.
+
+"I think," said the policeman, "that it must serve them right.
+They had no business to hanker after British rule, to cheat and plot
+with the enemies of their Republic for the overthrow of their Government.
+Why did they not assist the forces of their Republic during the war
+instead of supplying the English with scouts and intelligence?
+Oom Paul would not have died of a broken heart and he would still be there
+to protect them. Serve them right, I say."
+
+So saying he spurred his horse, which showed a clean pair of hoofs.
+He left us rather abruptly, for we were about to ask
+why we, too, of Natal and the Cape were suffering, for we,
+being originally British subjects, never "cheated and plotted with
+the enemies of our Colonies", but he was gone and left us still cogitating
+by the roadside.
+
+Proceeding on our journey we next came upon a native trek
+and heard the same old story of prosperity on a Dutch farm:
+they had raised an average 800 bags of grain each season,
+which, with the increase of stock and sale of wool, gave a steady income
+of about 150 Pounds per year after the farmer had taken his share.
+There were gossipy rumours about somebody having met some one
+who said that some one else had overheard a conversation
+between the Baas and somebody else, to the effect that the Kafirs
+were getting too rich on his property. This much involved tale
+incidentally conveys the idea that the Baas was himself getting too rich
+on his farm. For the Native provides his own seed, his own cattle,
+his own labour for the ploughing, the weeding and the reaping,
+and after bagging his grain he calls in the landlord to receive his share,
+which is fifty per cent of the entire crop.
+
+All had gone well till the previous week when the Baas came
+to the native tenants with the story that a new law had been passed
+under which "all my oxen and cows must belong to him, and my family to work
+for 2 Pounds a month, failing which he gave me four days to leave the farm."
+
+We passed several farm-houses along the road, where all
+appeared pretty tranquil as we went along, until the evening
+which we spent in the open country, somewhere near the boundaries
+of the Hoopstad and Boshof districts; here a regular circus had gathered.
+By a "circus" we mean the meeting of groups of families,
+moving to every point of the compass, and all bivouacked at this point
+in the open country where we were passing. It was heartrending
+to listen to the tales of their cruel experiences derived from
+the rigour of the Natives' Land Act. Some of their cattle had perished
+on the journey, from poverty and lack of fodder, and the native owners
+ran a serious risk of imprisonment for travelling with dying stock.
+The experience of one of these evicted tenants is typical of the rest,
+and illustrates the cases of several we met in other parts of the country.
+
+Kgobadi, for instance, had received a message describing
+the eviction of his father-in-law in the Transvaal Province, without notice,
+because he had refused to place his stock, his family, and his person
+at the disposal of his former landlord, who now refuses
+to let him remain on his farm except on these conditions.
+The father-in-law asked that Kgobadi should try and secure a place for him
+in the much dreaded "Free" State as the Transvaal had suddenly
+become uninhabitable to Natives who cannot become servants;
+but "greedy folk hae lang airms", and Kgobadi himself
+was proceeding with his family and his belongings in a wagon,
+to inform his people-in-law of his own eviction, without notice,
+in the "Free" State, for a similar reason to that which sent
+his father-in-law adrift. The Baas had exacted from him
+the services of himself, his wife and his oxen, for wages of 30s. a month,
+whereas Kgobadi had been making over 100 Pounds a year, besides retaining
+the services of his wife and of his cattle for himself.
+When he refused the extortionate terms the Baas retaliated with a Dutch note,
+dated the 30th day of June, 1913, which ordered him to "betake himself
+from the farm of the undersigned, by sunset of the same day,
+failing which his stock would be seized and impounded,
+and himself handed over to the authorities for trespassing on the farm."
+
+A drowning man catches at every straw, and so we were again and again
+appealed to for advice by these sorely afflicted people.
+To those who were not yet evicted we counselled patience and submission
+to the absurd terms, pending an appeal to a higher authority
+than the South African Parliament and finally to His Majesty the King who,
+we believed, would certainly disapprove of all that we saw on that day
+had it been brought to his notice. As for those who were already evicted,
+as a Bechuana we could not help thanking God that Bechuanaland
+(on the western boundary of this quasi-British Republic) was still
+entirely British. In the early days it was the base of David Livingstone's
+activities and peaceful mission against the Portuguese and Arab slave trade.
+We suggested that they might negotiate the numerous restrictions
+against the transfer of cattle from the Western Transvaal and seek an asylum
+in Bechuanaland. We wondered what consolation we could give
+to these roving wanderers if the whole of Bechuanaland were under
+the jurisdiction of the relentless Union Parliament.
+
+It was cold that afternoon as we cycled into the "Free" State from Transvaal,
+and towards evening the southern winds rose. A cutting blizzard
+raged during the night, and native mothers evicted from their homes
+shivered with their babies by their sides. When we saw on that night
+the teeth of the little children clattering through the cold,
+we thought of our own little ones in their Kimberley home of an evening
+after gambolling in their winter frocks with their schoolmates,
+and we wondered what these little mites had done that a home should suddenly
+become to them a thing of the past.
+
+Kgobadi's goats had been to kid when he trekked from his farm;
+but the kids, which in halcyon times represented the interest on his capital,
+were now one by one dying as fast as they were born and left by the roadside
+for the jackals and vultures to feast upon.
+
+This visitation was not confined to Kgobadi's stock,
+Mrs. Kgobadi carried a sick baby when the eviction took place,
+and she had to transfer her darling from the cottage to the jolting ox-wagon
+in which they left the farm. Two days out the little one began to sink
+as the result of privation and exposure on the road, and the night
+before we met them its little soul was released from its earthly bonds.
+The death of the child added a fresh perplexity to the stricken parents.
+They had no right or title to the farm lands through which they trekked:
+they must keep to the public roads -- the only places in the country
+open to the outcasts if they are possessed of a travelling permit.
+The deceased child had to be buried, but where, when, and how?
+
+This young wandering family decided to dig a grave under cover of the darkness
+of that night, when no one was looking, and in that crude manner
+the dead child was interred -- and interred amid fear and trembling,
+as well as the throbs of a torturing anguish, in a stolen grave,
+lest the proprietor of the spot, or any of his servants, should surprise them
+in the act. Even criminals dropping straight from the gallows
+have an undisputed claim to six feet of ground on which to rest
+their criminal remains, but under the cruel operation of the Natives' Land Act
+little children, whose only crime is that God did not make them white,
+are sometimes denied that right in their ancestral home.
+
+Numerous details narrated by these victims of an Act of Parliament
+kept us awake all that night, and by next morning we were glad enough
+to hear no more of the sickening procedure of extermination
+voluntarily instituted by the South African Parliament.
+We had spent a hideous night under a bitterly cold sky,
+conditions to which hundreds of our unfortunate countrymen and countrywomen
+in various parts of the country are condemned by the provisions
+of this Parliamentary land plague. At five o'clock in the morning
+the cold seemed to redouble its energies; and never before
+did we so fully appreciate the Master's saying: "But pray ye that your flight
+be not in the winter."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter V Another Night with the Sufferers
+
+ Heureux ceux qui sont morts dans le calme des soirs,
+ Avant ces jours affreux de carnage et de haine!
+ Ils se sont endormis, le coeur rempli d'espoirs,
+ Dans un reve d'amour et de concorde humaine!
+
+ Ils n'ont pas entendu la sinistre remeur
+ Qui monte des hameaux consumes par la flamme,
+ Ni les cris des enfants et des vierges en pleurs,
+ Ni le gemissement des vieillards et des femmes!
+ Heureux les morts!
+ Maurice Kufferath.
+
+
+
+We parted sadly from these unfortunate nomads of an ungrateful
+and inhospitable country, after advising them to trek from the Union
+into the arid deserts of Bechuanaland. In our advice we laid special stress
+upon the costliness of such an expedition as theirs and upon
+the many and varying regulations to be complied with, on such a trek,
+through the Western Transvaal. But, cost whatever it may,
+they, like ourselves, understood that as the law stood
+they would be better off and safer beyond the boundaries of the Union.
+
+From here we worked our way into the Hoopstad district. There we saw
+some Natives who were, as it were, on pins and needles, their landlords
+having given them a few days in which to consider the advisability
+of either accepting the new conditions or leaving their houses.
+Our advice to these tenants was to accept, for the time being,
+any terms offered by their landlords, pending an appeal to His Majesty
+the King; we also passed through a few farms where the white farmers were
+visibly sympathetic towards the harried Natives. Some of the white farmers
+were accepting Natives as tenants on their farms in defiance of the law.
+We naturally thanked these for their humanity and went our way,
+promising never to disclose their magnanimity to the Government officials.
+"What has suddenly happened?" one of these landlords asked.
+"We were living so nicely with your people, and why should the law
+unsettle them in this manner?"
+
+We may here mention that a fortnight later we were in General Botha's
+constituency in the Transvaal. A few days before we arrived there
+a meeting of white farmers was held at one of the Dutch farm-houses
+at which it was resolved to take the fullest advantage of the new law,
+which had placed the entire native population in the hands of the farmers.
+It was further resolved that a Kafir who refused to become a servant
+should at once be consigned to the road.
+
+A similar resolution was passed at another meeting of landlords
+at another place. Part of the proceedings of this meeting
+was reported in some, though not all, of the Dutch newspapers.
+Without breaking our promise not to disclose any names of landlords
+who felt it a duty to resist injustice, even though it bears the garb of law,
+we will mention Mr. X., a Boer farmer, of the farm ----, near Thingamejig,
+between the town of ---- and the river ----. He protested at the meeting,
+stating that the Transvaalers were not compelled to turn the Natives out,
+and that they were only debarred from taking any new native tenants;
+that it was wicked to expel a Kafir from the farm for no reason whatever,
+and so make him homeless, since he could not, if evicted, go either
+to another farm or back to his old place. For expressing his views so frankly
+Mr. X. was threatened by his compatriots with physical violence!
+His opponents also said that, if he continued to harbour Kafirs on his farm
+as tenants, they would hold him responsible for any stock
+that they might lose. The incidents of the meeting were related
+to the Natives by Mr. X. himself. He told the Natives, further,
+that he would go to the expense of fencing his farm with the Natives inside,
+so that they may be out of the reach of his infuriated neighbours.
+
+We spent the next night in some native huts on a farm
+in the district of Hoopstad. On that occasion we met a man
+who had had a month's notice to leave his farm, and was going
+from farm to farm in search of a new place. He had heard
+alarming stories about evictions wherever he went. During that evening
+we were treated to some more pitiful stories concerning
+the atrocities of the wretched land Act. Many native wanderers
+had actually passed that farm during the preceding few days,
+trudging aimlessly from place to place in search of some farmer
+who might give them a shelter. At first they thought
+the stories about a new law were inventions or exaggerations,
+but their own desperate straits and the prevailing native dislocation
+soon taught them otherwise.
+
+The similarity in the experiences of the sufferers would make
+monotonous reading if given individually, but there are instances
+here and there which give variety to the painful record,
+and these should yield the utmost satisfaction to the promoters of the Act,
+in proving to them the fell measure of their achievement.
+One example of these experiences was that of a white farmer
+who had induced a thrifty Native in another district to come and farm
+on his estate. The contract was duly executed about the end of May, 1913.
+It was agreed that the Native should move over to the new place
+after gathering his crops and sharing them with his old landlord,
+which he did in the third week in June. On his arrival, however,
+the new landlord's attitude towards him aroused his suspicions;
+his suspicions were confirmed when, after some hesitation,
+the landlord told him that their contract was illegal. Having already
+left his old place the legal embargo was also against his return there,
+and so his only course was to leave that place and wander about
+with his stock and family. They went in the direction of Kroonstad,
+and they have not been heard of since.
+
+The next example is that of the oldest man in the "Free" State.
+He had been evicted (so we were told during that evening on the farm)
+along with his aged wife, his grey-headed children,
+the children's children and grandchildren. We may here add that we read
+a confirmation of this case in the English weekly newspaper of Harrismith.
+The paper's reference to this case will also illustrate the easy manner
+in which these outrageous evictions are reported in white newspapers.
+There is no reference to the sinister undercurrent and hardships
+attending these evictions. The paper in question, the `Harrismith Chronicle',
+simply says: --
+
+==
+ AN ANCIENT COUPLE
+
+A venerable Native whose age is no less than 119 years,
+accompanied by his wife, aged 98, and a son who is approaching 80,
+left Harrismith on Tuesday by train for Volksrust. The old man
+acquired some property in the Transvaal, and is leaving this district
+to start a new home with as much interest in the venture
+as if he were a stripling of twenty. The old lady had to be carried
+to the train, but the old man walked fairly firmly. The aged couple
+were the centre of much kindly attraction, and were made
+as comfortable as possible for their journey by the railway officials.
+It is difficult to realize in these days of rapid change
+that in the departure from the "Free" State of this venerable party
+we are losing from our midst a man who was born in 1794,
+and has lived in no less than three centuries of time.
+Good luck to them both; may they still live long and prosper!
+==
+
+Now, as a matter of fact, this "ancient couple" had not left the "Free" State
+of their own free will. Their stock had been expelled from
+their grazing areas, and they were told that they could only continue to graze
+if the centenarian tenant agreed to supply a certain number of labourers
+to work on the landowner's farm and with his sons ceased to do any ploughing
+as tenants. This system of sharing the crops has been followed
+ever since the Boers planted themselves in the "Free" State, and the family
+had had no other means of support. Happily the aid of Providence
+in the case of this "ancient couple" was speedy, as the old people
+quickly found an asylum on the farm of Mr. P. ka I. Seme, a native solicitor
+in the Transvaal.
+
+At the same place on the same evening we were told of a conversation
+between a well-known Dutchman and a Native. "The object of this law,"
+said the Burgher, "is to goad the Natives into rebellion,
+so that the Government may legally confiscate what little ground
+was left to them, and hand over the dispossessed Kafirs and their families
+to work for the farmers, just for their food." The policy of
+goading the Natives into rebellion is not wholly foreign to Colonial policy;
+but the horrible cruelty to which live stock is exposed under the new Act
+is altogether a new departure. King Solomon says, "The righteous man
+regardeth the life of his beast, but the tender mercies of the wicked
+are cruel"; but there is a Government of professed Bible readers who,
+in defiance of all Scriptural precepts, pass a law which penalizes
+a section of the community along with their oxen, sheep, goats,
+horses and donkeys on account of the colour of their owners.
+The penalty clause (Section 5) imposes a fine of 100 Pounds on a landowner
+who accommodates a Native on his farm; and if after the fine is paid
+the Native leaves his stock on the farm to go and look for a fresh place,
+there will be an additional fine of 5 Pounds for every day
+that the Native's cattle remain on that farm. They must
+take the road immediately and be kept moving day and night
+until they die of starvation, or until the owner (who is debarred,
+by Section 1, from purchasing a pasturage for his cattle) disposes of them
+to a white man.
+
+Such cruelty to dumb animals is as unwarranted as it is unprecedented.
+It reads cruel enough on paper, but we wish that the reader had accompanied us
+on one journey, say, during the cold snap in the first week in August,
+when we travelled from Potchefstroom to Vereeniging,
+and seen the flocks of those evicted Natives that we met.
+We frequently met those roving pariahs, with their hungry cattle,
+and wondered if the animals were not more deserving of pity than their owners.
+It may be the cattle's misfortune that they have a black owner,
+but it is certainly not their fault, for sheep have no choice
+in the selection of a colour for their owners, and no cows or goats
+are ever asked to decide if the black boy who milks them shall be their owner,
+or but a herd in the employ of a white man; so why should they be starved
+on account of the colour of their owners? We knew of a law to prevent cruelty
+to animals, but had never thought that we should live to meet in one day
+so many dumb creatures making silent appeals to Heaven for protection
+against the law. "What man has nerve to do, man has not nerve to see",
+and oh! if those gifted Parliamentarians could have been mustered here
+to witness the wretched results of one of their fine days' work
+for a fine day's pay! But "they bind heavy burdens and grievous to be borne",
+then draw their Parliamentary emoluments and retire to the quiet
+of their comfortable homes, to enjoy more rest than is due to toilers
+who have served both God and humanity.
+
+During this same night in Hoopstad district we were also told of the visit
+of a Dutch farmer in the middle of June, 1913, to his native tenants.
+One of the Natives -- named Kgabale -- was rather old. His two sons are
+delving in the gold mines of Johannesburg, and return home each spring time
+to help the old man and their two young sisters to do the ploughing.
+The daughters tend the fields and Kgabale looks after the stock.
+By this means they have been enabled to lead a respectable life
+and to pay the landowner fifty per cent. of the produce every year,
+besides the taxes levied by the Government on Natives.
+Three weeks before our visit, the farmer came to cancel
+Kgabale's verbal contract with him and to turn the family
+into unpaid servants, in return for the privilege of squatting on his farm.
+As Kgabale himself was too old to work, the farmer demanded of him
+that his two sons should return immediately from Johannesburg
+to render manual service on his farm, failing which, the old man
+should forthwith betake himself from the place. He gave Kgabale seven days
+to deliver his two sons.
+
+Naturally this decision came upon Kgabale and his daughters
+like a bolt from the blue. The poor old man wandered from place to place,
+trying to find some one -- and it took him two days to do so --
+who could write, so as to dictate a letter to his sons in Johannesburg,
+informing them of what had happened. The week expired before he could get
+a reply from Johannesburg. The landlord, in a very abusive mood,
+again demanded the instant arrival of his two sons from Johannesburg,
+to commence work at the farm-house the very next morning.
+Kgabale spent the whole night praying that at least one of his sons
+might come. By daybreak next morning no answer had arrived,
+and the Dutchman came and set fire to the old man's houses,
+and ordered him then and there to quit the farm. It was a sad sight
+to see the feeble old man, his aged wife and his daughters
+driven in this way from a place which they had regarded as their home.
+In the ordinary course, such a calamity could have been made more tolerable
+by moving to the next farm and there await the arrival and advice of his sons;
+but now, under the Natives' Land Act, no sympathetic landowner
+would be permitted to shelter them for a single day. So Kgabale was said
+to have gone in the direction of Klerksdorp.
+
+One of the sons arrived a week after the catastrophe. He found
+his old home in ruins, and that his aged parents and their children
+had become victims of the turpitude of an Act of Parliament.
+The son went in search of his relatives across the Vaal,
+but it was not known if they succeeded in finding the refuge
+which the law had made unlawful.
+
+Among the squatters on the same farm as Kgabale was a widow named Maria.
+Her husband in his lifetime had lived as a tenant on the farm,
+ploughing in shares until his death. After his death
+Maria kept on the contract and made a fair living. Her son and daughter,
+aged fourteen and sixteen respectively, took turns at herding her cattle
+and assisting the mother in other ways. During the ploughing season,
+they hired assistance to till the fields, but they themselves
+tended and reaped the harvest and delivered 50 per cent of the produce
+to the landowner. Such were the conditions on which she was allowed
+to live on the farm. Maria, being a widow, and her son being but a youth,
+it was hoped that the landlord would propose reasonable terms for her;
+but instead, his proposal was that she should dispose of her stock
+and indenture her children to him. This sinister proposal makes it evident
+that farmers not only expect Natives to render them free labour,
+but they actually wish the Natives to breed slaves for them.
+Maria found it difficult to comply with her landlord's demand,
+and as she had no husband, from whom labour could be exacted,
+the Dutchman ordered her to "clear out, and," he added with an oath,
+"you must get another man before you reach your next place of abode,
+as the law will not permit you to stay there till you have a man
+to work for the Baas." Having given this counsel the landlord is said
+to have set fire to Maria's thatched cottage, and as the chilly south-easter
+blew the smoke of her burning home towards the north-west, Maria,
+with her bedclothes on her head, and on the heads of her son and daughter,
+and carrying her three-year-old boy tied to her back,
+walked off from the farm, driving her cows before her.
+In parting from the endeared associations of their late home,
+for one blank and unknown, the children were weeping bitterly.
+Nor has any news of the fate of this family been received
+since they were forced out on this perilous adventure.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VI Our Indebtedness to White Women
+
+ O woman! in our hours of ease
+ Uncertain, coy, and hard to please,
+ And variable as the shade
+ By the light quivering aspen made;
+ When pain and anguish wring the brow,
+ A ministering angel thou.
+ Scott.
+
+
+
+Some farmers (unfortunately too few) who had at first intended
+to change the status of their native tenants, had been obliged
+to abandon the idea owing to the determined opposition of their wives.
+One such case was particularly interesting. Thus, at Dashfontein,
+the wife of a Dutch farmer, a Mr. V., on whose property some native families
+were squatting, got up, one morning, and found the kitchen-maid
+very disagreeable. The morning coffee had been made right enough,
+but the maid's "Morre, Nooi" (Good morning, ma'am) was rather sullen
+and almost bordering on insolence. She did her scullery work as usual,
+but did not seem to care, that morning, about wasting time inquiring
+how baby slept, and if Nonnie had got rid of her neuralgia, and so on.
+She spoke only when spoken to and answered mainly in monosyllables.
+Mrs. V. was perplexed.
+
+"What is the matter, Anna?" she asked.
+
+"Nothing, Nooi," replied Anna curtly.
+
+Mrs. V. tried some of her witty jokes, but they seemed to be wasted on Anna.
+After jesting with the servant had failed, scolding was next tried,
+but nothing seemed to bring back the girl's usual cheerfulness.
+"Oh, Anna," said the mistress at length, "you make me think of the olden days,
+when such disagreeable whims on the part of frowning maids
+used to be cured by ----"
+
+Anna was evidently not listening, and, if she had heard the mistress,
+she did not care two straws (or one straw for that matter) what cures
+Mrs. V.'s great-grandmother had prescribed for sullen servant girls.
+In fact, Anna had become a wild Kafir, for though she went about her work
+in silence, her face bore an expression which seemed to speak louder
+than her mouth could have done. She was clearly engaged
+in serious thought. The mistress tried to dismiss from her mind
+the inexplicable attitude of her servant, but the frowning look on Anna's face
+made the attempts unsuccessful. The fact that when Anna went home,
+the previous night, she was happiness personified, did not decrease
+Mrs. V.'s perplexity.
+
+"There must be something wrong," Mrs. V. concluded, after vainly trying
+ruse after ruse to get a smile out of her servant girl. "Something is amiss.
+I wonder if one of those well-dressed Kafirs from Potchefstroom
+had been prowling about the farm and instilling in Anna's simple mind
+all kinds of silly notions, about town flirts and black dandies,
+silk dresses in Potchefstroom and similar vuilgoed (rubbish).
+And if a town Kafir is going to marry Anna, where on earth am I going to get
+a reliable servant to whom I could securely entrust my home when I have
+occasion to go to town or to the seaside on a shorter or longer vacation?
+Who could cook and attend to my husband's and children's peculiar wants,
+if Anna is going to leave us? It seems certain that Anna's heart
+is not on the farm," she said to herself. "It was there right enough
+when she went home last night, but it is clear that some one has stolen it
+during the night. Anna is helplessly lovesick. I must find out who it is.
+The swain must be found and induced to come and join, or supervise,
+our squatters. We cannot let him take her away, for what will the homestead
+be without Anna? I was looking forward to her marrying on the farm
+and giving her a superior cottage so that other Kafir girls may see
+how profitable it is to be good. Anna leaving the farm, O, nee wat! (Oh, no).
+We must find out who it is; but wait, there is old Gert (her father) coming,
+with old Jan (her uncle). I must find out from them who had been intruding
+into the company of their daughters last night. I should warn them
+to be on the alert lest Anna elopes to Potchefstroom with somebody,
+probably to take the train and go farther -- to Johannesburg or Kimberley,
+as did Klein Mietje, whom I had hoped to train as our housemaid ----"
+
+"Good morning, Auta Gert, how is Mietje and the kleintjes (little ones)?"
+
+Auta Gert's demeanour was a greater puzzle to Mrs. V. than his daughter's
+when he replied, "So, so."
+
+Mrs. V. (between horns of the same dilemma): "And you, Auta Jan?"
+
+"Ja, Missus," replied Jan.
+
+Mrs. V.'s perplexity was intense, for it became evident that the two Natives
+were there as a deputation, charged with some grave mission.
+Before she uttered another word the two Natives asked for an interview.
+
+"Not to waste much time, Missus," began old Gert, "a thunderbolt has burst
+on the native settlement on the farm, and Dashfontein is no longer
+a home to us ----"
+
+"No longer a home!" exclaimed Mrs. V. "I hope you idiotic Kafirs
+are not going to be so foolhardy as to leave me, leave the Baas,
+and leave the farm upon which your fathers and mothers lie buried.
+Do not you know that during this very week numbers of Natives have been
+calling on the Baas, asking him for places of abode, complaining that
+they have been turned adrift, with their little ones and their hungry animals,
+for refusing to become servants to farmers on whose property
+they had been ploughing on shares? White men have suddenly
+become brutes and have expelled Natives with whom they have lived
+from childhood -- Natives whose labour made the white man wealthy
+are turned away by people who should treat them with gratitude.
+And are you going to leave your old home just when the Devil
+appears to have possessed himself of the hearts of most farmers?
+In your own interest, apart from my own and the Baas's, Auta Gert,
+you should have left us long ago when you could find a place elsewhere.
+Are you so deaf and blind as not to hear and see the change
+which has come over the country of late? White men formerly punished a Kafir
+who had done some wrong, now they worry him from sheer cussedness.
+You must be mad, Auta Gert, to try and leave us. What is going
+to become of your family and your beautiful cattle. No wonder that Anna
+is so upset. I have been thinking that some rondlooper (vagabond)
+from the towns had been trying to take her away."
+
+As Mrs. V. spoke she was agreeably surprised to find the sobering effect
+which her rebuke seemed to have upon her husband's native tenants.
+She knew her influence over them, especially over the old native families,
+but in all her dealings and close association with them she could not remember
+an impromptu speech of hers that produced such immediate results.
+The faces of the two Natives brightened up, and they kept
+looking at one another as she spoke. At length she turned round
+towards the stoep and there was Anna, for the first time that morning,
+interested in and delighted by what she said. Usually it would have been
+a serious breach of the rules of the house for Anna to listen
+when the Missus was speaking about something that did not immediately concern
+her scullery duties; but Mrs. V.'s satisfaction was unbounded
+on seeing the bright look on her servant's face, which she had hitherto
+vainly sought.
+
+"Now, you see," said Anna to her father, "I told you it would never happen
+if the Missus can help it."
+
+At this, the men could scarcely suppress a laugh. The Missus
+looked round again, and said:
+
+"Anna, have you Kafirs plotted to fool me this morning? Because I take
+such a deep interest in your welfare, you have so far forgotten yourselves
+that you connived with your parents to come over to my house and fool me
+on my own farm? What is the meaning of all this?"
+
+Auta Gert unfolded his story. The Baas was at the native settlement
+the previous day. He called a meeting of the native peasants and told them
+of the new law, under which no Kafir can buy a farm or hire a farm.
+He added that, according to this law, their former relations
+of landlord and tenants have been made a criminal offence,
+for which they could be fined a hundred pounds, and he gave them ten days
+to decide whether they would become his servants or leave the farm.
+
+"Go away, Auta Gert; you were dreaming, my husband would never talk
+such nonsense. You have been with him from childhood,
+long before I ever knew him, and yet you do not know that my husband
+is incapable of uttering anything half so wicked?"
+
+"He said it was the law, the new law."
+
+"Of course you need some stringent measures against the useless,
+sneaking and prowling loafers, but there is no fear that such laws
+could apply to Natives like you and Mietje and your children."
+
+"But, Nooi, the Baas told us to leave the farm as the law
+did not permit him to ----"
+
+"Get you gone, Auta Gert, he was joking. You must know that the law
+did not buy this farm. The old Baas purchased it from Baas Philander.
+I personally helped to add up the number of morgen and to calculate the money,
+and there was not a penny piece from any Government. Go home, Auta Gert,
+and leave everything to me, and do not let me hear you saying
+Dashfontein is no longer your home."
+
+"Well, Nooi," assented the Natives with some relief, "if you say
+it is all right, then it must be so, and we will go back and reap our mealies
+in peace, and if a policeman comes round demanding a hundred pounds
+we will tell him to arrest us and take us to the Nooi of the farm.
+Good-bye, Nooi."
+
+"Good-bye, Auta Gert; good-bye, Auta Jan ---- Poor Anna, my dear little maid,
+why did you not tell Nooi this morning that you were worried over this matter.
+Really, Anna, I was thinking that you were lovesick. How did poor old Mietje
+take it? Sadly, did she. Well, I will speak to the Baas about it.
+He had no business to attempt to bring bad luck over us
+by disturbing our peaceful Natives with such godless tidings.
+Tell your mother that Nooi says it will be all right."
+
+A few days later, Hendrik Prins, the farm manager in the employ of Mr. V.,
+was due at the native settlement to see the steam sheller at work
+and also to receive the landowner's share of the produce. Instead of Prins,
+Mr. V. attended in person. Each Native regarded this unusual occurrence
+as the signal for their impending eviction and thought that day would see
+their last transaction with their old master and landlord.
+
+Mr. V. counted the separate bags filled with mealies and Kafir corn
+placed in groups around the sheller. He counted no fewer than 12,300 bags,
+and knew that his share would total 6,150, representing about
+3,000 Pounds gross. Could he ever succeed in getting so much,
+with so little trouble, if poor whites tilled his lands
+instead of these Natives? he thought. After all, his dear Johanna was right.
+This law is blind and must be resisted. It gives more consideration
+to the so-called poor whites (a respectable term for lazy whites),
+than to the owners of the ground. He, there and then, resolved to resist it
+and take the consequences.
+
+The grain was all threshed; a number of native girls were busy
+sewing up the bags, and the engine-driver ordered his men
+to yoke his oxen and pull the machine away. Mr. V. ordered Auta Gert
+to call all the `volk' together as he had something to tell them.
+Auta Gert, knowing the determination of his mistress,
+did so in confidence that they were about to receive some glad tidings.
+But the other folks came forward with a grievous sense of wrong.
+The fact that some Natives on the adjoining property
+had been turned away three days before and sent homeless about the country,
+their places being taken by others, who, tired of roaming about and losing
+nearly everything, had come in as serfs did not allay their fears.
+Auta Hans was already conjuring up visions of a Johannesburg speculator
+literally "taking" his Cape shorthorns for a mere bagatelle,
+as they did to William Ranco, another evicted squatter from Hoopstad.
+
+Mr. V., the farmer, mounted a handy wagon hard by and commenced to address
+the crowd of blacks who gathered around the wagon at the call of Gert.
+
+"Attention! Listen," he said. "You will remember that I was here last month
+and explained to you the new law. Well, I understand that that explanation
+created the greatest amount of unrest amongst the Natives in the huts
+on my farm. Personally, I am very sorry that it ever came to that,
+but let me tell you that your Nooi, my wife, says it is not right
+that the terms under which we have lived in the past should be disturbed.
+I agree with her that it is unjust, and that the good Lord,
+who has always blessed us, will turn His face from us
+if people are unsettled and sent away from the farm in a discontented mood."
+(Loud and continued applause, during which Mr. V. took out
+his pouch of Magaliesburg tobacco and lit his pipe.) "The Nooi," he continued
+after a few puffs, "says we must not obey this law: she even says,
+if it comes to physical ejectment, or if they take me to prison,
+she is prepared to go to Pretoria in person and interview General Botha."
+(More cheers, during which the Natives dispersed to cart away their mealies
+amidst general satisfaction.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The writer visited Dashfontein in July, 1913, when the above narrative
+was given him word for word by old Gert.
+
+As old Gert narrated the story, Aunt Mietje, his wife,
+who had had timely notice of the impending visit of the morulaganyi (editor)
+from her husband (who slaughtered a sheep in honour of the occasion),
+superintended with interesting expectations over frizzling items
+in the frying-pan on her fireplace. Her bright eyes, beaming from
+under her headkerchief, suggested how she must have been
+the undisputed belle of her day. The rough wooden table was covered
+with the best linen in the native settlement, and on it were laid
+some clean plates, and the old yet shining cutlery reserved for
+special occasions, besides other signs of an approaching evening meal.
+Having learnt the art from an experienced housewife on whose farm
+her people were squatting, and improved upon her teaching,
+she was famous in the neighbourhood for the excellence of her cooking.
+Her only worry in that department was her seeming lack of success
+in training her daughters up to her elevation. She is usually sent for
+when important visitors come to Dashfontein, and would then don
+her best costume of coloured German print, and carry down with her
+the spotless apron which Mrs. V. gave her the preceding New Year;
+and in spite of her advancing years, she would cause Anna,
+and every other upstart at the homestead, instinctively to play
+second fiddle to her. And when we suggested that our wife
+could measure swords (or, shall we say, forks) with her as a cook,
+she giggled and remembered some white man's proverb about
+the proof of the pudding being in the eating.
+
+After the harrowing experience of the previous week, during which
+we were forced to see our fellow-beings hounded out of their homes,
+and the homes broken up; their lifelong earnings frittered away
+by a law of the land, their only crime being the atrocious one of having
+the same colour of skin as our own, and finding ourselves suddenly landed
+on an oasis, the farm of a kind Dutchman and his noble wife,
+on whose property, and by whose leave, little black piccaninnies
+still played about in spite of the law, it can be readily understood
+with what comfort we sat down and did justice to the good things
+provided by Aunt Mietje. In the course of her preparation
+every step of hers suggested that she entertained no sort of misprised opinion
+about her superiority over her compeers; and nothing pleased her better
+than when she dazzled her husband and family connexions
+with deeds which proved her superiority over her contemporaries,
+in everything that tends to make the virtuous and industrious house-wife.
+She gave a dramatic ending to her husband's narrative when she said --
+
+"Who would have thought that Hannetje, naughty little Hannetje,
+who was so troublesome when my sister used to nurse her --
+who would have thought that she would ever prove to be
+the salvation of our people? Who ever anticipated that all the strong Boers,
+on whom we had relied, would desert us when the fate of our whole tribe
+hung in the balance? Natives have been moving from north to south,
+and from south to north, all searching at the same time
+for homes and grazing for their cattle. During the last few weeks
+the roads were hidden in clouds of dust, sent up by
+hundreds of hoofs of hundreds of cattle, their owners with them,
+vainly seeking places of refuge; but in the case of Dashfontein,
+we reclined on a veritable Mount Ararat, by grace of naughty little Hannetje,
+whom God in His mysterious foresight had raised up to be Mrs. van V.,
+proprietress of Dashfontein. If my prayers are of any value,
+God will appoint in heaven a special place for her when she gets there,
+though, for the sake of our people, I hope that time is very far distant.
+However, I hope to be somewhere near: in truth, I should like
+to accompany her, when Elijah's chariot comes for her soul,
+so as to render her what little aid I can on board, when she soars
+through unknown tracts of space to the spirit world on high,
+so that if there be any uncomfortable questions about her maiden vagaries,
+I may be there to attest that she has since atoned a hundred fold for each,
+and thus accelerate her promotion. No no, Hannetje is not a Boer vrouw,
+she is an angel."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VII Persecution of Coloured Women in the Orange Free State
+
+ Ripe persecution, like the plant
+ Whose nascence Mocha boasted,
+ Some bitter fruit produced, whose worth
+ Was never known till roasted.
+
+
+
+When the Free State ex-Republicans made use of the South African Constitution
+-- a Constitution which Lord Gladstone says is one after the Boer sentiment --
+to ruin the coloured population, they should at least
+have confined their persecution to the male portion of the blacks
+(as is done in a milder manner in the other three Provinces), and have left
+the women and children alone. According to this class legislation,
+no native woman in the Province of the Orange "Free" State can reside
+within a municipality (whether with or without her parents, or her husband)
+unless she can produce a permit showing that she is a servant
+in the employ of a white person, this permit being signed
+by the Town Clerk. All repressive measures under the old Republic
+(which, in matters of this kind, always showed a regard
+for the suzerainty of Great Britain) were mildly applied.
+Now, under the Union, the Republicans are told by the Imperial authorities
+that since they are self-governing they have the utmost freedom of action,
+including freedom to do wrong, without any fear of Imperial interference.
+Of this licence the white inhabitants of the Union are making the fullest use.
+Like a mastiff long held in the leash they are urging the application
+of all the former stringent measures enacted against the blacks,
+and the authorities, in obedience to their electoral supporters,
+are enforcing these measures with the utmost rigour against the blacks
+because they have no votes.
+
+Hence, whereas the pass regulations were formerly never enforced by the Boers
+against clergymen's wives or against the families of respectable
+native inhabitants, now a minister's wife has not only to produce a pass
+on demand, but, like every woman of colour, she has to pay a shilling
+for a fresh pass at the end of the month, so that a family consisting of,
+say, a mother and five daughters pay the municipality 6s. every month,
+whether as a penalty for the colour of their skins or a penalty for their sex
+it is not clear which.
+
+There is some unexplained anomaly in this woman's pass business.
+If the writer were to go and live in the "Free" State, he could
+apply for and obtain letters of exemption from the ordinary pass laws;
+but if his wife, who has had a better schooling and enjoyed
+an older civilization than he, were to go and reside in the "Free" State
+with her daughters, all of them would be forced to carry passes
+on their persons, and be called upon to ransack their skirt pockets
+at any time in the public streets at the behest of male policemen
+in quest of their passes. Several white men are at present undergoing
+long terms of imprisonment inflicted by the Orange "Free" State Circuit Courts
+for criminally outraging coloured women whom the pass laws had placed
+in the hollow of the hands of these ruffians. Still many more mothers
+are smothering evidence of similar outrages upon innocent daughters --
+cases that could never have happened under ordinary circumstances.
+
+The Natives of the "Free" State have made all possible constitutional appeals
+against these outrages. In reply to their petitions the Provincial Government
+blames the municipalities. The latter blame the law and the Union Parliament,
+and there the matter ends. We have read the "Free" State law
+which empowers the municipalities to frame regulations
+for the control of Natives, etc., but it must be confessed
+that our limited intelligence could discern nothing in it
+which could be construed as imposing any dire penalties
+on municipalities which emancipate their coloured women
+from the burden of the insidious pass law and tax. Hon. Mr. H. Burton,
+as already stated, was Minister for Native Affairs before the Union Government
+surrendered to the "Free" State reactionaries. A deputation
+consisting of Mrs. A. S. Gabashane, Mrs. Kotsi and Mrs. Louw,
+women from Bloemfontein -- the first-named being a clergyman's wife --
+waited on him in Capetown on the subject of these grievances,
+and he assured them that in response to representations made
+by the Native Congress, he had already written to Dr. Ramsbottom,
+the Provincial Administrator, asking him to persuade
+the "Free" State municipalities to relieve the native women from this burden.
+And if to relieve native women in the "Free" State from a burden
+which obtains nowhere else in the Union were unlawful,
+as the municipalities aver, Mr. Burton -- a K.C. -- would have been
+the last person to ask them to break the law.
+
+Subsequently the women petitioned Lady Gladstone for her intercession.
+But we wonder if the petition was ever handed to Lady Gladstone
+by the responsible authority who, in this instance, would have been
+the Department of Native Affairs. Notwithstanding all these efforts,
+native women in the "Free" State are still forced to buy passes
+every month or go to prison, and they are still exposed
+to the indecent provision of the law authorizing male constables
+to insult them by day and by night, without distinction.
+
+After exhausting all these constitutional means on behalf of their women,
+and witnessing the spread of the trouble to the women and children
+of the country districts under the Natives' Land Act, the male Natives
+of the municipalities of the Province of the Orange "Free" State
+saw their women folk throwing off their shawls and taking the "law"
+into their own hands. A crowd of 600 women, in July, 1913,
+marched to the Municipal Offices at Bloemfontein and asked
+to see the Mayor. He was not in, so they called for the Town Clerk.
+The Deputy-Mayor came out, and they deposited before him a bag
+containing their passes of the previous month and politely signified
+their intention not to buy any more passes. Then there occurred
+what `John Bull' would call, "----l with the lid off".
+
+At Jagersfontein there was a similar demonstration, led by
+a jet-black Mozambique lady. She and a number of others
+were arrested and sentenced to various terms of imprisonment.
+The sentences ranged from about three weeks to three months,
+and the fines from 10s. to 3 Pounds. They all refused to pay the fines,
+and said their little ones could be entrusted to the care of Providence
+till their mothers and sisters have broken the shackles of oppression
+by means of passive resistance. As the prison authorities
+were scarcely prepared for such a sudden influx of prisoners
+there was not sufficient accommodation for fifty-two women,
+who were conveyed on donkey carts to the adjoining village of Fauresmith.
+
+When this happened, Winburg, the old capital of the "Free" State,
+also had a similar trouble. Eight hundred women marched
+from the native location to the Town Hall, singing hymns,
+and addressed the authorities. They were tired of making friendly appeals
+which bore no fruit from year's end to year's end, so they had resolved,
+they said, to carry no more passes, much less to pay a shilling each
+per month, PER CAPITA, for passes. A procession of so many women
+would attract attention even in Piccadilly, but in a "Free" State dorp
+it was a stupendous event, and it made a striking impression.
+The result was that many of the women were arrested and sent to prison,
+but they all resolutely refused to pay their fines, and there was a rumour
+that the Central Government had been appealed to for funds and for material
+to fit out a new jail to cope with the difficulty.
+
+This movement served to exasperate the authorities, who rigorously
+enforced the law and sent them to jail. The first batch of prisoners
+from Bloemfontein were conveyed south to Edenburg; and as further batches
+came down from Bloemfontein they had to be retransferred north to Kroonstad.
+In the course of our tour in connexion with the Natives' Land Act
+in August, 1913, we spent a week-end with the Rev. A. P. Pitso,
+of the last-named town. Thirty-four of the women passive resisters were still
+incarcerated there, doing hard labour. Mrs. Pitso and Mrs. Michael Petrus
+went with us on the Sunday morning to visit the prisoners at the jail.
+
+A severe shock burst upon us, inside the prison walls,
+when the matron withdrew the barriers and the emaciated figures
+of ladies and young girls of our acquaintance filed out and greeted us.
+It was an exceptionally cold week, and our hearts bled to see
+young women of Bloemfontein, who had spent all their lives
+in the capital and never knew what it was to walk without socks,
+walking the chilly cemented floors and the cold and sharp pebbles
+without boots. Their own boots and shoes had been taken off,
+they told us, and they were, throughout the winter,
+forced to perform hard labour barefooted.
+
+Was ever inhumanity more cold-blooded?
+
+Do these "Free" Staters consider their brutality less brutal
+because it happens to be sanctioned by law?
+
+Is Heaven so entirely unmindful of our case that it looks on with indifference
+when indignity upon indignity is heaped, not only upon our innocent men,
+but even upon our inoffensive women?
+
+Tears rolled down our cheeks as we saw the cracks on their bare feet,
+the swellings and chronic chilblains, which made them look like sheep
+suffering from foot-and-mouth disease. It was torture to us to learn
+the kind of punishment to which they were subjected and the nature of the work
+they were called upon to perform; these facts were stated to us
+in the presence of the prison officials, and they were communicated by us
+to the Native Affairs Department merely as a matter of course.
+But what must be the effect of this brutal punishment upon girls
+who knew only city life? To our surprise, however, they vowed
+never to buy passes, even if they had to come back.
+
+A month later, when we visited Bloemfontein, a majority of those
+who were at the Kroonstad jail had already returned to their homes,
+and the family doctors were doing a roaring trade. Their practice, too,
+was most likely to continue to boom as the sufferers were still determined
+to buy no more women's passes.
+
+This determination caused a white man to suggest that "instead of being
+sent to prison with hard labour, these madcaps should be flogged" --
+and this because the women refuse to be outraged by law.
+
+Our visit to Kroonstad took place just after the Circuit Court
+had convicted the white superintendent of the Kroonstad Native Location
+for an outrage upon a coloured woman. He arrested her in the location
+ostensibly because she could not produce her residential pass,
+and in the field between the location and the town through which
+he had to escort her to prison he perpetrated the atrocity.
+In sentencing him to four years' hard labour, the Chief Justice said
+for a similar crime upon a white woman a black man would be liable
+to the death penalty.
+
+When General Botha assumed the portfolio of Native Affairs
+at the time of this trouble, the writer, as General Secretary of the Congress,
+telegraphed to him the greetings of the South African Native Congress,
+and pointed out to him that over two hundred coloured women were at that time
+languishing in jail for resenting a crime committed upon them,
+a crime which would have been considered serious in any other place
+outside the "Free" State. The chivalrous General replied in a Dutch telegram
+containing this very courteous reply: "It shall be my endeavour, as hitherto,
+to safeguard the just interests of the inhabitants of this land
+irrespective of colour."
+
+General Botha's assurances are so sweet, especially when they are made
+to persons who are not in a position to influence his electoral support.
+The Natives, who know the "sweets" of these assurances cannot be blamed if
+they analyse the Premier's assurances in the light of their past experience,
+especially the phrase "as hitherto". To them it conveys but one idea, namely,
+"If the future policy of the South African Government found it convenient
+to send coloured women to prison in order to please the ruling whites,
+they will, AS HITHERTO, not hesitate to do so."
+
+While on the subject of native women, it is deeply to be regretted that during
+this year, while the Empire is waging a terrible war for the cause of liberty,
+His Excellency the Governor-General in South Africa should have seen his way
+to issue a Basutoland Proclamation -- No. 3 of 1915. This law decrees
+that under certain penalties, no native woman will be permitted
+to leave Basutoland "without the permission of her husband or guardian".
+The Proclamation on the face of it may look comparatively harmless,
+but its operation will have wide and painful ramifications
+amounting to no less than an entrenchment of the evils embraced
+in polygamy; and in carrying out this decree civilization
+will have to join hands with barbarism to perpetuate the bondage,
+and accentuate the degradation, of Basuto women.
+
+It is a fact that no respectable Mosuto woman wants to leave
+her husband or guardian; but the economic conditions of to-day
+press very heavily on polygamous wives. Their lord and master
+finding himself no longer able to provide for half a dozen houses at a time,
+bestows on them the burden and anxieties of wifehood without its joys,
+namely, a husband's undivided care and the comforts due to wives
+in monogamous marriages.
+
+Some of these polygamous wives have from time to time
+sought relief in emigrating to European centres where they could
+earn their own living and send food and raiment to their little ones.
+A woman cannot always be blamed for having entered into
+a polygamous marriage. More often than not, she did so in obedience
+to the wishes of her aged parents. The old people, in many instances,
+have judged present day economics from the standard of their own happy days
+when there was plenty of land and rainfalls were more regular;
+when the several wives and children of a rich cattle-owner
+could always have enough grain, eat meat, drink milk and live happily.
+But times are altered and even a monogamist finds the requirements of one wife
+quite a stupendous handful. The country is so congested
+that the little arable land left them yields hardly any produce.
+I have seen it suggested in official documents that sheep-breeding
+should be limited in Basutoland as there is not enough grazing for the flocks.
+And under this economic stress these surplus wives are sometimes driven
+to accept the overtures of unscrupulous men who gradually induce them
+to wallow in sin; hence too, they give birth to an inferior type of Basuto.
+
+That such a law should be adopted during the reign of Chief Griffith,
+their first Christian Chief and the first monogamist
+who ever ruled the Basuto, is disappointing. And while
+we resent the policy of the British authorities in the Union,
+who promote the interests of the whites by repressing the blacks,
+we shall likewise object to an attempt on the part of the same authorities
+in the native territories to protect the comfort of black men by degrading
+black women. God knows that the lot of the black woman in South Africa
+is bad as it is. One has but to read the report of the Commission recently
+appointed by the Union Government to inquire into cases of assault on women
+to find that their condition is getting worse. Presumably the evidence
+was too bad for publication, but the report would seem to show
+that in South Africa, a country where prostitution was formerly unknown,
+coloured women are gradually perverted and demoralized into a cesspool
+for the impurities of the family lives of all the nationalities
+in the sub-continent.
+
+In her primitive state, the native girl was protected against
+seduction and moral ruin by drastic penalties against the seducer,
+which safeguards have since the introduction of civilized rule
+been done away with. With tribes just groping their way
+from barbarism towards civilization natural hygienic and moral laws
+have been trampled upon, and for this state of affairs
+the white man's rule is not wholly free from blame. It should be a crime
+to defile a potential mother and a woman should continue to be regarded
+as the cradle of the race and her person remain sacred and inviolate
+under the law, as was the case in former times.
+
+The only charge that could be brought up against primitive native socialism
+was that by tolerating polygamy it had incidentally legalized concubinage;
+but taking all circumstances into consideration, it is doubtful
+if the systematic prostitution of to-day is a happy substitution
+for the polygamy of the past.
+
+There were no mothers of unwanted babies; no orphanages, because there were
+no stray children; the absence of extreme wealth and dire poverty
+prevented destitution, and the Natives had little or no insanity;
+they had no cancer or syphilis, and no venereal diseases
+because they had no prostitutes.
+
+Have we not a right to expect a better state of affairs
+under civilized European rule?
+
+It is apparently in revolt of similar horrible conditions
+that when the war broke out, British and Continental women
+were fighting for the vote with a view to liberating their sex and race
+from kindred impurities, for the soul rises up in "divine discontent"
+against a state of affairs which no nation should tolerate -- evils to which
+the coloured women of South Africa are now a prey.
+
+To this kind of degeneracy may also be traced the undoing
+of the finer elements of the native social system, the undermining
+of their health and of the erstwhile splendid physique of the African race
+and the increasing loss of the stamina of our proverbially magnificent
+men and women. The effect of these evils and of the abuses
+inherent to the liquor traffic is manifest in several of the tribes
+who are to-day but shadows of their former selves.
+
+The safeguarding of our maidens and women folk from the evils of drink,
+greed and outrages resulting from indefensible pass laws
+and the elimination of bad habits among men by a rightful policy
+will restore that efficiency, loyalty, and contentment which aforetime
+were the boast of pioneer administrators in British South Africa,
+and which if fostered will render them a magnificent asset to the Empire
+for all time.
+
+But as often as the coloured woman has been attacked she has humbly presented
+"the other cheek". Evidence of her characteristic humility
+is to be found in the action of the coloured women of the "Free" State,
+whose persecution by the South African Government, at the instance of certain
+"Free" State Municipalities, prompted the writing of this chapter.
+After the war broke out (the Bloemfontein `Friend' tells us)
+the native women of that city forgot their own difficulties,
+joined sewing classes, and helped to send clothing to the afflicted Belgians
+in Europe. Surely such useful members of the community deserve
+the sympathy of every right-minded person who has a voice
+in the conduct of British Colonial administration; so let us hope
+that this humble appeal on their behalf will not be in vain.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VIII At Thaba Ncho: A Secretarial Fiasco
+
+ Man's inhumanity to man makes countless thousands mourn.
+ Burns.
+
+
+
+The beginning of September, 1913, found us in the Lady Brand district.
+Besides numerous other sufferers of the land plague,
+the writer was here informed of one case that was particularly distressing,
+of a native couple evicted from a farm in the adjoining district.
+After making a fruitless search for a new place of abode,
+they took out a travelling pass to go to Basutoland with their stock.
+But they never, so the story went, reached their destination.
+We were told that they were ambushed by some Dutchmen,
+who shot them down and appropriated their stock. To a stranger
+the news would have been incredible, but, being a Free Stater born,
+it sounded to us uncommonly like the occurrences that our parents said
+they used to witness in the early days of that precious dependency.
+We were further told that one of the Dutch murderers
+had been arrested and was awaiting his trial at the next criminal sessions.
+As both the native man and woman were shot, it seemed difficult to conceive
+how the prosecution could find the necessary evidence to sustain
+a charge of murder.
+
+The trial duly came off at Bloemfontein a month or two later,
+and the evidence in court seemed more direct and less circumstantial
+than we had expected. For, not only were the stolen cattle found
+in the possession of the prisoner, but the bullet picked up
+near the bodies of the dead refugees (according to the evidence
+given in court) fitted the prisoner's pistol. General Hertzog
+personally attended the court at Bloemfontein and conducted the defence;
+and, presumably more by his eloquence than anything else,
+he convinced a white jury of the guiltlessness of the accused,
+who was acquitted and acclaimed outside the court by his friends
+as a hero. In justice to the police it must be added
+that they re-arrested this man and charged him with the theft,
+or with being in possession of the deceased Natives' cattle.
+On this charge the prisoner was convicted before the Circuit Court
+a few months later, and in sentencing him to three years, with hard labour,
+the presiding judge is said to have made some references
+to the previous trial and the manner in which the prisoner had escaped
+the capital sentence.
+
+From Lady Brand we travelled south towards Wepener, not far
+from the Basuto frontier. Evictions around here were numerous,
+but beyond the inevitable hardships of families suddenly driven
+from home, they had not suffered any great amount of damage.
+Being near to the Basuto border, a Native in these parts, when ejected,
+can quickly take his stock across the boundary, and leaving them
+in friendly pastures, under sympathetic laws, go away to look for a new place.
+But it became abundantly clear that the influx of outsiders into Basutoland
+could not continue at the rate it was then proceeding
+without seriously complicating the land question in Basutoland,
+where chieftains are constantly quarrelling over small patches of arable land.
+
+A pitiable spectacle, however, was the sight of those who had been evicted
+from the centre of the Orange "Free" State. It was heartrending
+to hear them relate the circumstances of their expulsions,
+and how they had spent the winter months roaming from farm to farm
+with their famishing stock, applying in vain for a resting place.
+Some farmers were apparently sympathetic, but debarred from entertaining
+such applications by the sword of Damocles -- the 100 Pound fine
+in Section 5 of the Natives' Land Act -- they had perforce to refuse
+the applicants. The farms hereabout are owned by Boers and English settlers,
+but many are owned by Germans, Jews, Russians, and other Continentals.
+Some of the proprietors do not reside on the farms at all;
+they are either Hebrew merchants or lawyers, living in the towns and villages
+away from the farms. Many have no wish to part with the Natives,
+who seem invariably to have treated their landlords well,
+but they are forced to do so by the law.
+
+It seems a curious commentary on the irony of things that South Africa,
+which so tyrannically chases her own Natives from the country,
+receives at this very time with open arms Polish, Finnish,
+Russian and German Jews, who themselves are said to have fled
+from the tyranny of their own Governments in Europe. With a vengeance,
+it looks like "robbing Peter to pay Paul".
+
+Standing by the side of a kopje, very early on that September morning,
+it was a relief to see the majestic tops of the mountains of Basutoland,
+silhouetted against the rising sun, beyond the Caledon River,
+which separates the "Free" State from Basutoland.
+
+A number of fugitives were at that time driving little lots of stock
+across the broad and level flats which extend in the direction
+of the Basutoland Protectorate. How comforting to know
+that once they crossed the river, these exiles could
+rest their tired limbs and water their animals without breaking any law.
+Really until we saw those emaciated animals, it had never so forcibly
+occurred to us that it is as bad to be a black man's animal
+as it is to be a black man in South Africa.
+
+To think that this "Free" State land from which these people are now expelled
+was at one time, and should still be, part and parcel of Basutoland;
+and to remember that the fathers of these Natives, who are now fleeing
+from the "Free" State laws, were allies of the Boers, whom they assisted
+to drive the Basutos from this habitable and arable part of their land;
+that with their own rations, their own horses, their own rifles,
+and often their own ammunition, they helped the Boers to force the Basutos
+back into their present mountain recesses, and compelled them
+to build fresh homes in all but uninhabitable mountain fastnesses,
+in many instances inaccessible to vehicles of any kind,
+in order (as was said at the time) to give themselves "more elbow-room";
+to see them to-day fleeing from the laws of their perfidious Dutch allies,
+expelled from the country for which they bled and for which
+their fathers died; and to find that, at the risk of intensifying
+their own domestic problems in their now diminutive and overcrowded
+Mountain State, the Basutos are nobly offering an asylum to those
+who had helped to deprive them of their country; and to remember
+that this mean breach of faith, on the part of ex-Republicans towards
+their native allies, is facilitated by the protection of the Union Jack,
+sheds, in regard to the Basutos, a glorious ray of light
+upon black human nature.
+
+Look at these exiles swarming towards the Basuto border, some of them
+with their belongings on their heads, driving their emaciated flocks
+attenuated by starvation and the cold. The faces of some of the children,
+too, are livid from the cold. It looks as if these people
+were so many fugitives escaping from a war, with the enemy pressing hard
+at their heels.
+
+It was a distressing sight. We had never seen the likes of it
+since the outbreak of the Boer War, near the Transvaal border,
+immediately before the siege of Mafeking. Even that flight of 1899
+had a buoyancy of its own, for the Boer War, unlike the present
+stealthy war of extermination (the law which caused this flight),
+was preceded by an ultimatum. But the sight of a people
+who had loyally paid taxation put to flight in these halcyon times,
+by a Parliament the huge salaries of whose members these very exiles,
+although unrepresented in its body, have meekly helped to pay,
+turned one's weeping eyes to Heaven, for, as Jean Paul says, "There above
+is everything he can wish for here below." But if the Native of other days
+has been sold by the perfidy of his Dutch allies of the day,
+the British soldiers and British taxpayer of the present day
+have been deceived by "we don't know who". They fought and died and paid
+to unfurl the banner of freedom in this part of the globe,
+and the spectacle before us is the result. This must be
+what A. H. Keene referred to when he said, "The British public were also dumb,
+and with that infinite capacity for being gulled which is so remarkable
+in a people proud of their common sense, acquiesced in everything."
+
+Visiting the farms, we found some native tenants under notice to leave.
+We informed them that Mr. Edward Dower, the Secretary for Native Affairs,
+would be in Thaba Ncho the following week, and advised them
+to proceed to the town and lay their difficulties before
+this high representative of the Union Government, with a request
+for the use of his good offices to procure for them
+the Governor-General's permission to live on farms,
+a course provided in Section 1 of the Natives' Land Act.
+We made no promises, as previous requests for such permission
+had been invariably ignored. But we hoped that the Government Secretary's
+meeting with the sufferers and speaking with them face to face
+would soften the implacable red-tape and official circumlocution,
+and perhaps even open the way towards a modification of the administration
+of this legislative atrocity; but we were mistaken.
+
+The meeting duly took place on Friday, September 12, 1913.
+A thousand Natives gathered at the racecourse on the wide level country
+between the railway station and Thaba Ncho town. A few historical facts
+relative to Thaba Ncho might not be out of place.
+
+Thaba Ncho (Mount Black) takes its name from the hill below which
+the town is situated. Formerly this part of Africa was peopled by Bushmen
+and subsequently by Basutos. The Barolong, a section of the Bechuana,
+came here from Motlhanapitse, a place in the Western "Free" State,
+to which place they had been driven by Mzilikasi's hordes from over the Vaal
+in the early 'twenties. The Barolongs settled in Thaba Ncho
+during the early 'thirties under an agreement with Chief Mosheshe.
+The Seleka branch of the Barolong nation, under Chief Moroka,
+after settling here, befriended the immigrant Boers who were on their way
+to the north country from the south and from Natal during the 'thirties.
+A party of immigrant Boers had an encounter with Mzilikasi's
+forces of Matabele. Up in Bechuanaland the powerful Matabele
+had scattered the other Barolong tribes and forced them
+to move south and join their brethren under Moroka. Thus during the 'thirties
+circumstances had formed a bond of sympathy between the Boers and Barolongs
+in their mutual regard of the terrible Matabele as a common foe.
+
+But the story of the relations between the Boers and the Barolong
+needs no comment: it is consistent with the general policy of the Boers,
+which, as far as Natives are concerned, draws no distinction
+between friend and foe. It was thus that Hendrik Potgieter's Voortrekkers
+forsook the more equitable laws of Cape Colony, particularly that relating
+to the emancipation of the slaves, and journeyed north to establish
+a social condition in the interior under which they might enslave the Natives
+without British interference. The fact that Great Britain
+gave monetary compensation for the liberated slaves did not apparently assuage
+their strong feelings on the subject of slavery; hence they were anxious
+to get beyond the hateful reach of British sway. They were sweeping
+through the country with their wagons, their families, their cattle,
+and their other belongings, when in the course of their march,
+Potgieter met the Matabele far away in the Northern Free State
+near a place called Vecht-kop. The trekkers made use of their firearms,
+but this did not prevent them from being severely punished by the Matabeles,
+who marched off with their horses and live stock and left the Boers
+in a hopeless condition, with their families still exposed to further attacks.
+Potgieter sent back word to Chief Moroka asking for assistance,
+and it was immediately granted.
+
+Chief Moroka made a general collection of draught oxen
+from amongst his tribe, and these with a party of Barolong warriors
+were sent to the relief of the defeated Boers, and to bring them back
+to a place of safety behind Thaba Ncho Hill, a regular refugee camp,
+which the Boers named "Moroka's Hoek". But the wayfarers
+were now threatened with starvation; and as they were guests of honour
+amongst his people, the Chief Moroka made a second collection of cattle,
+and the Barolong responded with unheard-of liberality.
+Enough milch cows, and sheep, and goats were thus obtained
+for a liberal distribution among the Boer families, who, compared with
+the large numbers of their hospitable hosts, were relatively few.
+Hides and skins were also collected from the tribesmen,
+and their tanners were set to work to assist in making veldschoens (shoes),
+velbroeks (skin trousers), and karosses (sheepskin rugs)
+for the tattered and footsore Boers and their children.
+The oxen which they received at Vechtkop they were allowed to keep,
+and these came in very handy for ploughing and transport purposes.
+No doubt the Rev. Mr. Archbell, the Wesleyan Methodist missionary and apostle
+to the Barolong, played an active part on the Barolong Relief Committee,
+and, at that time, there were no more grateful people on earth
+than Hendrik Potgieter and his party of stricken voortrekkers.
+
+After a rest of many moons and communicating with friends
+at Cape Colony and Natal, the Dutch leader held a council of war
+with the Barolong chiefs. He asked them to reinforce
+his punitive expedition against the Matabele. Of course they were to use
+their own materials and munitions and, as a reward, they were to retain
+whatever stock they might capture from the Matabele; but the Barolongs
+did not quite like the terms. Tauana especially told Potgieter
+that he himself was a refugee in the land of his brother Moroka.
+His country was Bechuanaland, and he could only accompany the expedition
+on condition that the Matabele stronghold at Coenyane (now Western Transvaal)
+be smashed up, Mzilikasi driven from the neighbourhood
+and the Barolong returned to their homes in the land of the Bechuana,
+the Boers themselves retaining the country to the east and the south
+(now the "Free" State and the Transvaal). That this could be done
+Tauana had no doubt, for since they came to Thaba Ncho, the Barolong had
+acquired the use of firearms -- long-range weapons -- which were still unknown
+to the Matabele, who only used hand spears. This was agreed to,
+and a vow was made accordingly. To make assurance doubly sure,
+Tauana sent his son Motshegare to enlist the co-operation of a Griqua
+by the name of Pieter Dout, who also had a bone to pick with the Matabele.
+
+Pieter Dout consented, and joined the expedition with a number of mounted men,
+and for the time being the Boer-Barolong-Griqua combination
+proved a happy one. The expedition was successful beyond
+the most sanguine expectations of its promoters. The Matabele were routed,
+and King Mzilikasi was driven north, where he founded
+the kingdom of Matabeleland -- now Southern Rhodesia -- having left the allies
+to share his old haunts in the south.
+
+This successful expedition was the immediate outcome of the friendly alliance
+between the Boers in the "Free" State and Moroka's Barolong at Thaba Ncho.
+But Boers make bad neighbours in Africa, and, on that account,
+the Government of the "Free" State thereafter proved a continual menace
+to the Basuto, their neighbours to the east. Pretexts were readily found
+and hostile inroads constantly engineered against the Basuto
+for purposes of aggression, and the friendliness of the Barolong
+was frequently exploited by the Boers in their raids,
+undertaken to drive the Basuto further back into the mountains.
+This, however, must be said to the honour of the mid-nineteenth century
+"Free" Staters, in contrast to the "Free" Staters of later date:
+that the earlier "Free" Staters rewarded the loyalty of their Barolong allies
+by recognizing and respecting Thaba Ncho as a friendly native State;
+but it must also be stated that the bargain was all in the favour of one side;
+thereby all the land captured from the Basuto was annexed to the "Free" State,
+while the dusky warriors of Moroka, who bore the brunt of the battles,
+got nothing for their pains. So much was this the case that Thaba Ncho,
+which formerly lay between the "Free" State and Basutoland,
+was subsequently entirely surrounded by "Free" State territory.
+
+Eventually Chief Moroka died, and a dispute ensued between his sons
+concerning the chieftainship. Some Boers took sides in this dispute
+and accentuated the differences. In 1884, Chief Tsipinare,
+Moroka's successor, was murdered after a night attack
+by followers of his brother Samuel, assisted by a party of "Free" State Boers.
+It is definitely stated that the unfortunate chief valiantly defended himself.
+He kept his assailants at bay for the best part of the day
+by shooting at them through the windows of his house,
+which they had surrounded; and it was only by setting fire to the house
+that they managed to get the chief out, and shoot him. As a matter of fact
+the house was set on fire by the advice of one of the Boers,
+and it is said that it was a bullet from the rifle of one of these Boers
+that killed Chief Tsipinare.
+
+President Brand, the faithful ally of the dead chieftain,
+called out the burghers who reached Thaba Ncho after the strife was over.
+He annexed Thaba Ncho to the "Free" State, and banished the rival chief
+from "Free" State territory, with all his followers.
+The Dutch members of the party which assassinated the chief
+were put upon a kind of trial, and discharged by a white jury at Bloemfontein.
+
+Of course, Boers could not be expected to participate in any adventure
+which did not immediately lead to land grabbing. But, fortunately for
+some Barolongs, the dead chief had in his lifetime surveyed some farms
+and granted freehold title to some of the tribesmen. In fact,
+his death took place while he was engaged in that democratic undertaking.
+The Boer Government, which annexed the territory, confiscated all the land
+not yet surveyed, and passed a law to the effect that those Barolongs
+who held individual title to land could only sell their farms to white people.
+It must, however, be added that successive Boer Presidents
+have always granted written exemptions from this drastic measure.
+So that any Native who wanted to buy a farm could always do so
+by applying for the President's permission, while, of course,
+no permission was necessary to sell to a white man; several Natives,
+to the author's knowledge, have thus bought farms from Natives,
+and also from white men, by permission of the State President,
+and the severity of the prohibition was never felt. But after
+the British occupation in 1900, the Natives keenly felt this measure,
+as the Governor, when appealed to by a Native for permission to buy a farm,
+always replied that he had no power to break the law.
+Thus, under the Union Jack, sales have gone on from black to white,
+but none from white to black, or even from black to black.
+In the crowd which met Mr. Dower that morning were two Barolong young men
+who had lately inherited a farm each under the will of their deceased uncle,
+and the law will not permit the Registrar of Deeds to give them title
+to their inheritance; their numerous representations to the Union authorities
+have only met with promises, while lawyers have taken advantage of the hitch
+to mulct them in more money than the land is worth. The best legal advice
+they have received is that they should sell their inheritances to white men.
+Now the Natives' Land Act, as applied to the whole Union of South Africa,
+is modelled on these highly unsatisfactory conditions relating to land
+in the "Free" State. The six months' imprisonment, the 100 Pounds fine,
+and other penalties for infringement of the Land Act, are borrowed from
+Chapter XXXIV of the "Free" State laws, to which reference is made
+in Section 7 of the Natives' Land Act. Section 8 of the Natives' Land Act
+is a re-enactment of some of the reprehensible "Free" State land laws
+which had been repealed by the Crown Colony Government
+after the British occupation in 1900. When the Natives' Land Bill
+was before Parliament the Opposition moved that the remaining native farms
+be scheduled as a native area, where Natives might purchase farms,
+of course from other Natives. The passage of such an amendment
+was more than could be expected as the real object of the Natives' Land Bill
+was to block every possible means whereby a Native may acquire land
+from a Native, or from any one else; but when the motion was rejected
+the Natives of Thaba Ncho were exceedingly alarmed. They telegraphed
+their fears to Mr. Sauer, who promised to visit them when Parliament rose,
+but his purpose was frustrated by his death, immediately after
+the passage of the Act.
+
+To return to Mr. Dower's meeting, the Native Affairs Secretary
+received a warm welcome from the Natives, who hoped that his coming
+would show them a way out of their dilemma. As already stated,
+a thousand Natives came from the surrounding farms, some on horseback,
+others on bicycles, and other conveyances such as carts, wagons, etc.;
+they included evicted wanderers and native tenants under notice
+to leave their farms, with letters of eviction and other evidence
+in their pockets; they included some refugees, who had likewise been evicted
+from other districts -- refugees who, as one of them put it,
+were "constantly on the move, and hurried hither to plead for shelter
+for our homeless families, now living in wagons."
+
+The morning was showery. Thaba Ncho Hill in the background,
+always visible for scores of miles in every direction, towered high above
+the surrounding landscape. Its stony slopes covered with a light mist
+from peak to base, it stood like a silent witness to the outraged treaty
+between the Barolong and the Boers.
+
+Mr. Dower, who was accompanied by his secretary (Mr. Apthorpe) and
+the Thaba Ncho Magistrate (Major Robertson) and the Location Superintendent,
+addressed the Natives for half an hour. The speeches were
+correctly interpreted by Mr. Jeremiah Makgothi, a native farmer,
+and formerly a local school teacher, who collaborated
+with Canon Crisp in the translation of the Scriptures into Serolong
+for the world-renowned S.P.C.K. The Rev. P. K. Motiyane,
+the local Wesleyan minister, also assisted in the task of interpretation.
+
+Mr. Dower made some pathetic references to the life and work
+of the late Hon. J. W. Sauer, the great Cape politician
+who had just passed away; then he proceeded to refer at length
+to sundry inconsequential topics of minor local significance;
+and, having repeated his great pleasure at seeing them,
+without making a single reference to the momentous measure
+that was ravaging the Natives of the country, the Government Secretary
+resumed his seat amidst looks of astonishment and consternation
+from the assembled Natives.
+
+The Rev. J. D. Goronyane, a gentleman who, as secretary to the late chiefs,
+played a leading part in the Boer-Barolong relations
+of the nineteenth century, was the next speaker. He thanked the Secretary
+for coming. No people, he said, regretted Mr. Sauer's death
+more than the Barolong; they had looked forward to meeting him
+in connexion with the new cloud now looming over the country
+in the shape of the Land Act, and they were sorry that his coming
+had been frustrated by a Higher Power. Turning to Mr. Dower, he said:
+"All the people you see before you are frightened by the new law.
+They have come here for nothing else but to hear how they are expected
+to live under it."
+
+Other speakers followed, but when the actual sufferers began
+to narrate their experiences there were so many who wished to come forward
+that the leaders decided that, their cases being more or less similar,
+they should wait and hear how the representative of the Government
+would deal with the cases of those who had already spoken.
+
+==
+ MR. DOWER'S REPLY
+
+He regretted that, as one speaker had said, some people read the Act
+through the spectacles coloured by their desires. Others seemed
+to be glad at the uncertainty and endeavoured to keep on turning
+the wheel of discontent. It was true that some people were imposing
+on the Natives, but, on the whole, there was a reasonable desire
+to comply with the Act, although it was not always properly understood.
+Few individuals had been evicted, though many had received notice.
+Some of the notices given under a misapprehension, and with a desire
+not to contravene the Act, had, since the Magistrates' explanations,
+actually been withdrawn. "So your best course is to explain the facts
+to your Magistrates, if possible, in the presence of the master."
+(A Voice: "Who'll bring him there?") After explaining
+that the principle of the Act was a first step towards
+territorial segregation, Mr. Dower said it gave protection
+to some parts of the country which formerly were not so protected.
+He mentioned as an instance that more than one-half of the farms
+formerly owned by Natives in that district were no longer in their possession.
+In other Provinces THE ACT WAS RESTRICTIVE, while IN THE FREE STATE
+IT WAS PROHIBITIVE. The old practice of "sowing on the halves"
+might continue so long as the lawfully executed contracts lasted;
+but at the expiration of those contracts the practice should cease,
+as Parliament had decided on its abolition. It amounted to a partnership
+between a white man and a black man. With a civilized Native
+the system might have been good, but a raw Native always got
+the worst of the partnership. He would advise them to make
+the best temporary arrangements within the four corners of the law.
+It might be by adopting one of three alternatives: (1) Become servants
+(in which case it would be legal for a master to give them pieces of land
+to plough and graze a number of stock); or (2) move into the reserve --
+(voices: "Where is the reserve?"); or (3) dispose of the stock for cash.
+(Sensation.) The arrangement would only be temporary until Parliament
+took further steps in terms of the Commission's report. It would be better
+than trekking from pillar to post, till all the cattle had died out,
+and eventually returning penniless. Farmers always had the right
+to evict their native tenants. (A voice: "But we could go elsewhere.")
+Because some old laws which had been repealed had now been re-enacted,
+let them not think that there was a desire to oppress.
+"They may have been unjust, as you say, but understand that this law
+is not the last thing said by Parliament. A final settlement must depend
+on the recommendations of the Commission, and such action will be taken
+as will be to the lasting interests of white and black.
+The Lands Commission has already held its first sitting,
+and you will be serving your best interests by bringing all your information
+to the Magistrate, so that it be laid before the Commission.
+Show by your wise action that you are inspired by the justice of your case.
+The course of agitation will not help you. Remove suspicions and mistrust
+from your minds, and bring cases of real hardships to the Magistrate,
+who will see that this Act is administered as smoothly as possible.
+But THE ACT DOES NOT PROVIDE FOR ANY SPECIAL CASES IN THE FREE STATE
+being submitted to the Governor-General under the first section of the Act."
+==
+
+The concluding statement settled the minds of those who
+had expected from the Government any protection against the law,
+and the disappointment under which the meeting broke up was indescribable.
+This law is full of rude shocks, and this day this spokesman of the Government
+told the Natives that in the other three Provinces the Governor-General
+will only exercise his right in exceptional cases, while in the "Free" State
+the law did not permit him to exercise it even in such cases,
+so that the Government alone knows why that provision was inserted.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IX The Fateful 13
+
+ He hath disgraced me and laughed at my losses, mocked at my gains,
+ scorned my nation, thwarted my bargains, cooled my friends,
+ heated mine enemies; and what is his reason? I am a Kafir.
+ Hath not a Kafir eyes? hath not a Kafir hands, organs, dimensions,
+ senses, affections, passions? Is he not fed with the same food,
+ hurt with the same weapons, subject to the same diseases,
+ healed by the same means, warmed and cooled by the same summer and winter
+ as a white Afrikander?
+ If you prick us, do we not bleed? If you tickle us, do we not laugh?
+ If you poison us, do we not die? And if you wrong us,
+ shall we not revenge? If we are like you in the rest,
+ we will resemble you in that.
+ Merchant of Venice.
+
+
+
+The Natives of South Africa, generally speaking, are intensely superstitious.
+The fact that they are more impressionable than tractable causes them,
+it seems, to take naturally to religion, and seems a flat contradiction
+of Junius's assertion that "there are proselytes from atheism,
+but none from superstition." With some South African tribes
+it is unlucky to include goats amongst the animals paid
+by a young man's parents as the dowry for his bride; it was equally bad
+to pay dowry in odd numbers of cattle. The payment must be made
+in an even number of oxen, sheep, or other animals or articles,
+such as two, four, six, eight, ten, and so on. The man who could not afford
+more than one sheep to seal the marriage contract would have
+to exchange his goat for a sheep to make up a presentable pair.
+If he were too poor to do that, a needle or any other article
+was admissible to make up the dowry to an even number,
+and so avoid giving one or three, or more odd numbers of articles.
+Conscious as they were of the existence of some Supreme Being,
+but worshipping no God, true or false, the white man's religion
+which makes such a worship obligatory through a mediator found easy access
+among so susceptible a people; and with equal ease they likewise adopted
+the civilization of the white man. But the Natives received
+not only the white man's civilization and his religion,
+but have even gullibly imbibed his superstitions. Thus is
+their dread of the figure 13 accounted for. The Native witch-doctors
+in the early days took advantage of their credulity, whilst civilized people
+traded on their susceptibilities, and the semi-civilized Natives also traded
+upon the fears of their more impressionable brethren.
+
+To give a concrete case or two, we might say that when
+the main reservoir of the Kimberley waterworks was built,
+one of the labourers one week-end lost the whole of his weekly pay.
+He inquired, and searched everywhere he could think of,
+but nobody had seen his missing purse. But on Monday morning
+he conceived a plan for the recovery of his lost purse.
+In pursuance of this plan, on the Monday he asked for and obtained a day off;
+then he declared to the gang of labourers that he was going
+to the nearest location to consult a bone-thrower. Instead of going
+to the location, however, he went to the open country, gathered some plants,
+returned to the dormitories while the others were at work, boiled the herbs
+in a pot of water and put it aside to cool. When the workmen returned
+for their midday meal he announced an imaginary consultation he had had
+with the bone-thrower, and that that functionary had divined
+the whereabouts of the purse; it was to the effect that the purse
+had been stolen and was in the possession of a fellow-worker.
+"The doctor," he said, "gave me some herbs. I have cooked them,
+and by his direction each of you is invited to immerse his hands
+in the decoction which is now cool. If you are not the thief,
+nothing would happen to you, but to the one who has stolen my money,"
+he added with emphasis, "the doctor said that the medicine
+will snap the thief's fingers clean off and leave him only with the palm."
+
+One by one the men dipped their hands in the "medicine",
+and as they took turns at the pot, one young fellow at length
+became visibly disturbed, and believing that the concoction was true,
+he confessed to the theft and undertook to refund the money,
+rather than lose his fingers.
+
+Another case was this. "A Transkeian missionary once heard
+of the serious indisposition of a Native. It was not a natural sickness,
+it was believed, but was the effect of sorcery, and news in that sense
+was noised abroad. Such cases primitive Natives believe
+to be beyond the skill of a medical man. White doctors,
+they would say, know next to nothing at all about such things.
+They do not believe in witchcraft and how could they be expected
+to be able to smell it out of a patient. Only a witch-doctor
+-- if he is more skilful -- can smell out and subdue the charm
+directed by another witch-doctor into the body of the bewitched.
+
+Having heard this piece of native philosophy on witchcraft,
+the missionary startled the Natives by telling them in their own tongue
+that he could cure the disease. And he did cure it.
+He captured a baby lizard from the rocks which abound
+in the craggy undulations of most parts of the Transkei.
+He hid it in the inside pocket of his coat and proceeded to the sick-bed
+with some real medicines in his hand. "When a man who is not sick
+imagines himself sick," says Dr. Kellogg, "he must be sick indeed,"
+and truly, in accordance with this saying, the Native was dangerously ill.
+A bone-thrower, who had in the presence and hearing of the sick man
+divined his malady, pronounced that he was not only bewitched by a snake,
+but also that the reptile was within him and was eating him to death.
+In these circumstances the missionary administered an emetic
+to the reluctant patient, in the presence of some incredulous spectators,
+who had never known a white man to extract a reptile
+from the person of a bewitched Native. Further, by some agility of the hand,
+the missionary produced from his pocket unobserved, just as
+the emetic was acting, the baby lizard he had taken from the rocks.
+So smartly was this done that everybody, including the patient,
+believed the reptile to have been extracted from his body
+by the power of the medicine administered by the missionary.
+The sick man at once stood up and walked, and the missionary was known,
+by all who witnessed the marvel, as the greatest witch-doctor
+of the neighbourhood.
+
+In like manner, when some civilized Christians made remarks
+on New Year's Day about the figure 13, there was much gossiping
+among the more superstitious Natives as to the form of trouble
+which the year 1913 had in store for the Natives, although none knew
+that a revolutionary law of Draconian severity would be launched
+in their midst during this eventful year.
+
+The powerful African potentate, Menelik of Abyssinia
+(whose death had been falsely circulated no fewer than seven times
+during the past dozen years), really died in 1913.
+
+Letsie II, paramount chief of the semi-independent Basuto nation,
+departed this life during this same year.
+
+Dinizulu (son of the great Cetewayo, whose impis slew the Prince Imperial
+in 1879), who was born to inherit the throne of his fathers, and who lived
+to be one of the most disappointed men of his day, spent many years
+in prison and in exile, and was known in his lifetime as the Black Napoleon;
+was released from prison by the Union Government, and given back
+his pension of 500 Pounds per annum. Sharing the hopes of his people
+that in accordance with the Government's erstwhile good intentions
+now tottering before a growing Republicanism, Zululand would be restored
+to the Zulus, and he established as their ruler under the Crown. He, too,
+died in the year 1913.
+
+An unusually large number of good and noble men of greater or lesser renown
+were gathered to their fathers during this year.
+
+It is perhaps not generally known that few British statesmen
+did so much for the South African Natives, in so short a term of service
+at the Colonial Office, as the Hon. A. Lyttleton. And he, too, left us
+rather suddenly during this troublous year of 1913. In this year, too,
+South Africa was visited by a drought which for severity was pronounced to be
+unprecedented in the knowledge of all the old inhabitants.
+Remarks -- some pithy, some ugly -- were made upon the drought by Dutchmen.
+They all remembered how the God of their fathers used to send them
+nice soaking rains regularly each spring-time, and that it usually continued
+to nourish the plants and other of the country's vegetation
+throughout the summer, and they concluded that there must be some reason
+why He does not do it now. The majority of Dutchmen whom the writer
+thus overheard attributed the visitation to the sins of the foreigners,
+who are fast buying up the country, and cursing it by settling godless people
+upon it. One or two saw in it the vengeance of the Supreme Being
+for the unnecessary persecution of His black creatures, but they were afraid
+to say this aloud. "See," said one, "is the drought not worse
+in the `Free' State where Kafirs seem to be very hard hit by this new law?"
+This was true. Dutchmen's cattle were dying of poverty in the "Free" State,
+and the land was so parched in some parts that it seemed difficult
+to believe that grass could ever grow in these places again,
+supposing the long-looked-for rain came at last.
+
+On our birthday, October 9, 1913, they hanged four murderers
+who had been condemned to death at the preceding criminal sessions.
+The selection of the morning of our birthday for the execution
+of four prisoners at our home was curious as executions in Kimberley
+take place only about once or twice in ten years. The event, of course,
+was purely accidental; but middle-aged Natives seemed
+to have an aptitude for remembering catastrophes which,
+in the lives of their fathers and their fathers' fathers,
+followed such coincidences. Whilst the executions were taking place,
+on the morning of our birthday, an ugly ocean tragedy
+was taking place away out on the Atlantic. The `Vulturno' was ablaze
+with a number of passengers on board. Innocent white men and women
+were being roasted alive, because the sea was too rough
+to permit their transfer from the burning ship to the rescuing liners;
+and so they perished, literally, "between the devil and the deep sea" --
+within full view of relief.
+
+Dutchmen as a rule are like Natives in that they live as long as they can,
+and die only when they must; but in the Transvaal a Dutch farmer
+all but exterminated his family on this day with a revolver,
+which he had previously secured for the purpose. On this day also
+the mind of an English miner at Randfontein having suddenly become unhinged,
+he shot his wife, his baby, and his aunt, then coolly pocketing the pistol,
+he cycled down to the school, called out his two children,
+shot them down in cold blood, and retired to a quiet place
+where he put an end to his own life. During that fateful week
+in which disaster followed disaster in rapid succession,
+there occurred the following, namely, the colliery disaster at Cardiff,
+which left a thousand dependents without breadwinners, to say nothing
+of the damage to property, which is estimated at over 100,000 Pounds.
+There were also railway accidents and aviation disasters,
+causing damage to life and property. There were commercial troubles
+due to the Johannesburg strike in July, and this effect of the strike
+indicates the influence exercised by the "golden city"
+over South African commerce. In that sad upheaval in the labour world
+many innocent people lost their lives and property, and unfortunately,
+as is always the case, besides adding largely to the taxpayers' burdens,
+seriously affected people who had nothing to do with the strike.
+Yet when some of our friends expressed thankfulness that the year did not have
+thirteen months, we were obstinate enough to refuse to waste valuable time
+in considering the subject.
+
+Individuals, like communities, suffered heavily from one cause or another
+in the year 1913. Thus the writer's little family also had
+its baptism of sorrow. On New Year's Day of that year 1913,
+his little boy, a robust child of three months, was prattling in the house.
+He first saw the light in the last quarter of 1912, on the very day
+we opened and christened our printing office, so we named him after
+the great inventor of printing type: he was christened Johann Gutenberg.
+Somehow or other he could never keep well after the New Year,
+for though he tried to look pleasant, it was visibly
+under serious difficulties. It had been our fortune,
+during a married life of fifteen years, to keep our children
+in remarkably good health; but the health of this little fellow
+showed unmistakable evidence that this immunity was reaching its end.
+Vehement attacks of whooping cough now overtook the little ones.
+The others got rid of it during the winter months, but with Gutenberg
+the disease developed into inflammation of this organ, and of that;
+and taking the whole year from January to December, it would not be too much
+to say that the little boy scarcely enjoyed three full months of good health.
+And by the end of the year it was clear that he was going the way
+of half a dozen cousins who were gathered into eternity
+all during one month -- December, 1913. Before the New Year was a week old,
+the doctor, who had then become a regular member of the family,
+gave us the final warning.
+
+For a month past loving aunts had tenderly relieved the child's
+inexperienced parents of the daily ministrations and of the more exacting
+night watches. After the doctor's warning there came "the calm
+before the storm". It only lasted for one day; the deceptive strength
+which had temporarily buoyed the little patient up was now passing away
+and the inevitable reaction was setting in. Oh, if he were only a year older
+so that he could have communicated to us by speech his feelings and his wants!
+His little body, which stood the long sickness with such fortitude, got frail.
+His bright eyes, high forehead and round cheeks remained, however, to defy
+the waste of the disease. The parson came and uttered words of encouragement.
+"Symptoms of death," he said, pointing to the sick-bed
+(and he was no novice in such matters) "were very far from there,"
+but the surroundings of the sick-bed seemed to us to ring out the command
+with a force as strong as six peals of thunder, saying "Suffer little children
+to come unto Me," and such Divine orders, comprehensible only to those
+to whom they are issued, took precedence of any words of encouragement
+that may be uttered by a mortal minister of religion.
+That these good men of God know the ways of their Master is patent
+in that they always couple the encouragement to the sick,
+or to the friends of the sick, with the advice to surrender
+to the Divine injunction. The grandmother of the child was composed.
+"When the Lord's will is to be done," she said, "no mortal can stay it,"
+but his aunts were restless. "Go, call the doctor at once,"
+they demanded. He came, gave a solemn look and stood silent.
+After feeling the pulse he said: "The child has collapsed.
+I have done all I could and can do no more." Next came the anxious looks
+of the other attendants, the footfalls of inquiring neighbours,
+messages to nearer and further relatives about the pronounced "collapse".
+
+This was at noon, and each one expected that he could hold out for two hours
+at the most; but he breathed throughout the afternoon with a gallantry
+that was wonderful in its way. His large round eyes turned upward
+as though they had become blind to their immediate surroundings.
+It seemed that those eyes could no longer see the objects in the room
+and its anxious inmates; truly they could no longer see
+the sun or the moon and stars that night. Kimberley was no longer a home
+to the little chap whose short lease of life was clearly drawing to an end.
+A new outlook seemed to have dawned over his now brightening face.
+His eyes were riveted on the New Jerusalem, the City of God,
+and he seemed to be in full communion with the dear little cousins
+who preceded him thither during the previous month. Evidently they
+were beckoning him to leave this wicked South Africa and everything in it,
+and come to eternal glory. In this condition we left him
+early in the afternoon to answer the call of our daily and nightly drudgery
+-- it would be gross extravagance to call it "duty" -- an occupation
+which has no reverence for mournful occasions. At 9.15 p.m.,
+just about the time of his birth sixteen months before, the little soul
+was relieved of its earthly bonds.
+
+There he lay robed in a simple white gown, his motionless form
+being an eloquent testimony of the indelible gap left in our domestic circle
+as a visitation of 1913. But the celestial expression of his face,
+his deep-brown colour, and his closed eyelids, seemed to say to us:
+"Be at ease, I have conquered."
+
+Still, it must be confessed that to us this wrench was
+a most painful experience, and that the doctrine of "Thy will be done"
+was found to be a great deal more than a mere profession of faith.
+The sympathies of relatives, friends, and other mourners,
+their deeds and words of condolence, followed by a solemn religious service,
+took the sting out of the affliction, although it must again be confessed
+that so deep was our sorrow for the dead child's mother that for some time
+we could not bear to look her in the face.
+
+Painful and unusual solemnities and formulae were gone through
+during the next day, and these again were lightened by
+the kind and sympathetic assistance of genuine friends,
+like Messrs. Joseph Twayi, H. S. Poho, and others, some of them delegates
+to a Temperance Conference then sitting in Kimberley.
+
+In the absence of the pastors of St. Paul's Mission, who were both
+attending the annual synod at Pniel, two Wesleyan ministers --
+Rev. Jonathan Motshumi of Kimberley, and Rev. Shadrach Ramailane of Fauresmith
+-- took charge of the funeral service, and a row of carriages
+followed the hearse to the West End Cemetery.
+
+As the procession turned round Cooper's corner into Green Street, Kimberley,
+something caused us to look out of the carriage window;
+we then caught sight of one of the carriages that formed the procession
+in which some little girl friends and relatives of the deceased were driving,
+their plain white dresses relieved only by a scrap of black ribbon
+here and there. Their silent sympathy, expressed with
+girlish shyness, was evident, though their snow-white dresses
+were in striking contrast to the colour of their carriage and of the horses,
+and the sombre black of the rest of the funeral party.
+As we saw the solemn procession and heard the clank of the horses' hoofs,
+we were suddenly reminded of that journey in July, 1913,
+when we met that poor wandering young family of fugitives
+from the Natives' Land Act. A sharp pang went through us,
+and caused our heart to bleed as we recalled the scene of their night funeral,
+forced on them by the necessity of having to steal a grave
+on the moonless night, when detection would be less easy.
+Every man in this country, we thought, be he a Russian,
+Jew, Peruvian, or of any other nationality, has a claim
+to at least six feet of South African soil as a resting place after death,
+but those native outcasts, who in the country of their birth,
+as a penalty for the colour of their skin, are made by the Union Parliament
+to lead lives like that awarded to Cain for his crime of fratricide,
+they might, as in the case of that wandering family, be even denied
+a sepulchre for their little ones.
+
+The solemnity of the funeral procession, of which we formed the mainmast,
+almost entirely disappeared from our mind, to be succeeded
+by the spirit of revolt against this impious persecution
+as these things came before us. What have our people done
+to these colonists, we asked, that is so utterly unforgivable,
+that this law should be passed as an unavoidable reprisal?
+Have we not delved in their mines, and are not a quarter of a million of us
+still labouring for them in the depths of the earth in such circumstances
+for the most niggardly pittance? Are not thousands of us
+still offering up our lives and our limbs in order that South Africa
+should satisfy the white man's greed, delivering 50,000,000 Pounds
+worth of minerals every year? Have we not quarried the stones,
+mixed, moulded and carried the mortar which built the cities of South Africa?
+Have we not likewise prepared the material for building the railways?
+Have we not obsequiously and regularly paid taxation every year,
+and have we not supplied the Treasury with money to provide free education
+for Dutch children in the "Free" State and Transvaal, while we had to find
+additional money to pay the school fees of our own children?
+Are not many of us toiling in the grain fields and fruit farms,
+with their wives and their children, for the white man's benefit?
+Did not our people take care of the white women -- all the white women,
+including Boer fraus -- whose husbands, brothers and fathers were away
+at the front -- in many cases actively engaged in shattering our own liberty?
+But see their appreciation and gratitude! Oh, for something to --
+
+ Strike flat the thick rotundity o' the world!
+ Crack Nature's moulds, all germins spill at once!
+ That make ungrateful man!
+
+When one is distressed in mind there is no greater comforter
+than an appropriate Scriptural quotation. Our bleeding heart
+was nowhere in the present procession, which apparently
+could take care of itself, for we had returned in thought
+to the July funeral of the veld and its horrid characteristics;
+and a pleasant reaction set in when we recalled a verse of Matthew which says:
+"The foxes have holes, and the birds of the air have nests,
+but the Son of Man hath not where to lay His head." How very Christlike
+was that funeral of the veld. It resembled the Messiah's
+in that it had no carriages, no horses, no ordained ministers,
+nor a trained choir singing the remains into their final resting place.
+The veld funeral party, like the funeral party of the Son of Man,
+was in mortal fear of the representatives of the law; it, like that party,
+had not the light of the sun, nor the light of a candle,
+which charitable friends in our day would usually provide
+for the poorest of the poor under ordinary circumstances.
+Still, it was not cold at Golgotha, or should not be to-day
+as it was on the first Good Friday; but even the Madonna and the disciples
+must have had some house in which to gather to discuss the situation.
+
+One of the most astounding things in connexion with
+the unjust treatment of the Natives by the Whites of South Africa
+is the profound silence of the Dutch Reformed Church,
+which practically is now the State Church of South Africa.
+This Christian body does not only exclude coloured worshippers
+from participating in its services, but would arraign them before the law,
+or otherwise violently assault them should they visit its places of worship
+at other times.
+
+When it is remembered that the predikants of the Dutch Reformed Church
+in the old Republics dare not pronounce the benediction
+on a coloured congregation, we think it will not be considered
+unfair to say that the calculatingly outrageous treatment
+of the coloured races of South Africa by the Boer section of that community
+is mainly due from the sanction it receives from the Dutch Reformed Church.
+If the predikants of the Dutch Reformed Church would
+but tell their congregations that it was gross libel on the Christian faith,
+which they profess, to treat human beings as they treat those
+with loathsome disease -- except when it is desired to exploit the benefits,
+such as their taxes and their labour which these outraged human beings
+confer upon the Dutch: we say that if the predikants
+would but instruct their congregations so, then this stain,
+which so greatly disfigures the Christian character of the Boers
+would be removed.
+
+The Dutch almost worship their religious teachers; and they will continue
+these cruelties upon the Natives as long as they believe that they have
+the approval of the Church. Let the predikants then tell their people
+that tyranny is tyrannical even though the victims are of a different race,
+and the South African Dutch will speedily abandon that course.
+
+Just two instances by way of illustration. Ten years ago we attended
+an election meeting at Burghersdorp, a typical Dutch constituency at the Cape.
+The present Minister of Railways and Harbours was wooing the constituency,
+and he appeared to be the favourite candidate among three others.
+Dutchmen from the surrounding farms flocked to attend the meeting.
+The speeches were all in the Taal. No hall in the town was large enough
+to hold the number that came, so the four candidates addressed the gathering
+in the Market Square. This was how Mr. Burton asked the Dutch electors
+for their votes: "Whenever you speak of making South Africa comfortable
+to Afrikanders, do not forget that the blacks are the original Afrikanders.
+We found them in this country, and no policy can possibly succeed which aims
+at the promotion of the interests of one section of the Afrikander race
+to the neglect of another section."
+
+There were a few native listeners in the throng, and we blacks
+at once thought that the speaker had held out the red-rag to the bull,
+and that every word of this candid statement would cost him
+at least fifty Dutch votes. But we were agreeably surprised,
+for the open air rang with the loud cheers and "Hoor, hoors"*
+from hundreds of leather-lunged Boers. One old farmer turned round to Tommy
+-- the blackest Native in the crowd -- held him by the shoulders,
+and shouted as brusquely as his tongue could bend to the vernacular:
+"Utloa, utloa, utloa!"**
+
+--
+* "Hear, hear", in Dutch.
+** "Hear, hear", in Sesuto.
+--
+
+Mr. Burton was returned at the head of the poll.
+
+A more recent instance: In 1913, the South African Asiatic laws
+operated so harshly against British Indians that Westminster and Bombay
+demanded instant reform. In deference to this outside intervention
+the Union Government appointed the Solomon Commission
+to inquire into the matter. While the investigations were in progress,
+emphatic protests were constantly uttered against this "outside interference".
+Some of the South Africans went as far as to assert that "if Imperialism
+meant a `coolie'* domination in South Africa, then it was about time
+that South Africa severed her Imperial bonds." The clamourers
+who designated the inquiry as a concession to outsiders
+seemed almost to dictate to the Commission not to recommend anything
+that "savours of a surrender to the coolies".*
+
+--
+* A contemptuous South African term for British Indians.
+--
+
+But when General Smuts, in terms of the Commission's report
+and as a concession to Anglo-Indian feeling, tabled a Bill in 1914,
+to amend the hardships before they had been a year in operation, the clamour
+at once died down; and we have not heard that any one in South Africa
+was a penny the poorer as a result of this "outside interference",
+and its consequent "surrender to the coolies".
+
+Dutchmen only follow their leaders. Hence, let the leaders
+direct them into cruel ways as they are seemingly doing
+at the present time, then if Mr. Burton's assertions be right
+(and we think no one will deny that he is right when he says
+the one-sided policy can never succeed), these leaders,
+instead of producing a South Africa which is rich and contented,
+will only succeed in producing a South Africa which is poor and discontented.
+Those, too, who wish well for South Africa and are at the same time
+sympathizers of the present Government, let them also strive to induce
+the Ministry to cease its policy of dilly-dallying and of equivocation
+at the expense of the coloured tax-payers. So that the Dutch
+throughout South Africa, as did the Dutch of Cape Colony,
+under the able leadership of Jan Hendrik Hofmeyr, may pursue a fresh course --
+the course of political righteousness. When the Labour Party discover
+that white votes alone will not give it the reins of Government, its leaders
+will most probably advocate a native franchise in the Northern Colonies
+similar to the native franchise of the Cape. And we can assure them
+that the first man who would successfully tackle such a problem
+will not only secure for his party the votes thus created,
+but that sheer gratitude will in future place at his disposal
+the coloured vote of the Cape as well.
+
+It is also our belief, in regard to the Dutch, that if a trusted leader
+from among them were to propose a native franchise for the Northern Provinces,
+the proposal would ultimately be accepted.
+
+The predikants of the Dutch Reformed Church, who largely influence
+the leadership of the South African Dutch, ought to know
+that the English colonist can be just as devilish as the Boers
+on questions of colour; and that some of them, with their
+superior means and education have almost out-Boered the Boer in this matter;
+but that even they have been held in check by the restraint
+imposed upon them by the English Churches in the country.
+Thus, knowing the Dutchman's obedience to the commands of his pastor,
+we are afraid that if ever there come a day of reckoning
+for the multifarious accumulation of wrongs done to the Natives,
+the Dutch Reformed Church, owing to its silent consent to all these wrongs,
+will have a lot to answer for.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter X Dr. Abdurahman, President of the A.P.O. /
+ Dr. A. Abdurahman, M.P.C.
+
+ (Native of the Cape, and M.B.C. of Edinburgh)
+
+ President of the African Political Organization
+ on the South African Colour Trouble
+
+
+
+The following presidential address was delivered by Dr. Abdurahman
+at Kimberley on September 29, 1913, at the opening of the tenth annual
+Conference of the A.P.O. His Worship Councillor E. Oppenheimer,
+Mayor of Kimberley, presided: --
+
+==
+Nearly two years have elapsed since we last met in Conference --
+two years crowded with events that have an important bearing
+on the future of South Africa, and especially on the Coloured races.
+Thanks, however, to the A.P.O. newspaper, every intelligent Coloured man is
+acquainted with those events, and there is no need for me to dwell in detail
+on any one of them. Nevertheless, a cursory enumeration will be desirable
+in order to answer certain questions I propose to submit to you: it will be
+further necessary to make a retrospect of the conditions that prevailed
+at the time when White South Africa, amid exuberant exultations,
+and a chorus of hosannahs, wildly welcomed the Act of Union
+as a beacon light, that would blaze down through ages of history,
+indicating the commencement of peace and prosperity for the land,
+and the birth of a new nation -- the foundation of a new nationalism.
+
+Ushered in by its authors with the blare of trumpets,
+and with an incense of self-adulation for their vaunted achievement,
+it surely cannot have belied their sanguine hopes, and proved to have been
+nothing more than a dream of Alnaschar. Whether Europeans
+are wholly satisfied with the results of Union is their business;
+but I think we are warranted in looking for some indication
+of the fruits of that Act from our point of view. But, before doing so,
+let us take a cursory glance at the condition of the Coloured races
+in pre-Union days, and then, after a rapid review of the legislation
+since that memorable date, we will ask ourselves: How have those events
+impressed the minds of the Coloured races, and what is our duty
+to ourselves and to our country?
+
+Such are the questions that I propose to put myself to-night,
+and I shall endeavour to answer them in the most candid and straightforward
+manner possible. Justice and equity are our demands --
+are inherent rights of every man, especially a free-born British subject,
+even in South Africa. Heedless, therefore, as to whether some of our views
+please or displease the privileged section of this country's population,
+we are in duty bound to speak out our honest convictions
+boldly and fearlessly. I shall endeavour to state my opinions, therefore,
+without any heat, but with a cold, passionless calmness that is possible
+only to those who, despite bitter experiences, base their remarks
+on stern facts and undeniable realities.
+
+Of late, it has become the fashion in the Press of the Union
+to dub any one who has to utter unpleasant truths an emotionalist.
+That is, of course, not argument. The silent suffering of years
+that must have been undergone by the Coloured man in South Africa
+is not likely to have left much of the emotional side of humanity
+in his composition. However, unpalatable as the facts may be
+that I have to present for your consideration to-night,
+I trust that my critics will be honest enough on this occasion
+to face them boldly. They may question their accuracy, if they will,
+or dispute the validity of my deductions from these facts.
+That is the honest course for them to adopt. Furthermore, I trust that
+White South Africa, especially those who boast loudest of British traditions,
+will remember that it is an inalienable right of a British subject,
+no matter in what part of the Empire he may be, to address his fellow-subjects
+on the momentous question of Government. "If," declared an English lawyer,
+"no man could have awakened the public mind to the errors and the abuses
+in our English Government, how could it have passed on from stage to stage,
+through reformation and revolution, so as to have arrived from barbarism
+to such a pitch of happiness and perfection?" Such an inquiry
+as I now propose will not be without its lessons. If South Africa
+is worthily fulfilling her mission; if she has been faithful to her trust;
+if she is promoting the cause of civilization, and if her actions
+are based upon humanitarianism, then she may strenuously and conscientiously
+proceed on the course she has been following. But if it can be shown
+that there is no ethical basis to her policy of dealing with Coloured races,
+that humanitarianism as a dominating factor is invariably wanting, and that
+underlying her present policy is the principle of class aggrandizement,
+then we may urge her to halt ere it is too late, and pursue another course.
+
+
+ Cape Colony
+
+Now although there never was a time when the white and the black races
+stood on a footing of practical equality -- civilly and politically --
+it is a fact that, under the old Cape constitution, theoretical equality
+was ensured to all, irrespective of race or creed. The Coloured races were,
+in this Colony, treated with much consideration, if not with
+absolute equality. The advancement made by them under that regime was always
+held up to the world's admiration. It was regarded as convincing proof
+that a policy based upon justice was the right one to be followed
+in governing subject races. The peaceful habits of the Coloured races
+since the granting of the old Cape Constitution is a complete vindication
+of the broad liberalism entertained by English statesmen sixty years ago.
+"It is the earnest desire of Her Majesty's Government that all her subjects
+at the Cape, without distinction of class or colour, should be united
+by one bond of loyalty, and we believe that the exercise of political rights
+enjoyed by all alike will prove one of the best methods of attaining
+this object." Thus reads the dispatch of the Duke of Newcastle to
+Governor Cathcart, when transmitting "to the Colony of the Cape of Good Hope
+Ordinances which confer one of the most liberal constitutions enjoyed
+by any of the British possessions."
+
+But even in the Cape, prior to Union, signs were not wanting that
+some slight reactions had set in. By degrees the doctrine of equal rights,
+which formed the basis of the Cape Constitution, despite its resuscitation
+by the famous declaration of the great Rhodes, was losing its force.
+However, in the face of minor infractions of the principle of equal rights,
+and some invasions of the necessary corollary to that principle, the right
+to equal opportunity -- in the industrial as well as in the political world --
+we were not wholly dissatisfied with the White man's rule in the Cape.
+
+
+ The Northern Colonies
+
+Now let us consider the position in the Northern Colonies, especially in
+the misnamed Free State. There a very different picture is presented.
+From the days that the voortrekkers endeavoured to escape English rule,
+from the day that they sought the hospitality of Chief Moroka,
+the history of the treatment of the blacks north of the Orange River
+is one long and uninterrupted record of rapine and greed,
+without a solitary virtue to redeem the horrors which were committed
+in the name of civilization. Such is the opinion any impartial student
+must arrive at from a study even of the meagre records available.
+If all were told, it would indeed be a blood-curdling tale,
+and it is probably well that the world was not acquainted
+with all that happened. However, the treatment of the Coloured races,
+even in the Northern Colonies, is just what one might expect
+from their history. The restraints of civilization
+were flung aside, and the essentials of Christian precepts ignored.
+The northward march of the voortrekkers was a gigantic plundering raid.
+They swept like a desolating pestilence through the land,
+blasting everything in their path, and pitilessly laughing at the ravages
+from which the native races have not yet recovered. Their governments
+were founded on the principle that is subversive of all Christian ethics,
+that the Coloured man was entitled to no recognition
+either in Church or State. Cruelty and oppression amounting to serfdom were,
+and still are, the outstanding features of the Free State.
+And he would be a bold man who would assert that the native races
+have progressed at all as a result of contact with the white man
+in the Free State. Progress could not be looked for under such circumstances,
+for nowhere are there any signs that the Free State was ever inspired
+by altruistic motives.
+
+Such was the condition of things at the time of Union. Injustice, repression,
+and inhumanity characterized the treatment of the Coloured races in the north:
+justice, benevolence, and equality of opportunity in the south.
+Now, it is said that "where slavery is prohibited, there civil liberty
+must exist; where civil liberty is denied, there slavery follows."
+These maxims, every student of history will admit, have been
+abundantly verified in the history of South Africa. Take, for instance,
+a comparison of the condition of the Coloured people of this town
+and that of Bloemfontein, the capital of the Orange Free State.
+Your member of Parliament has stated that in Kimberley our people are a credit
+to the district, and the most advanced and progressive Coloured people
+in South Africa. This is no doubt due to the excellent educational facilities
+with which you have been provided for some considerable time,
+to the liberty and freedom you enjoy, and to the kindly treatment
+you have received at the hands of the Europeans. In Bloemfontein,
+on the other hand, there are practically no educational facilities
+for children, who, as soon as they reach the age of fifteen,
+must enter the service of a white man, or be cast into prison.
+There is no freedom, no liberty, and the result is that
+the Coloured people of the capital of that British Slave State
+are uneducated, poor, and degraded.
+
+Here, then, one can easily see the results produced by
+the two different systems of governing Coloured races --
+the benevolent and the despotic. In the north the denial of civil rights
+produced a state of virtual slavery, and the recent denial
+of the complete enfranchisement of the Coloured people in the Union
+has similarly resulted in the passing of an Act -- the Natives' Land Act,
+which means nothing less than the partial enslavement of the races
+throughout the Union. With two such divergent policies in force
+in South Africa, it is not surprising that the Coloured races
+viewed with the gravest apprehension the Union of the Colonies upon a basis
+which would give the Northern Colonies sufficient power and influence
+to shape the legislation of the Union. And I have no hesitation
+in declaring that when Union was accomplished, and the Coloured people
+were partially disfranchised, the death-knell of political equality
+for the Coloured races was sounded, and the triumph of the north
+over the south was heralded.
+
+Sincere regrets were expressed by our friends at the abridgement of our rights
+and the curtailment of our privileges that were effected
+by the South Africa Act. Fervent hopes were entertained
+by Cape politicians that not only would we not suffer any injustice,
+but the position of the Coloured races in the north would be improved,
+and their rights eventually be admitted. They fondly believed
+that the leavening influence of the Cape ideas would mitigate
+the barbarity of those of the northerner. We had no reason to doubt
+the sincerity of our friends' beliefs, but we had no faith
+in the northerners -- men whose public professions and practice
+were void of a vestige of justice or honour in their dealings
+with the Coloured races.
+
+In November, 1904, when the question of Union was under discussion,
+I expressed myself thus: "In a central Parliament there would be
+the danger of the policies of the north slowly creeping into our Colony,
+and undermining our Constitution. The men of the north have already told us
+what they would do if they got into power; and European friends,
+numerous and influential as they might be, would not be able
+to safeguard the interests of the Coloured people." How far
+that prediction has been verified is well known to every Coloured man.
+
+The position of the Coloured man at the time of the Union
+was such as I have described.
+
+
+ Since Union
+
+Scarcely had the blessing of the Almighty been invoked on the proceedings
+of the Union Parliament at the opening of its first session when,
+to its eternal shame and infamy, it placed upon its statute book a law
+that would debar Christ Himself from membership of the Dutch Reformed Church.
+A Parliament capable of such blasphemy is capable of any iniquity.
+
+Then followed the Marriage Bill and the Squatters' Bill,
+both abortive measures, but, nevertheless, showing clearly
+the attitude of mind of the white rulers towards the Coloured races.
+In order to find employment for poor whites, Coloured railway employees
+who had served the country faithfully and well were dismissed.
+A white South Africa has been declared in the Union Parliament
+and from every platform. The white race must preserve its dominance.
+To this end a rigorous policy of repression was adopted;
+and the enthusiastic hopes of an extension of franchise rights
+to our northern fellow-men, that was entertained by Cape politicians
+and the Imperial Parliament, is now as far distant as the Greek Kalends.
+I shall not recount the long catalogue of other persecutions and injustices.
+We have all felt some of them in one phase of life or other.
+
+So serious had matters become in 1911 that in my warning to the Coloured races
+against the dangers that such a policy must entail, I was bold enough
+to declare at our Johannesburg Conference that when Europeans were ready
+they would enter upon a war of extermination. I was severely taken to task
+for imputing such inhuman motives to Europeans. I was denounced
+in even worse language than has been used towards the labour leaders
+in the recent strike. No vituperative epithet was strong enough
+to fling at my head. My statement met with almost universal condemnation
+at the hands of the editors of the white Press; but it was condemned
+not on account of any falsity in it, but simply because
+it was unwise and inexpedient to make such remarks. Barely eighteen months
+have elapsed from the time when I made that prediction
+ere we find the Union Parliament pass the Natives' Land Act,
+which creates conditions, if not amounting to extermination, yet designed
+to enslave the Natives of this country. That tyrannical mandate is scattering
+multitudes of Natives from their homes. Mother earth is to them now
+only a step-dame. They may enter either into perpetual bondage on the farm,
+or spend "a sunless life in the unwholesome mine".
+
+To-day there is also a revival of persecution in the Free State.
+The old laws of the dark days are being enforced with relentless rigour.
+The sanctity of homes is violated. Wives are compelled to carry passes.
+Mothers driven to abandon their offspring of tender years and seek employment.
+Daughters are wrenched from parental care and control,
+and forced into the service of some white scoundrel. Husbands are not allowed
+to work at their trades for themselves without paying 5s. per month
+for the privilege. Such is the condition of things in the slave State.
+And all this is done behind the power of the British flag
+which floats over that Province, and yet these acts were impossible
+while the Free State lacked the power to face British public opinion.
+Moreover, in the Cape Colony the Free State laws are gradually
+being introduced. The Curfew Laws are enforced. A distinct colour line
+is being drawn in every phase of life, more distinctly since General Smuts
+declared that colour and colour only is to be the dividing line.
+
+Such a long list of tyrannical acts of persecutions as I could make out
+-- persecutions of the Coloured people as a class as well as individually --
+can point to but one conclusion, and that is that the whites are determined
+at all hazards to repress all aspirations of the Coloured people
+for a higher life, to deny all opportunities of betterment,
+to keep them politically, civilly and industrially as slaves,
+and even to force those who have risen back into a state worse than slavery.
+South Africa is fast becoming
+
+ A land of tyrants, and a den of slaves,
+ Where wretches seek dishonourable graves.
+
+
+ Duty of Europeans
+
+What is the duty of Europeans towards the Coloured races of the country?
+Take the oft-repeated assertions of Europeans themselves.
+Their leaders are fond of talking of their responsibilities to us. They have
+everlastingly had, or used to have until quite recently, on their lips
+these nice-sounding phrases about "our duties and our responsibilities
+to our Coloured brothers". But are such phrases not hollow and meaningless?
+If Europeans have duties towards the Coloured people, what else is implied
+than the need for humane dealings, and endeavours to ameliorate their lot,
+and uplift them in the scale of civilization. If that is what
+their duties mean, let us ask how far they have fulfilled them.
+
+Instead of kindly, humane treatment, we find barbarous cruelty and inhumanity.
+Instead of ameliorating our lot they endeavour to accentuate its bitterness.
+Instead of aiming at our upliftment they seek to degrade us.
+Instead of lending a helping hand to those struggling to improve themselves
+they thrust them back remorselessly and rigorously.
+Instead of making it possible for them to enjoy the blessings
+of an enlightened Christianity and a noble civilization,
+they refuse them the right to live, unless they are content
+to slave for farmers or descend into the bowels of the earth
+to delve the gold which enslaves the world, and before whose charms
+all freedom flies. In short, the object of the white man's rule to-day
+is not to develop the faculties of the Coloured races so that they may live
+a full life, but to keep them for ever in a servile position.
+The spirit that underlies this view of governing Coloured races
+spread into this Colony with the Union, and is now universal
+throughout South Africa.
+
+The Coloured people resent this, and one cannot be astonished
+at the feeling of violent hostility that has sprung up.
+It is a natural result. And, in the words of Carlyle, it may be said
+that "to whatever other griefs the Coloured people labour under,
+this bitterest grief -- injustice -- super-adds itself:
+the unendurable conviction that they are unfairly dealt with,
+that their lot in this world is not founded on right,
+nor even on necessity and might, is neither what it should be,
+nor what it shall be." The Coloured peoples are sentient beings.
+Their souls smart under the stigma of injustice. They are nursing
+a sullen revengeful humour of revolt against the white rule.
+They have lost respect for the white man, and are refusing to give their best
+to the country.
+
+The duty of Europeans is plain. Show the Coloured people that the Government
+is for the good of all, not for the privileged class. Prove that
+the first aim is not to keep us as hewers of wood and drawers of water
+to men who have the power. Engage the Coloured races by their affection.
+Grant them equal opportunities. If you do so, then the happy harmonization
+of the whole community will be achieved, and you may be sure of receiving
+the grateful return of the affection and respect of the Coloured races.
+
+The treatment we might reasonably expect from the dominant race
+is just what they themselves would expect were they in our position.
+We have as much right to the land of South Africa as they.
+We have as much right as they to be governed on the same basis of humanity.
+In the language of one of England's greatest statesmen, Europeans themselves
+would have been shut out from all the blessings they enjoy,
+of peace, of happiness, and of liberty if there had been any truth
+in these principles which some gentlemen have not hesitated to lay down
+as applicable to the case of Africa. "Had those principles been true,
+we ourselves," said William Pitt, "had languished to this hour
+in that miserable state of ignorance, brutality, and degradation,
+in which history proves our ancestors to have been immersed.
+Had other nations adopted those principles in their conduct towards us;
+had other nations applied to Great Britain the reasoning
+which some of the Senators of this very Island now apply to Africa,
+ages might have passed without our emerging from barbarism;
+and we, who are enjoying the blessings of British civilization,
+of British laws, and British liberty, might at this hour have been
+little superior either in morals, in knowledge, or refinement,
+to the rude inhabitants of the coast of Guinea."
+
+Such were the words of Pitt in a speech he delivered in 1792
+in the course of a debate on the Slave Trade. His opinions
+were vastly different from those of our South African Premier,
+who only refrains from using the sjambok, so he has told us,
+on no other ground than that it might also hurt himself,
+and who is determined to allow no native representative
+in the Union Parliament as long as the Almighty spares him to be overlord.
+He does not look forward as Pitt did to the day when "We (British)
+might behold the beams of science and philosophy breaking in upon Africa,
+which, at some happy period, may blaze with full lustre."
+But this policy of repression cannot last much longer.
+If a handful of Indians in a matter of conscience can so firmly resist
+what they consider injustice, what could the Coloured races not do
+if they were to adopt this practice of passive resistance?
+We must all admire what these British Indians have shown, and are showing,
+in their determination to maintain what they deem to be their rights.
+The inhumanity of the Free State has driven our women to resist the law.
+Numbers of them went to jail rather than carry passes. The Coloured races
+applaud the noble actions of those brave daughters of Africa.
+I am convinced that if our people as a whole were prepared to suffer likewise
+we could gain redress of our most serious grievances
+while General Botha is still alive. Are we to be driven to that course?
+Europeans should ask themselves that question, and ask it promptly.
+For example, if the 200,000 Natives on the mines were,
+in the language of the white Labour Party, to "down" tools,
+and prefer to bask in the sun than to go down the mines;
+if the farm labourer at harvesting time refused to work
+for one shilling and sixpence a day, the economic foundation of South Africa
+would suddenly shake and tremble with such violence that
+the beautiful white South Africa superstructure which has been built on it
+would come down with a crash, entailing financial ruin
+such as the world has never witnessed before. If Europeans
+wish to prevent such a calamity in this country, they must
+pursue the right course and encourage the Coloured people of South Africa
+to improve their position and become more useful citizens
+than they have ever been. They will themselves participate
+in the blessings that spring from our improvement and prosperity,
+and they will receive "ample recompense for their tardy kindness
+(if kindness it can be called) in no longer hindering" our progress.
+
+We also should urge Europeans to go back to the path of justice, to retrace
+their steps along the route they appear to have been travelling of late.
+They can influence the Legislature. Whatever Parliament does
+is done in the name of the white people, and whites should,
+if they wish to see South Africa a happy, prosperous and peaceful country,
+check the Parliament in its mad career. It is worse than insensate folly
+to pursue that path any further. Many people have revolted at less oppression
+than we have had to suffer. At present we have no other course
+than to endure in silence the persecution of our tyrants,
+and conform to the servitude imposed on us. We may well exclaim
+that this is a country where
+
+ The wanton whites new penal statutes draw
+ Whites grind the blacks, and white men rule the law.
+
+Nevertheless, it is not too late to mend. The estrangement
+between the two races is not irreconcilable. Europeans could,
+with advantage to the country, if they would only be men,
+show the Coloured people that the white man's rule is for the good of all,
+not for the privileged class only. If they grant the Coloured races
+equal opportunities, and do not penalize them on account of race or colour,
+they may see a happy realization of the dreams of the wisest statesmen
+that all classes should be contented, and should work together
+for the good of all.
+==
+
+Dr. Abdurahman's address provided material for leading articles
+in the South African papers during that and the following week,
+the criticisms, with very few exceptions, being more or less hostile.
+Not one of them, however, accused him of telling untruths;
+but they vehemently resented the tone of his speech, which they characterized
+as inflammatory. One daily paper showed some inconsistency in the matter.
+It upbraided the doctor for his attack upon oppressive legislation,
+and two days later, presumably after second thoughts,
+came out with a leading article urging Europeans to check
+their oppression of the blacks, and in their own interests
+deal justly by the native and coloured sections of the population.
+By the Natives it was said that under the present circumstances
+the speech could have been better for a little moderation;
+but they nevertheless pronounced it the clearest and most accurate
+representation of their condition under the Union Administration
+that was ever uttered on a South African platform.
+
+It should be remembered that Dr. Abdurahman delivered his address
+at a time when the operation of the Land Act was raging like a plague
+in the Northern Provinces, and its victims included an old man of 119 years,
+respected by his white neighbours, with his nonogenarian wife,
+and his sons aged seventy and eighty.
+
+From the point of view of the Native, it is satisfactory to note
+that such sincere white students of the native question
+as Dr. J. E. Mackenzie of Kimberley, and Rev. Chas. Phillips of Johannesburg,
+when asked to dissociate themselves from Dr. Abdurahman's charges
+of "cruelty, inhumanity," etc., refused to do so until it could be pointed out
+that he had spoken untruths; that, however, could more easily be done
+by a shrug of the shoulders than by adducing substantial facts.
+
+Again, it is doubtful if any South African journalist possesses
+the experience of Mr. Vere Stent, the editor of the `Pretoria News'.
+Mr. Stent as a Kimberley youth spent many years in the de Beers
+mining compounds, working with Natives of nearly all African tribes.
+He was war correspondent in Ashanti and other parts of Africa, and also with
+the Republican troops under General Joubert in the Northern Transvaal
+in the 'eighties, and saw the Boers (whose primitive artillery
+could not dislodge a native tribe that was impregnably entrenched
+inside a cave) closing up the mouth of the cave and sealing up the masonry,
+then leaving the Natives, men, women and children, to smother to death
+with their belongings inside the cave. Further, Mr. Stent
+accompanied Cecil Rhodes to the Mattopo hills, where the late Colossus
+went unarmed to hold with the Matabele chiefs the pourparler
+which brought about the peace of Southern Rhodesia. In the siege of Mafeking,
+Mr. Stent was Reuter's war correspondent, and all things considered,
+it must be conceded that he is better qualified to write
+on a subject of this kind than all the critics of Dr. Abdurahman.
+
+Commenting on Dr. Abdurahman's address, in the course of a leading article
+Mr. Stent said:
+
+==
+Here is no paid agitator, but a professional man and a scholar,
+who is addressing the Coloured workers of South Africa
+from the lowest Aborigine to the Bantu, from the Bantu
+to the Coloured tradesman, from the Coloured tradesman
+to the professional man, of whom there are a few like himself,
+a great mass of unenfranchised human beings that suffer
+under disabilities and actual and obvious injustice.
+
+This vast proletariat is slowly cohering. Tribal feuds
+are being forgotten. The anti-colour laws of South Africa,
+and particularly of the north -- which makes no difference
+between the savage Zulu fresh from his kraal and the stately Malay,
+between the Mashaangan and a man like Dr. Abdurahman himself --
+are welding together this vast human mass, in the flux of a single grievance,
+and that grievance, the disability put upon colour qua colour by the law.
+
+What if some day, and sooner than we think, that great mass becomes mobile,
+learns to co-operate, and moves irresistibly together?
+
+What, again, which is more likely, if its molecules
+realize the power of their inertia, if they simply decide
+quite constitutionally and without violence to do nothing,
+pending a remedy of their grievances?
+
+It will, of course, be said that Dr. Abdurahman is a picturesque extremist;
+that his position is an abnormal one; that he does not speak for
+the Coloured people and the Natives as a whole. Do not let us be too certain
+on the last point.
+
+As to the first, there runs through the speech, holding it together
+and making it difficult to attack, a single plain statement in it --
+a steel strong thread of truth.
+
+He throws quite a new light upon the Voortrekkers when he says: --
+
+"The northward march of the Voortrekkers was a gigantic plundering raid.
+They swept like a desolating pestilence through the land,
+blasting everything in their path, and pitilessly laughing
+at the ravages from which the native races have not yet recovered."
+But from the point of view of the native races, the description is a true one.
+
+To say of the Natives' Land Act, "That tyrannical mandate is scattering
+multitudes of Natives from their homes" is extravagant. Only a few so far
+have been disturbed, but many must be disturbed for the Natives' Land Act
+is tyrannical. In fact, though couched in the flowing language of an orator,
+the speech on the whole is not an unfair summing up of the grievances
+of the coloured people, and there is a very solemn warning in it.
+The European labour agitators may well envy Dr. Abdurahman:
+his logic, his doctrine and his power of invective. He has so much
+to complain of, he asks for so very little. Just equality of opportunity.
+He does not propose to set up any Trades' Hall government within a government;
+he does not talk about or attempt to incite to riot or revolution;
+he does not speak for a few skilled artisans who are living in comfort,
+and sometimes luxury, upon the sweat of the black man's brow;
+he speaks for the dark, submerged 5,000,000 South Africans upon whom light
+is very slowly breaking.
+==
+
+It should also be recorded that long before Dr. Abdurahman
+became President of the Coloured Organization, white men
+have been delivering speeches, some of them rather indignant,
+on the treatment of His Majesty's coloured and native subjects
+in South Africa. We will refer to just a few for example:
+
+==
+"I will leave out of account altogether," said His Excellency,
+"the unwise and hard things said by reckless and unthinking white men
+about Natives; I will only ask white men to consider whether they have
+ever calculated the cumulative effect on the Natives of what I may call
+the policy of pin-pricks? In some places a Native, however personally clean,
+or however hard he may have striven to civilize himself,
+is not allowed to walk on the pavement of the public streets;
+in others he is not allowed to go into a public park or to pay
+for the privilege of watching a game of cricket; in others he is not allowed
+to ride on the top of a tram-car, even in specified seats set apart for him;
+in others he is not allowed to ride in a railway carriage except in
+a sort of dog-kennel; in others he is unfeelingly and ungraciously treated
+by white officials; in others he may not stir without a pass,
+and if, for instance, he comes, as thousands of Natives do,
+from the farm on which he resides to work in a labour district
+-- (an act which is highly beneficial to the State and commendable
+in the eyes of all white men) -- he does not meet with facilities,
+but with elaborate impediments. In the course of his absence from home
+he may have to take out at least eight different passes, for several of which
+he has the additional pleasure of paying, though he would be much happier
+without them; and it is possible that, in an extreme case,
+he may have to conform to no fewer than twenty different pass regulations.
+Now, let a white man put himself in the position of a black man,
+and see how he would like it, and let him ask whether
+such regulations and laws really make his task easier?" -- Lord Selborne,
+before the Congregation of the University of the Cape of Good Hope,
+February 27, 1909.
+==
+
+The Hon. Dewdney W. Drew, M.A., who was member of the Legislative Council
+under the Crown Colony Government in the Orange River Colony, now misnamed
+the Orange "Free" State, is one of the leading South African journalists.
+In his pamphlet on the Native Question, about four years ago,
+Mr. Drew made the following remarks:
+
+==
+Most Europeans adopt towards the Natives the privilege of the aristocrat --
+not always with the manners of an aristocrat. Many whites expect
+as a matter of course obeisance and service from all Natives,
+and think it perfectly natural to cuff and correct them when
+they make mistakes. Any resentment is apt to draw down severe punishment.
+In the law courts the Natives do not get the same justice as the whites.
+A Native convicted of an offence gets, in the first place, the punishment
+which a white man would get and something extra for the colour of his skin --
+often lashes. The bias of white juries in trying Natives
+charged with offences against whites is such as to have brought
+the jury system into disrepute, and become a chief argument among lawyers
+for its entire abolition. The Natives suffer various restrictions
+on their liberty; they may not use the side-walks, nor visit a friend's house
+after a certain hour at night, nor move abroad, or even exist
+anywhere in this "white man's country" without a pass.
+All the police, if not all Europeans, have the right
+to arrest and search them, and the exercise of this right is made sometimes
+a means of shamefully molesting their women. In one Colony
+the Natives are not allowed to own land, and in another they can only do so
+under virtually prohibitive conditions. If the tenant families
+residing upon a farm grow beyond a certain limited number -- three or five --
+the surplus are liable to be driven off by the police. As a rule
+only the worse-paid forms of work are permitted to the Natives,
+and even these are grudged them. A legislator rises in one Colony to move
+that all native messengers and other native servants in the Government offices
+be immediately discharged and replaced by poor whites. In another Colony,
+the papers and the public chorus with joy to hear that the C.S.A.R.
+has been able to reduce its native staff, and hopes ultimately
+to get rid of them all. There are municipalities in which Natives,
+if they drive a cab, have to pay a higher licence than a white man,
+and in which they are not permitted to make bricks unless they do so
+for a white employer. In these municipalities they are not allowed
+to educate their children above the age of sixteen, nor may they keep
+their daughters at home under their own protection after that age,
+except the girls find positions in service, in which case they may sleep
+under the roof of their parents if the distance is not too great.
+And, of course, the Natives pay relatively a higher taxation than the whites.
+Articles which they use, but which are little bought by the whites,
+are marked for special customs duties. For instance,
+the white farmers' machinery is duty free, but in several Colonies
+the native hoes pay an ad valorem tax of 25 per cent.
+So of shawls; the Customs officer is content to take 12 1/2 per cent
+on the kind used by Europeans, but when he comes to the native shawl,
+the duty is again 25 per cent. In addition to these stiff indirect taxes,
+the Native pays direct taxes amounting to one-sixth part of their average
+annual wage. Not only they, but even the most respectable coloured people,
+are in some places not allowed to ride in trams or walk in the parks,
+or attend public sports, or evening concerts, or even follow a deceased white,
+though he should be their own father, to his last resting place
+in the European cemetery. As to the laws, they realize,
+in all the Colonies but one, Wellington's great ideal for the people,
+by having nothing to do with them except obey them. In addition
+to this treatment, varying from mere pin-pricks to oppression,
+they are mostly referred to in the Press, in public speeches,
+and private conversation, with words of opprobrium and contempt
+as "niggers" and "black brutes". The occasional outbreaks of a few,
+usually maddened with drink which Europeans have sold to them,
+are put to the discredit of the whole race. Those who,
+when they hear of a case of rape, talk about the black peril,
+forget apparently that it is largely the result of a bad environment.
+In their own country the Natives are by no means lacking in respect
+to white womanhood. A European lady travelling in Basutoland without escort
+would probably be safer there than in England under the like condition.
+The Hon. H. Burton, Attorney-General of the Cape Colony,
+reports, after visiting the Transkei, that in that great reserve,
+where ten thousand Europeans are surrounded by a million Natives,
+the molestation of white women is a thing unheard of. . . .
+Obviously the treatment which the Natives get is not on the whole
+such as he can be expected to like, and the drift of things
+appears to be towards greater harshness, especially towards
+severer pass laws and the stricter denial of property rights.
+In one of our Parliaments a Commission has just reported
+in favour of breaking up the reserves and bringing the Natives
+under a system resembling slavery.
+==
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XI The Natives' Land Act in Cape Colony
+
+ It must not be lost sight of that all land held by Europeans
+ in Africa has been acquired by conquest or diplomacy,
+ and that the aboriginal Natives have been ousted by the white man:
+ that being so, I cannot see any reason why the Native
+ should not be allowed to buy back what he has lost; in my opinion
+ he should be encouraged to do so. . . .
+ He is a better citizen than the thriftless European who lives
+ from hand to mouth and makes no effort to better his circumstances. . . .
+ Legislation should be carefully watched lest endeavours be made
+ to deprive deserving Natives of the privilege of acquiring title to land.
+ In the Transvaal strong efforts are being made to restrict
+ the acquisition of land by Natives; but I can see
+ neither justice nor reason in such a measure. If the Native
+ by his education, honesty, thrift and industry has got the means
+ to buy land, even in the Transvaal, why should he not be allowed
+ to do so? . . .
+ The Natives are already pretty tightly "squeezed" in the matter of land
+ in South Africa, and it is time this "squeezing" process came to an end.
+ They must have somewhere to live. What would we do in this country
+ without them?
+ Mr. J. Hemming, a Cape Magistrate.
+
+
+
+During the month of October, 1913, the fell work of the iniquitous
+provisions of the Natives' Land Act was done so remorselessly
+that the British blood of certain editors of Natal dailies
+rose superior to their Colonial prejudices and they lashed out against
+such wicked and wholesale injustice on the part of the legislation
+against the peaceful native population. It has already been pointed out
+that when the Secretary for Native Affairs started to tour the districts,
+to teach Magistrates how to enforce the new Plague Act,
+some people thought that the tour was part of a scheme to alleviate
+the distress that followed the enforcement of the Natives' Land Act,
+but the Natives and those of their sympathizers who followed
+Mr. Dower's itinerary very soon discovered that the authorities
+were waging a war of extermination against the blacks;
+and that they were bent upon reducing the independent black peasantry
+to a state of thraldom. Commenting on Mr. Dower's visit to the "Free" State,
+the `Natal Advertiser' of October 4, 1913, said: --
+
+==
+The explanation of the Natives' Land Act, given to the Barolongs of Thaba Nchu
+by Mr. Dower, is so illuminative of the wretched unsatisfactoriness of the Act
+that the occasion certainly merits notice. It would be difficult
+to conceive a more thoroughgoing and drastic condemnation of the Act
+than this attempt at faint praise of it, delivered by
+the Secretary of the Native Affairs Department. All he can say
+to these unfortunate Natives is, that it would be better
+to engage as labourers or sell up than to trek from pillar to post,
+till all their cattle had died. As to saying that farmers
+always had power to evict, the interrupting Native hit the nail on the head
+by his ejaculation: "But we could go elsewhere."
+==
+
+On October 5, the daily papers published the following telegram
+from Johannesburg:
+
+==
+As the result of the passing of the Natives' Land Act, groups of Natives
+are to be seen in the different Provinces seeking for new land.
+They have crossed over from the Free State into Natal, from Natal
+into the Transvaal, and from the Transvaal into British Bechuanaland. . . .
+
+Yesterday a native arrived in Johannesburg from the Umvoti district, Natal,
+and reported that a chief, together with his tribe, had been evicted
+from a farm in the Greytown district, Natal, and that feeling in the matter
+had become acute.
+
+In the Western Transvaal hundreds of natives are crossing over
+into the Bechuanaland Protectorate, and in the Eastern Transvaal
+they are concentrating on three farms in the Wakkerstroom district
+that have been bought by a native land company.
+
+At present the attention of those working for the repeal of the law
+is being concentrated on the collection of funds for the purpose of sending
+a deputation to England. They hope to arouse public opinion there
+by lectures and other means.
+==
+
+The `Natal Mercury' said:
+
+==
+We pointed out at the time that the Act was passed that it was being
+rushed through the House without any proper inquiry and without much regard
+for native opinion or native feeling in a matter that affected
+their most vital interests. It was replied that the administration of the Act
+would be carried out on sympathetic lines, and that Mr. Sauer
+would make himself personally responsible for the administration
+being carried out in a manner which would inflict the least possible hardships
+on the Natives affected. The industrial crisis was followed
+by the untimely end of Mr. Sauer which made his tour impossible,
+and the Act now seems to be put in force on the most approved red-tape lines,
+with the result that the Natives are in a state of great alarm and agitation.
+At the recent Missionary Conference at Maritzburg on July 8,
+the question was the subject of considerable discussion,
+and a series of resolutions were passed.
+
+What is happening is that in many places the Natives are being driven off land
+where they have been from time immemorial, so to speak. They consider the Act
+as an attempt to drive them into slavery, and numbers of them are being placed
+in the position of having no place to which to go.
+==
+
+It must not be supposed, however, that all English colonial journalists
+regretted the operation of this atrocious law. The `Cape Times',
+for instance, vied with the Hertzog press in congratulating the minister
+on having successfully passed it, and in belittling the hardships
+of the victims of the Act. One English farmer wrote to the `Farmer's Weekly'
+that the evictions were effective, but at the same time he regretted that
+"as long as the Native kept to the public road he still had a resting place
+for the hollow of his foot." The Native had been successfully legislated
+off the land, and apparently this farmer wanted him to be legislated
+off the roads as well. Another English journalist wrote to the `Sunday Post'
+that the hardships are exaggerated, as he had himself seen
+only twelve families evicted in one day and on one farm.
+The question which this statement suggests is: How many families
+must be ejected from one farm in one day to constitute a hardship;
+and whether this journalist would view with the same coolness
+a law which forcibly turned twelve white families off a farm,
+against the wishes of themselves and the landowner?
+
+Again, it cannot be said that South African politicians as a whole
+were indifferent to the suffering of the luckless victims of the Land Act,
+but they eased their consciences with the palliative thought
+that the sufferers were not so many. However this blissful
+though erroneous self-satisfaction was nailed to the counter
+by the Rev. A. Burnet of Transvaal, when he said: "I have yet to learn
+that a harsh law becomes less harsh, and an act of injustice less unjust,
+because only a few people are affected by it."
+
+The section of the law debarring Natives from hiring land
+is particularly harsh. It has been explained that its major portion
+is intended to reduce the Natives to serfs; but it should also
+be noted that the portion of the Act that is against Natives
+acquiring any interest whatsoever in land aims directly
+at dispossessing the Natives of their live stock. Section 5
+provides for a fine of 100 Pounds, or six months' imprisonment,
+to a farmer convicted of accommodating a Native on his farm.
+And if after the fine is paid, the Native leaves the stock on the farm,
+for a number of days, while he goes to search for another place,
+there will be a fine of 5 Pounds per diem for each day the cattle remain
+on the farm. The cattle should be consigned to the road
+immediately the order is given for the ejection, and they should remain
+without food till their owner sells them, or finds employment under a farmer
+as a wage-earner. Thus it would seem that the aim of Section 5
+is not only to prohibit native occupation of land, but, in addition to it,
+makes it impossible for him to be a cattle owner.
+
+When this harsh provision of the law was brought to the notice
+of Cape politicians, they shrugged their shoulders and remarked
+that they were happy that things in the Cape were not so bad.
+But this is no excuse at all, for in accordance with the wording of the Act,
+as substantiated by its results upon the Cape Natives,
+the condition of these Natives is worse in many instances
+than it is among the Natives of Natal, or of the Transvaal.
+In these two Provinces a European who has no intention of evicting his Natives
+may retain their services under certain restrictions (see Sub-sect. 6 (c));
+but in the Cape and the Orange "Free" State, the Native,
+according to Section 1, may retain no interest whatever in land,
+including the "ploughing on shares".
+
+Well-to-do Natives, from Grahamstown to the Transkeian boundaries,
+mainly derived their wealth from this form of occupation. It enabled them
+to lead respectable lives and to educate their children. The new prohibitions
+tended to drive these Natives back into overcrowded locations,
+with the logical result that sundry acute domestic problems,
+such as disordered sanitation caused by the smallness of the location,
+loss of numerous heads of cattle owing to the too limited pasturage
+in the locations, are likely to arise. These herds of cattle
+have been the Natives' only capital, or the Natives' "bank",
+as they truthfully call them, so that, deprived of this occupation,
+the down-grade of a people, under an unsympathetic quasi-Republican Government
+like the present Union Administration, must be very rapid.
+
+The fact that the traditional liberal policy of Cape Colony
+has broken down through this law can no longer be disputed:
+indeed, the only comfort that had been held out to the Natives
+was that Mr. Sauer would make the Natives' Land Act a dead letter.
+This statesman having since died, we were anxious to see how the Cape Natives
+were faring under the Act, so we left Kimberley on November 1, 1913,
+on a tour of observation in the eastern districts of the Cape Province.
+Our programme included visits to two alleged defenders of the Act,
+in the persons of Rev. James Henderson of Lovedale, and Mr. Tengo Jabavu
+of King Williamstown, editor of the Xosa Ministerial newspaper.
+Our object in visiting these gentlemen was to acquaint ourselves
+with their point of view, and if possible to arrive at an agreement with them.
+
+We reached Alice in the forenoon and walked through the town
+to the famous Native Institution. We made our first acquaintance
+with Lovedale, and we hardly remember having seen so many native boys
+housed in any one place before. But it pained us to think what must be
+the future lot of this great gathering of young fellows, who are now
+debarred by law from rights of ownership of the soil of South Africa,
+their own homeland.
+
+During our three hours' stay at Lovedale we had an interview
+with Mr. Henderson, the Principal, about things in general,
+and the Native College Scheme in particular, and lastly, but not least,
+about the Native Land Act. Unfortunately we could learn nothing
+from the eminent educator, for we found that his conclusions
+were based on second-hand information. He had never met
+any member of the Government, or their representatives,
+in fact it was news to the Principal that in going to Lovedale, that morning,
+we had met men on their way from the Magistrate's office in Alice,
+not far away, who had been definitely warned by the Magistrate
+against re-ploughing their old lands on the farms. Of course Mr. Henderson
+was moved with sympathy for a people so ruthlessly treated by a Government
+they had loyally served. And it would seem that the Principal of Lovedale
+had since made independent inquiries, for we have read in the Lovedale paper
+other evidence of the operation of this drastic law that had not come under
+our own observation. Thus in supporting the case of the Native Deputation
+in the Imperial Parliament on July 28, 1914, Sir Albert Spicer
+effectively read passages from the `Christian Express', the organ of Lovedale.
+
+One of the instructors at Lovedale very kindly lent us a horse,
+and Mr. Moikangoa accompanied us to an all-night meeting at Sheshegu,
+a famous political "rendezvous" which has acquired this distinction
+because it is the centre of numerous little locations,
+within easy reach of four surrounding Magistracies. At the all-night meeting
+at Sheshegu there were chiefs, headmen, and other Natives from the Peddie,
+Fort Beaufort and Alice districts. There were a number of school teachers
+also from these districts, and two or three native storekeepers.
+The disclosures made by the several speakers concerning
+the operation of the Land Act among the Natives made one's heart bleed.
+The chieftain Kapok Mgijima, who entertained many of the visitors
+to the meeting, had his own peculiar experience under the Act.
+Not only had he been debarred from re-ploughing his own lands,
+but he had also been ordered to move his oxen from a farm owned by a European,
+where for fourteen years he had grazed his oxen. Another Native,
+who had been ploughing in the direction of King Williamstown,
+was warned by the authorities not to resume his ploughing in 1913.
+He could only do so as a servant in the employ of a white landowner.
+He was further warned that if he connived with the white man to cheat the law,
+by representing themselves as master and servant, they would, when found out
+to be still carrying on their old relation of landlord and tenant,
+be dealt with very severely.
+
+The landlord was furious. "Why," he asked, "did you tell them
+of your intention? You should have done your business quietly;
+now that you have apprised them they will watch us, you fool."
+
+"But," said the Native, "owing to the existence of East Coast fever
+in Transkei, no animals can be taken from one plantation to another
+without a magisterial permit disclosing the object of the removal.
+I had to tell what I wanted to come here for. I was asked
+at the Magistrate's office if I did not know the law.
+I said that I was aware of such a new law, which had created
+a lot of disturbance in the Northern Provinces, but I had never heard
+that it was applicable to the Cape. To this the Magistrate's clerk replied
+that it was not a Provincial law, it was a law of the Union,
+of which the Cape formed part. There were certain exemptions,
+the clerk added, but they did not exempt the Cape Natives from
+the prohibition of ploughing on white men's farms and grazing their cattle
+on those farms."
+
+Other speakers narrated their experiences under the Act, and these experiences
+showed that the Plague Act was raging with particular fury
+in the old Cape Districts of Fort Beaufort, Grahamstown, King Williamstown,
+and East London. At this meeting it was resolved to support a movement
+to send an appeal to His Majesty the King, against this law.
+
+Our visit to these places took place just after the glorious showers
+of the early summer. On the wider tracts of land owned by Europeans
+the grass looked invitingly green. The maiden soil,
+looking beautiful and soft after the soaking rains, cried silently
+for cultivation. The people who had hitherto depended on such cultivation
+for their subsistence were now prohibited by reason of their colour
+from earning their usual livelihood, as directed by Almighty God,
+"In the sweat of thy brow shalt thou eat bread."
+
+This prohibition seems particularly contemptible when it is remembered
+that the majority of the Natives of these locations are Fingoes,
+and that their fathers in the early days joined the British
+in fighting most of the Kafir wars, side by side with British troops.
+They shared in all the massacres and devastating raids
+committed upon the British settlers by unfriendly native tribes.
+As a mark of recognition of their loyalty to the Government,
+and of their co-operation with the British forces in the field of battle,
+this country was given, in the name of Her late Majesty Victoria,
+to their chiefs by a British Governor. But in spite of this treaty,
+the people have been gradually dispossessed of the land during the past
+three-quarters of a century. Hence the occupation, now crystallized
+into ownership, passed bit by bit into white hands. Hitherto the right
+to live on, and to cultivate, lands which thus formerly belonged to them
+was never challenged, but all that is now changed. Naturally the ingratitude
+meted out to these people by the authorities in return for services
+consistently rendered by three successive generations of them will be a blow,
+not only to the economic independence of a loyal and patriotic people,
+but to the belief in British sense of justice.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XII The Passing of Cape Ideals
+
+ Naboth was right to hold on to his home. There were garnered memories
+ that all the wealth of Ahab could not buy.
+ Ward Beecher.
+
+
+
+From the great meeting place -- Sheshegu -- we went through
+the Alice district. In this district we met several men
+who would get no crops -- their annual income -- the next year,
+as the law had placed an embargo on their ordinary avocation.
+King Williamstown was also visited, and there at a meeting
+held in the Baptist Church, which was kindly lent for the purpose
+by the Rev. Mr. Pierce, it was unanimously resolved to appeal
+to His Majesty the King against the Natives' Land Act.
+Mr. W. Sebe presided over this meeting of representative Natives,
+and Mr. Bassie translated the Act.
+
+At Queenstown a similar resolution was passed by practically
+the whole meeting. Beyond answering questions at each of these meetings,
+the writer said little else besides reading the Act, which told its own tale.
+Many Natives who had never seen a copy of the Act before,
+but who had heard its praises sung by interested parties and had believed
+the false teachers, attended the meetings to oppose any undue interference
+with "the law". But these men were appalled when the law was read to them,
+sentence by sentence, and translated by their own teachers
+in their own tongue. Then a discussion would follow, invariably ending
+with the query: "Can a Parliament capable of passing such a law
+still be trusted by the community concerned?"
+
+The Queenstown meeting, which was held in the Native Baptist School
+kindly lent by Messrs. Damane and Koti, was more interesting than the others
+because it is the only one of the many native meetings we attended
+where there was any dissent. There were four dissentients
+at Queenstown, and we take this opportunity of congratulating
+all genuine enemies of native welfare on the fact that they had
+four staunch protagonists of colour, who showed more manliness
+than Mr. Tengo-Jabavu because they attended the meeting.
+Still, if the courage of these opponents was admirable,
+we confess we did not like the gross callousness, and what seemed to us
+an indecent disregard of native suffering that was manifest in their conduct:
+when the story of the hardships of unfortunate victims of the Land Act
+was narrated they laughed, and repeated the newspaper excuse
+that the evictions were not directly due to the Act.
+
+We agree with them that evictions have always taken place,
+since the first human couple was sent out of the Garden of Eden, yet they
+must admit that until the Union Parliament passed the Natives' Land Act
+there never was a law saying to the native population of South Africa,
+"You must not settle anywhere, under a penalty of 100 Pounds,
+unless you are a servant." These unsympathetic Natives made no effort
+to defend the Act itself, but attempted to bluff the meeting
+with the supposed danger of "reprisals by spiteful Boers, who, they said,
+will be more vindictive if Natives dared to appeal to the King,
+over the heads of the Boer Government." But the meeting would not be bluffed.
+One speaker especially remarked that the Act embodied
+the very worst form of vindictiveness, and the sooner the whole world
+understood the Union Parliament's attitude towards the blacks
+the better it would be. The meeting agreed that no slavery could be worse
+than to be outlawed in your own homes, and the motion was carried
+against the said four dissentients.
+
+We interviewed a number of the Natives passing through Queenstown,
+and the result showed that many and varied were the vicissitudes
+of the Natives in the eastern districts of the Cape Province.
+
+From Queenstown we touched some of the north-eastern districts
+of the Cape Province. In one of these districts a fairly prosperous Native
+was farming as a tenant on a farm. By sheer industry
+he had earned and enjoyed the respect of all who knew him.
+His landlord, a white man, was particularly proud of him.
+This Native went into town one morning and as he passed the Magistrate's Court
+on his way to the stores, a messenger hailed him inside.
+Having entered the office, the Assistant Magistrate served him with a notice
+to leave his hired farm, on which he had been a tenant since his youth,
+and which was as much a home to him as to the proprietor.
+The landlord, on hearing of this, naturally resented this usurpation
+on the part of the authorities, who, he said, had unduly interfered
+with his private affairs. Next day the Baas drove into the town to interview
+the Magistrate, and to remonstrate with him on what he thought to be
+the unauthorized interference of the Assistant Magistrate.
+
+He and the Magistrate read and re-read the Natives' Land Act,
+and both came to the conclusion that it was a law that was as complicated
+as it was unnecessary; but the Magistrate, being a representative of the law,
+decided that, rightly or wrongly, it must be obeyed.
+
+This visit of the Baas to the Magistrate had made our native friend hopeful
+that it would result in averting the calamity that threatened
+him and his family, but, to his utter dismay, the landlord on returning soon
+undeceived him and gave his own opinion of "the most peculiar and wicked law"
+that he had ever heard of. Although Dutchmen had known and had heard of
+some strange laws, yet this Dutchman was so full of indignation
+at the strangeness of this law that his description of it
+was made up of largely untranslatable Dutch adjectives. These adjectives,
+however, could not relieve the suffering of his native tenant
+from the wound inflicted by the law in his sudden expulsion from his home.
+It seems clear that no South African Native, on leaving a Dutch farm,
+had ever received a more respectable send-off than our friend did
+on leaving his farm in compliance with the Natives' Land Act.
+The white landlord accompanied him right up to the boundary of the farm
+which for seventeen years had been his home, and which he was so cruelly
+forced to leave. For the first time in his life, as the Dutchman said,
+he shook hands with a Kafir. And, as he did so, he called down
+the direst curses upon the persons responsible for the impasse --
+curses, by the way, which seem to be liberally answered.
+
+It would, perhaps, be interesting to add what has happened since.
+Our native friend took his family to the town, because the Act
+is not enforceable in municipal areas. Leaving his family there,
+he started roaming about the districts, looking for a place
+where he could graze his cattle. In the course of the wandering
+his stock thinned down, owing to death from starvation and other causes.
+At home his old master found he could not get on without him,
+so learning of the whereabouts of the Native and also of his sad plight,
+the master sent out to him and advised him to return home,
+graze his stock there, and "hang the legal consequences."
+May they never be found out.
+
+It has now amounted to this that white men who wish to deal humanely
+with their native friends must resort to clandestine methods, to enable
+a Native and his stock to drink the fresh water and breathe the pure air
+in the wide tracts of South Africa, for by law Natives have now less rights
+than the snakes and scorpions abounding in that country.
+Can a law be justified which forces the people to live
+only by means of chicanery; and which, in order to progress, compels one
+to cheat the law officers of the Crown? This case is but one of many
+that came under our own observation, and there may be many more
+of which we know nothing.
+
+The `Cape Times', the leading Bothaite daily newspaper of the Cape,
+has defended every action of the Union, including the dismissal
+of English Civil servants. It justifies this last act
+by alleging that the dismissed officials did not know Dutch.
+Consequently it could not be expected that this journal
+could have any qualms about a law enacted specifically to repress black men.
+It supported every harsh clause of the Natives' Land Bill,
+including Clause 1. However, when the native deputation to England
+gave proofs of the ravages of the "plague law" in Cape Colony,
+the `Cape Times', instead of defending its pet law, said:
+"The complaint to which they give precedence is particularly instructive,"
+and so, quoting from the deputation's appeal which says: "In the Cape Colony,
+where we are repeatedly told that the Act is not in force,
+the Magistrates of East London, King Williamstown and Alice
+prohibited native tenants from reploughing their old hired lands last October,
+and also ordered them to remove their stock from grazing farms,"
+this ministerial daily adds: "It is unnecessary to consider
+the justice or otherwise of this complaint for it is perfectly clear
+that if a Magistrate oversteps the bounds of the law, it is a matter
+to be dealt with by the Union Government."
+
+It will be observed that this is an insinuation that the Magistrates
+who administer the Land Act at the Cape are exceeding their authority
+and should be "dealt with by the Union Government". Now, what are the facts?
+It is well known that all Magistrates, including those at the Cape, are paid
+to administer every legislative instrument, whether sensible or absurd,
+passed by the partly literate Parliament of the Union of South Africa.
+Hence, these Magistrates, in ordering Natives off their farms,
+and turning native cattle off the grazing areas, are only carrying out
+Section 1 of the Natives' Land Act. One Cape Magistrate who ruled
+that to plough on a farm was no breach of the law, WAS "dealt with
+by the Union Government", for a peremptory order came from Pretoria
+declaring such a decision to be illegal.
+
+Therefore, so far from the Cape Magistrate "overstepping
+the bounds of the law" in expelling Natives from the farms and native cattle
+from their pastures, these Magistrates could legally have done worse,
+inasmuch as they could, under Section 5, have sent these Natives to prison
+for contravening Section 1. In justification, then,
+of its own and of its party's share in this legislative achievement,
+the `Cape Times' should have sought a more worthy excuse than thus attempting
+to make scapegoats of a band of fair-minded men who presumably,
+prior to the Union, never thought it would be part of their duty
+to administer from the Cape bench an Act which inflicted such gross cruelty.
+
+Who, in the days of the Murrays, Mr. F. Y. St. Leger, and subsequently
+of Mr. F. E. Garrett, could have thought that the `Cape Times'
+would in this manner have destroyed its great traditions,
+built up during the nineteenth century, by sanctioning a law
+under which Cape Magistrates would be forced to render homeless
+the Natives of the Cape in their own Cape of Good Hope? The one Colony
+whose administration, under its wise statesmen of the Victorian era,
+created for it that tremendous prestige that was felt
+throughout the dark continent, and that rested largely
+upon the fact that among its citizens, before its incorporation
+with the northern states, it knew no distinction of colour,
+for all were free to qualify for the exercise of electoral rights.
+The old Cape Colony of our boyhood days, whose administration,
+despite occasional lapses, managed during a hundred years
+to steer clear of the familiar massacres and bloodshed of punitive expeditions
+against primitive tribes, massacres and bloodshed so common
+in other parts of the same continent; the old Cape Colony whose
+peaceful methods of civilization acted as an incentive to the Bechuana tribes
+to draw the sword and resist every attempt at annexation by Europeans
+other than the British: a resistance so determined that it thwarted
+the efforts to link German South West Africa with the Transvaal Republic,
+and so kept open the trade route to Rhodesia for the British.
+All this done without any effort on the part of the British themselves,
+and done by the Natives out of regard for Cape Colony ideals.
+But alas! these Natives are now debarred from tilling the soil of the Cape,
+except as Republican serfs. What would Sir George Grey, or Bishop Gray,
+or Saul Solomon, say of this? What would these Empire builders say if they
+came back here and found that the hills and valleys of their old Cape Colony
+have ceased to be a home to many of their million brawny blacks,
+whose muscles helped the conqueror to secure his present hold of the country?
+What would these champions of justice say if they saw how,
+with her entrance into the Union, Cape Colony had bartered
+her shining ideals for the sombre history of the northern states,
+a history defiled with innocent blood, and a territory
+soaked with native tears and scandalized by burying Natives alive;
+and that with one stroke of the pen the so-called federation
+has demolished the Rhodes's formula of "equal rights for all civilized men,
+irrespective of colour"? How are the mighty fallen!
+
+But while we sing the funeral dirge of Cape ideals, the Republicans
+sing songs of gladness. Thus, when Mr. Sauer, a noted disciple
+of the late Mr. Saul Solomon, died, the `Bloemfontein Friend',
+the leading Ministerial daily of the "Free" State, said:
+
+==
+He stood uncompromisingly for Rhodes's ideal of complete equality,
+and it was an open secret that Mr. Sauer, who piloted the Natives' Land Act
+through Parliament last session, would, had circumstances been different,
+have been its strongest opponent. It was the irony of fate that made him
+Minister of Native Affairs when a law had to be passed which appeared to be
+in entire conflict with his cherished lifelong convictions.
+The Act he passed embodied the hated northern principles which
+he had consistently opposed during the whole of his political career, and,
+as in the case of the Act of Union, it was only Mr. Sauer's influence that
+allayed the feelings of the intransigent section of the native population.
+
+Mr. Sauer was a convinced disciple of the teachings of Saul Solomon,
+who founded and preached the gospel of the Cape native policy.
+In our view that was a mistaken policy. Its principal modern exponent has now
+been taken away, and if God, and not man, shapes the destinies of nations,
+we may be pardoned the belief that Mr. Sauer's death at this juncture
+means something more than the mere passing from the finite into the infinite
+of one human being.
+==
+
+If this is a brutal utterance, it is at any rate more frank,
+and therefore more manly, than the vacillating policy of the `Cape Times',
+the Ministerial organ of the Cape Colony. It is said that "politics
+make strange bed-fellows", but not even the shrewdest of our political seers
+could have predicted that in 1913 the `Cape Times' would be found
+in the same camp as its Republican contemporaries which sing glees
+over the demolished structure of Cape traditions, and over
+the passing away of Victorian statesmen and the principles they stood for --
+Victorian principles, which the `Cape Times' of other days helped to build up
+in another political camp! How are the mighty fallen!
+
+ Dear lovely bowers of innocence and ease,
+ Seats of my youth when every sport could please,
+ How often have I loitered o'er thy green,
+ Where humble happiness endeared each scene!
+
+ How often have I paused on every charm:
+ The shelter'd cot, the cultivated farm,
+ The never failing brook, the busy mill,
+ The decent church that topt the neighbouring hill,
+
+ The hawthorn bush with seats beneath the shade
+ For talking age and whisp'ring lovers made!
+ How often have I blest the coming day,
+ When toil remitting lent its turn to play!
+
+ And all the village train, from labour free,
+ Led up their sports beneath the spreading tree;
+ With bashful virgins' sidelong looks of love,
+ The matron's glance that would these looks reprove.
+
+ These were thy charms, sweet Province, sports like these,
+ With sweet succession, taught e'en toil to please;
+ These round thy bowers their cheerful influence shed,
+ These were thy charms -- but all these charms are fled.
+
+ Sweet smiling village, loveliest of the lawn,
+ Thy sports are fled and all thy charms withdrawn;
+ Amidst thy bowers the tyrant's hand is seen
+ And desolation saddens all thy green:
+
+ And trembling, shrinking from the spoiler's hand,
+ Far, far away, thy children leave the land.
+ Ill fares the land, to hastening ills a prey,
+ Where wealth accumulates and men decay.
+
+The Cape Native can thoroughly endorse these sentiments of Oliver Goldsmith,
+which, however, compared with his own present lot, are mild in the extreme;
+for it could not have been amid scenes of this description,
+and with an outlook half as bad as ours, that the same author further sings:
+
+ A time there was e'er England's grief began,
+ When every rood of ground maintain'd its man;
+ But times are alter'd: Trade's unfeeling train
+ Usurp the land and dispossess the swain.
+
+ Those gentle hours that plenty bade to bloom,
+ Those calm desires that ask'd but little room,
+ Those graceful sports that grac'd the peaceful scene,
+ Liv'd in each look and brighten'd all the green,
+ These far departing seek a kinder shore,
+ And rural mirth and manners are no more.
+
+ In all my wand'rings round this world of care,
+ In all my griefs -- and God has giv'n my share --
+ I still had hopes my latest hours to crown,
+ Amidst these humble bowers to lay me down.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIII Mr. Tengo-Jabavu, the Pioneer Native Pressman
+
+ Egotists cannot converse; they talk to themselves only.
+ Alcott.
+
+
+
+There is issued in King Williamstown (Cape) `Imvo', the second oldest
+newspaper published in any one of the South African native languages.
+This paper formerly had a kind of monopoly in the field of native journalism,
+and it deserved a wide reputation. In later years the `Izwi',
+another native journal, appeared on the scene; and then
+the King Williamstown pioneer could hardly hold its ground
+against the new rival. The `Izwi', though somewhat too pronounced
+against the traditional policy of the Dutch, appealed to a large section
+mainly by reason of its Imperial sentiment. The result was that
+Mr. Tengo-Jabavu's paper began to sink into difficulties and had to cast about
+for a financial rescuer. Prominent supporters of the present Ministry
+came to the rescue; three out of the ten members of the first Union Cabinet
+became shareholders in the sinking `Imvo', so that the editor,
+in a sense, cannot very well be blamed because his paper is native
+only in language. However, we do not think that he does full justice
+to his ministerial employers.
+
+God forbid that we should ever find that our mind had become
+the property of some one other than ourselves; but should
+such a misfortune ever overtake us, we should at least strive
+to serve our new proprietor diligently, and whenever our people
+are unanimously opposed to a policy, we should consider it a part of our duty
+to tell him so; but that is not Mr. Jabavu's way of serving a master.
+Throughout the course of a general election, we have known him
+to feed his masters (the S.A. party), upon flapdoodle,
+fabricating the mess out of imaginary native votes of confidence
+for his masters' delectation, and leaving them to discover
+the real ingredients of the dish, at the bottom of the poll,
+when the result has been declared.
+
+He did the same thing in the case of the Natives' Land Bill.
+Thus when he found that the trouble was organizing the Natives
+on an unprecedented scale, and that the Native Press and the Native Congress
+were unanimous in denouncing the Grobler-Sauer Bill,
+a Reuter's telegram appeared in the newspapers purporting to give
+the proceedings of a meeting of the Natives of King Williamstown,
+who, it was alleged, approved of the Bill. When the author reached
+King Williamstown, during this visit, he found the King Williamstown Natives
+disgusted with what they said was Reuter's speculation upon their feelings.
+But Reuter's agent on the spot, whose office we also visited,
+knew nothing about the meeting. The only meeting ever held in the place,
+we were told, was one of nineteen persons presided over by Mr. Tengo-Jabavu,
+and when Mr. Jabavu asked the other eighteen Natives present in the meeting
+besides him to signify their approval of the legislation,
+Mr. W. D. Soga (a well-known native politician) asked the chairman
+to place a motion before the meeting, as he was ready to move an amendment.
+The temper of the meeting having already shown itself unfavourably
+to the chairman's suggestion, the latter, instead of challenging
+a positive defeat, suggested an adjournment. This was agreed to
+for the simple reason that nineteen persons were too few
+to express the wishes of the 100,000 Natives of King Williamstown.
+But, the next morning, the message "from Reuter's agent at King Williamstown"
+appeared in all the daily papers, except that of King Williamstown,
+conveying the Natives' approval of the Bill, and Mr. Sauer, in Parliament,
+made capital out of the "mess"-age. But Mr. Tengo-Jabavu lived
+to rue his action in this matter before very long. His authority,
+or rather his leadership, of the Natives, was put to the test in March, 1914,
+when he contested the Tembuland seat against Dr. W. B. Rubusana.
+Dr. Rubusana had always been supposed to occupy the second place,
+and Mr. Jabavu the first place, in the estimation of the Natives
+of the Cape Province: yet, to the surprise of everybody,
+Mr. Jabavu, although assisted by the Dutch vote, polled only 294 votes,
+while Dr. Rubusana, who relied entirely on the coloured vote, polled 852.
+
+We mentioned, in a previous chapter, the names of Principal Henderson
+and Mr. Tengo-Jabavu, as those whom we especially desired to interview
+during our trip. Having stated the fulfilment of this desire
+in regard to Mr. Henderson, we now proceed to state it
+in regard to Mr. Jabavu.
+
+There was to be a meeting of the Natives of King Williamstown,
+in the Baptist Chapel, on November 3, 1913, to discuss the Natives' Land Act.
+To this meeting we had been invited by telegram; and in going
+to King Williamstown we made up our mind to invite Mr. Jabavu
+to this meeting of Natives of his town, and in fact, to treat him
+with the same respect as we had shown the Principal of Lovedale
+with such happy results; but, to our horror, we found that Mr. Jabavu
+was not only preaching the Backvelders' dangerous politics, that were ruinous
+to native interests, but that, besides their dangerous politics,
+he had imbibed their baser quality of ingratitude. For this man
+had not only enjoyed our free hospitality on three occasions,
+when he visited up-country, and the hospitality of our relatives
+at various times in other parts, but when he was about to leave for Europe,
+on a holiday jaunt, and wanted some one to take charge of his work,
+we left our own affairs and went to King Williamstown, at our own expense,
+to fill that post, and we filled it without a fee; but, see his retaliation.
+
+We reached King Williamstown on Saturday evening and called
+at Mr. Jabavu's house on Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Jabavu said her husband
+had gone to Stutterheim, and would be back by a late train. On Monday morning
+we called at Mr. Jabavu's office, and his son whom we saw said his father
+would be there in the afternoon. We called in the afternoon and was told
+that he was inside and would see us later. We waited from 2.30
+till nearly 4 p.m., chatting with his son, while Mr. Jabavu was closeted
+in the next room, evidently unwilling to see us. As his son had to leave,
+we also went away, but returned to his office at 6 p.m., just an hour before
+the opening of the public meeting to which we wished to invite him.
+Mr. Jabavu sent a verbal message, with the young lady who had taken in
+our card to him, to the effect that he was not prepared to see us.
+That in brief was our reception by the man who edits "a native paper".
+
+We went to the meeting at the Baptist Chapel, which was a huge success.
+Mr. W. Sebe presided. The editor of the King Williamstown daily paper,
+an Englishman, attended the meeting in person and took notes for his paper,
+while no reporter represented the soi-disant native paper
+of King Williamstown.
+
+When the proceedings of the meeting appeared in the King Williamstown
+English paper, Mr. Jabavu attempted to discount the report by writing
+in his own paper that "the `Cape Mercury' evidently does not know that there
+are Natives and Natives, as well as King Williamstown and King Williamstown,
+there being town and country," etc. This being a veiled insinuation
+that the rural native view was opposed to the urban native view
+at King Williamstown, we could not leave the matter unchallenged,
+so we posted the following challenge to Mr. Tengo-Jabavu, which he evidently
+found it impossible to accept: --
+
+==
+Dear Sir, --
+
+`Imvo' comments disparagingly on Monday's meeting, and adds that
+the Natives who composed the meeting were a handful drawn by curiosity.
+Now, I challenge `Imvo', or Mr. Tengo-Jabavu, to call a series
+of three public meetings, anywhere in the district of King Williamstown.
+Let us both address these meetings immediately after the Natives' Land Act
+has been read and interpreted to each. We could address the meetings from
+the same platform, or separately, but on the same day and at the same place.
+For every vote carried at each of these meetings in favour of his views
+on the Act I undertake to hand over 15 Pounds to the Grey Hospital
+(King Williamstown), and 15 Pounds to the Victoria Hospital (Lovedale),
+on condition that for every vote I carry at any of the meetings,
+he hand over 15 Pounds to the Victoria Hospital (Mafeking),
+and 15 Pounds to the Carnarvon Hospital (Kimberley).
+
+That is 30 Pounds for charity, if he will accept.
+
+I will not place difficulties in his way by inviting him to meetings up here,
+but leave him to call meetings among his own people (if he has any)
+in his own district, and I will attend at my own expense.
+
+ Yours, etc.
+ (Sgd.) Sol. T. Plaatje,
+ Editor of `Tsala ea Batho', and Secretary S.A. Native National Congress.
+14, Shannon Street, Kimberley.
+==
+
+==
+ "IMVO'S" REPLY
+
+Dear Sir, -- I am instructed by the Editor of "Imvo" to acknowledge
+the receipt of your letter, and to inform you that as he has not been
+reading and following your writings, etc., he cannot understand
+what you mean by it. In short, to let you know that he takes no interest
+in the matter.
+
+ I am, Sir,
+ Yours truly,
+ (Sgd.) A. M. Jabavu.
+"Imvo" Office, King Williamstown,
+ November 24, 1913.
+==
+
+Poor fellow! He had not met a single member of the Government
+since the plague law was so rudely sprung upon an unsuspecting country,
+and since it sent unprotected widows and innocent children adrift,
+to wander about with their belongings on their heads.
+Mr. Jabavu had not met any member of Parliament and discussed the measure
+with him or with a responsible Government official; so he found it awkward
+to accept a challenge to substantiate his arguments, in the presence of one
+who had not only discussed the measure with members of Parliament,
+with Cabinet Ministers and their representatives, but who had also witnessed
+the ravages of the Act amongst the Natives in the country.
+
+The general complaint of the Natives of King Williamstown,
+his fellow-townsmen, is that he refuses to attend their meetings and relies
+on the white daily papers for information about the Natives at large.
+
+But Mr. Jabavu is nothing if he is not selfish. We are informed,
+and have every reason to believe, that, three months after the Act was passed,
+he wanted to raise a loan of 200 Pounds on landed security,
+but was debarred by the Natives' Land Act. The next issue of his paper
+praised the Act for the sixtieth time and noted the following exception:
+"There is only one flaw in this otherwise useful Act,
+which is occasioning a manifest hardship through harsh administration,
+and that is the provision relating to lending money."
+
+Now, from our point of view, this seems to be the only defensible provision,
+as it would tend to discourage usury, a common evil in money transactions
+between Europeans and Natives; but because it interfered
+with Mr. Jabavu's personal aims, that is the only flaw.
+The cold-blooded evictions and the Draconian principle
+against living anywhere, except as serfs, are inconsequential
+because they have not yet touched Mr. Jabavu's person.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIV The Native Congress and the Union Government
+
+ Pity and need make all flesh kin. There is no caste in blood
+ which runneth of one hue; nor caste in tears, which trickle salt with all.
+ Sir Edwin Arnold.
+
+
+
+A native meeting was called to meet at Johannesburg on July 25, 1913,
+under the auspices of the South African Native Congress.
+
+The Congress was attended by Natives from as far south
+as East London and King Williamstown, and from as far north
+as the Zoutpansbergen in Northern Transvaal, and also from Natal, Zululand,
+and from Bechuanaland; in fact from nearer and distant centres
+in all parts of the country they had gathered to discuss
+the situation arising from the serious conditions created
+by the Natives' Land Act. Thus the proceedings of the meeting
+were conducted under a grave sense of responsibility.
+There was little of the customary loquaciousness which characterizes
+native gatherings; and there was much less free translation of the speeches
+for the benefit of the European visitors. Translations, as a rule,
+take up a great deal of valuable time, and it was their curtailment
+on this occasion, apparently, which caused the `Transvaal Leader'
+-- a morning paper of the Rand -- to complain that Natives
+had become unusually secretive and had ceased to be as communicative
+as at previous meetings. The `Rand Daily Mail', on the other hand,
+referred to the closing session in a very few lines. It said:
+"Last evening, a number of Native women attended the Native Congress,
+attired as befitting the solemnity and importance of the occasion.
+The orderly behaviour of the 200 or more delegates was attributable
+to the presence on the platform of Mr. Dube, an able chairman,
+supported by two native solicitors who passed their B.A. in London."
+
+Mr. R. W. Msimang is a solicitor who was articled to
+a firm of solicitors in England; but the reference to
+the second "native solicitor" and "London B.A." is about
+the most undeserved compliment ever paid to the author,
+who, until 1914 (a year after the Congress reported by the `Mail'),
+had never been on board a ship, nor inside a London college.
+
+At the annual Congress, March, 1913, a deputation had been appointed
+to proceed to Capetown and to present to the Government the native objections
+against the proposed embargo on the purchase and lease of land.
+The deputation consisted of Mr. J. L. Dube, Dr. W. B. Rubusana,
+Mr. Advocate Mangena, Rev. L. Dlepu, Messrs. W. Z. Fenyang, S. Msane,
+L. T. Mvabaza, D. Le Tanka, and S. T. Plaatje; the writer, however,
+was not able to proceed to Capetown at the time. The July Congress
+was specially called to receive the report of the delegates to Capetown,
+and further to consider what other steps it might be necessary to take.
+
+Dr. Rubusana gave a report on the deputation to Capetown. They had
+four interviews with the Minister of Native Affairs, and several interviews
+with members of Parliament, urging the setting aside of some Government farms,
+to which evicted native tenants might go, as the effect of the Bill,
+then under discussion, would inevitably be to make numbers of them homeless.
+The Minister, he said, never denied the possible hardship
+that would follow the enforcement of such a law, but he seemed to be driven
+by a mysterious force in the face of which the native interest did not count.
+What that force was, he said, could only be surmised. General Hertzog,
+who had always advocated some such measure (though he had never been able
+to carry it out), had just been excluded from the Botha Cabinet;
+to placate his supporters, who were very angry over his dismissal,
+the Government carried out this alleged policy of his,
+so that while General Hertzog in office was not able to bring about
+the enslavement of the blacks, General Hertzog out of office succeeded
+in getting the Government to sacrifice their principles of right and justice
+and to force the Act through Parliament, in order to retain
+the support of the "Free" State malcontents.
+
+When every effort with the Ministry failed, the delegates asked
+for a postponement of the Bill pending the report of the Commission.
+This also was refused by the Government. Finally he wrote a letter
+to Lord Gladstone, asking him to withhold his assent to the Bill
+until he had heard the native view. To this His Excellency replied
+that such a course was "not within his constitutional functions".
+All this took place in May, 1913.
+
+In July, Mr. Dube, the president of the Congress, wrote to Lord Gladstone
+asking for an interview to lay before him the nature of the damage
+that the Act was causing among the native population. Again His Excellency
+replied that it was "not within his constitutional functions".
+
+The Natives' Land Act, which was then law, was read to the assembled Natives,
+most of whom narrated their experiences and the result of their observations
+of the effect of the Act during the six weeks that it had been in force.
+Congress considered these, and as a result of their deliberations
+it was resolved to appeal to His Majesty's Government; and also to take steps
+to apprise the British public of the mode of government carried on
+in British South Africa under the Union Jack, and to invoke their assistance
+to abrogate the obnoxious law that had brought the Congress together.
+
+The Congress considered at length how His Majesty the King
+and the British public could best help the Natives in these matters;
+and it was concluded that if South Africa were really British,
+then any suffering taking place in that country must be of concern
+to His Majesty the King and the British public. The next point
+for inquiry by the Congress was the journey of a deputation to be chosen
+to proceed on this mission, a journey consisting of six thousand miles by sea
+and a thousand miles by rail. When the Europeans of South Africa
+went to England to ask the Imperial Government for a Constitution,
+their delegates were easily sent, because the native taxpayers,
+although with hardly any hope of benefiting by the gift
+-- which amounted to a curtailment of their rights -- were compelled
+to contribute to the travelling and other expenses of these envoys;
+but in the Natives' own case no such funds are at his disposal,
+even though he goes to the Imperial Government to point out
+that his taxes had been used by a Parliament in which he is unrepresented
+as a rod for his back. In order to meet this necessary demand for
+ways and means, Mr. Msane was deputed to tour the country and ask for funds
+from the Natives. A Johannesburg committee was appointed
+to superintend this effort and take charge of the funds which he might raise.
+The members of the said committee were: Messrs. W. F. Jemsana (chairman),
+Elka M. Cele (treasurer), D. S. Letanka, R. W. Msimang, H. D. Mkize,
+B. G. Phooko, D. D. Tywakadi, D. Moeletsi, M. D. Ndabezita,
+H. Selby Msimang (hon. sec.), S. Msane (organizer). Finally a deputation
+was appointed to proceed to Pretoria to lay before the Union Government
+three resolutions that the Congress passed. The first,
+condoling with the Government on the death of Hon. J. W. Sauer,
+late Minister of Justice and Native Affairs, who died just as the Congress
+was about to meet; the second resolution, that the Natives
+dissociated themselves entirely from the industrial struggles
+on the Witwatersrand and elsewhere, and preferred to seek redress
+for their grievances through constitutional rather than by violent means.
+
+The third resolution, that humble representations to the authorities against
+the eviction of Natives from farms, having proved unavailing, the Natives
+had now decided to raise funds for the purpose and convey their appeal
+to His Majesty the King and to the British public. That Mr. Msane
+had been appointed organizer of the appeal fund and that a safe conduct
+was requested for him to tour the native villages. The following deputation
+was appointed to present these resolutions to the Union Government
+at Pretoria: Chief Karl Kekana and Mr. S. M. Makgatho of the Transvaal,
+Mr. E. Mamba of the Transkei (Cape), Mr. Saul Msane and Rev. R. Twala (Natal),
+Mr. S. T. Plaatje (Kimberley), and Mr. J. M. Nyokong
+of the Orange "Free" State.
+
+Mr. S. F. Malan, the Minister for Native Affairs pro tem.
+received the deputation in the Government Buildings,
+which were the Transvaal Houses of Parliament before Union.
+With the Minister of Native Affairs were Messrs. E. Barrett,
+Assistant Secretary for Native Affairs, Mr. Pritchard,
+the Johannesburg Commissioner, and Mr. Cross, a Rand Magistrate.
+The Minister readily received the resolutions and confessed to
+a feeling of relief at the moderation of their tone. Further,
+he listened to the story of hardships already suffered by the Natives,
+as a result of the enforcement of the Land Act, specific instances of which
+were given, some being of Natives not far from Pretoria,
+who, after being evicted from their old homes and having found new homes,
+were told by the Commissioner that they could not settle therein.
+
+The delegates submitted to the Minister that their complaint
+was not a sentimental grievance, but real physical suffering.
+The Minister having listened to these statements, pointed out
+that this Act was the law of the land, which must be obeyed.
+He was not so sure, he said, that the Natives could achieve anything
+by means of a deputation to England as the law had already been signed
+by His Majesty's representative on the spot without hesitation.
+He could not see why the Natives should be interfered with
+when holding meetings and organizing a deputation to go to the King,
+as long as they kept within the four corners of the law. But it seemed to him
+that they should have waited until a commission had been appointed
+under Sections 2 and 3 of the Act. An appeal to the Sovereign, he added,
+was the inherent right of every British subject; but he expressed the desire
+that the appeal to England should be dropped until the commission
+had first made its report. The delegates explained that as the law
+had in six weeks done so much harm, it was alarming to think
+what it might do in six months, while there was nothing definite to hope for
+from the report of a commission not yet appointed, and whose report
+might conceivably take six years.
+
+The deputation made it clear that the appeal to the King
+would be dropped if the Government undertook to amend the law
+pending the report of the commission.
+
+
+ THE NATIVES' LAND ACT IN NATAL
+
+In the following months both the Minister in charge of Native Affairs
+and the Chief Native Commissioner of Natal asked Rev. John L. Dube,
+President of the S.A. Native National Congress, to furnish them
+with information and particulars of Natives in misery
+as a result of the Natives' Land Act. Mr. Dube had been collecting
+some concrete cases of hardship, including Chief Sandanazwe of Evansdale,
+Waschbank, who stated that he and fifty members of his tribe
+"are given notice to remove, and that he has made representations
+to the authorities in Maritzburg asking for land without success."
+
+Mr. Dube sent the following letter to the Secretary for Native Affairs,
+with a list of evicted farm tenants, on September 12, 1913.
+
+==
+Sir, --
+
+The Chief Native Commissioner for Natal approached me
+shortly after the publication in the Press of my open letter*
+with a request similar to that made by you, viz., that I should furnish him
+with particulars and information. From time to time
+I did so furnish those names to the Chief Commissioner,
+and I send you herewith a list of those names and also additional names
+which have come to my knowledge since my correspondence
+with the Chief Native Commissioner.
+
+--
+* Mr. Dube was here referring to an open letter which he sent
+ to the `Natal Press', explaining the hard lot of the Native victims
+ of the Act, and appealing to the colonists to intercede
+ with the South African Government on behalf of the sufferers.
+--
+
+In regard to the concluding paragraph of your letter to the effect
+that the only result of the Chief Native Commissioner's request
+was the submission of the case of a Native in the Weenen County
+who received notice from his landlord over a year ago,
+you must be misinformed. As you will see from the list,
+scores of names were furnished to the Native Commissioner, and furthermore,
+some of the individuals themselves who were suffering hardship
+were sent by me to the Chief Commissioner and were interviewed by him.
+The trouble has been that the Chief Commissioner, instead of dealing
+with these individual cases himself, has, I am informed, in many instances,
+sent the individuals on to the Magistrates, and my letters also
+have been forwarded to the Magistrates, with the request that Magistrates
+would go into the matter. However anxious the Magistrates may be
+to help in this matter they are but human, and in many cases,
+I am informed, they are overweighed with other work and have been unable
+to give the attention to these matters that they required.
+Moreover the Magistrate acts purely as an official, and the Native
+who is wandering about the country helpless does not get
+the immediate sympathy and attention which his case deserves and demands.
+In many cases the individuals I sent on are under the impression,
+rightly or wrongly, that nothing is being done for their relief.
+
+If I might make a suggestion, it would be that some independent gentleman
+should be appointed to investigate these cases -- some gentleman
+who would have sufficient time to devote to the investigation
+of the various instances of hardship that would come before him,
+and who would be empowered to do what was necessary to relieve the deserving.
+
+I may say further that since the introduction of the Squatters Bill
+during the 1912 session of Parliament eviction by farmers has been
+much increased, possibly in view of the impression that prevailed generally
+among the farming community that the Squatters Bill or some similar measure
+was to be re-introduced by the Government, the result being that those Natives
+who had been evicted by farmers now the Natives' Land Bill has become law,
+are prevented from entering into agreements with land owners
+as rent-paying tenants, and only under servile conditions, with the result
+that in many cases they become wandering and helpless vagrants.
+
+Another form of hardship which prevails very generally
+as the result of the Natives' Land Act is this: The younger Natives
+do not receive the wage from farmers as can be easily earned,
+say, on the Rand mines, with the result that the younger men
+leave their homes and their fathers and proceed to the mines;
+the father is unable to supply the labour demanded by the landlord
+owing to the absence of his sons, and as a result he is evicted --
+many cases of this sort can be cited.
+
+I may here cite two cases within my personal knowledge:
+(1) Bhulose was living on Mr. R. Miller's farm, "Dalmeny",
+near Phoenix. He was evicted with his wife and family in June last.
+He is seeking a place now to reside on, but cannot obtain one.
+(2) A native woman Vatplank, a widow with a family, was evicted
+from the property of a farmer, Mr. Adendorff, near Newcastle; this woman
+with all her household goods and her family had to camp out on the veld.
+She was barred by the Act from going to neighbouring farmers for a residence.
+
+I have done my utmost to give you concrete examples and names of persons
+suffering hardship. If I can supplement the information
+contained in this letter and in the accompanying list I shall only be
+too happy to do so.
+
+Might I suggest further that you should ask the Chief Native Commissioner
+to forward to you all my correspondence with him on this matter?
+This will show you and the Government that the statements contained
+in my open letter are not mere fabrications, but are based upon solid facts.
+
+ John L. Dube.
+==
+
+Mr. Dube's list includes evictions from the districts of Greytown,
+New Hanover, Ekukanyeni, Homeless (a very appropriate name
+in the circumstances), Howick, Estcourt, and Mid-Illovu.
+
+Here is a specimen of notice: --
+
+==
+I hereby give you Mandwasi notice to leave my farm Blinkwater
+by the end of July, 1913.
+
+ (Sgd.)
+ July 20, 1913. Freestone Ridge.
+==
+
+"The wheels of administration moved slowly" (to borrow an official phrase)
+between the Native Affairs Department and the other departments of State.
+Thus, while the authorities were temporizing with this
+and similar representations, the Natives' Land Act was scattering the Natives
+about the country, creating alarm and panic in different places.
+The high officials of State, instead of relieving the distress thus caused,
+were interviewing Natives and urging them not to send a deputation to Europe.
+The Natives received this advice hopefully. They believed
+it was an indication that the Government was about to amend the law,
+in which case, of course, the deputation would be unnecessary;
+but, besides this advice, the officials in each instance promised no relief.
+
+The Natal Native Commissioner held a similar meeting with a number of Zulus.
+The meeting asked for some relief for the evicted tenants
+who were roaming about the country, but the official significantly
+evaded the point. The disappointment of the meeting, created by
+his evasive replies, having overcome the proverbial native timidity
+when in the presence of authority, resulted in one petty chief
+saying to the Commissioner: "Local authorities levy a tax every year
+on each of our dogs. We don't know what they do with the money.
+You have never complained against that waste, so why should you complain
+if our money is spent in sending a deputation to the King?" The answer,
+if there was one, is not reported.
+
+General Botha, until then, never met native tax-payers
+to discuss their grievances with them. But in the latter part of 1913,
+he actually met some Natives in the Eastern Transvaal, who desired
+to inform him of the ravages of the Act. But instead of holding out any hope
+that an asylum would be found for the wanderers, he proceeded
+to advise them against sending a deputation to England. The Natives
+having given specific instances of the plight of certain evicted tenants
+in the neighbourhood, asked for an abode for them, but on that point
+the Premier would not be drawn. The Government's indifference
+to native sufferings being thus revealed, the Natives of Vryheid
+became more eager to help to organize the proposed deputation.
+
+General Botha's efforts against the deputation, without offering any homes
+to the evicted Natives, was probably the best stimulus
+towards the deputation fund. The Premier visited a northern tribe
+some time after and was said to have warned the chief and his people
+against the pretensions of the Native Congress. When Mr. Dube called there
+a few days later, they handed him 200 Pounds towards the deputation fund,
+which they had collected since General Botha's visit. Mr. Saul Msane
+similarly raised 360 Pounds for the fund in the Eastern Transvaal
+where the Premier first warned the Natives against the deputation
+without offering them any relief.
+
+Those Natives who were not immediately affected by the Act
+were rather lukewarm regarding the proposed deputation.
+But when the officials warned them against wasting their money on a deputation
+and told them in the next breath that it was a breach of the law
+to find an abode for the evicted wanderers, these Natives,
+perceiving the hollowness of the Government's advice,
+determined that as a last resort a deputation should be sent to England.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XV The Kimberley Congress / The Kimberley Conference
+
+ Sorrow like this draws parted lives in one, and knits anew the rents
+ which time has made.
+ Lewis Morris.
+
+
+
+When everything was ready another special Congress was called
+to meet at Johannesburg in February, to carry out the deputation's scheme
+and appoint the delegates to proceed to England. In view of
+the dissatisfaction of the Government after the July Congress,
+the author considered it his duty to inform the Government
+that a meeting was about to take place. This information
+called forth a peremptory intimation from the Government
+that because of the recent strike of white men (from which the Natives
+had publicly disassociated themselves) the Native Congress could not be held.
+But at the time that this telegraphic prohibition reached us
+General Smuts, Minister of Defence, was announcing in Parliament that
+the embargo on public meetings, in areas where, owing to the recent strike
+(of January, 1914), martial law was proclaimed, had been removed.
+Logically then General Botha's decision made the previous day
+in regard to the Congress meeting fell to the ground; and so we telegraphed
+to Senator Schreiner and Dr. Watkins, members of Parliament,
+to ascertain if this was so. Both these gentlemen answered
+that in spite of the removal of the prohibition of public meetings of whites,
+the Prime Minister directs that the one in regard to the "Native Congress"
+must stand. Thereupon the writer, after consulting a few native residents
+in Kimberley, intimated to the executive of the Congress that:
+
+==
+Kimberley, my home, is not yet a Republic in its sentiments.
+There we have not reached the stage where some one's permission
+must be asked before a meeting can be held. So we invite the Congress
+to hospitable and British Kimberley, where public meetings close
+with singing the British National Anthem and not with singing
+the "Volkslied" or the "Red Flag", as is the case in meetings
+at some other South African centres.
+==
+
+After the notices were out the Government sent an intimation to the effect
+that the Congress was not actually prohibited. That it was only deemed
+undesirable to allow it to be held at Johannesburg, where a strike
+had taken place; and that even there the Government no longer objected,
+provided it be held indoors. But this belated reconsideration was unnecessary
+as the Kimberley preparations were far advanced and some of the delegates
+were already on their way to Kimberley.
+
+The Congress was opened in St. John's Hall at 10 a.m. on
+Friday morning, February 27, 1914, by the Rt. Rev. W. Gore-Browne,
+Bishop of Kimberley and Kuruman. His lordship was accompanied
+by Archdeacon de Rougemont and Rev. I. I. Hlangwana of St. Paul's Mission,
+who gave out the native hymns. In the absence of the president,
+who reached Kimberley in the afternoon of that day, the Bishop
+was received by Mr. Makgatho, vice-president of the Congress.
+After the religious exercise had ended, the Bishop counselled the Congress
+not to ask for a repeal of the whole Act, but only for relief
+from the oppressive clauses, and then to wait for the Commission's report
+in regard to the remainder of the Act. "There may be something good in it,"
+added the Bishop, "as the glittering diamonds of Kimberley are found
+in blue clay."
+
+Mr. Makgatho, in thanking the Bishop for opening the Congress, thanked him
+for the allegory, but added, however, that he had never heard of a father
+who said to his child, "You are hungry, my son, and I am going
+to prepare some dinner for you, but meanwhile you had better wait outside
+in the rain." After the Bishop gave the Congress his benediction,
+Prince Malunge-Ka-Mban-deni of Swaziland was introduced to him,
+as were the Chiefs Molotlegi and Mamogale of Transvaal,
+Moiloa of the Bahurutshe, and Messrs. Elka M. Cele of Natal,
+Meshach Pelem from the Cape, J. M. Nyokong, S. Litheko of the O.F.S.,
+and other native leaders.
+
+In the evening a large public reception was held in the City Hall
+in honour of the delegates. Kimberley joined wholeheartedly in the function.
+De Beers Company, which had hitherto shown the greatest hospitality
+only to European assemblies and not to native conferences and organizations,
+acted otherwise in the case of this Congress and its requirements.
+Presumably Mr. Pickering, the secretary of De Beers, had had information
+that even the mining labourers in the enclosed mining compounds were
+heart and soul with their countrymen outside; and so the Company's hospitality
+was extended to the native delegates.
+
+Bioscope films were projected by Mr. I. Joshua, the chairman of the A.P.O.,
+Messrs. Lakey and September, other A.P.O. committee men, acting as
+masters of ceremonies. The coloured people attended in their hundreds,
+and cheered the musicians of their native brethren who entertained the people
+who thronged the City Hall till many were refused admission.
+The Coloured People's Organization sent a speaker, Mr. H. Van Rooyen,
+to welcome the delegates on behalf of the African Political Organization.
+The president of their Ladies' Guild, Mrs. Van der Riet,
+a school teacher and musician of long standing, attended and played
+the accompaniment for the Greenport Choir on the pianoforte;
+Miss M. Ntsiko, who had borne the brunt of the evening's accompaniment,
+was thus relieved.
+
+Mr. Joseph Kokozela, on behalf of the Kimberley and Beaconsfield
+branches of the Congress, welcomed the Congress to Kimberley,
+and presented Mr. Dube, the president, with an address,
+which was beautifully illuminated by the Sisters of St. Joseph Convent,
+of Mafeking. Mr. H. Van Rooyen associated his people with the Natives
+in their present struggle for existence, and Dr. J. E. Mackenzie,
+who spoke on behalf of the Europeans, made a fine speech.
+He said that nobility was not confined to any particular race or colour;
+that men with black skins have been known to be just as noble
+as men with white skins. Amongst other questions he asked,
+"What could be more noble than the Bedford boy leader who subsequently became
+the St. Augustine of Central Africa, or what could be more noble
+than the action of the two servants of Dr. Livingstone, who carried his body,
+for hundreds of miles, through difficult forests, to the coast,
+and thus ensured his burial in Westminster Abbey?"
+
+Dr. Mackenzie's speech was afterwards referred to by several native delegates
+to the Congress. They said that before they came to Kimberley
+they felt certain that English ideas were utterly obliterated
+in the Union of South Africa, and that English sentiments
+were things of the past; but that Dr. Mackenzie's speech had given them
+fresh hope, as it was like cold water to a traveller in the desert.
+It was, they said further, like a dream to hear a white man talk like that
+in a mixed audience.
+
+The Congress received sympathetic telegrams from such
+old residents of Kimberley as Sir David Harris and Dr. Watkins.
+Both these gentlemen telegraphed their felicitations from Parliament.
+
+Mr. H. A. Oliver, member for Kimberley, a great Wesleyan
+and Sunday School leader, who was at Capetown for the Parliamentary session,
+instructed his manager at Kimberley to book seats on his account
+for the senior classes of the Newton Wesleyan Sunday School
+to attend the Congress entertainment.
+
+The Resident Magistrate of Kimberley telephoned to us on this same day
+that he had received the following telegram from the Secretary
+for Native Affairs: --
+
+"LEAVING TO-NIGHT FOR KIMBERLEY TO ATTEND THE NATIVE CONGRESS.
+INFORM PLAATJE."
+
+It had never previously happened that a representative of the Government
+attended a coloured political assembly, and it was felt
+that wiser councils had prevailed with the Government,
+and that as a result it had decided to meet the Natives, at least half-way.
+If gambling was one of the indulgences of the Natives,
+some at least of the delegates would have wagered that Mr. Dower
+was conveying a concession to the Native Congress, by which
+it would be unnecessary for the latter to send a deputation to England.
+So thoroughly was the idea of a concession associated
+in the mind of the Congress with the approaching visit of Mr. Dower
+that it postponed the election of delegates for the mission to England.
+This anticipation was a reasonable one as the Union's recent legislation
+was in the melting-pot.
+
+The law against British Indians, passed at the same time
+as the Natives' Land Act, was just then recommended for modification,
+under pressure brought to bear upon the Imperial Government
+by the Government of India and other agencies. Again, the Labour members
+were creating difficulties both at Capetown and Westminster
+over General Smuts's Deportation Bill, which compelled the Government
+to amend its conditional banishment clause -- a hardship that was not
+as vital or as absolute as the banishment clauses against black tenants
+in the Natives' Land Act. Consequently, the native delegates to Congress,
+representing as they did an overwhelming majority of the inhabitants
+of South Africa -- a section that had received nothing but violent legislation
+from the South African Parliament since the inauguration of Union --
+had every reason to expect that, for the first time,
+a Government emissary was carrying an olive branch to the Natives;
+but, alas! unlike the industrial strikers, the Natives had no votes
+to create a constitutional difficulty; unlike the British Indians, they have
+no Indian Government at their back; therefore, their vital interests,
+being negligible, could comfortably be relegated to the regions of oblivion,
+and this hope, like all its predecessors, was falsified.
+
+Mr. Dower attended the Congress on Saturday, February 28,
+and again on Monday, March 2, and made speeches.
+
+He was profuse in expressions of the gratitude of the Government
+to the Natives, their leaders and their chiefs, for the loyal co-operation
+they have always rendered the authorities, and he came to ask them,
+he said, to perpetuate that loyal co-operation and to refrain
+from appealing to Great Britain on the Natives' Land Act.
+To appeal would be to put back the clock of the Native Affairs Department
+for many years. Of course, it did not matter about
+the putting back of the Natives' own clock, since its only use
+is that of an index for the registration of Government taxes,
+municipal pass fees at one shilling or more per month per Native,
+and similar phases of the black man's burden. Thus, in answer to questions
+put by the members of the Congress, Mr. Dower was not able to say
+that one iota of the provisions of that Draconian law would be modified
+before the Commission made its report, nor could he give a pledge
+in the name of the Government that if the Commission reported
+favourably to the Natives, Parliament would carry into effect
+the Commission's report, even though the pledge sought
+took no account of the possibility of the Commission's report being hostile
+to the interests of the Natives. This then was the character of the visit
+which the Government Secretary paid to the Native Congress.
+It was entirely barren of results, and as such it left the Congress
+as it found it, in bewilderment and gloom.
+
+Fresh fears took hold of the Congress. When the commissioners' names
+were gazetted, they were not received with any great amount of enthusiasm
+by the native population, for the best that could be thought
+of the Natives' Land Commissioners was that they were not associated
+with any political party. With such a view, it can be understood
+what were the feelings of the Congress when it thereafter learnt
+that four of the five commissioners were present, as delegates,
+at the conference of the Ministerial party held at Capetown two months before
+(the conference at which Generals Hertzog and De Wet definitely severed
+their connexion with General Botha), nor was there anything to show
+that the fifth commissioner was not there also. Therefore, the situation
+amounted to this, that this Land Commission, which should be
+composed of impartial members, or, if made up of party politicians,
+it should at any rate represent the three political parties
+as well as the Natives, was in reality but a branch of the Ministerial party
+which foisted this very Land Act upon the country.
+
+It was finally resolved to appoint a deputation of five
+to accompany the president, Mr. Dube, to England if further efforts failed.
+The Congress nominated nine names, and the election of five delegates
+from these was entrusted to a committee of fourteen members of the Congress,
+who balloted for five and reported the result to the full Congress
+as follows: --
+
+ S. T. Plaatje 13
+ S. M. Makgatho 9
+ Saul Msane 6
+ W. Z. Fenyang 3
+ T. M. Mapikela 3
+ Dr. W. B. Rubusana 2
+ A. K. Soga 2
+ M. Pellem 2
+ Chief Mamogale 1
+
+The first-named five were therefore declared elected. Mr. Fenyang
+subsequently stood down in favour of Dr. Rubusana; Mr. Makgatho was not able
+to reach Capetown in time for the steamer's departure, so the deputation
+that eventually accompanied the president to England were: --
+
+ 1. Dr. Rubusana.
+ 2. S. T. Plaatje.
+ 3. Saul Msane.
+ 4. T. M. Mapikela.
+
+Their instructions were first to approach the Prime Minister and ask him
+to undertake on behalf of his parliamentary majority to repeal
+the Natives' Land Act, failing that, to endeavour at least
+to get the clause rescinded which prevents evicted native tenants
+from finding settlements anywhere except as servants, and that
+if the Prime Minister should refuse to grant this request, they were forthwith
+to appeal to the Imperial Parliament and the British public.
+
+It may be added that the Congress, before it rose, received telegraphic
+advices from Mr. Gibson of the Cape Church Council, and also from
+the Hon. W. P. Schreiner, not to appeal to England. These communications
+encouraged the delegates to believe that intermediate relief was being
+arranged for, to ameliorate the condition of the wandering evicted Natives,
+in which case there would, of course, be no occasion to appeal to England.
+But it subsequently transpired that the Natives were advised against
+making an appeal to England without the offer of any relief.
+
+Before Congress rose votes of thanks were passed in favour of
+the Bishop of Kimberley and Kuruman, the De Beers Company,
+the `Diamond Fields Advertiser' for its liberal reports of the proceedings,
+Mr. Dower for entertaining the delegates to a dinner on Monday,
+and also to the residents of Kimberley.
+
+The special thanks of the Congress were voiced by Mr. Makgatho
+to the various committees, whose strenuous efforts for
+the comfort of the delegates left nothing to be desired. These were: --
+
+ COMMITTEES OF LOCAL BRANCHES
+
+KIMBERLEY. -- Messrs. Thos. Leeuw (chairman), S. Marogo (treasurer),
+Bill Tshabalala, H. Ndlovu, Z. Jumane, A. R. Mashoko, T. Diniso (secretary).
+
+BEACONSFIELD. -- Messrs. J. Smith (chairman), W. January,
+S. Pehla (treasurer), Jas. Ngcezula, Ntshenge, B. Mradu,
+J. S. Kokozela (secretary).
+
+LOCAL ACCOMMODATION AND REFRESHMENTS COMMITTEE: Mesdames J. Smith,
+S. Sidziya, M. Mahuma, S. Kawa, Mildred Kokozela and L. Skota;
+Messrs. J. Chologi, J. Matsebe, S. Pehla, Soga, J. Ngcezula and A. Ntshoko.
+
+CITY HALL RECEPTION COMMITTEE: Mesdames J. J. van der Riet and M. Ntsiko;
+Messrs. Isaac P. Joshua, Sidney Motlhabi, P. W. Mama, T. Diniso,
+Tony Msengana and J. G. Motlhabi.
+
+An honorarium of 10 Pounds was voted in favour of the honorary secretary,
+Mr. S. T. Plaatje.
+
+After the deputation reached Capetown on May 13, 1914, we wrote Lord Gladstone
+informing him that we were bearers of a petition from the native population
+to His Majesty the King, which we would ask His Excellency
+to graciously convey. Of course we expected a short note from His Excellency
+to the effect that "it was not within his constitutional functions"
+to meet us, but to our surprise this time His Excellency wrote
+appointing a meeting with us at noon on May 15 at Government House.
+But, in the interview, the reason why that particular appointment
+came within the pale of His Excellency's constitutional functions
+became apparent: for the Governor-General only made it the opportunity
+to urge the deputation not to go to England.
+
+The deputation replied that, even in native politics there was always
+an appeal from the action of an induna to the native chief
+and from the latter to the ruler; that it was straining the loyalty
+of the black millions of South Africa to tell them that there was no appeal
+to His Majesty the King against the oppressive laws of a Parliament
+in which they had no representatives.
+
+It must be added that although the Governor-General did not say so,
+yet the barbarous cruelties of this relentless law appeared to have produced
+a sympathy that was visible in his facial expression. Astonishment and pity
+were amongst the sensations which seemed to be depicted
+on Lord Gladstone's face. Still, he held out no hope that his good offices
+would be used to secure an amelioration of the conditions complained of.
+All His Excellency advised us to do was to abandon the appeal to England.
+
+"But, your excellency, what about these cruelties that are now in progress?"
+we asked.
+
+"Oh, well," said Lord Gladstone, "the Natives are not the only sufferers,
+even in England people have suffered hardships from time to time,
+till they were compelled to emigrate to America and other places."
+
+"That is true, your lordship, but it is to avert such a contingency,
+if possible, that the Natives appointed a deputation to lay their case
+before His Majesty the King, as they have no means to emigrate to America,
+or any other country."
+
+"Oh, no," he answered, "don't misunderstand me; I only use that
+as an instance, not that Natives must emigrate."
+
+The Governor-General then repeated the advice not to appeal to the Crown,
+but he held out no hope of an amendment in the Act, and so the deputation
+sailed for England.
+
+Previous to this interview, no less a personage than General Botha himself
+-- Premier and Minister for Native Affairs -- condescended to meet
+the deputation. Prior to this meeting, the deputation entertained
+strong hopes that the Premier would come to it with an offer of, say, at least
+allowing the hiring of land by Natives, pending the report of the Commission,
+even though the prohibition to buy land remained in force.
+But instead of such a minimum, the only hope that General Botha held out
+was that he had not evicted the Natives on his own farm,
+and that he had further told some farmers not to evict their Natives.
+These personal acts of the Premier on his own farm, and with regard to
+some other farmers, had not helped the entire native population of the Union
+since the Act was promulgated. Nor would they assist those native wanderers
+who are now without a home on earth, as General Botha himself
+could not allow any of them to settle on his farm without breaking the law.
+Again, it did not seem quite clear how General Botha's efforts
+in this direction could make any impression on private landowners when
+his own officials were carrying out wholesale evictions of native tenants,
+on the Government farms at Standerton and elsewhere, and sending them adrift
+about the country. The only remedy, and that a partial one,
+would be to legalize the settlement of tenants who have been evicted.
+But to this General Botha said, "If I went to Parliament now
+with a Bill to amend this law they will think I'm mad."
+
+That statement confirmed the decision of the deputation to proceed to England,
+and accordingly they at once made arrangements for sailing.
+
+One painful fact which these interviews revealed was
+the ignorance of the Government in matters relating to the Natives.
+The 5,000,000 blacks of the Union are taxed to maintain
+what is called the most expensive Civil Service in the world.
+The officials of the Native Affairs Department, in return for
+their huge salaries, paid out of the proceeds of taxes levied from
+relatively the most poorly paid manual labourers in the world,
+namely, the Native taxpayers, are called "the guardians of the Natives";
+but General Botha, the Minister of Native Affairs, "Father of the Natives"
+and supreme head of the Civil Service, seemed (or pretended)
+to know absolutely nothing of the manner in which his official underlings
+play battledore and shuttlecock with the interests of the Native population.
+To mention but one instance: at one stage of the interview we attempted
+to enlist his sympathy on behalf of the "Free" State Natives in particular,
+who, in spite of prohibitive laws in the Boer statute books,
+had not to our knowledge been debarred by the Boer Government
+from buying or leasing land. General Botha not only denied that his was
+the first Boer administration which definitely enforced these prohibitions
+but he also asserted, with all the dignity of his office,
+that no living Native had ever bought a farm in the "Free" State
+from a white man -- in short he accused us of telling lies.
+Fortunately Mr. E. Dower, who remembered that some Native landowners
+in both the Hoopstad and Thaba Ncho districts of the "Free" State
+had acquired their properties from white people under the Republican regime,
+was present at the interview and he then bore out our statement:
+thus on May 15, 1914, the Prime Minister and Minister of Native Affairs
+heard for the first time in his life that there were some Natives
+actually living in the "Free" State who pay him quit-rent on farms
+which they had bought from white people under Republican rule.
+
+The assertion that "Free" State Natives lost nothing by the enforcement
+of the Natives' Land Act is but one phase of the maze of ignorance
+through which the Union Government is groping in a hopeless attempt
+to discharge their trust to the native taxpayers.
+
+The co-operation of intelligent and responsible native taxpayers,
+which could sweep away these administrative cobwebs of ignorance,
+is always at the disposal of the Government if they deigned
+to avail themselves of it; but they prefer, at enormous cost
+to the taxpayers (including native taxpayers), to purchase
+from the non-native section of the community arm-chair views
+based largely on hearsay evidence, which is often tainted by colour prejudice.
+Hence the shroud of ignorance which surrounds the native policy
+of the Union of South Africa.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XVI The Appeal for Imperial Protection
+
+ Of all the characters of cruelty, I consider that as the most odious
+ which assumes the garb of mercy.
+ Fox.
+
+
+
+On arrival in London the native delegates were received
+by several friends, including Dr. Chas. Garnett, M.A.,
+of the Brotherhood League; Rev. Amos Burnet, of Transvaal,
+introduced them to the Wesleyan Missionary Committee in session
+at Bishopsgate; the Anti-Slavery and Aborigines Protection Society
+communicated with the Colonial Office regarding an interview.
+The Colonial Secretary agreed to see the deputation on condition
+that they were accompanied by no one from the Society.
+
+When the native deputation reached England there were
+a number of South African missionaries on furlough in England
+who had taken part in Church meetings in Africa, of protest against the Act.
+Some of these gentlemen had witnessed the cruel operations of the Act;
+but the decision to receive the native delegates by themselves
+meant that no such eyewitnesses as these could testify
+to what they had seen of the working of the Act.
+
+In accordance with the time fixed for the interview, the deputation
+duly waited upon the Secretary of State, whose reply was more fully given
+in Parliament. At the interview he took notes on nothing, and asked
+no questions. On every point he had "the assurance of General Botha"
+to the contrary.
+
+No headway having been made with the Government, it was resolved upon
+that the delegates should appeal to the British Parliament
+and thence to the British public in terms of the native mandate.
+
+Later on Messrs. T. Buxton and J. H. Harris, the secretaries
+of the A.S. and A.P.S., arranged a meeting for the delegates
+to meet certain members of Parliament. The meeting took place
+in No. 11 Committee Room of the House of Commons. The British peerage
+was represented by Lords Emmott and H. Cavendish Bentinck.
+After hearing the delegates and asking them questions,
+the members of Parliament intimated that their decision would be
+arrived at later in the absence of visitors. It must be mentioned here
+that besides the above secretaries of the A.S. and A.P.S. there were also
+present at this meeting a few sympathizers who were not members of Parliament.
+They included Miss S. Colenso of Amersham, and the Rev. Dr. Howie of Stirling,
+and Mrs. Howie, etc.
+
+By the kindness of Mr. and Mrs. Buxton, Mr. and Mrs. Cobden Unwin
+(in conjunction with Mrs. Saul Solomon), Lady Scott of Westminster,
+Mrs. S. J. Colenso of Amersham, and Mr. H. E. Wood, J.P., of Camberwell
+(the latter being a prelude to a successful meeting of the delegates with
+the Baptist Council of England), Sir Albert Spicer, M.P., and Lady Spicer,
+and Mr. and Mrs. Harris of Dulwich, receptions -- some of them attended
+by English and Colonial guests -- held at the residences of the friends named,
+were given in honour of the delegates.
+
+==
+ IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS
+
+Mr. P. ALDEN: I wish to bring to the notice of the right hon. Gentleman
+the question of the native lands in South Africa. I happen to have been
+responsible for a Resolution passed unanimously in this House
+previous to the passing of the Act of Union, and in the discussion
+which took place on that occasion the Under-Secretary of State to the Colonies
+laid it down as one of the duties of the Imperial Parliament
+to protect in every possible way the interests of the Natives in their land,
+and protect their rights and liberties in that respect.
+If we take away the land from the Native we take away his liberty.
+In reference to the Natives Land Act of 1913, I want to put
+two or three points before the right hon. Gentleman.
+In the Union of South Africa, blacks own about 4,500,000 morgen of land,
+and the whites own fourteen times as much land as the blacks,
+though, of course, they are very much smaller in number. The inequality
+is very noticeable in the Transvaal, where there are 300,000 whites
+holding 31,000,000 morgen of land, and the 1,000,000 Natives
+only have 500,000 morgen of land which they can call their own.
+
+It has been said over and over again in South Africa that this law
+applies equally to Europeans and whites as well as to the Natives.
+There is, they say, no injustice. The European is estopped
+from this purchase of land, just as the Native is estopped.
+All I can say in answer to that is that the fallacy is shown
+the moment you begin to ask what land the Natives have to sell.
+The native areas are already overcrowded, and they positively have no land
+which they could sell. When once a Native leaves his farm or is evicted,
+or has to quit for any reason whatever, the Act does not allow him
+to purchase, hire or to lease anywhere else for farming purposes
+except from Natives, who have not the land to lease or to sell.
+He therefore must become a servant on the farm. There is absolutely
+nothing else for him to do but to become a servant. This Act has already
+produced very great hardships. It has produced hardships to the people
+who were under notice to quit at the time the Act was passed,
+to the people who have actually since then been evicted from their farms,
+to the Natives who were in search of land and who are wandering about
+with their families and stock and have nowhere to settle,
+and to the Natives who have had to leave their crops unreaped.
+There are many hundreds of such cases of hardship which have been inflicted
+under the Act which is being enforced on all sides. I do not wish to go
+into this question at very great length, because the right hon. Gentleman
+knows more about it than anybody in the House in all probability,
+and he knows the difficulties of the situation.
+
+I want to put before him just one point with regard to what can be done.
+WE CALL OURSELVES THE PROTECTORS OF THE RIGHTS OF THE NATIVES,
+and we claim that we have always, in season and out of season,
+insisted that those rights should not be infringed, and that no action
+should be taken against their liberties. The Imperial Government cannot,
+of course, intervene in the sense of asking the Government of South Africa
+either to rescind an Act of Parliament or to amend an Act of Parliament,
+unless it is their own wish, but I must point out that
+Clauses 1, 4, and 5 do operate most harshly against the Native,
+and it might be possible, on the representation of the right hon. Gentleman,
+for the Prime Minister of South Africa to mitigate the hardships.
+
+Mr. CAVE: The subject to which the hon. Member has referred
+is no doubt of importance, and no one can quarrel with the tone of the speech
+in which he has introduced it.
+
+Sir ALBERT SPICER: I quite realize that in South Africa
+we have a self-governing country, and, therefore, one would be
+desirous to be very careful in what he said with regard to
+its administration and legislation. But this, at any rate,
+is the right place to express the views that are held
+by very large numbers of people in this country, who have devoted
+a good deal of time and money in doing what they can to educate and uplift
+the native races of South Africa. Those of us who know South Africa,
+are perfectly well aware that whilst it is now a country
+owned by the white races, it can only be properly and fully developed
+with the help of the native races, and the better educated they are,
+the better work they will be able to do for South Africa.
+This Native Lands Act was passed very hurriedly. Of course,
+we cannot blame South Africa for passing legislation hastily,
+seeing that we are accustomed sometimes to do the same thing
+in the Mother of Parliaments. Again, the appointment of the Commission,
+which is now inquiring into the subject and is taking evidence,
+is helping, I think, to produce injustice in some cases,
+so far as the Natives are concerned, because the introduction of the Lands Act
+has led farmers to take action to enforce their rights. They have terminated
+the rent-paying agreements of former tenants, and, knowing that these
+are precluded from making new agreements for the hire of land, they have
+either ejected them or have demanded from them three months' unpaid service
+per annum, which has had the indirect effect of reducing a free people
+to a condition of service. I could give instances of that
+from well authenticated sources. I will refer to one only.
+It is the case of a chief and his people living on land
+which they and their fathers have dwelt upon for eight generations.
+The farm was recently purchased by a farmer resident in another province.
+He decided to terminate the rent-paying conditions previously in existence
+between the former owner and the Natives, and to substitute labour conditions,
+under which even the chief, an old man, has been required to give service.
+The people were called upon to quit their houses, square buildings,
+timbered and thatched, and in connexion with this the owner gave
+less than one month's notice in the following terms: --
+
+ "This is to notify I can let you have the school building
+ no longer. I bought the farm and wish to receive the same
+ at the end of your school quarter."
+
+We desire to speak with all due respect of the self-governing Dominions
+of South Africa, but I think we may fairly ask the Colonial Secretary
+to help the Union Government to realize that there is a strong feeling
+in this country in favour of everything possible being done
+to secure just and reasonable treatment for the Natives.
+One may fairly ask the right hon. Gentleman to use all reasonable influence
+with the Union Government to secure for the Natives a fair quid pro quo
+for the loss of their former rights of land purchase, which would mean
+in some cases an extension of the native area, and if it were possible
+to suspend to some extent the operation of the Act until the Land Commission
+has reported. Having been connected with South Africa for a good many years,
+having travelled through it, and given a good deal of time to it,
+I desire to do what I can for the uplifting of the people of that country,
+and that is my reason for intervening in this Debate.
+==
+
+Other sympathizers, including the Member for Woolwich,
+rose in different parts of the House to support the foregoing appeal,
+but the Colonial Secretary stopped them by delivering his reply.
+
+==
+The RT. HON. L. HARCOURT: The hon. member for Tottenham (Mr. Alden)
+and the hon. Baronet the Member for Hackney (Sir A. Spicer)
+have drawn attention to the South Africa Land Act. It is not
+a sudden inspiration of the Botha Government. It is the outcome and result
+of a Commission appointed by Lord Milner some years ago,
+presided over by Sir Godfrey Lagden. The Commission was appointed
+
+ "In view of the possible federation of the South African Colonies
+ to gather accurate information as to native affairs so as to arrive
+ at a common understanding on questions of native policy."
+
+That Commission sat for two years. It had upon it representatives
+of every colony and territory. It arrived at what I believe
+was a unanimous (sic) report,* and this Act is practically doing no more
+than carrying out its recommendations. The Act has already been
+in operation for twelve months. The Commission of Inquiry,
+which was to be instituted under the Act, is now sitting.
+It is bound by the terms of its appointment to report within two years,
+and will probably report by Christmas next.** The whole of this Act
+is a temporary measure until that Commission reports. A native deputation
+has come over and seen me, and I believe many other members.
+That deputation left Africa against the advice of General Botha,
+and against almost the entreaties of Lord Gladstone. They knew that the Act
+would not be disallowed, because it had been announced months before
+in South Africa. The day the deputation saw me the period of twelve months
+during which that Act could be disallowed on my recommendation
+had already expired, and it is now an act which can only be suspended
+by the Government and Parliament of the Union of South Africa.
+
+--
+* Col. Stanford (the Cape Colony representative on the Lagden Commission)
+ and Messrs. Campbell and Samuelson (the Natal representatives)
+ sent in two strongly-worded minority reports against such restrictions.
+ Vide S.A. Native Affairs Commission, 1903-5, Vol. I. -- Author.
+** After Christmas the Commissioners' "terms of appointment" were altered
+ from two years to three years.
+--
+
+Sir W. BYLES: Does it forbid the holding of land by Natives?
+
+Mr. HARCOURT: Perhaps the hon. member will allow me to complete my statement
+as the time is short.* The suspension of the Act would be worse than useless
+at the present stage. It would suspend the Inquiry which is taking place
+at this moment in the interests of the Natives themselves. I cannot believe
+that any further Commission is necessary, as the existing one seems to me
+both efficient and sufficient.
+
+--
+* Mr. Harcourt would have shortened the time considerably,
+ had he said "Yes" or "No", instead of replying in sixteen words.
+--
+==
+
+It is not clear why Mr. Harcourt made this statement as the Natives,
+in their petition to the King, never asked for a suspension of the whole Act.
+All that they wished was that the harshest clauses of the measure
+might be suspended, leaving the others in operation until the Commission
+rendered its report.
+
+When Mr. Harcourt's reference to the Commission was made known in South Africa
+the Commissioners, then sitting in Pretoria, were informed of the plight
+of evicted Natives. The Commissioners replied that any grievance
+arising out of the operation of an Act of Parliament was beyond
+the scope of their enquiry, and that they could not consider such grievances.
+This was exactly what they had previously told the Natives
+at King Williamstown and elsewhere. At Harrismith the Commission heard
+the complaint of a son of Chief Wietzie, who, during the Basuto wars,
+had always remained loyal to the "Free" State Boers. The son had been
+evicted from the ground on which he and his fellow-tribesmen
+had resided for generations and he was forced to live on an urban location
+where it is impossible to do any farming. The President
+(Sir William Beaumont) said he was sorry to hear that a son of Wietzie
+found himself homeless, but he regretted that the Commission
+could not help him. Mr. Harcourt, therefore, must have been
+incorrectly informed regarding the functions of the Commission.
+
+Yet another puzzle. After the appointment of this Commission
+in September 1913, there was a newspaper report to the effect
+that the Commission found the native difficulty most acute
+in the "Free" State, and that it had decided on setting aside without delay
+a strip of territory in the Western "Free" State as a native settlement.
+Immediately after the appearance of this report in the Press,
+angry meetings of the whites were held in Boshof and Hoopstad
+to protest against the proposals attributed to the Commission.
+In reply to these protests, Mr. Theron, the Minister of Lands,
+evidently speaking on behalf of the South African Government,
+not only repudiated the report but he also added significantly
+that "the Government had no intention of creating a native area
+in Hoopstad or anywhere else." So, where do we stand? Can it be wondered
+that the Natives are beginning to conclude that their position under the Union
+is hopeless?
+
+But, to return to Mr. Harcourt, the Colonial Secretary also gave
+the Imperial Parliament a fresh explanation of the Natives' Land Act.
+It is a pity that we cannot reproduce his explanation side by side
+with the four explanatory circulars issued by the Union Government in 1913.
+Such a reproduction would show the discrepancy between the five explanations.
+We wrote to South Africa but could only secure one of these circulars,
+which purports to be an explanation of a previous explanatory circular --
+an explanation of an explanation. However, the definition of the Act,
+as given by the other three circulars, leaves, as far as we can remember,
+the root principle of the Act unexplained. Moreover, the statements set forth
+in these circulars are not in harmony; they have only one point of agreement,
+namely: that when Natives are driven out of their homes by the law,
+and are debarred by the same law from establishing other homes
+(the only provision made for them being that they should live
+as servants of the whites) the circumstances give them
+no ground for complaint.
+
+Take for instance only two sentences in Mr. Harcourt's explanation.
+In the first of these, he appears to approve of the system of forced labour
+established by the Act; in the second, he denies the evictions that took place
+in July when he spoke, and those that took place subsequently. He seems
+to flatly deny not only what is admitted by Lord Gladstone and General Botha,
+but he likewise contradicts the terms of the Act itself.
+Indeed, if we had not been there and heard him we should have felt, on reading
+this part of his speech, that he had been misreported in Hansard. Thus --
+
+==
+If the Natives are farm labourers there is no limit to the number
+who may reside on white property. If not, they are not dispossessed
+until Parliament acts upon the report of the Commissioners, and then only
+when suitable land is provided by addition to a native reserve.*
+
+--
+* At Downing Street Mr. Harcourt informed the Deputation
+ that he had the "assurance of General Botha" that the Natives
+ have too much land already.
+--
+==
+
+The Imperial explanation being as obscure as the Colonial explanations
+which preceded it, the reader's remedy is to fall back
+on the plain English of the Act (Chapter III), which alone has
+the force of law. Again Mr. Harcourt: --
+
+==
+If General Botha breaks his word I have no power to enforce it.
+I cannot bind his successors. If the Government of South Africa
+is not to be trusted in this matter they are to be trusted in nothing;
+and we know perfectly well that they can be trusted in these matters.
+NOTE WHAT HAS BEEN DONE WITH RESPECT TO THE INDIAN IMMIGRATION ACT.
+THIS WAS PASSED NOT FROM LOCAL DESIRE, BUT FROM IMPERIAL CONSIDERATIONS.
+THE PROVISIONS OF THAT ACT HAVE BEEN ACCEPTED BY THE COLONISTS
+AND BY THE REPRESENTATIVES OF THE INDIANS, WHO CONSIDER IT
+THE MAGNA CHARTA OF THE INDIANS IN SOUTH AFRICA. I think that that should be
+a sufficient guarantee as to the way in which General Botha proposes to act.
+General Botha, too, used THESE WORDS in Parliament: --
+
+"He had told the deputation that he had given standing instructions
+to the magistrates throughout the country that if they found
+any one in their districts ejecting Natives from the farms
+they had to go and make inquiries and report to him. He had
+in all those cases which had been brought to his notice
+used the influence of his Department."
+==
+
+All we can say in regard to "these words" is that the Magistrates
+apparently ignored the "standing instructions" alluded to,
+for they allowed the officials of the Department of Lands
+to scatter the native tenants from Government farms at Standerton,
+Colworth and elsewhere and sent them adrift over the country,
+well knowing that they could find no other shelter.
+
+On the 31st of January, 1914, the Magistrate of Ladysmith,
+presumably acting under instructions from one of General Botha's Departments,
+issued the following notice to 79 native families in his district: --
+
+==
+"To Vellem Sibisi, Kraal Head residing on one of the following farms,
+viz. Remainder of Brakfontein, Remainder of Weltevrede, etc.,
+
+"Take notice in terms of Section 4 of Law 41 of 1884 that you are required
+to remove with your Kraal and inmates from whichever of the said farms
+you may be residing on, six months from this date, the aforementioned farms
+having all been purchased by Government for closer settlement purposes."
+==
+
+The Magistrate who so ruthlessly ejected these and other native families
+acted under the orders of the Government, who settled white people
+on the farms at the expense of a Treasury maintained also by native taxpayers.
+And it seems difficult to conceive how a Government which proved
+so indifferent regarding the fate of its own native tenants or of tenants
+on farms freshly acquired at the public expense, could be solicitous about
+the welfare of Natives evicted by private landowners. The statement,
+on the face of it, is incongruous.
+
+In his heroic efforts to defend South Africa's giant wrong,
+Mr. Harcourt gave away his case when he referred approvingly
+to what he calls "the Magna Charta of the Indians in South Africa".
+Now, what is this "Magna Charta"? In 1913, when the South African Parliament
+was at the noontide of its "mad career", it passed this iniquitous land law
+to repress the native race; and also a law imposing the most
+humiliating limitations on British Indians. Yet it must be added
+that the Indian law was the milder of the two, as it did not prohibit
+Indian residents in South Africa from living on the land.
+The Rt. Hon. A. Fischer, Union Minister of the Interior,
+who died two years ago, called these two laws of 1913,
+"the Kafir law and the Coolie law".
+
+As already stated, the London Committee of the Wesleyan Methodist Church
+asked to see Mr. Harcourt and inform him how drastically the "Kafir law"
+was operating against their converts and other Natives in South Africa,
+but Mr. Harcourt discreetly refused to see the Committee.
+
+As for the Indians, no one in South Africa paid any heed to their complaints
+against the "Coolie law"; but their cry reached India and Lord Hardinge
+demanded the redress of their grievances. His Lordship insisted so forcibly
+that (unlike the Wesleyan missionaries) he could not be ignored.
+The result was that the South African Parliament, "not from local desire,
+but from Imperial consideration", was obliged in the next session (1914)
+to amend the "Coolie law" with a "Magna Charta of the Indians
+in South Africa", and Mr. Harcourt's reference to this episode
+conveys the suggestion that what is sauce for the Indian goose,
+with Lord Hardinge at its back, can be by no means sauce for the native gander
+without the backing of a Viceroy.
+
+We cannot believe that to boast in one and the same speech
+about a "Magna Charta of the Indians" and dismiss the native appeal
+against a vital wrong is true Imperialism. For if Imperialism stands
+for the protection of a few thousand Indians in South Africa because they are
+supported by a Viceroy, and the neglect of the groans of five million Natives
+because (unlike a Viceroy) the missionaries who plead for them
+cannot enforce their claim with a political or diplomatic blow,
+then there would appear to be the suggestion of more fear than justice
+in Imperialism.
+
+Mr. Harcourt further credits the Milner Commission, presided over by
+Sir Godfrey Lagden, with the origin of the Natives' Land Act. We do not wish
+to defend the policy of these two former South African Statesmen, as we
+feel certain that they can take care of themselves. But we must say at once
+that we read the recommendations of the Lagden Commission ten years ago,
+as carefully as we have since read the controversy of the Natives' Land Act;
+and with the knowledge thus gained, we can safely tell the reader
+that that Commission never recommended that: --
+
+1. "Except with the permission of the Governor-General", Europeans must
+be debarred from buying land from Natives (who have no land to sell),
+and Natives must be debarred from buying land or leasing land from Europeans,
+who alone deal in land. -- (Sect. 1 of the Nat. Land Act).
+
+2. When evicted Natives apply for the said "permission of
+the Governor-General" they should be told that that permission
+"will only be granted to a few exceptional applicants"
+and that it could under no circumstances be granted to Natives
+in the colony in which the applicants resided (The Government's reply
+to the "Free" State wanderers).
+
+3. The Government should always take from three to six months
+to deliver this refusal, during which period applicants may have
+already become serfs or fled the country. (This has been
+the experience of all applicants within the writer's knowledge.)
+
+4. There should be a fine of 100 Pounds or six months' hard labour
+on any farmer who provides the Native with a shelter while he is waiting
+for this disappointing reply to his application (Sect. 5 Nat. Land Act).
+
+5. Native tenants to be hounded out of the Government farms
+long before the segregation takes place and that white people,
+who are not debarred from buying or leasing land for themselves,
+be settled thereon at Government expense. (See magisterial notice above.)
+
+If Mr. Harcourt has been told by any one that the Lagden Commission
+recommended any of these pitiless iniquities, then we are afraid
+that his informer is a romancer of the superlative degree.
+The Lagden report was never discussed in any South African legislature,
+much less adopted by any Parliament in South Africa; indeed, it is detested
+because it recommended a Native Franchise for South Africa
+like the Maori Franchise of New Zealand.
+
+One member of Parliament (Mr. Joynson-Hicks) said South Africa
+was a Home Rule country and he wondered what would happen if after Home Rule
+had been granted to Ireland some one asked the Imperial Parliament
+to interfere with Irish legislation.
+
+We wonder who could have told this hon. Member that there was Home Rule
+in South Africa! There used to be Home Rule in the Cape Colony alone,
+but this has been swamped by the Act of Union, which has since
+established an oligarchic Government throughout the country.
+And if by Home Rule to Ireland it is intended to give the franchise
+to a selfish, greedy and tyrannical few; and give carte blanche
+to this few, telling them thereby to do what they wish
+with the rest of the population of Ireland, and telling them further
+that they will be accountable to nobody for any good legislation
+that they might enact on the one hand, or any maladministration
+that they might perform on the other hand as is the case in South Africa --
+if that be what is meant by Home Rule for Ireland, then God have mercy
+on the Irish.
+
+When the reply of Mr. Harcourt was published in South Africa,
+supporters of this cruel law bubbled over with joy concerning it.
+One Dutch writer, after saying in a Dutch journal some very fine things
+about Mr. Harcourt, wound up a high-sounding eulogy
+by congratulating South Africa on having such a good Colonial Secretary
+at Downing Street. "Had Mr. Harcourt's predecessors been like him,"
+said this writer to his readers, "South Africa would have been saved
+many tears." We doubt if Mr. Harcourt, the object of this appreciation,
+would feel flattered by it if he knew that all the black victims
+of this cruel law, and all their European sympathizers,
+stood firmly by the Imperial Government and by the Colonial Government
+in the present struggle, while the gentleman at whose instance
+it was introduced in Parliament, as well as the Dutch editor of the journal
+alluded to, are at present (May 1915) committed for trial
+on charges of high treason; and the proprietor of another Dutch journal,
+in which we read similar vaunting adulations of Mr. Harcourt, was fined
+60 Pounds (so his paper says) for alleged complicity in the recent rebellion.
+These facts should impel the Rt. Hon. the Colonial Secretary to stop,
+look round and inquire "who's who" among his South African admirers.
+
+Two members of the South African Parliament -- Senator T. L. Schreiner
+and Mr. Wilcocks, M.L.A. -- the former an opponent and the latter
+a supporter of the Natives' Land Act, recently discussed the Act
+from separate points of view; and both came to the conclusion that the measure
+was designed to keep the blacks in subjection. This conclusion is in harmony
+with the bitter experiences of the native races since this Act was enforced.
+Yet in the face of this unanimous testimony of different observers,
+Mr. Harcourt equivocates behind the irrelevant "assurances of General Botha"
+about a possible segregation, which question is not now before the country.
+Assurances on segregation only serve to confound the issue.
+If the Beaumont commission, or its successor, should ever report
+then the question of segregation may come before Parliament
+some time in 1926. The point before the country now is not segregation,
+but the Natives' Land Act of 1913, which is now scattering the Natives
+about the country. That is the measure against which the Native appeals
+for Imperial protection. Not the future segregation.
+
+The only serious objection with which Mr. Harcourt apparently was able
+to charge the native deputation, and one which the Natives do not deny,
+is that they came to England against the "entreaties of Lord Gladstone"
+(who previously had twice refused to see them), and against
+the "advice of General Botha", by whose Cabinet the measure
+was enacted and enforced.
+
+It is a pity that Mr. Harcourt did not at the same time
+tell the House of an authentic case where an aggrieved party
+ever sued for redress with the consent and advice of his oppressor.
+In this connexion, the scope of our reading being limited,
+our ignorance is possibly abysmal; but it must be confessed that we have
+never heard of such an interesting appellant and we are inclined to believe
+that there never has been one.
+
+If General Botha wished to tell the whole truth, instead of making
+vague assurances to Mr. Harcourt, he would say: "I foresaw all
+the difficulties under which the Natives are suffering; and when Mr. Grobler
+proposed the summary stoppage of the sale and lease of land to Natives
+before the areas are segregated, I warned the House against this trouble,
+but the Hertzogites being too much for me I had to give in."
+Gen. Botha could go further and say to Mr. Harcourt: "If you will turn up
+page 579 of the South African Hansard (first column) reading from
+the top of the page, you will find my warning in these words: --
+
+==
+Unless they went slowly and carefully, there was a danger that they might
+take steps which would be unreasonable, unjust, and unfair on one section.
+For that reason, he regretted the amendment proposed by General Hertzog,
+because the amendment would have bad results if it were accepted.
+It would lead to an over-hasty measure of a most impracticable kind.
+This House would have to demarcate exactly and immediately
+those parts where the Natives would have to live, and he asked them:
+was this House able to do so? (Cries of "No".) It was all very nice
+to talk and take a map and draw lines on it. On the map they might be able
+to beacon off parts, and say, "This is for the Natives,"
+but then, when they put their scheme into effect, they might find
+that the ground of many individuals had been taken away
+without any inquiries or any investigations having been made.
+(Laughter, and "Hear hear".) This House would expropriate
+the rights of many white people, and they would meet with
+the greatest opposition. Where were they going to put these people then?
+In the Transvaal, farmers certainly would not consent to this; he did not know
+the people of the Free State so well, but he doubted whether they would agree.
+(A Free State Member: "No, they certainly will not.") Instead of taking
+any steps like this, they should be practical, and not land themselves
+into greater difficulties than they could help. Governments before them
+had done their best. He agreed that the squatting of Natives should be
+put an end to as soon as possible, but they should not lose sight of the fact
+that many Governments before them had done their best to put an end
+to this squatting evil. He knew well how the Transvaal Government had,
+year after year, taken up this matter. But what did they find? Simply that
+when they had passed a Squatters Law they could only put it into operation
+in one small part of the country. (Hear, hear.) To introduce
+another Bill like that would simply mean deceiving the country
+-- (hear, hear) -- and the Natives. If they accepted
+the proposal of the Minister of Native Affairs to appoint a Commission
+to investigate the various conditions prevailing throughout the country,
+he thought they would be taking a step in the right direction. (Hear, hear.)
+However, care was essential, because they must prevent causing
+a sort of revolution through the country. What they wanted
+was a measure which would be acceptable to the white man
+as well as to the Native. (Hear, hear.)
+==
+
+These were General Botha's views when the Land Act was first mooted,
+but in defiance of his solemn warning, the Bill, when gazetted, provided that
+the eviction of native tenants should precede the Commission's inquiry;
+harsher and still harsher clauses were inserted in the Bill until the Act
+finally embodied all the proposals brought forward by General Hertzog.
+The promise to refer the Bill to a Select Committee was also broken,
+presumably as a result of pressure from the caucus. The Government
+could not face a Select Committee after this complete change of front
+as they must have known that reason was absolutely against them.
+
+It might be asked: How could a Minister turn round afterwards
+and give "assurances" concerning the benefits of a measure
+which he had opposed before? To such a question we would hazard
+the following explanation: Our Prime Minister, on the one hand,
+is a British Privy Councillor and a General in the British Army;
+and, on the other hand, he is a simple Afrikander Boer,
+who only speaks Dutch in Parliament and addresses English audiences
+through an interpreter. And so in the eyes of General Botha,
+the British Crown Minister, if the Natives be treated justly,
+as British subjects should be treated, it is right; and, again,
+in the eyes of General Botha, the Afrikander Boer, if the Natives be treated
+harshly and barbarously, that too is right.
+
+It is not unusual to find these two natures contending against each other
+in one and the same person, whenever the Prime Minister
+deals with native questions; then more often than not the Boer view,
+being that of his own nature, dominates the British sentiment,
+which is a fresh acquisition.
+
+Having given above a striking extract from a speech on native policy,
+by the Rt. Hon. Louis Botha, Premier of British South Africa,
+we will now proceed to give an extract from another declaration
+by General Louis Botha, the Transvaal Boer. The Union Premier
+was giving evidence before the Labour Commission in Johannesburg
+and this is what he then said: --
+
+==
+11,302. Sir GEORGE FARRAR: You said that you would recommend
+the breaking up of Locations like Swaziland, Zululand and Basutoland
+and the putting of white settlers there? General BOTHA: I would suggest
+that these countries be given up to the white people to live in. . . .
+
+11,337. The general tenor of your remarks is that there is sufficient labour,
+and it only wants a little patience to wait for it, that is all?
+I have distinctly stated that there is a greater amount of labour
+than has at present been obtained. But there are farmers who have farms,
+and have no Natives living on these farms. For these people it is difficult
+to obtain Natives because the Natives who are not living on the farms
+are in locations. If the locations were broken up the Natives would be made
+to live on farms.
+
+11,338. You suggest that we should break up such land as Basutoland,
+Swaziland and Zululand? Yes, I say that such places are a source of evil.
+It is building up a Kaffir kingdom in the midst of us which is not only
+bad for the Kaffirs themselves but is a danger in the future.*
+
+--
+* One of the Chiefs in these locations gave General Botha 200 bullocks
+ to feed his troops engaged in crushing a rebellion of white men.
+--
+
+11,339. But take Zululand, for instance; there is a quarter of a million
+people there. What would you do with them if you break up their territory?
+They would all live on the farms as the white people are doing now.
+
+11,340. Oh, you want to cut up the land into farms,
+give it to the white people and retain the Kaffirs on the farms? Yes.
+
+11,343. But what will the white people do with the Kaffirs,
+pay them wages or charge them rent for the ground or what?
+My opinion is that Kaffirs who now live in locations should work
+for the white people, and the land should be exploited. The white people
+would pay them for the work they did and this would civilize them.
+
+11,344. A nation like the Basutos you would deal with
+in the same way? -- Yes.
+
+11,345. They at present occupy the land, we have had it in evidence before us
+to the effect that every inch of land in Basutoland is occupied and worked
+by the Kaffirs themselves as their own property? -- That is just
+my argument . . . because there is opening for the Kaffirs there
+they go and live there without doing anything.
+
+11,347. But they do something. They work the whole country,
+they have a lot of grain? -- Yes, for themselves.
+
+11,352. . . . I have shown you that Basutoland is fully occupied by Kaffirs,
+and they work it. Do you want to apply your scheme to Basutoland? --
+I do not know very much about Basutoland, I have never been there personally;
+but I am well acquainted with Zululand and also Swaziland,
+and I want to state this, that in my opinion it is not only a wrong policy,
+but also dangerous policy to have large tracts of country inhabited
+by uncivilized races, and to keep them there on the present terms.
+
+11,353. But these Natives lived there from time immemorial.
+It was theirs before we came here. How can we drive them off the land now,
+and take it for ourselves? I think we are feeling very happy
+that we drove them from Johannesburg in the olden days.
+They lived in this country too just the same and the Kaffirs
+who became civilized under us have improved.*
+
+--
+* `Transvaal Labour Commission', pp. 717-726.
+--
+==
+
+In the foregoing extract the reader has the root principle
+of the Natives' Land Act in a nut-shell. Not from hearsay "assurances"
+but from what fell from the Premier's own lips.
+
+Mr. Jacob de Villiers Roos, head of the Union Law Department (who knows more
+about South African law than outsiders who have to rely on "assurances",)
+says in his evidence given before the Select Committee on Public Accounts,
+February 25, 1914, incidentally or accidentally: --
+
+==
+"A circular was issued by our Department, at the instigation
+of the Native Affairs Department, asking that prosecutors
+under the Natives' Land Act, before commencing prosecutions,
+should refer to the Native Affairs Department as otherwise
+IT WAS FEARED THAT AN UPHEAVAL MIGHT RESULT. The Transvaal Attorney-General
+drew our attention to this circular and said that it was
+an infringement of his powers. . . . When Mr. Beyers went away on leave
+Mr. Greenlees was appointed Acting Attorney-General,
+and he first drew the attention of the Minister to it.
+The Minister took no action until Mr. Beyers returned
+when the matter was again raised and then this circular was withdrawn."*
+
+--
+* S.C. 1-'14, pp. 136-137.
+--
+==
+
+Now, what, in the name of common sense, does a supposedly civilized Government
+want with a law that it knows will cause "an upheaval"?
+
+This Act should be abolished in the interest of the morality of the State
+and for the sake of the reputation of the Union Jack,
+because of the harm it does to the Natives and because its promoters
+have rebelled against the Crown. The Act has benefited no one;
+it has driven the Natives from the country to the cities,
+and has also disappointed the White Labour Party, who supported it
+in the belief that by its clause forcing Natives to work for white farmers
+it would keep the Natives away from the industrial centres.
+
+It should be abolished in the interests of the Boers,
+for it has aroused the bitterest enmity of the blacks
+against the Dutch section of his Majesty's subjects.
+
+Further, the Act should be abolished because it has lowered the prestige
+of the Union Jack in the eyes of the coloured subjects of the King,
+who have suffered and are still suffering untold misery under it.
+Perhaps nothing illustrates more clearly this changed feeling of the Natives
+than the present state of things in South Africa. Thus, if German
+South-West Africa had been annexed to the Cape before the Union, every Native,
+south of the Zambesi, would have approved of the step, whereas to-day,
+as a result of the Natives' Land Act, there is a different feeling extant.
+For now the Natives know that annexation to the Union will mean
+the elimination of the Imperial factor, and that as Capetown, like Pretoria,
+has ceased to represent British ideas of fair play and justice,
+such a change would in the annexed territory establish "Free" State ideals
+under the aegis of the Union Jack. The Natives of the Union
+shudder at the possibility of the Damaras, who are now under
+the harsh rule of the Germans, being placed under a self-governing Dominion
+in which the German rule will be accentuated by the truculent
+"Free" State ideas of ruling Natives. And they think that
+in the existing state of circumstances, Portuguese or French rule would be
+infinitely better for the Damaras than a Government which, although protected
+by the Union Jack, yet is inspired from Pretoria and Bloemfontein.
+And it is to be feared that the pernicious principles
+which Tommy Atkins is now fighting on the Continent to suppress,
+are going to be rigorously applied in a South-West Africa
+under Burgher rule. The prosperity of no State can afford to alienate
+the sympathy of any considerable portion of its tax-payers. And so,
+as 5,000,000 blacks have been alienated in their sympathies to the Union
+by this oppressive law, and as the Union Government is unable or unwilling
+to amend it, in the interest of the Union Government, no less than
+the 5,000,000 blacks, outside intervention becomes a necessity.
+
+During three separate white men's upheavals in the last two years
+-- two bloody strikes and a civil war -- white revolters made frantic efforts
+to embroil the Union in a native rising, but the Natives very sensibly
+sided with the Government. The native leaders, in order to counteract
+this mischief-making, had to incur the expense of journeys by rail
+besides financing their own mission to reach the scene of the would-be
+native disturbance.
+
+The time will come when these leaders will tire of spending their own money
+in paying fares to the Government Railways, to render free services
+to a Government which taxes them to pay other people lavishly
+for similar work, while it does not even tender them so much
+as a word of thanks.
+
+Instead of the smallest recognition for our voluntary services,
+the Union Government repays our loyalty by persecuting
+our widows and fatherless children with the cold-blooded provisions
+of the Natives' Land Act. These cruelties are euphemistically described
+as the first step towards the segregation of white and black,
+but they might more truthfully be styled the first steps
+towards the extermination of the blacks.
+
+When the war broke out, the Government promptly suspended
+the inquiries of the Commission, whose report is naively alleged
+to be pregnant with the fruits of the millennium, but the cruel evictions
+under the same law of the rebel Grobler are pursuing their course
+while the war lasts and the Union Government remains unconcerned.
+It was only when a whole tribe was evicted during the war
+that the Government interceded on behalf of the victims,
+but then, the only extent of the intervention has been to secure
+exemption for the chief of the tribe alone, on the condition that
+HE FORCED THE REST OF HIS TRIBE TO RENDER EVERY YEAR THREE MONTHS' LABOUR
+TO THE LANDOWNER. Yet these people could live happily on some other farm
+did not the Government prohibit their happiness at the behest of a rebel who,
+at or about the time of this enthralling compromise, was conducting
+treasonable operations against the Government.
+
+The sublime ingratitude of the Union Government is wellnigh unbearable!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XVII The London Press and the Natives' Land Act
+
+ Slaves cannot breathe in England: if their lungs
+ Receive our air, that moment they are free;
+ They touch our country, and their shackles fall.
+ Cowper.
+
+
+
+The native deputation (thanks to Mr. H. Cornish, secretary of
+the Institute of Journalists) can truthfully assure their people,
+at the present critical state of their position, of the sympathy
+of the London Press. It is hardly necessary to mention
+that religious papers, to which the object of the deputation was made known,
+published some very encouraging articles on the same,
+and bespoke the deputation a cordial reception and a sympathetic hearing
+throughout the United Kingdom; but the mission might have been
+somewhat monotonous had we friends only and no enemies in the London Press.
+And a weekly paper with a yellow cover, called `South Africa',
+did its best to fill the role of an enemy.
+
+It abused the Brotherhood Movement and the Aborigines Protection Society for
+taking up the cause of the deputation. The General Press Cutting Association,
+however, through whom we learnt of the attacks of `South Africa',
+did not tell us whether this journal also abused our other friends
+represented by the London Press. Such has been our good fortune
+in this respect that friends frequently congratulated us
+on the unanimity of the Press in our favour. In this we think
+they were right, as a cause with only one enemy could very well be depended on
+to take care of itself.
+
+On one occasion some of our friends heard that the author
+was going to interview the fine-fingered editor of the `Westminster Gazette'
+by appointment, and they strongly advised us against doing so.
+"Why not?" we asked. "Oh," said our friends, "he edits the leading
+Government organ, and he is going to pump you of all information
+in order to use it against your cause and in favour of the Government."
+But we went -- firstly, because we refused to believe
+that the editor of that great organ of British thought
+was capable of taking such a mean advantage of us; and secondly,
+because we were confident of being able to take care of ourselves
+against any kind of pump; and we can now say with satisfaction that,
+on the part of the British public, there was such a demand
+for back numbers of the two editions of the `Westminster Gazette'
+which contained a report of our interview and a photograph of the deputation
+that in a fortnight both issues were sold out of print. Further,
+it is safe to say that from the wide area from which inquirers wrote to us
+mentioning the `Daily News', it would seem that either that journal
+has a very big circulation or its readers are mainly interested
+in South African Affairs. And what, may be asked, are the qualifications
+of the newspaper `South Africa' which attempted to run counter
+to this overwhelming opinion in our favour?
+
+Unlike some of its contemporaries, `South Africa' has not
+a single native contributor to its columns. Some London newspapers
+are in regular receipt of exchange copies from native newspapers
+published in South Africa, London papers which never claimed
+a monopoly over South African thought; yet here is a paper,
+South African in title and in pretensions, which cannot even boast
+of a South African native paper on its exchange list! What information, then,
+can the editors of such an exclusive London paper possess
+about an Act specifically enacted to operate against Natives?
+Logically, they would know absolutely less than next to nothing
+about such a law or its fell work. That alone should dispose of
+the qualifications of this enemy of the deputation, and his authority to speak
+on the subject of its mission.
+
+The `African World' is an Anglo-African weekly which has
+native newspaper exchanges and several African correspondents
+both white and black. Its editor-in-chief was born in South Africa
+and was a journalist there before he came to reside in England;
+and it must be admitted that a paper with such connexions
+is in a better position to discuss the subject from both points of view.
+And so the `African World' says:
+
+==
+ THE SOUTH AFRICAN NATIVE DEPUTATION
+
+It must be admitted that the South African Native Deputation
+now in this country have gone about their business with decorum.
+They have not pressed themselves forward unduly, and, so far,
+the publicity given to them has been moderate in its tone, and the expressions
+by the members of the deputation have been equally moderate.
+Of course, their best friends discountenanced this visit, as we have noted
+from the South African Press, but it seems to be the general opinion
+that even though no appeal lies under the Union Constitution
+to the British Crown as regards native rights, an extraordinary anomaly
+seems to exist in this: That the Natives of South Africa within the Union
+appear to have fewer rights than those outside the Union, especially so far
+as an appeal to London on various matters affecting their interests
+is concerned. We are aware that Mr. Harcourt treated the deputation
+with the utmost discretion when he received them. We also know
+that Mr. Harcourt and General Botha are on very friendly personal relations,
+and under these circumstances, without wishing to dictate
+any action in the matter to the powers that be on both sides of the water,
+we would like to join our contemporary `The Globe'.
+==
+
+And what did `The Globe' say?
+
+==
+ THE NATIVE APPEAL
+
+The complaint of the South African Natives who have laid their grievances
+before certain members of Parliament amounts in effect to a complaint
+that Parliament is not Imperial. Their grievances are real and pressing,
+as anybody can discover who troubles to look up the recent proceedings
+of the Union Parliament, but they have no constitutional means
+of ventilating them. No native franchise exists in South Africa,
+and although certain members of the Union Senate are presumed
+to keep an eye on native questions their influence has proved ineffective.
+No appeal exists under the Union Constitution to the Crown
+as regards Native rights, for although this omission was pointed out
+at the time the Act of Union was debated in the Imperial Parliament
+and was adversely commented on, no steps were taken by the Colonial Office
+to rectify the constitution in this respect. We are, therefore,
+brought up against the extraordinary anomaly that Natives of South Africa
+within the Union have fewer rights than those outside -- for the Basutos,
+who remain under direct Imperial control, have successfully appealed to London
+on various matters affecting their interests -- or even than
+the Natives of Crown Colonies elsewhere, as the appeal of native landowners
+on the Gold Coast against recent legislation in that territory attests.
+In the latter case the appeal to the Colonial Office
+was successful in modifying the offending enactments;
+in the far more serious grievances of the South African Natives
+the Colonial Office has no constitutional title whatever.
+Nevertheless the relations between Mr. Harcourt and General Botha
+in other respects are notoriously so close and confidential that we may hope
+the Colonial Secretary will take the present occasion by the hand
+and urge upon the head of the South African Government
+the wisdom of dealing with native discontents in his own proper sphere
+before he prosecutes his claim for the inclusion of the Basutos and Rhodesia
+in the Union -- a claim which both the black Natives and the white colonists
+have repudiated with all the emphasis at their command.
+General Botha could scarcely fail to give heed to private advice
+from the Colonial Office. In the case of the Natal Indians, whose grievances
+he recently redressed, he proved himself a man capable of taking
+a broad and generous view of a difficult question. There is no reason
+to anticipate until the contrary is proved, that he will fall below
+his own level in the present not less difficult or dangerous case.
+==
+
+==
+ VIEWS OF THE `DAILY NEWS'
+
+"The South African National Congress, after resorting to
+every constitutional means of pressing their case against the Land Act
+on the Union Government, have sent five of their number to London
+in the firm conviction that the King of England, to whom they look
+as their natural defender and vindicator, will turn no deaf ear
+to their pleas. Two of the five -- the Rev. J. L. Dube and Mr. Saul Msane --
+are Zulus; Dr. Rubusana is a Xosa; Mr. Mapikela, a Fingo;
+and Mr. Plaatje, the secretary of the National Congress, a Bechuana.
+All of them are men of obvious culture and with a striking command
+of the English language."
+
+"Having failed to make any impression on the Union Government
+(`If we had votes,' Dr. Rubusana observed, `we could fight our own battles')
+the deputation has come to England in the hope of influencing
+the Imperial Government through the Colonial Secretary.
+
+"What they ask for is:
+
+"First, a suspension of the operation of the Act pending the report
+of the Delimitation Commission:
+
+"Second, an inquiry into native grievances under the Act; and,
+
+"Thirdly, an assurance that the Home Government will express its concurrence
+with certain promises made recently on behalf of General Botha,
+but obviously depending for their value on the continuance of
+his personal political supremacy.
+
+
+ Four Blacks to One White
+
+"In carving out estates for themselves in Africa the white races have shown
+little regard for the claims of the black man," says the `Daily News'.
+"They have appropriated his land, and in appropriating his land
+have taken away his economic freedom, and have left him in a worse case
+than they found him. How the Native has been dispossessed may be illustrated
+by the facts in regard to the Union of South Africa. Here the blacks,
+as compared with the whites, are in the proportion of four to one;
+but they are in legal occupation of only one-fifteenth of the soil.
+
+"Under the Natives' Land Act, which has brought the matter to a crisis,
+even the poor fragment of rights in the soil that remains seems doomed.
+For under the Act the Native is denied the right -- except with
+the quite illusory `approval of the Governor-General' to purchase, hire,
+or acquire any rights in land from a person other than a Native.
+Under this provision, the Native whose tenancy expires, or who is evicted
+from a farm, is legally denied any career except that of a labourer.
+He cannot own, he cannot hire, he cannot live a free man.
+
+
+ A Legal Serf
+
+"In the language of Mr. Dower, the Secretary for Native Affairs,
+he must `sell his stock and go into service.' He must accept any conditions
+the white farmer chooses or the mine-owner gives, and an ingenious clause
+encourages the white farmer to exact unpaid service from the native tenants.
+In a word, the Native is a legal serf in his own land.
+
+"As British subjects, the deputation of Natives now in England
+have appealed to the Imperial Government for protection.
+They asked for its help to secure the suspension of the Act
+until the Land Commission report is before Parliament,
+and for machinery to inquire into and redress their grievances.
+They have got no satisfaction on these points.
+
+"It is time that Parliament gave some attention to its obligations
+in regard to the South African Native. He has no vote and no friends --
+only his labour, which the white man wants on the cheapest terms.
+And the white man has got this by taking his land and imposing on him
+taxes that he cannot pay. In fact, the black man is `rounded up'
+on every side, and if, as the deputation suggest may be the case,
+he is forced to acts of violence, it will not be possible to say
+that he has not had abundant provocation.
+
+
+ Rights to the Soil
+
+"There is only one principle that can be applied for his protection.
+It is the principle that he has rights in his native soil.
+Perhaps segregation is the only remedy now, but if so
+the reservations allocated to him in the Union area ought to have
+some relation to his needs. We cannot do much for him there,
+but we should do what we can."
+==
+
+Mr. Advocate F. A. Silva wrote to the `Daily News': --
+
+==
+ AN APPEAL FOR JUSTICE
+
+Sir, -- Will you please allow me space, while appreciating
+your editorial of this date, to bring to the kind notice of your readers
+the distinction between "British justice as supposed to be"
+and "British justice as it is" with regard to the subject races,
+especially the black men?
+
+If even the "hair" of a "white" British subject were to be touched in China
+or Japan or Turkey or Russia, the whole of the political parties of England,
+with their usual patriotism, will rise to the occasion, and with one accord
+demand the use of physical force against that country.
+
+But here in South Africa, on the day the "Act" came into law, all agreements
+with regard to land were terminated, and thousands of the Natives
+found themselves ruined and homeless. From tenants they have become serfs.
+
+If the Imperial Parliament looks with complacency on these
+tyrannical proceedings of a local Parliament, then the British public
+should not be surprised if the intelligent and thoughtful
+among the subject races of "Britain" consider "British justice"
+and "Russian tyranny" to be synonymous terms.
+==
+
+Let us draw attention to one more letter, by an Anglo-African
+to the `Daily News', which was typical of the rest: --
+
+==
+ THE BLACK MAN'S BURDEN
+
+Sir, -- Those of your readers who, like myself, have some
+first-hand knowledge of the Natives of South Africa, know that this grievance
+voiced by the native deputation is a very real one. That such a deputation
+should have to come to England to urge such a plea is humiliating enough
+to them and to us. That their plea should be urged in vain
+would be disastrous to the last degree.
+
+If the Natives' Land Act is the best thing the Union Government can do
+in the discharge of its responsibilities to the native tribes
+placed under its care by the King, then many of us would have to revise
+our faith in self-government as a fit instrument of national evolution;
+and would, moreover, strenuously resist the ultimate incorporation
+of the northern territories within the Union as being infinitely worse
+for the black man than even government under Chartered Company control.
+
+One hopes that it is not yet too late for both Boer and Briton in South Africa
+to see that this debasement of the whole idea of self-government
+is to affront and discourage all in Great Britain who saw
+in the grant of its own political freedom to that great country
+a healing for its many woes. In the meantime Liberalism
+must back the native deputation at all costs, and it is well
+that `The Daily News and Leader' should lead the way.
+==
+
+==
+ ONE OBJECT OF THE S.A. WAR: THE LIBERATION OF THE NATIVE
+
+One object of the South African War was to liberate the Native
+in the Transvaal. One result of it is that we have practically
+less opportunity to interfere in his behalf than we had
+under the Convention with the South African Republic. Interference in
+the internal affairs of a self-governing colony -- in this case a colony
+in which a small number of white men govern a large number of black --
+has ceased to be within the realm of practical politics.
+But if this political interference is impossible, moral remonstrance
+is all the more in point. There is in all parts of the world
+a better and more enlightened as well as a duller and more callous
+public opinion, and the better opinion of a colony is powerfully reinforced
+by judicious expression of feeling in the mother country.
+There are occasions when that opinion should even be formally expressed
+by the Colonial Office or by a resolution of the House of Commons.
+Now, there is at present a deputation of South African Natives in this country
+appealing against the ratification of the Natives' Land Act of 1913.
+Mr. Harcourt has told them that he cannot interfere, nor can he
+any more than if he were an ornamental registering clerk.
+But he can if he chooses speak winged words to the South African Government,
+which, having alienated the entire white working population,
+is now exciting the same hostility among the blacks.
+The Act itself probably has a deeper motive. It prevents
+the sale of white men's land to the Natives or native land to the white men.
+This would have the effect of securing to the Native
+that very small portion of his own country which he has still managed
+to retain. This probably commended the measure to those
+who because they care for elementary justice are called negrophile,
+the colour of justice in a white man's eyes being apparently black.
+The other effect would be to prevent those Kafirs who are
+becoming educated and rising in the social scale from acquiring land.
+As in proportion to population the white man has by far the greater
+amount of land, it is clear that he does not come badly out of the bargain.
+However, it is not the Act itself of which the most serious complaint is made.
+What makes matters worse is the interim arrangement that
+pending the delimitation of native land by a Commission
+no Native whose lease of land has expired shall be able to renew it
+for a money rent or for any consideration whatever except labour service.
+It is contended that farmers are taking advantage of this prohibition to exact
+unpaid labour services from Natives, and are thus in effect reducing them
+to serfdom. It is clear that the position in which the Native is placed
+renders this only too possible, and it is an extraordinary thing
+that any such violent alteration of status should be made
+before instead of after the report of a Commission. For our part
+we cannot believe that men like Generals Botha and Smuts deliberately desire
+to reduce the Native to the condition of a semi-servile, landless labourer,
+and we would venture on behalf of the many Liberals who fought steadily
+for the right of South Africa to govern herself to appeal to them
+to extend a similar consideration to the people of whose destinies
+they have become responsible, and to suspend the operation of the Act
+until the administrative preparations for carrying it out with equity
+have been completed. -- `Manchester Guardian'.
+==
+
+==
+ VIEWS OF THE "STAR"
+
+We have always realized that one of the gravest problems of self-government
+in South Africa is the native question. On the one hand,
+South African Colonial opinion -- by which is meant "white" opinion --
+will bitterly resent any shadow of dictation from Downing Street;
+on the other hand, the conscience of the British people cannot remain
+indifferent to any flagrant oppression of or injustice to the native races
+under the British flag. A very difficult question of this kind
+is raised by the deputation of South African Natives,
+which is now in this country, seeking to move the Colonial Office
+on the subject of the Natives' Land Act recently passed by General Botha.
+The ultimate object of General Botha's plan is the greatest exodus
+since the days of Moses; it is apparently to get rid of black landholders
+in areas in which the majority of the landowners are white,
+and to buy up tracts of land elsewhere from white landowners, in order
+to settle Natives upon them. In this way the black and the white races,
+so far as landholding is concerned, will be segregated into separate areas,
+with a reduction of possible cause of friction, and in some respects
+this is an excellent policy. But the trouble is that General Botha
+has passed the first part of his policy and has left the second part
+to the future. The Land Act provides that hereafter,
+"except with the approval of the Governor-General" -- which proviso
+is mere leather and prunella -- a Native shall not buy or hire any land
+from a person other than a Native. The effect of this is that
+at the termination of any existing tenancy a Native will have
+to relinquish his farm, and will not be able to hire or buy another
+from any white owner. If the Government had provided farms
+in the proposed native reserves for these men, their policy would be complete,
+but nothing has been done, and the fulfilment of that promise depends upon
+General Botha's continuance in office, and does not bind his successors.
+It is not surprising the South African Natives regard this Act
+as a means of driving them into the labour market either at the mines,
+or for white farmers. Mr. Dower, the Secretary for Native Affairs,
+addressing a meeting of Natives at Thaba Nchu, in the Free State,
+gave a strong hint of this when he said: "My best advice to you
+is to sell your stock and go into service." Here at home we hear a great deal
+about the "magic of property" and the importance of giving the worker
+an interest in the soil he tills; but in South Africa they apparently agree
+with the southerner in the `Biglow Papers' that
+
+ Libbaty's a kind o' thing
+ Thet don't agree with niggers.
+
+It is clear that it is the duty of the Colonial Office to guarantee,
+in conjunction with the South African Government, the carrying out
+of the full policy as outlined by General Botha, and we hope
+occasion will be taken to urge action on these lines. -- `Star'.
+==
+
+==
+ CAN BRITAIN PREVENT SLAVERY
+
+A question of great importance and a question which may easily strain
+the links that bind the various parts of the Empire and the Mother Country,
+has arisen in South Africa owing to the operation of the Natives' Land Act
+passed last year by the Union Parliament. The Native question is by far
+the greatest problem South Africa has to solve, and its difficulties
+are so great that nobody has been able to advance any feasible scheme
+for its settlement, though there have been many suggestions
+as to the broad lines on which the matter may be settled.
+The Land Act is an attempt to establish modified segregation --
+i.e., confining the white man and the black to separate areas of the country.
+It is by no means a well-thought-out nor a very practicable enactment,
+and unfortunately has had the effect of greatly irritating the Natives
+throughout the Union. The Natives do not think they are being treated fairly,
+and have used every legitimate means to obtain a hearing.
+These means, however, are exceedingly meagre, practically non-existent,
+since they have no one to represent them, and as they have no vote
+they can bring no pressure on Parliament. Having failed in South Africa,
+they have sent a deputation to Great Britain, since, as they are
+British subjects, they consider that Great Britain should look after them.
+Arriving here, they find the Home Government cannot interfere
+in the internal policy of a self-governing colony, and so are left
+with no means of obtaining redress. It is surely impossible to admit
+that Great Britain can do nothing for the mass of the native population,
+although at the moment it appears to them that though
+they are subjects of the King he cannot even hear their appeal,
+and will do nothing for them, and has abandoned them, a state of affairs
+which is quite incomprehensible to them and leads them to depend
+solely on themselves to obtain redress -- and that way rebellion lies.
+Britain is in an awkward position as she still has obligations
+to secure justice to the Natives. If South Africa were to enact slavery,
+would Britain still be able to do nothing to prevent it?
+
+
+ Ousting the Native
+
+Surely Mr. Harcourt can suggest to the South African Government
+the necessity of appointing a Commission to inquire into
+the working of the Act, a Commission which would include Natives
+as well as whites. That the Natives have a material grievance is certain.
+The Act says that there shall be certain areas in which no Native
+can own or lease land, and similarly areas in which no white
+can own or lease land. That within a certain period the Natives owning land
+in the white area must sell out, and when their leases run out
+they shall not be renewed, similarly for the whites in the black area.
+Now at present no black area has been delimited, and the Commission
+performing this task will not report for a year or more;
+meanwhile the blacks are being turned off the land and have nowhere to go.
+The only course left to them is to hire themselves out as servants
+to the white; and, in fact, that is the real object of the Act.
+The farmers found that the Natives were acquiring land rapidly,
+and working for themselves rather than for the white man.
+There was a shortage of labour, and farmers wished to force the Natives
+to work for them rather than for themselves. This ejection
+with no other alternative is obviously most unfair, especially as
+there are indications that the native areas will not be delimited
+for a considerable time. The South Africans have always feared
+a combined action of all the native tribes, but surely by this Act
+they have chosen the simplest way of irritating every Native in South Africa.
+This condition of affairs is exceedingly grave, and, though the results
+are suppressed at present, there is no knowing what may happen
+if the British Government, whom the Natives regard as their final
+court of appeal, shows itself powerless. We know that the native question
+in South Africa is terribly difficult, but it is an obvious course
+to be pursued in order to maintain good relations between the two races
+that grievances should be fairly heard and dealt with justly.
+-- `Review of Reviews'.
+==
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XVIII The P.S.A. and Brotherhoods
+
+ The Brotherhood must help not only the spiritual part of life,
+ but also in social matters. They should always help the down-trodden,
+ showing the brotherly feeling which was portrayed throughout
+ the life of Christ.
+ Rt. Hon. A. Henderson, M.P.,
+ President of the Brotherhood Movement, at Weston-super-Mare.
+
+
+
+In a previous chapter we mentioned a yellow-covered newspaper which
+abused our English friends for supporting the appeal of the native deputation.
+It characterized the advocacy of the aims of the deputation by the Brotherhood
+as "Rubbish -- a commodity which can always be picked up,
+and quite a lot of people spend much of their time in collecting it."
+"Why," exclaims this paper with indignation, "we had imagined
+that the `Brotherhood' movement was of a religious nature."
+
+Our answer to this taunt is, that just because the Brotherhood movement
+opposes the Natives' Land Act it must be religious,
+for Anglican Bishops in South Africa have denounced this law
+in their episcopal charges (vide `Church Chronicle', 1913, October issues),
+and Anglican Bishops in South Africa are nothing if they are not religious.
+Nonconformist Ministers have condemned this law in their annual
+synods and conferences. Ex-Premier W. P. Schreiner, K.C., C.M.G.,
+at present the London representative of the Union of South Africa,
+is the son of an old South African missionary. He was member of
+the Union Parliament when this law was passed and was one of the few senators
+who had the pluck to vote against it after condemning it;
+and it is monstrous to suggest that these pious and learned men
+could conspire to denounce a law just for the pleasure of denouncing it.
+And to our untutored mind it seems that if it be true that all these good men
+are working for the spread of Christ's Kingdom in South Africa,
+then we must be pardoned the inference that in the same country
+protagonists of this Act are working for the establishment of another kingdom.
+This inference grows into a belief when it is recalled that the men
+who are responsible for the recent commotion are the very men
+who forced this law upon the Government.
+
+In the various reports of the South African Church Synods of 1915,
+the character of this "Church closing" law stands out in bold relief,
+and it is there revealed as an opponent of Christ and His work. Let us refer
+to only one of them. "The native work of the (Transvaal) District
+has been seriously hampered by the operation of the Natives' Land Act.
+As the result of evictions under the Act, some of the Churches on farms
+have ceased to exist." -- Cape `Methodist Churchman', Jan. 22, 1915.
+
+The numerous South African opponents of this law had no share
+in the recent upheaval, and the Brotherhoods by lending their platforms
+to a campaign in opposition to a law that emanates from such a quarter
+show that their cause, in addition to religion, is on the side of law,
+order, and constitutional liberty. We know, of course,
+that no doctrine of liberty would be acceptable in South Africa
+that did not also imply "liberty to ill-treat the blacks".
+Hence the Brotherhood propaganda, being colour-blind,
+explains the fury of the London mouthpiece of "lily-white" South Africa.
+
+Early in July the deputation called at the Brotherhood headquarters
+in Norfolk Street, Strand, to explain to the National Brotherhood Council
+the object of their mission. Mr. William Ward, the national secretary,
+received the deputation in person; Mr. John McIntosh, secretary to
+the London Federation, Mr. W. Mann and other officers being also present.
+They invited the deputation to the Quarterly Meeting of the London Federation
+at Bishopsgate on July 14, 1914, after which the deputation received
+invitations to address meetings in various parts. Some of these engagements
+still remain unfulfilled. A list of the centres visited is given
+at the end of this chapter.
+
+At the Bishopsgate gathering Mr. Will Crooks, M.P., was the "star turn".
+He welcomed the deputation and regretted the cold reception accorded to it
+by the Colonial Secretary. He added, however, that if they proceeded
+along the same moderate lines followed by Dr. Rubusana and Mr. Msane
+(the two members of the deputation who spoke that evening)
+he felt certain that they would do more good for their cause in the country
+than they did at the Colonial Office.
+
+The `Brotherhood Journal', the newspaper organ of the movement said: --
+
+==
+ Bear ye one another's Burdens
+
+For Brotherhood men and women there can be only one response to their appeal.
+For Brotherhood is not only between man and man, but between
+nation and nation, and race and race.
+
+In our movement, at any rate, there can be no colour bar to love and justice.
+If our Brotherhoods did not rise to a cause like this, we might well question
+the reality of their fraternal pretensions.
+
+We are told that the problem has its difficulties. No doubt.
+But they can be overcome, if only our statesmen will act
+in a spirit of courage and faith. Surely empire means not only
+privilege and power and glory, but also responsibility and obligations.
+If it means only commercial profit, and injustice is to be done with impunity
+under the Imperial flag,
+
+ Of what worth is such an Empire?
+
+This is a matter in which every one of our members should exert
+the force of opinion on the side of right. Let us open
+to our coloured brothers' cause our platforms and our hearts.
+
+The five members of the deputation will be in this country for some months,
+and are prepared to address Brotherhoods and Sisterhoods,
+and to send information as to their case to any who wish it.
+
+We doubt not that they will find in our midst not only
+a most sympathetic hearing, but active help in educating public opinion
+in this country, in order that a great wrong may be righted.
+==
+
+How unlike so many poor attempts at brotherhood, organized in
+the name of Christianity, especially in our part of the globe,
+where "they have made the welkin ring with the sorrowful tale
+of the unfortunate condition of the weak, but, like the rich man
+in the parable, they liked their Lazarus afar off," and considered their
+fraternal pretensions satisfied if they sent their dogs to lick his wounds.
+No, the Brotherhood movement is no such parody. It is practical Christianity
+which knows no distinction of colour or boundaries between nations.
+Our nine months' association with Brother Martin and Brother Timberlake,
+of the Shernhall Brotherhood, confirms this view; and our acquaintanceship
+with other members of this wonderful movement (which counts
+judges and members of Parliament as well as factory hands
+among its office-bearers) satisfied the writer that they are always ready
+to practise what they preach.
+
+A noteworthy occasion in connexion with the campaign was our visit
+to the Southall Brotherhood on Sunday, March 14. We can hardly
+forget the day; it was on Crocus Sunday when thousands of Londoners
+went to Hampton Court in crowds to see the crocus bulbs in bloom.
+It was a glorious day and we remember it as the second day in 1915 on which
+the European sun shone through a cloudless sky from sunrise to sunset.
+Thousands of people attended at Hyde Park to witness the church parade,
+and still more thousands took advantage of the glorious spring day
+after a strenuous winter to flock to Epping Forest and other popular resorts.
+
+In the afternoon we took part in an Imperial indoor demonstration
+organized by the "Southall Men's Own" at the Central Hall.
+Mr. William Cross of Hanwell represented England; Mr. T. Owens, F.C.I.S.,
+represented Wales; Mr. S. S. A. Cambridge, a black barrister,
+represented his homeland, British Guiana; Miss Ruth Bucknall, the celebrated
+lyric soprano, who artistically contributed the solos, represented Australia;
+while Scotland and the Emerald Isle were also represented
+in the orchestra and elsewhere in the hall; Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Boote,
+of Auckland, New Zealand, represented "the most English of the Colonies"
+(unfortunately the Indian representative could not reach Southall in time),
+and the writer represented South Africa, the baby member
+of the British family.
+
+Among such intellectual giants, one was inclined at the outset
+to feel somewhat out of place, but thanks to the encouraging Brotherhood cheer
+which always accompany their reception of a speaker, the stripling
+soon finds himself at home, as is always the case on any Brotherhood platform,
+and that was how we felt that day.
+
+Mr. W. Cross said, in part, that one of the most striking proofs
+of the unity of the Empire was shown in the splendid way
+that men had come forward to assist the Mother Country
+on the battlefields of Europe from all parts of our Dominions.
+The coloured men from India had come as free men and fellow-subjects
+to do their share. The Empire was composed of territories and people --
+once separated by race and creed, now united under one flag.
+There was a great resemblance between Brotherhood and Empire.
+In it all kinds of religion were represented, yet all were united
+in one great principle. It had been said the soul of Russia was pity,
+of France reason, and of Britain justice. No Empire could be built to stand
+unless based on justice and freedom. The principle of freedom underlay Empire
+as it underlay Brotherhood also. There was no limit to the Empire
+that was founded upon unity, toleration, justice, and liberty;
+it surely had no end. Similarly there was no frontier
+to the kingdom of Brotherhood, and they looked for a kingdom out-spanning
+far beyond the roll of British drums -- the kingdom of Brotherhood --
+the kingdom of Christ.
+
+Referring to the limitations of colour in South Africa, Mr. Cambridge said:
+"Have you no cattle and sheep in South Africa? Are there no birds?
+Have you not observed that they are of different colours and yet are not
+restricted in their flight on that account; and are you going to run counter
+to the work of nature in regard to human beings? The British Empire
+has a population of over 430,000,000, of which less than 100,000,000
+are white, and there was a big problem to solve: `How to rule
+with justice and equity this great multitude of various races and creeds
+and consolidate them as fellow-subjects of one great and mighty Empire.'
+The future of the British Empire could be secured by following
+the high ideals of `Brotherhood' which were foreshadowed by Christ
+in the Bible, and by great writers such as Shakespeare and Addison.
+The fall of Rome was due to her failure to recognize the duty
+of welding her subjects together as brothers one and all
+under the Fatherhood of God. . . ."
+
+It is a pity that the argument used by Mr. Cambridge would not go down
+with the majority of the rulers in South Africa. If it did
+one would remind them that even South African ladies pay
+higher prices for black silks than they do for white silks;
+that the value of domestic animals does not as a whole appear
+to be influenced by their colour: thus, whereas the fleece of white sheep
+commands a higher price in the South African wool market
+than the fleece of black sheep, their mutton has about the same flavour.
+Again of horned cattle, which give the same quality of beef,
+irrespective of colour; farmers will tell you of them
+that coloured cattle are among the best for farming and other purposes,
+while white bullocks are subject to sore eyes, and white cows
+continually suffer from erythema of the nipples (`Garget-mammitis');
+yet we have not heard that this peculiarity had any influence
+on the quality of their beef or the quality of the milk they give.
+The springbuck, whence the best South African venison is obtained,
+has the colours of black, white and brown; and this blend has not prevented it
+from having the reputation of being the prettiest and most graceful antelope
+in the world. But argument in this respect is simply wasted
+on the ruling caste in South Africa: there, Mr. Cross's views
+about "freedom, liberty," etc., will simply be laughed out of court,
+unless he limits them to white men; so that one sometimes wonders
+whether Christ's metaphor about "casting pearls before swine" does not find
+an application here. Look at the weighty arguments delivered
+inside and outside Parliament against the Natives' Land Act.
+Surely no legislature with a sense of responsibility could have
+passed that law after hearing arguments of such force and weight against it;
+but the South African legislature passed that Act and seems to glory
+in the wretched result of its operation.
+
+Mr. Boote expressed his pride in finding how shining was the native policy
+of New Zealand when contrasted with the native policy of South Africa.
+"Why," said Mrs. Boote to us, with evident satisfaction,
+"we have got Maori members of Parliament and our country
+is all the better for it." She had every justification to look pleased
+at the comparison which reveals the justice of her country's rule,
+for we remember how the women of New Zealand got the vote.
+The white members of Parliament in New Zealand were equally divided
+on the Women's Enfranchisement Bill; but for the native members,
+there would have been a tie, as was the case in South Africa three years ago,
+when the white members of the South African Parliament,
+as seemed likely there, wheedled the Women's Suffrage Bill out of the House.
+Happily for Women's Franchise in the Antipodes the Maori members
+voted solidly for the Bill and secured the passage of a reform which,
+judging by the satisfactory results in Australia and elsewhere,
+gave the lead to the rest of the Empire.
+
+It was at Hammersmith, where the chairman after hearing
+our story of the operation of the Natives' Land Act,
+in moving a resolution, in a sympathetic speech, asked: "Why did we
+spend 240,000,000 Pounds and kill 10,000 men in the South African War
+if this is the result?" He asked the permission of the audience to change
+the last hymn on the programme and sing the Brotherhood Song of Liberty.
+
+As the newspaper `South Africa' seems to insinuate that
+the Brotherhood movement by allying itself with our cause
+had deviated from its aims and objects, we would explain that the chairman
+did not run out of the meeting to borrow a book from somewhere
+containing that song. The song is No. 26 of the `Fellowship Hymnal' --
+the hymn-book of the P.S.A. and Brotherhoods.
+
+At subsequent meetings it had often been our pleasure,
+after delivering the message from the South African Natives,
+to sit down and hear the chairman give out that hymn,
+and the orchestra lead off with the tune of Costa's March of the Israelites.
+A pleasant variety was lent to it at the Victoria Brotherhood
+in Monmouthshire, which we visited on the first Sunday in 1915.
+There the chairman gave out the now familiar hymn, and the grand organ chimed
+the more familiar tune of "Jesu, lover of my soul" (Hollingside's),
+and the variety lent extra freshness to the singing of
+the Brotherhood Song of Liberty, which is reproduced: --
+
+ Men whose boast it is that ye
+ Come of fathers brave and free,
+ If there breathe on earth a slave,
+ Are ye truly free and brave?
+ If ye do not feel the chain
+ When it works a brother's pain,
+ Are ye not base slaves indeed --
+ Slaves unworthy to be freed?
+
+ Is true freedom but to break
+ Fetters for our own dear sake,
+ And with leathern hearts forget
+ That we owe mankind a debt?
+ No! true freedom is to share
+ All the chains our brothers wear,
+ And with heart and hand to be
+ Earnest to make others free.
+
+ They are slaves who fear to speak
+ For the fallen and the weak;
+ They are slaves who will not choose
+ Hatred, scoffing, and abuse,
+ Rather than in silence shrink
+ From the truth they needs must think:
+ They are slaves who dare not be
+ In the right with two or three.
+
+ J. R. Lowell.
+
+
+ ------------------------------------------------------------
+ P.S.A. and Brotherhood Societies Addressed by the Deputation
+ and the Order in Which They Were Visited
+ ------------------------------------------------------------
+ [Modified from original table format]
+
+ [a] Society. [b] Name of President or Secretary.
+ [c] Where Meetings are Held. [d] By Whom Addressed.
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+[a] 1. London Federation of Brotherhoods [b] Mr. John McIntosh
+[c] 230, Bishopsgate, E.C. [d] Mr. Saul Msane, Dr. W. B. Rubusana
+
+[a] 2. Tooting Brotherhood [b] Rev. E. Aldom French
+[c] Wesleyan Central Hall, Tooting, S.W. [d] Mr. Saul Msane,
+Dr. W. B. Rubusana
+
+[a] 3. Willesden Green Men's Own Brotherhood [b] Mr. H. J. Weaver
+[c] Baptist Church, High Road, Willesden Green [d] Mr. Sol T. Plaatje,
+Mr. T. M. Mapikela
+
+[a] 4. Westbourne Park Brotherhood [b] Dr. J. Clifford, MA.DD.
+[c] Baptist Church, Bayswater, W. [d] Dr. W. B. Rubusana
+
+[a] 5. Willesden P.S.A. [b] Mr. W. Springbett
+[c] Primitive Methodist Church, Willesden Green [d] Dr. W. B. Rubusana,
+Mr. T. M. Mapikela
+
+[a] 6. East Ham Brotherhood [b] Rev. W. H. Armstrong [c] Central Hall,
+Barking Road, East Ham [d] Dr. W. B. Rubusana, Mr. T. M. Mapikela
+
+[a] 7. Tooting Graveny Brotherhood [b] Mr. A. Riding [c] Central Hall,
+Tooting, Broadway [d] Mr. Saul Msane
+
+[a] 8. Men's Brotherhood [b] Rev. A. Clifford Hall
+[c] Congregational Church, Greenwich Rd., S.E. [d] Mr. Saul Msane
+
+[a] 9. Hammersmith Brotherhood [b] Mr. J. W. Butters
+[c] Albion Congregational Church, Hammersmith [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 10. Shern Hall Brotherhood [b] Mr. W. H. Jennings
+[c] United Methodist Church, Whipps Cross [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 11. Swanscombe Brotherhood [b] Mr. E. Pallant [c] Wesleyan Church,
+Swanscombe, near Northfleet [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 12. Clifton Brotherhood [b] Rev. F. Hastings
+[c] Congregational Church, Peckham Rye [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 13. Abertillery P.S.A. [b] Mr. Wm. Davies [c] The Pavilion,
+Abertillery, South Wales [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 14. Abertillery P.S.A. [b] Mr. E. Jefferies [c] Wesleyan Church,
+Abertillery, South Wales [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 15. Barking Brotherhood [b] Mr. W. Barnard [c] Wesleyan Church,
+Barking, Essex [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 16. Willesden Green Men's Own [b] Mr. C. E. Pink [c] Baptist Church,
+High Rd., Willesden Green [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 17. Victoria Brotherhood [b] Mr. J. W. Hall [c] Wesleyan Church,
+Newport, Monmouthshire [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 18. Marsh Street Men's Own Brotherhood (Men's Meeting)
+[b] Mr. E. K. Fuller [c] Queen's Cinema Electric Theatre, Walthamstow
+[d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 19. Greenhithe Brotherhood [b] Mr. S. W. Lineham
+[c] Wesleyan Church, London Rd., Greenhithe [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 20. Marsh Street Men's Own (Evening Meeting: Mixed)
+[b] Mr. W. F. Toynbee [c] Queen's Cinema Electric Theatre, Walthamstow
+[d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 21. Dartford P.S.A. [b] Mr. H. Keyte [c] Primitive Methodist Church,
+Dartford, Kent [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 22. Southall Men's Own Brotherhood [b] T. Owen, Esq., F.C.I.S.
+[c] Central Hall, Southall, W. [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 23. Lloyd's Park P.S.A. [b] Rev. R. P. Campbell
+[c] United Methodist Church, Lloyd's Park [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 24. Men and Women's Meeting [b] Mr. F. Mercer
+[c] Independent Church, Edmonton, North [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 25. Chiswick Brotherhood [b] Mr. D. J. Hawkins [c] Brotherhood Hall,
+Turnham Green Terrace [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 26. Abney Brotherhood [b] Mr. W. A. Procktor [c] Abney Church,
+Stoke Newington [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 27. Uxbridge P.S.A. [b] Mr. W. Ashton, J.P.
+[c] Old Meeting House (Congl.), Uxbridge [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 28. West Ealing P.S.A. [b] Mr. S. Garrard
+[c] Primitive Methodist Church, West Ealing [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 29. New England P.S.A. [b] Sir Richard Winfrey, M.P.
+[c] P.S.A. Hall, Peterborough, Northampton [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 30. Shern Hall Brotherhood [b] Rev. James Ellis
+[c] United Methodist Church, Walthamstow [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 31. Leighton Men's Meeting [b] Mr. G. F. Drew [c] Corn Exchange,
+Leighton Buzzard, Bedfordshire [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 32. Pembury Grove P.S.A. [b] Mr. Ernest Prior
+[c] United Methodist Church, Clapton [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 33. Shepherd's Bush Brotherhood [b] Mr. F. C. Simpson
+[c] Shepherd's Bush Tabernacle (Baptist) [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 34. East Ham Brotherhood [b] Mr. G. Sorrell [c] Central Hall,
+Barking Road, East Ham [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 35. Botwell Brotherhood [b] Mr. J. Matson [c] The Cinema,
+Hayes, Middlesex [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 36. Kingsland P.S.A. [b] Mr. J. Harding [c] Congregational Church,
+High Street, Kingsland [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 37. Heathfield Brotherhood [b] Mr. Hy. H. Castle
+[c] Recreation Hall, Heathfield, Sussex [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 38. Men's Own Brotherhood [b] Rev. A. Hallack, M.A.
+[c] Angel Street Church, Worcester [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 39. Greenwich P.S.A. [b] Rev. W. T. Penny [c] Central Hall,
+London Street, Greenwich [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 40. Hither Green P.S.A. [b] Mr. P. Duff [c] Congregational Church,
+Torridon Road [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 41. Whitefield's Men's Meeting [b] Rev. W. Charter Piggott
+[c] Whitefield's Tabernacle, Tottenham Court Road [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 42. North End Brotherhood [b] Mr. Elwin Wrench [c] North End Hall,
+Croydon, Surrey [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 43. Trinity Men's Own [b] Mr. A. J. Walker [c] Congl. Church,
+Victoria Park, Sth. Hackney [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 44. Acton Brotherhood [b] Mr. James McIntosh [c] Congl. Church,
+Churchfield Rd., Acton, W. [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 45. P.S.A. Brotherhood [b] Mr. W. G. Brown [c] Wesleyan Church,
+High Rd., Tottenham [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 46. Northampton Men's Own [b] Rev. R. Morton Stanley, M.A., B.D.
+[c] Doddridge Church, Northampton [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 47. Cheshunt and Waltham Cross P.S.A. [b] Mr. A. W. Ashmead
+[c] Drill Hall, Waltham Cross [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 48. Staines P.S.A. [b] Mr. R. C. Edwards [c] Town Hall,
+Staines, Middlesex [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 49. Snell's Park P.S.A. [b] R. Green, Esq., C.C.
+[c] Congregational Church, Upper Edmonton [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 50. Camberwell P.S.A. [b] Mr. H. A. Spong [c] Masonic Hall,
+Camberwell, Surrey [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 51. Norbury Brotherhood [b] Mr. J. L. Moody [c] Wesleyan Church,
+London Rd., Norbury [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 52. Hastings Brotherhood [b] Mr. A. G. Strickland
+[c] Congregational Church, Hastings, Sussex [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 53. Evesham Men's Own Brotherhood [b] Mr. G. H. White
+[c] Cowl St. Church, Evesham, Worcestershire [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 54. South Bank Brotherhood [b] Mr. T. Bosher
+[c] South Bank-on-Tees, Yorkshire [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 55. Tees-side Brotherhood [b] Mr. T. Summers
+[c] Wes. Church South Bank, Yorkshire [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 56. Shepherd's Bush, P.S.A. [b] Rev. W. G. Davis
+[c] Wesleyan Church, Shepherd's Bush [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 57. Stockton United [b] Mr. W. Weighell [c] Baptist Tabernacle,
+Stockton-on-Tees [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 58. Wembley Brotherhood [b] Mr. H. W. Hagger [c] Union Hall, Wembley
+[d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 59. Watford Men's Own [b] Mr. A. G. Baker [c] Beechen Grove,
+Ch. Watford, Hertfordshire [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+[a] 60. Clerkenwell Men's Own [b] Mr. R. G. Pursaill [c] Peel Institute,
+Clerkenwell Green [d] Mr. S. T. Plaatje
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------
+ In addition to the Brotherhoods and P.S.A.'s, we are indebted to
+ the Sisterhoods, Adult Schools and several Church bodies who gave us
+ many occasions to speak, the response to our message being most gratifying.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIX Armed Natives in the South African War
+
+ Oh, where is he, the simple fool,
+ Who says that wars are over?
+ What bloody portent flashes there,
+ Across the Straits of Dover?
+ Nine hundred thousand slaves in arms
+ May seek to bring us under
+ But England lives and still will live,
+ For we'll crush the despot yonder.
+ Are we ready, Britons all,
+ To answer foes with thunder?
+ Arm, arm, arm!
+
+
+
+ The Gallant Bakhatla Tribe
+
+When Bechuanaland was invaded by the Republican forces
+at the outbreak of the Boer War, the British Police Force
+in the Bechuanaland Protectorate, finding themselves hopelessly isolated
+in that far-away region, decided to evacuate Gaberones and effect a junction
+with Colonel Plumer's force which was then coming south from Rhodesia.
+The British Commissioner, before leaving Gaberones,
+advised the Native Chiefs of the Southern Protectorate
+to make the best terms possible with the invaders until the Transvaal Republic
+was conquered by the advancing British Army.
+
+Chief Lentsue of the Bakhatla, acting entirely on his own responsibility,
+sent his brother Segale with a message to the Dutch Commandant, reminding him
+that the war was a white man's war, and asking him at the same time
+not to traverse his territory with armed Boers; he also added
+that any invasion of his territory would be resisted with all the means
+at his disposal. Naturally, this message was treated with the contempt
+that a Boer would habitually treat any frankness on the part of a "Kafir",
+and the Boers, in utter disregard of this warning, invaded Bakhatla territory.
+Chief Lentsue was not in a position to attack the Boers
+at the beginning of the invasion. He had the men but hardly enough ammunition
+to last for a whole day, so he had to bide his time, scheming the while
+to secure an arsenal. The Dutch contempt for Lentsue's threats
+advanced by 100 per cent when they overran his outer villages on two occasions
+and he failed to offer any resistance, but they had not calculated
+that his Intelligence Department and War Office were hard at work
+in order that his threat to the Boers might not come to naught.
+Accordingly on a certain day a convoy of huge buck-wagons,
+each drawn by sixteen African bullocks, carrying ammunition
+to the Dutch troops in Bechuanaland, meandered its way slowly
+in the direction of the Marico River, escorted by a squadron
+of mounted Burghers. All of a sudden they were surprised and disconcerted
+by a fusillade of musketry, and the situation grew in gravity
+from the fact that whichever way the members of the convoy scampered,
+they appeared to be running from the frying-pan into the fire.
+The ruse was swift and successful, indeed so successful
+that the train of ammunition and provision wagons proceeded on its way
+to Lentsue's town, Mochudi, but under a different escort.
+
+What had happened was this: The sub-chief Segale, who has since
+been known as Lentsue's fighting general, had closely watched
+the movements of the Dutch and studied their plans, till he was able
+to anticipate the coming of this convoy and to waylay it.
+He captured enough ammunition in this and succeeding attacks
+to enable the Chief Lentsue to arm his men. Thus they repulsed
+two invasions of the Boers, followed the enemy into his territory,
+and came home with numbers of head of cattle, and Lentsue's territory
+was never again invaded by the Boers.
+
+This isolated action of the Bakhatla Chief and people
+in a remote corner of the Empire, on the boundaries of the late Boer Republic,
+had its moral and material value. The Boers, who virtually owned
+the whole of Bechuanaland to the south, except Mafeking town,
+found that it would pay them better to adopt a friendlier attitude
+towards the other Bechuana tribes. Thereby a Dutch Field Cornet
+pronounced all the Bechuana Chiefs as the original Afrikanders --
+with the exception of Lentsue of the Bakhatla, and Montsioa of the Barolong
+in Mafeking. These two chiefs, the Field Cornet said,
+were traitors to their country as they had joined the foreign Rooineks
+against their black and white fellow Afrikander. But the armed Burghers
+ceased to help themselves to native property, and the Government's
+huge compensation bill at the end of the War became less formidable
+in consequence. Furthermore, the task of that unacknowledged hero
+-- the native dispatch runner -- became so appreciably easier that
+an almost regular bi-weekly communication was maintained between headquarters
+at the Cape and the siege garrison at Mafeking, for the native runners
+after crawling through the lines of the investing Boers,
+under cover of the night, could move through the peasant villages
+with much less danger of detection by Boer patrols.
+
+But it must be confessed that Chief Lentsue's defensive activities
+were wholly illegal, inasmuch as the Boers, although they had declared war
+against Lentsue's sovereign Lady, Queen Victoria, were not at war with him.
+It was defined, by an uncanny white man's mode of reasoning,
+that the war was a white man's business in which the blacks
+should take no part beyond merely suffering its effects. The Natives' retort
+to this declaration was in the words of a Sechuana proverb,
+viz., "You cannot sever the jawbones from the head and expect to keep
+those parts alive separately." It was this principle, we presume, that guided
+Lentsue's action. Still from the standpoint of white South Africa,
+the Chief's operations were a purely filibustering adventure;
+and while it seemed difficult to indict Lentsue on any definite charge,
+some of his men were arrested for having taken part
+in a cattle-raiding expedition in Transvaal in the course of which
+they shot and killed a German subject of the Transvaal Republic.
+These men were tried at Pretoria after peace was declared,
+and three of them were sentenced to death. All through the trial
+the Chief stood by his men, who pleaded justification. He accompanied them
+in the first instance to Pretoria, and afterwards paid for their defence
+at the trial, and it was evident that he took the verdict and sentence
+very much to heart.
+
+If the verdict strained the loyalty of the Bakhatla,
+it had the effect of satisfying the Boers across the Bechuana border,
+in the Western Transvaal, who had to live down the sad memory of a victory
+gained by a black chief over their white army and of their purposes thereby.
+From a Dutch point of view nothing could be more humiliating
+than that black men should have gained such a signal success over them,
+and they are constantly crying out for the repression of Lentsue
+and his "proud" Kafirs. The Boers' demand that the Union authorities
+should make the thraldom of the Natives more effective,
+forgetting that the armed forces of the Boers when left to themselves
+during the temporary British evacuation of Bechuanaland were unable to do it.
+Notwithstanding this fact, the newspapers, especially the Rand Sunday Press,
+seem always to have open spaces for rancorous appeals to colour prejudice,
+perhaps because such appeals, despite their inherent danger,
+suit the colonial taste. Preceding the introduction of the Natives' Land Act,
+the clamour of a section of the colonists and most of the Transvaal Boers
+for more restrictive measures towards the blacks was accompanied
+at one of its stages by alarming reports of "Native disaffection",
+"Bakhatla insolence", and similar inflammatory headlines. One Sunday morning
+it was actually announced in the Sunday Press of Johannesburg
+that the Bakhatla had actually opened fire on the Union Police
+and were the first to draw blood. Our own inquiries proved
+that the British Protectorate, in and around Lentsue's territory,
+where the Bakhatla dwell, was abnormally quiet. All that had happened
+was that two Dutch policemen had unlawfully crossed into Bechuanaland
+with firearms; that the Natives had disarmed them and taken them
+to their chief, who in turn handed them over to the British authorities
+at Gaberones, where they were tried and sentenced.
+
+It is not suggested that Sunday papers in giving publicity
+to disturbing reports lend their space to what they know to be untrue;
+but the fact remains that, right or wrong, their editorials seem ever ready
+to fan the glowing embers of colour prejudice into a blaze;
+and after arousing in this manner a most acute race feeling,
+the editors, upon discovering their mistake, if such it was,
+did not even trouble to tell their readers that they had unwittingly published
+exaggerated accounts -- since after a fair trial before the British tribunal
+at Gaberones, the offending Union Police were fined 50 Pounds.
+The fact is that while under the quasi-Republican laws of the Transvaal
+a native policeman dare not lay his "black hands" on a "lily-white" criminal,
+even if he caught him in the very act of breaking the law:
+in British Bechuanaland, "there shall be no difference in the eye of the law
+between a man with a white skin and a man with a black skin,
+and the one shall be as much entitled to the protection of the law
+as the other," and so in spite of scaremongers' ravings to the contrary,
+Chief Lentsue proved himself once more on the side of the law of his Empire.
+
+ Go mokong-kong ko Tipereri,
+ Go mokong-kong gole;
+ Go mokong-kong ko Tipereri,
+ Go mosetsana montle.
+ Dumela, Pikadili,
+ Sala, Lester-skuer,
+ Tsela ea Kgalagadi, Tipereri,
+ Pelo ea me e koo.
+ "Tipperary" in Rolong.
+
+
+ The Barolong and the War
+
+The Barolong and other native tribes near Mafeking were keenly interested
+in the negotiations that preceded the Boer War. The chiefs continually
+received information regarding the mobilization of the Boer forces
+across the border. This was conveyed to the Magistrate of Mafeking
+with requests for arms for purpose of defence. The Magistrate
+replied each time with confident assurances that the Boers
+would never cross the boundary into British territory.
+The Transvaal boundary is only ten or twelve miles from the magistracy.
+The assurances of the Magistrate made the Natives rather restive;
+the result was that a deputation of Barolong chiefs had a dramatic interview
+with the Magistrate, at which the writer acted as interpreter.
+The chiefs told the Magistrate that they feared he knew very little about war
+if he thought that belligerents would respect one another's boundaries.
+He replied in true South African style, that it was a white man's war,
+and that if the enemy came, Her Majesty's white troops
+would do all the fighting and protect the territories of the chiefs.
+We remember how the chief Montsioa and his counsellor Joshua Molema
+went round the Magistrate's chair and crouching behind him said:
+"Let us say, for the sake of argument, that your assurances are genuine,
+and that when the trouble begins we hide behind your back like this,
+and, rifle in hand, you do all the fighting because you are white;
+let us say, further, that some Dutchmen appear on the scene
+and they outnumber and shoot you: what would be our course of action then?
+Are we to run home, put on skirts and hoist the white flag?"
+
+Chief Motshegare pulled off his coat, undid his shirt front
+and baring his shoulder and showing an old bullet scar, received in
+the Boer-Barolong war prior to the British occupation of Bechuanaland,
+he said: "Until you can satisfy me that Her Majesty's white troops
+are impervious to bullets, I am going to defend my own wife and children.
+I have got my rifle at home and all I want is ammunition."
+
+The Magistrate duly communicated the proceedings to Capetown,
+but the reply from headquarters was so mild and reassuring that one
+could almost think that it referred to an impending Parliamentary election
+rather than to a bloody war. But the subsequent rapid developments of events
+showed that the Natives of Mafeking were in advance and that those
+at headquarters were far behind the times. In a short time
+after the interview of the chiefs with the Magistrate,
+the Boers, following the terms of their ultimatum, crossed the border
+between the Cape and Transvaal, cut the lines of communication
+north and south of Mafeking and, before any arms could reach this quarter,
+Mafeking (a little village on the banks of the Molopo) was surrounded,
+with Montsioastad, a town of 5,000 native inhabitants.
+The population of these places was largely increased by refugees,
+both white and black, from outside the town, and also from the Transvaal.
+
+At this time of the investment General Cronje sent verbal messages
+to the chief advising him not to mix himself and his people
+in a white man's quarrel. This view of General Cronje's was,
+at the beginning of the siege, in accord with local white sentiment.
+The European inhabitants of the besieged town had a repugnance
+to the idea of armed Natives shooting at a white enemy;
+but the businesslike method of General Cronje in effecting the investment
+had a sobering effect upon the whole of the beleaguered garrison;
+the Dutch 100-pounder Cruesot especially thundered some sense into them
+and completely altered their views.
+
+The Barolong youth had his baptism of fire on October 25, 1899,
+when General Cronje tried to storm the garrison by effecting an entry
+through the native village. He poured a deafening hail of nickel
+into the native village. The Natives who were concealed behind
+the outer walls of Montsioastad waited with their rifles in the loopholes,
+according to Captain Marsh's instructions, till the Boers
+were quite near to them, then returned the fire with satisfactory results.
+After this encounter the whites, for the first time, regretted that
+there were not any arms in the place with which to arm all the Natives.
+As this attack was unmistakably severe and a Red Cross wagon
+moved around the Boer lines in the afternoon, it was feared
+that the native casualties were heavy, and medical aid was offered
+by the white section of the garrison. But all were agreeably surprised
+to find that beyond slight damages to the housetops there were no casualties
+among the Barolongs. The following was the only injury:
+A shell burst in front of Chief Lekoko as he was engaged
+in repelling the Boer attack, but no fragments of it touched him.
+One piece of shell, however, struck a rock and a splinter of the rock
+grazed his temple. At best only a few rounds of ammunition
+could be handed out to those of the Barolongs who used their own rifles,
+and it is doubtful if so little ammunition was ever more economically used,
+and used to greater advantage.
+
+The investment of Mafeking was so effective that only
+certain Natives could crawl through the Boer lines at night.
+Throughout the seven months of the siege only one white man managed,
+under the guidance of two Natives, to pass into the village.
+All the dispatches which came into and out of Mafeking
+were carried by Barolong runners. Before the Boers moved their stock
+into the far interior of the Transvaal, the Barolongs continually
+went out and raided Boer cattle and brought them into the besieged garrison.
+Often the raiders had to fight their way back, but sometimes as they returned
+with the cattle in the night the Dutch sentries preferred to leave them alone.
+The result was that General Snyman, who commanded the besiegers
+after General Cronje went south, issued a general order
+authorizing the shooting dead of "any one coming in or out of Mafeking",
+armed or unarmed.
+
+At his village called Modimola, ten miles outside the beleaguered garrison,
+there lived Chief Saane, uncle of the Mafeking chief.
+Being apparently harmless he was not for some months molested by the Boers.
+Later, however, they rightly suspected him of supplying the garrison
+with information. They then took him and his followers to Rietfontein,
+where they placed him under surveillance, but Chief Saane proved
+even more useful in captivity than in liberty. He used the seemingly
+inoffensive young men of Rietfontein, to glean all first-hand information
+from the Boers, who still had command of the lines of communication.
+Then he sent the news in verbal messages to his nephew, the paramount chief
+in the siege, who in turn communicated it to Her Majesty's officers
+in command. By means of this self-constituted intelligence bureau
+the garrison learnt of the surrender of Cronje -- a happy consummation
+of the battle of Paardeberg -- shortly after the good news
+reached their besiegers; and when official confirmation came from the Cape,
+more than a week later, Chief Saane's messengers were there again
+with fresh news of the surrender of Bloemfontein. This news,
+as might be well supposed, was glad tidings to the besieged people.
+They were in fact the truths that King Solomon thus sets forth:
+"As cold water is to the weary soul, so is good news from a far country,"
+for, in those days, before the invention of aeroplanes and Marconigrams,
+no country in this wide world was further than a besieged garrison.
+
+Among the first civilian bodies raised in Mafeking for
+purposes of garrison defence was the "Cape Boy Contingent",
+a company of mixed classes in varying degrees of complexions.
+Sergt.-Major Taylor, a coloured bricklayer, who led the contingent
+and directed the crack snipers of that company, was killed
+during the fourth month of the siege, by a fragment of a huge shell
+in the outer trenches.
+
+His funeral was attended by General Baden-Powell and other staff officers,
+and was probably the only funeral of a coloured person
+in the South African war that was accorded such distinguished
+military attendance.
+
+The language of the Cape coloured or mixed people is the same
+as that of the Boers, viz., the Cape Dutch. At times during the siege
+our advance lines and those of the Boers used to be less than 100 yards apart,
+and when the wily snipers of both sides saw nothing to snipe at,
+they used to exchange pleasantries at the expense of one another,
+from the safety of their entrenchments. Sometimes these wordy compliments
+made the opponents decidedly "chummy", to borrow a trench phrase.
+In that mood, they would now and again wax derisive or become amusing,
+bespeaking the fates of one another or the eventual outcome of the war.
+Whoever got the worst of the argument used to cut off communication
+with an unpleasant remark; but when it was mutually amusing,
+both sides enjoyed an advantage and each joined heartily
+in the resulting merriment. On more than one occasion a convivial Dutchman
+momentarily forgot the martial aspect of the mutual hilarity and complied with
+an equally convivial coloured man's exclamation to "kyk hier, jong"
+(look here, old fellow), and directly he "kyked" the snipers did to him
+that which from the enemy's point of view would amount to "devil's work".
+
+The reader of these reminiscences will perhaps permit us to pay a tribute
+to the Dutch Burghers who, under General Snyman, besieged Mafeking.
+Whatever we may say against them, in other ways, this much must be said
+in their favour, namely, that they left us entirely alone on Sundays.
+Such an opportunity gave the Mafeking people a chance to get about,
+to have a thorough wash-up, and to keep the Sabbath holy.
+Snipers put down their rifles on Sunday mornings, declared a day's peace
+among the contending forces between the opposing trenches,
+and pointed out to one another landmarks beyond which the opposing sentries
+might not cross, since to wander past these beacons would mean
+a sudden resumption of hostilities. But as the landmarks
+were religiously respected there seldom was any occasion
+to desecrate the Sabbath by the clash of arms. We had thus
+a whole day's recreation, when the trenchmen used to visit
+their families in the women's camp and make all-round preparations
+for another week's bombardment.
+
+The "Cape Boys" fought with distinction and maintained their reputation
+right up to the end of the siege. Visitors to Mafeking may now see
+near the obelisk in front of the pretty town hall of the famous siege town,
+a five-pounder gun "captured by the Cape Police during the siege".
+This gun was seized by the coloured Sergeant Bell and two other
+subalterns of the "Cape Boys" contingent; their contingent was then
+under the command of Lieutenant Currey of the Cape Police.
+
+Besides the brave coloured men who fell during the defence of Mafeking,
+one painful effect of the siege, in connexion with this contingent,
+was that of Mr. Swartz, who was blinded by an exploding Boer shell
+and has never been able to regain his eyesight.
+
+ Ukude, ukude Tipperary,
+ 'Kude mpela ku hamba,
+ Ukude, ukude Tipperary,
+ Nentombi 'nhle ng' asiyo.
+ Hlala kahle, Piccadilly
+ Nawe Leicester Square
+ Ikude lendlhela yase Tipperary
+ Kona 'po nhliziyo yami.
+ "Tipperary" in Zulu.
+
+Two other small companies who filled their posts without reproach
+were the Fingo contingent and the Black Watch, so-called, presumably,
+from the jet-black colour of the members. The "Black Watch" included
+Mozambique and Zambesi boys, Shangaans and others from among
+the blackest races of South Africa. The greatest disaster
+sustained by this company was when a party of thirty-three of them
+dashed into the Boer lines on an ill-starred attempt to loot cattle
+from the enemy's herds. After their night's dash out of the garrison
+they got to a hiding place for the day, but they were followed there
+and were surrounded by a Boer commando, which peppered them
+with a maxim and a big gun. They fought up to the last cartridge,
+but were helplessly outnumbered and outranged by the Boers,
+who killed them to a man.
+
+Cattle-raiding was a dangerous business in which the crafty Barolong,
+who belonged to the country, alone were well versed. A subtle warrior
+among the Barolong, named Mathakgong, was a regular expert in this business.
+He led the occasional Barolong dashes into the Boer lines in search of beef
+and he invariably managed to rush his loot into Mafeking.
+He did this throughout the seven months' siege with the loss of only two men.
+The only misadventure of this intrepid looter was when he attempted
+to rush in an unusually large drove of cattle which Colonel Plumer had been
+buying and collecting at his Sefikile camp about forty miles north of Mafeking
+for the besieged garrison. Dutchmen tell us that for days they had learnt
+that Colonel Plumer was arranging to send cattle into Mafeking.
+They even knew the exact number -- 100 head -- and so they sent scouts
+to the north every day to watch the roads and warn the besiegers of the event.
+Hence, although they had left Mafeking unobserved, when Mathakgong's party
+approached Mafeking on the return trip with the cattle, a strong Dutch force
+was waylaying him and waiting to give him and Colonel Plumer's cattle
+a hot reception. They opened a rattling fusillade upon the cattle drivers,
+which could be heard from Mafeking. Over half of the cattle
+were killed in the ensuing fight, and the remainder,
+like the fat carcases of the dead bullocks, fell into the hands of the Boers.
+The drivers escaped with only two wounded out of the party of twelve.
+They said that they owed their escape almost entirely
+to the carcases of dead cattle, which they used as ramparts.
+
+When Mathakgong heard subsequently how the Boers had planned
+to annihilate him and his small party, he became very indignant
+at what he called "the clumsy European method of always revealing
+their intentions to the enemy."
+
+Away out in Basutoland, "the Switzerland of South Africa",
+the Paramount Chief Lerothodi offered to send an army on Bloemfontein
+while the "Free" Staters were engaged in the British Colonies
+of Natal and the Cape, which they had invaded. Lord Milner strongly
+forbade him from taking that step, and it was all that Sir Godfrey Lagden,
+the British Resident in Basutoland, could do to restrain the Basuto warriors
+from swooping down upon the Orange "Free" State.
+
+On one occasion, however, the Basuto mountaineers were quickly mobilized.
+Word reached Maseru that General De Wet, whose guerrilla career
+was then at the height of its fame, was seriously harassed by Imperial troops
+in the "Free" State, and that it was feared he would escape
+through Basuto territory. In such a case it was ruled that the Basuto
+would be justified in opening fire upon the trespassing commandoes,
+but not until the Boers actually set foot upon Basuto territory.
+Therefore the Basutos, in anticipation of this violation of their territory,
+under the leadership of Councillor Philip Modise, made a record turn-out
+in one night, in a mountainous country, without telegraphic communication,
+and where all the orders were conveyed by word of mouth
+by men mounted on the sure-footed Basuto ponies; so that at daybreak
+as the Boers at the frontier near Wepener awoke, they found the Basuto border
+to be one mass of black humanity. The Basutos made strong appeals to Maseru
+for permission to cross the border and rush the Boers, and again
+they were forbidden. At length General De Wet, amid a rain of British shells,
+withdrew his commando and carried his operations elsewhere.
+
+General De Wet, in his book on the South African War, admits that
+he was once hopelessly cornered and that then his only safe way of escape
+lay through the territory of the Basuto. He next proceeds to give his reason
+for not violating Basuto territory: it is that the Basutos
+showed no hostility towards the Boers, and that he had no wish
+to provoke them. No mention is made that armed Basutos barred his way,
+but if General De Wet's restraint were voluntary it would be
+the first instance in history that a Boer general had shown any regard
+concerning the rights or feelings of the Natives.
+
+General Botha has on several occasions mentioned the loyal assistance
+rendered to the Transvaal Burghers by the Natives of the Transvaal.
+We may also mention the case of Chief Mokgothu, of the Western Transvaal,
+who with his headmen was detained at Mafeking after the siege.
+In fact that chief died in the Mafeking prison where he was interned
+with the Republican political prisoners for participating in the war
+on the side of the Republic.
+
+On another occasion General Botha (obviously referring to Natives
+other than those around Mafeking) unwittingly paid a tribute
+to the valour of British Natives during the South African war.
+Speaking in the Nieuwe Kerk, at Middelburg, Holland, the General said: --
+
+==
+The Kaffirs turned against us and we not only had to fight
+against the English but against the Natives as well
+. . . when the attacks of the Kaffirs increased, our cause became
+dark and black. . . . All these facts taken collectively
+compelled us to discuss terms of peace.*
+
+--
+* "De Boerengeneraals in Zeeland", p. 29.
+--
+==
+
+The southern defences of Montsioastad were maintained by the Barolong,
+under their own chief Lekoko, in their own way and with their own
+rations and rifles. These were only supplemented by supplies of ammunition,
+of which there was not too much in the garrison. And the only instructions
+which Major Godley and Captain Marsh gave the defenders
+was to "sit tight and don't shoot until the enemy is quite close."
+
+The rest of the native population in the besieged town
+was under the fatherly care of Mr. C. G. H. Bell, the civil magistrate.
+And the harmonious relation between white and black as a prevailing
+characteristic of the population of the garrison throughout the siege
+was largely due to the tactful management of Major Lord Edward Cecil, D.S.O.,
+Colonel Baden-Powell's chief of Staff. At the end of the siege,
+Lord Roberts sent General Sir Chas. Parsons to thank the Barolong
+for the creditable manner in which they defended their homes
+throughout the siege. The veteran soldier evidently thought
+that he had not done enough in the matter, so later on he sent
+Major the Hon. Hanbury Tracey from Pretoria with a framed address
+to the Barolong chiefs, written in gilt letters.
+
+Colonel C. B. Vyvyan, who was escorted to Montsioastad
+by a squadron of the 4th Bedfordshire Regiment, headed by
+their band playing patriotic airs, presented the address
+in the presence of a large gathering of Barolongs and European visitors.
+The ceremony was described by the `Mafeking Mail' as follows: --
+
+==
+Within the square, seated on chairs and stools, were the Barolong men,
+whilst the women, attired in their brightest dresses,
+took up positions wherever they could get a view of the proceedings.
+On the arrival of the Base Commandant (Lieut.-Colonel Vyvyan)
+and the Resident Magistrate (Mr. C. G. H. Bell), a Union Jack was hoisted
+to the accompaniment of a general cheer. A large number of civilians
+and several military officers witnessed the ceremony, among them being
+the Mayor (Mr. A. H. Friend), Mr. W. H. Surmon (Acting Commissioner),
+Lieut.-Colonel Newbury (Field Paymaster), Major the Hon. Hanbury Tracey
+(the officer who brought the address from Pretoria), and Major Panzera.
+
+Mr. Bell, addressing the assembled Natives, said: To-day is an historical one
+in the history of the Barolongs as represented by Montsioa's people.
+I am sure it must be most satisfactory to you all who have so bravely assisted
+in the defence of Mafeking to have this honour conferred upon you,
+which is unprecedented in the annals of the history of the native tribes
+in this country. The Field-Marshal commanding Her Majesty's troops
+in South Africa has expressed in the address which is about to be
+presented to you his thanks for the services you rendered during the siege --
+an honour which I am sure you will appreciate at its full value, and which
+I can assure you is fully recognized by the Europeans who took part with you
+in the defence of the town. On many occasions bravery was displayed
+by both Europeans and Natives. We have fought and risked our lives together;
+we have undergone privations; we have eaten horses and various other animals
+of a like character; we have seen our friends fall, shattered by shells;
+and we have endured hardships and trials which very few men endure
+more than once in a lifetime. We have fought together for one common object.
+We have attained that object, and it is now impossible for us to do otherwise
+than experience a feeling of fellowship which is accentuated
+by the proceedings of to-day. You Barolongs at the commencement of the siege
+declared your determination to be loyal to the Queen,
+and when we had a meeting here shortly before war broke out
+you were assured by General Baden-Powell that if you did remain loyal
+your services would not be forgotten, and the Field-Marshal
+has endeavoured to-day to convince you of the truth of that statement.
+There are certain names mentioned on the address; but I cannot help,
+while talking to you now, mentioning the names of other persons
+who were of great assistance to us during the siege. It was
+altogether impossible to include the names of everybody on the address,
+and some of you may think that your names are not there
+because you have been overlooked, but that is not so. I will just mention
+the names of a few which, had there been room, might have appeared.
+First, there is Saane, who remained outside and assisted our dispatch runners,
+and who when he heard news sent it to us. It is only those
+who suffered from news hunger at the time can understand the pleasure
+we experienced at the assistance continually rendered to us by Saane.
+Then there is Badirile, who so bravely commanded his young men
+on the western outposts, and who on many occasions went through
+determined encounters with the enemy. Then again there is Joshua Molema,
+Motshegare and Mathakgong, all of whom did good service.
+Then there was Dinku, who on the day Eloff came in and when the enemy
+was behind him, stuck to his little fort, and who during the attack
+was wounded by a shell, which has since caused his death.
+His memory will not fade away amongst you Barolongs, as he was well known
+as a brave man.
+
+Colonel Vyvyan then stepped forward and said: Chief Wessels and men
+of the Barolong nation, -- Lord Roberts, Commander-in-Chief of
+the British Army in South Africa, has sent a special officer from Pretoria
+to bring you his greeting and to deliver to you a mark of his approval
+and the approval which he expresses on behalf of the Queen.
+Gathered here to-day are subjects of the Queen from various parts
+of her wide dominions -- men who have come overseas from England,
+from Australia, from Canada, and from India -- and they are here
+this afternoon to meet her native subjects of the Barolong tribe;
+whilst we, the officers and soldiers of the Queen who fought in Mafeking,
+wish to show what we think of our friends and neighbours
+down here in the stadt. You have done your duty well. You will remember
+that some time ago an officer was sent by Lieut.-General Baden-Powell
+to thank you for your services, and now the greatest General of all
+has sent you a special mark of his esteem in the form of this letter,
+which I shall read to you:
+
+
+ V [ Crest of Queen Victoria ] R.
+
+ "The Chief Wessels, Lekoko, and the Barolong of Mafeking.
+
+"I, Frederick Sleigh Baron Roberts, K.P., G.C.S.I., G.C.I.E., V.C.,
+of Kandahar and Waterford, hereby testify my approbation of the loyalty
+to H.M. Queen Victoria, and the good behaviour of the Barolongs
+under the leadership of Wessels, Lekoko, and the headmen
+Silas Molema and Paul Montsioa, throughout the long and trying
+investment of Mafeking by the Boers, from October 13, 1899, to May 17, 1900,
+and I desire to congratulate these leaders and their people on
+the successful issue of their courageous defence of their homes and property
+against the invasion of the enemy.
+
+ "(Signed) Roberts,
+ Field-Marshal.
+"Pretoria, July 1, 1900."
+
+
+Addressing Chief Wessels, and at the same time handing him
+the letter, the Colonel concluded: I give you this
+on behalf of Lord Roberts and the Queen. You are to accept it
+on behalf of your nation. You are to keep it and show it to your children
+and tell them why it was given to you and that they are to be proud of it.
+
+The Colonel held out his hand, which Wessels gripped very cordially.
+The band played the National Anthem, and the Barolongs joined
+in one of their native cheers.
+
+Wessels then rose, and taking off his white helmet,
+replied on behalf of his tribe.
+==
+
+Replying to the address and speeches Chief Wessels Montsioa asked the officers
+to convey to Lord Roberts the gratitude of the Barolong
+for the relief of Mafeking, adding: "I have gone to extremes
+into which my forefathers scarcely ever went in defending their homes.
+I have eaten horseflesh, donkey and mule flesh, and had the relief column
+not come when it did, I was going to eat dog flesh, if by that means
+I would have been enabled to hold up a gun and keep the enemy out of doors,
+until Lord Roberts sent relief."
+
+Mr. Chamberlain, who visited Mafeking two years later,
+inspected the old siege position and addressed the largest meetings
+we had ever seen in Mafeking. He said to the thousands
+of assembled Barolongs: "You ask in your addresses that the conditions
+secured to you, when you were transferred from the Imperial Government
+to the Colonial Government should remain as they are. I do not think
+that Sir Gordon Sprigg or any one who may succeed him will alter them
+in any respect, and should any one attempt to alter these conditions,
+you will have your appeal to His Majesty's Government."
+This was said in the presence of Sir Gordon Sprigg,
+the Cape Premier of the day, Mr. Thomas L. Graham,
+the Cape Attorney-General (now Judge of the Supreme Court at Grahamstown),
+and Sir Walter F. Hely-Hutchinson, Governor of the Cape Colony.
+But what must be the feelings of these people, and what must be
+the effect of these assurances upon them now that it is decreed
+that their sons and daughters can no longer settle in the Union
+except as serfs; that they no longer have any claim to the country
+for which they bled, and that when they appeal to the Imperial authorities
+for redress of these grievances, they are told that there is no appeal?
+
+A promise of a farm was made to the Fingo and Kafir contingent,
+but that promise still remains unfulfilled.
+
+When His Royal Highness the Duke of Connaught visited Mafeking in 1906,
+he was touched by the grateful references which Chief Lekoko made
+to the benign rule of His Royal Highness's late illustrious mother.
+And he assured the assembled Natives, in the name of His late Majesty
+King Edward VII, that the death of their beloved Queen
+would "not alter their status in any manner whatsoever as His Majesty took
+the same deep interest in the welfare of the native population
+as the late Queen did." In view of this statement by His Royal Highness,
+Chief Lekoko congratulated his people on having had the honour of receiving
+"assurances of Imperial protection, not from an Imperial official,
+but from the lips of His Majesty's own brother, and in the King's English,"
+the Barolong felt that they were reclining on a veritable rock of ages.
+
+Since the inauguration and meeting of the first Union Parliament,
+laws have been enacted which threaten to annul all this.
+As far as the Barolongs are concerned, the Colonial Government
+is not the only aggressor.
+
+In the early 'nineties a British Boundary Commission awarded
+the territory of Mokgomana to a northern tribe. The award caused
+great dissatisfaction amongst the Barolong; accordingly they sent a deputation
+to the High Commissioner about the award. It was only after they announced
+their unalterable intention to assert their claim to that territory
+by means of the sword, that the Imperial authorities,
+in the name of the Queen, re-considered the former decision,
+and that Sir Hamilton Goold Adams restored that land to the Barolong,
+under date March 11, 1896. But the Colonial Office, completely ignoring
+Sir Hamilton Goold Adams's signature on behalf of the Queen,
+and without referring the matter to the native inhabitants in any way,
+lately confiscated that territory and declared it the property of the Crown.
+In consequence of this high-handed proceeding there is much bad blood
+among the Barolong.
+
+It might be said in support of this act of the Colonial Office
+that strangers will not be settled in the territory,
+but Sir Garnet Wolseley once declared that "as long as the sun
+shines in the heavens, Zululand shall remain the property of the Zulus."
+The sun is still shining in the heavens, and right up to the time
+of the outbreak of the European War in 1914, the Union Government
+were very busy cutting up Zululand and parcelling it out to white settlers
+under the Land Settlement Act of the Union (for white men only),
+parcels of land to survey which black taxpayers are forced to pay,
+but which under the Natives' Land Act no black man can buy;
+and what is true in regard to Zululand, British Kaffraria,
+East Griqualand and other native territories, is equally so
+in regard to Bechuanaland.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XX The South African Races and the European War
+
+ Oh! the Battle-bow is strung,
+ The Banner is outflung:
+ From lowlands and from valley,
+ From mountain-tops, they rally!
+ L. J. Coppin.
+
+
+
+Africa is a land of prophets and prophetesses. In the course of
+our tour of observation on the ravages of the Land Act,
+we reached Vereeniging in August, 1913, and found the little village astir
+because the local pastor, Rev. S. H. Senamela, was returning from
+a certain funeral service. To many of the people of the place
+the event seemed to be a momentous one, affecting as it appeared more people
+than would be ordinarily the case. The person whose death and funeral
+caused all this stir was a black seeress of Vereeniging, of whom it was said
+that in her lifetime she prophesied the Anglo-Boer War and some such situation
+as that created by the Natives' Land Act. Before breathing her last,
+this interesting lady (whose sayings carried great weight
+among the surrounding native peasants and the Dutch neighbours
+on the farms of that neighbourhood) had, it was said,
+uttered her last prophecy. It was to the effect that a great war
+would take place in the near future, amongst the white peoples of the country,
+that there would be much bloodshed, but that the survivors
+would live very peacefully with the native population. We are sorry now
+that we did not care to listen to the whole story when it was related,
+and we very much wish that we had remained to interrogate the narrator
+as to whether the black population that would thus remain to share life
+with the white survivors in South Africa would be a contented one, or whether
+they would be living in chains, of which the thraldom of coming events
+appears to be casting its shadow before. But at the time
+it sounded parlous to think that anything could interrupt
+the calm of the tolerant British colonists and egg them against
+their Dutch rulers, who call them foreign adventurers.
+Nor could we conceive of any reason why the Boers, who have now more freedom
+than they ever dreamt of possessing under their own flag, including the right
+to partially enslave the blacks, should suddenly rise up against the English,
+whose money and brains are ever at the beck and call of the Dutch!
+Here, however, is the war, predicted by the late native seeress,
+and evidently we have to make the best of it.
+
+The writer was in London at the end of July, 1914, when there were
+many disquieting reports about the activities of suffragettes,
+and when there were still more serious reports about
+the unlawful mobilization of volunteer armies in Ireland.
+
+It was in this exciting period that attention was at once transferred
+from Ireland to the Continent of Europe. There it seemed
+that every moment was ticking to drive us towards the greatest war
+that the world ever saw. And though matters grew hourly more serious,
+it did not then occur to the writer, a stranger then of only
+six weeks in London, that after seeing the capital of the Empire
+under conditions of peace, he was soon to see it under a war cloud
+filled with all the horrors of the approaching war storm and all the signs
+of patriotic enthusiasm. We were about to see Mafeking over again,
+but through the biggest magnifying glass.
+
+To walk along Oxford Street of an afternoon and see
+the multitudes of well-dressed women pouring into the streets
+from the underground stations (the "Tube" and the "Met", as they are called
+in the vernacular), round Charing Cross and Piccadilly, and see them
+walking up and down the thoroughfares and looking at the wares displayed
+in the dazzling shop windows; or to come down Bishopsgate of a morning
+and see the stupendous swarms of white men rushing to and fro
+along the pavements of Threadneedle Street, crowding the motor-buses
+round the Mansion House, St. Paul's and Ludgate Circus --
+yet all this throng so well regulated by the City Police that nobody seems
+to be in the other's way -- the disproportion of men and women
+in the East and West respectively forming a partial segregation
+between the sexes: to see these myriads of humanity gave one the impression
+that if the Garden of Eden (whose whereabouts has not yet been defined)
+was not actually in London, then some very fertile human germ
+imported from the Garden must have been planted somewhere
+in the vicinity of Trafalgar Square, or the Elephant and Castle.
+These great masses of people when the war broke out were swept over,
+as already indicated, by a wave of patriotism, and sections of them reinforced
+by a regular inflow from the provinces, and foreign tourists
+-- Americans, Scandinavians, Orientals and Colonials -- rushing back
+from the danger zone on the Continent, stranded in London
+with their pockets bulging with useless credit notes, all these joined
+the buzzing groups in Fleet Street in scanning the latest telegrams
+posted at the windows of the newspaper offices, or, going to Hyde Park,
+they listened to the open-air speeches delivered there.
+In this gamut of personalities and nationalities there were, at first,
+faint murmurs by some of the English against their country joining the strife
+and in favour of her remaining neutral and leaving the Continentals
+to "stew in their own juice". But when German seamen laid mines
+in the English Channel, and capped their deeds by sinking
+the `Amphion' and the `Pathfinder', with hundreds of officers and men,
+the "protestants" found that their efforts were out of date
+and that their arguments could have held water in the good old days,
+before the declaration of war, but not after. For the silent determination
+of the London crowds, of both sexes and all colours, was so emphatic
+that one could almost read it in their thoughts, and see it,
+as it were, percolating through every fibre of their systems.
+If the weaker races of the world -- (and which race is weaker
+than the coloured?) -- are ever to enjoy rest, then the great Powers
+must avenge the violation of the neutrality of Belgium.
+
+Early in August, we left London to visit the Scottish capital,
+and as far as the swiftness of the North British Railway
+would allow a glimpse, the country towns and villages of the north
+appeared to be swarming with Territorials in khaki. A painful sight
+at some of the stations was the number of restive horses
+forced into the railway trucks by troopers -- beautiful, well-fed animals
+whose sleek appearance showed that they were unaccustomed to the rough life
+to which the Tommies were leading them. Further, it was sad to think
+that these noble creatures by their size were to be rendered easy targets
+for the marksmen of the enemy's forces, and that they would in addition
+be subjected to the severity of inclement weather conditions,
+to which they likewise were unaccustomed.
+
+At Edinburgh, the Cameron Highlanders marched along some of the streets
+in their battalions, flinging the Highland kilt like the plaited reeds
+of so many thousands of Bojale* girls. Handsome young Scotchmen, all of them,
+and it was shocking to think that these fine young fellows
+in the flower of their youth were going to be fired at with a set purpose
+to kill them as if they were a flock of springbuck on a South African veld.
+Surely it is time that civilization evolved a less brutal and less savage
+form of warfare! On Sunday evening we attended divine service
+at St. Giles's Cathedral, and the critical political situation
+permeated the entire service. This feeling was not lessened
+by the announcement that one of the gallant boys who sank with the `Amphion'
+was a son of one of the sidesmen of St. Giles's. It was war as unmistakable
+as it was grim.
+
+--
+* Bechuana circumcision rites.
+--
+
+After the declaration of war between Great Britain and Germany,
+the Irish tension at once died away. The self-constituted
+opposing armies of Dublin and Belfast, or rather Ireland and Ulster,
+came forward and offered themselves and their arms to
+the Imperial authorities. They were anxious to proceed at once
+to the Continent and assert British prestige on the battlefield;
+the suffragettes likewise at the outbreak of the war
+declared a truce and offered their humble services to the Empire.
+"More power to their hatpins!" But how about South Africa,
+the baby-member of the British family? Where does she come in?
+
+Within a week after the outbreak, Mr. Harcourt sent the following dispatch
+to the Governors-General of Canada, Australia and New Zealand: --
+
+==
+Please communicate to your Ministers the following message from His Majesty
+and publish: "I desire to express to my people of the overseas Dominions
+with what appreciation and pride I have received the messages
+from their respective Governments during the past few days.
+The spontaneous assurance of their fullest support recalls to me
+the generous self-sacrificing help given by them in the past
+to the Mother Country. I shall be strengthened in the discharge
+of the great responsibilities which rest upon me by the confident belief
+that in this time of trial my Empire will stand united, calm, resolute,
+trusting in God. -- George R.I."
+==
+
+More offers of men and money came from the Dominions;
+and when such well-deserved Royal encomiums are showered
+on the already laurelled heads of other dominions, a self-respecting
+South African like ourselves walked the streets with a drooping head.
+And when our kinsmen in West Africa under the leadership of British officers,
+annexed German Togoland rather early in the campaign, we found these questions
+reverting in our thoughts: What is our Government doing? When is it going
+to move? Surely our Prime Minister, who is also Minister of Native Affairs,
+should now postpone the constant pampering of the back-velders,
+hang colour prejudice for a more peaceful time, call out the loyal legions
+-- British, Boer, and Black -- and annex German South Africa without delay!
+As a British General and Minister of Native Affairs, he should himself
+lead the black contingents and leave the whites to be led
+by their regular officers.
+
+At the beginning of August, a special meeting of the South African
+Native Congress was called at Bloemfontein, first to express
+its disappointment at the cold reception given to the native deputation
+by the Imperial Government; and secondly, to express its thanks
+to the British public for the kind reception given to the deputation;
+and thirdly, to devise ways and means for the deputation
+to tour the United Kingdom on a mission, revealing to the British people
+the manner in which the Colonial Government discharges its trust
+to the coloured people.
+
+Many of the delegates to the Congress had travelled long distances
+by rail and road, but on their arrival at Bloemfontein it was only to learn
+that war had broken out between Great Britain and Germany.
+Hence the Native Congress, in view of the situation, resolving itself at once
+into a patriotic demonstration, decided to hang up native grievances against
+the South African Parliament till a better time and to tender the authorities
+every assistance.
+
+Mr. Dube, the president of the Congress, who had just returned from England
+in time for the conference, proceeded direct to Pretoria with the Executive,
+to lay at the feet of the Government this offer of service
+made by the Native Congress. Offers of service poured into
+the administrative capital from native chiefs and people
+in all parts of the country. Magistrates who held meetings in their districts
+on the instructions of the Government to explain the situation to the Natives
+received similar offers. And besides all these, offers of service also came
+from the Zulu chiefs and headmen, from Chief Dalindyebo of the Tembus,
+Marelana of the Pondos, and from Griffiths of Basutoland.
+In Bechuanaland, the veteran Chief Khama and other Bechuana chiefs
+offered the services of native warriors as scouts in German South West Africa,
+and the Swazi princes offered a Swazi impi, besides undertaking to help
+in any other manner, as they did in the campaign against Sekukuni
+in the 'seventies. The members of the native deputation in England
+were longing to catch the first steamer back to South Africa
+to join their countrymen and proceed to the front. But while
+all these offers were gratefully acknowledged, none were
+definitely accepted. Surely there must be something wrong.
+Is it that the wretched South African colour prejudice is exerting itself
+even in these critical times?
+
+At Pretoria, Captain W. Allan King, the popular Native Commissioner
+of the Pretoria District, held a meeting of Transvaal Natives,
+which amongst others was attended by His Worship the Mayor
+of the Union capital; and there again native offers of service were tendered.
+Mr. Makgatho, the chairman, in his denial of the report
+that appeared in the newspapers to the effect that "South Africa
+could not take the field as she had a native menace to watch",
+voiced the prevailing feeling of the Natives. Captain King, however,
+assured the Natives that no such slanders were uttered by the Government.
+He further reminded them that the Imperial Government
+was face to face with the biggest struggle that ever took place
+since the foundation of the world; and that there would be fighting
+on land, in the air, on the water and under the water.
+He urged the Natives to go to work as usual and see to it that there was
+no slackening of industries. He also made a plea for the abiding respect
+of the Natives to the German missionaries of the Transvaal,
+having regard to what those good men had done in bygone years
+for the evangelization of the Natives of that Province.
+How little did any one dream at the time that he was thus pleading for others,
+that Captain King would be among the victims of the war;
+and that he would fall, not from a German bullet, but from one fired
+by one of the Dutch traitors, in a brisk fight to quell
+the recent Boer rebellion.
+
+ Ku mugama e Tipperary,
+ E malandalahla;
+ Ku mugama e Tipperary,
+ Kwe sona standwa sam.
+ Bhota, Piccadilly,
+ Sala, Leicester Square,
+ Kude le-le-le, e Tipperary
+ 'Ntliziyo yam ikona.
+ "Tipperary" in Xosa.
+
+White men wrote to the newspapers that as France, our great Ally,
+was using Native African troops, there could be no objection
+against England doing the same -- as if England had rejected
+the assistance of her coloured subjects pending a decision by France.
+A well-known Natal campaigner wrote to the authorities
+offering to raise a crack Zulu regiment composed of men
+who had formerly fought for the old flag against their own people.
+He said he felt certain that those Zulus could give as good
+an account of themselves against any regiment in the field as any force
+yet mobilized; but there was no definite acceptance of these offers
+by the Government. The native uncertainty that arose from
+this attitude of the South African Government went on until October,
+when our colleagues of the native deputation returned home from England
+and threw themselves into the vortex of the martial enthusiasm
+that was then sweeping through the country, and as no offers were accepted
+by the Government, Dr. Rubusana made to it the following further offer: --
+
+==
+The Right Hon. the Minister of Native Affairs, Pretoria, Transvaal.
+
+Sir, -- Coming as I do so near from the scene of operations in Europe,
+I feel that something more practical than mere lip-loyalty is required
+from those who boast of the fact that they are British subjects, and are loyal
+to the British Crown, more especially during this present crisis.
+That being so, I am prepared to raise, if you deem it necessary,
+a native levy of 5,000 able-bodied men to proceed to German South-West Africa,
+provided the Government is prepared to fully equip this force for the front.
+I should, of course, be prepared to accompany them.
+
+ I have the honour to be, Sir,
+ Your obedient servant,
+ W. B. Rubusana.
+==
+
+==
+ Reply.
+
+ Union of South Africa,
+ Department of Defence,
+ Pretoria.
+ November 2, 1914.
+
+Sir, -- With reference to your letter of the 20th ultimo, I am directed
+to state that the Union Government greatly appreciates the loyal sentiments
+which are being expressed by the native citizens of the Union.
+
+I am, however, to refer you to the provisions of Section 7
+of the South Africa Defence Act, 1912, and to state that the Government
+does not desire to avail itself of the services, in a combatant capacity,
+of citizens not of European descent in the present hostilities.
+Apart from other considerations the present war is one which has its origin
+among the white people of Europe and the Government are anxious to avoid
+the employment of its native citizens in a warfare against whites.
+
+ I have the honour to be, Sir,
+ Your obedient servant,
+ H. B. M. Bourne,
+ Secretary for Defence.
+Dr. W. B. Rubusana,
+ East London, C.P.
+==
+
+General Botha was once confronted with a definite request
+to reconcile two conflicting declarations of policies
+enunciated by two members of his Cabinet, and in reply to that request
+he gave the following highly diplomatic explanation: "The one Minister
+has said things which should not have been said, and the other Minister
+had said things which should have been said in a different way."
+
+If there is one document which contains things that should not
+have been penned, or that should have been differently worded, surely it
+is the document we have just quoted. Fancy refusing native assistance
+in the present world's war on the ground of colour! For weeks before
+Dr. Rubusana sailed from Europe the Turcos and Algerian and Moroccan troops
+had been doing wondrous deeds on the Continent for the cause of the Allies.
+These coloured troops also included a regiment of wealthy Natives
+from North Africa who had come to fight for France entirely
+at their own expense -- a striking evidence of what the Empire is losing
+through the South African policy of restricting native wages
+to one shilling a day, in a country where the cost of living
+is about the highest in the world. The Union Government
+rejected the native offer a week after Lord Roberts laid down his life,
+having delivered the appreciation of a grateful Empire
+to the gallant Indian regiments who with distinction were participating
+in the same war; and a month after the first German General Freise
+was captured in the course of a daring charge by North African Natives
+from the French Colonies; ten days after the Germans at Tsiengtau
+had surrendered to the British and Japanese forces; and nearly three weeks
+after the Germans had successfully involved Turkey in the strife;
+and while the Canadian troops on Salisbury Plain included Red Indians.
+Where, then, is the wisdom of telling Dr. Rubusana, who knows all these facts,
+that the Government's rejection of the native offer is due to the fact
+that the present struggle is an all-white one? The truth of the matter
+is that the South African Government worships an idol, which was
+best described by Sir Gordon Sprigg as "the demon of ignorance and prejudice",
+and the claims of this fetish in South Africa precedes those of the Empire.
+
+Under the old Republics we had a law which since the Union has become
+the unwritten law of South Africa. In this law it is laid down
+that a coloured policeman shall not lay his black hands on a white man
+even if he found him red-handed in the commitment of a crime.
+The duty of a coloured policeman in such circumstances would be
+to look around for a white constable and report the misdemeanour to him.
+Rather than suffer the humiliation of a black official
+taking a white criminal into custody white South Africa
+would prefer to have the country overrun with white criminals,
+ergo, if the safety of the Crown is at stake and it could be saved
+only by employing black men, we would much rather let the Crown go
+than suffer the humiliation of seeing black warriors resisting a white enemy.
+If there is one point upon which white South Africa is agreed, it is that
+the claims of South Africa come first and those of the Empire afterwards.
+The "bitter-enders" go further: they say that "the Empire comes handy
+only in so far as it is useful to us, but when we have sucked it dry,
+like an orange, it must be thrown away."* It may be that the blacks have
+their reasons for objecting to these creeds: they would prefer Imperial lines
+all the time, for Imperial lines are benevolent while South African lines
+are cruel; consisting largely of repression and slavery.
+
+--
+* General Botha's reply to General Hertzog on the Ministerial crisis of 1912.
+--
+
+There is a talk in South Africa, which unhappily is not confined
+to Dutch-speaking South Africans. It advocates the elimination
+of the Imperial factor, because that factor is said to interfere
+with colonial liberties, among which is the right to "correct" a Native
+in a manner that a colonial deems fit. Thus, under the inconvenience
+of the "pestilential Imperial factor", a colonial Magistrate
+was forced to fine General De Wet the sum of 5s. on his pleading guilty
+to having horse-whipped a Native. Under German rule, which threatened
+the Union, the liberty of chastising the Native according to colonial ideas
+would be extended, for the German method is that of the old "Free" State,
+where a Native used to be tied to a wagon-wheel and whipped.
+If he dies in consequence of the beating, his death was but a nominal offence.
+This state of things explains the determination of the native races
+to fight for the retention of the Imperial factor, or for what vestige of it
+still remains in the country.
+
+A native clergyman sends us the following letter. We are not quite certain
+if the reverend gentleman desired to enlist as a private or as a chaplain;
+anyway, this is what he says:
+
+==
+Can it be really true that we, too, belong to the British Empire?
+This war is growing in such dimensions that it is even affecting
+the King's household. The Prince of Wales has gone to the front,
+and His Majesty the King has also gone, yet we are told that we are not worthy
+on account of our colour to fight for our King and Empire.
+White men only must defend the King's Dominions while we remain behind
+with the women and children. Surely it cannot be the wish of the loyal Boers
+that we must not defend our Empire; it is only the wish of the rebels,
+and it seems that our Government will continue to study their feelings
+even while they are engaged in shooting down loyal people.
+==
+
+It would seem that the South African Government is so deeply
+in love with the Natives that they are scrupulously careful
+lest the Natives should singe so much as a hair in the present struggle,
+and that white men alone may shoot and kill one another.
+But, in point of fact, black men ARE required by the Union Government
+to proceed to the front as Government wagon drivers,
+driving provisions and ammunition wagons, and acting as orderlies
+to the white burghers. In these capacities they are exposed
+to all the risks and horrors of the war, yet even if they are shot,
+they must not, under any circumstances, be mentioned in the casualty lists,
+nor must they carry arms, lest their behaviour should merit recognition;
+their heroic deeds and acts of valour must, on account of their colour,
+not be recorded. These native drivers are classed with the transport mules,
+with this difference, that while the owner of a mule receives
+monetary compensation for each animal that falls on the battlefield,
+or is captured by the enemy, the Government's interest in the black driver
+ceases when he is killed.
+
+Suppose the services of these muleteers were recognized
+in a combatant capacity, some one might get it into his head to ask:
+"Why should loyal fighting taxpayers be debarred from
+the rights of the franchise that are liberally bestowed
+on white rebels and their relations, some of whom are said
+to contribute nothing towards the upkeep of the State?"
+So then to refuse these Natives the right to carry arms
+in defence of the Empire, and to send them to the front without arms,
+is to deprive such inquirers of this and similar arguments.
+
+On St. Patrick's Day, the `Westminster Gazette' appeared
+with a leading article, from which we make the following extract: --
+
+==
+It will be impossible, when we have had the assistance of the Indian Army
+in Europe, to restrict the promotion of its officers in the manner
+laid down hitherto. It will also be impossible to restrict Natives of India
+WHO HAVE PROVED THEIR ABILITY AND EXPERIENCE BY LONG SERVICE
+in their own country TO POSITIONS IN WHICH THEY ARE SUBORDINATE TO THE RAWEST
+NEW ARRIVAL FROM THE COVENANTED SERVICE. All these discriminations
+which rest simply on race and are justified by no natural disability
+will have to be swept away, and new and more generous conditions laid down
+for the whole Indian public service.
+==
+
+Surely what is true in regard to the Indian public service
+is equally so in regard to that infallible South African taxing machine,
+the adjunct of the Union Civil Service, which is officially called
+the Native Affairs Department. There, raw recruits serve their apprenticeship
+while lording it over Natives who have proved their ability and experience
+by a quarter of a century's service in their own country.
+It is to prevent the application to South Africa of broad-minded views
+like those expressed by the `Westminster Gazette' that native Africans
+must not serve against the Germans. Therefore it seems
+to have occurred to the authorities that the best course
+is to engage the Natives in a capacity in which their participation
+will demand no recognition. These statements are not mere empty phrases,
+for the writer recently caused inquiries to be made through
+the Department of Native Affairs in South Africa as to whether there were
+any Coloured People who had been killed or wounded while on active service
+at the front. And the result was a long list of killed, wounded, and captured
+up to the end of October, 1914, among Natives and Coloured People
+who had not been mentioned in the casualty lists.*
+
+--
+* When the enemy airmen attacked the British camp at Garub (G.S.W.A.),
+ on March 27, 1915, and dropped bombs on General Botha's guns,
+ Reuter says, "only one Native was slightly wounded."
+--
+
+This deference to South African prejudice would at least seem reasonable
+if the King's enemies also had colour scruples. But so far from that
+being the case, Natives living far away from defended centres
+are always the first to suffer when a white man's war breaks out.
+In fact they are always subjected to indignities from which
+they would be immune if they had arms. One of the first steps taken
+by the "Free" State rebels under General De Wet during the recent rebellion
+was to dash for the nearest native owner of horses and annex their mounts.
+The unarmed proprietor's recourse in that case was to take to his heels
+and leave the rebels to plunder his stock. Any hesitation to run away
+has involved some unfortunate Native in the danger of being horsewhipped
+into the service of the King's enemies, and if he took the first opportunity
+to escape from the rebel commando, a detection of his act
+would positively have meant a bullet behind his neck.
+
+
+The late Dean Green of Natal, writing years ago, said: --
+
+==
+"Every chief should have his own militia and police. Our common human nature
+tells us that it is the duty of every one capable of bearing arms
+to fit himself to be able to defend his country and Government.
+Were the Government to refuse permission to the chief to enrol his young men,
+it would inflict a wrong on them, against which their manliness would revolt.
+Our Government, however, is not established to alienate from us
+the native races, but to attach them to us by giving them full freedom
+to exercise under restraints of Christianity all those instincts and desires
+which are proper to their manhood.
+
+"The Houssas and Soudanese on the north, the negro tribes on the west,
+form part of the Imperial forces, and have shown themselves
+true, brave, and useful troops. On no possible ground of justice
+can the loyal Bantu tribes be placed under a ban, and refused
+to serve in the ranks for the defence of the Empire. A youth debarred
+from the legitimate opportunities of exercising his manly energies will become
+riotous and unruly, and addict himself, for the sake of excitement,
+to sheep-stealing, etc."
+==
+
+The `Christian Express', which has always acted as the mediator
+between the overbearing section of Colonial opinion
+on the one hand and the subject races on the other, tried to allay
+the disappointment of our people with the excuse that the Government
+refused the native offer on the ground that it desired to use men
+from the more advanced races who are capable of being more easily trained.*
+In the face of historical records, however, this argument
+will not hold a drop of water. British archives are overloaded with instances
+of the valour and tractability of the aboriginal races of South Africa
+no less than those of their nephews, the Cape Coloured People.
+Not having enough space to enumerate them at length we may only refer
+to two instances of recent date.
+
+--
+* The `Express' is now advocating the raising of an army of 100,000 Natives.
+--
+
+During the South African war, the writer was asked by the military authorities
+to recruit twelve young Natives to act as scouts in the Western Transvaal.
+The young fellows were handed to Sergt. Clemens of the Cape Police
+for training. Three days after they were enrolled we met the Sergeant,
+who was highly pleased with his "raw recruits". He told us
+with evident satisfaction that, after he had given them oral instructions
+in the handling and use of firearms, he took them to the range
+to try them at shooting; and all but two of them hit the bull's eye
+with the first attempt. This is but one isolated instance
+which is typical of the rest.
+
+It is doubtful if any white man is a greater authority
+on the character of the Zulus than Mr. R. C. Samuelson of Natal.
+Writing on the outbreak of the European war and the advisability of raising
+native levies, he said: --
+
+==
+During the late rebellion I was captain and adjutant of 350 men
+composed of men, half of whom were Christians and the other half
+heathens of the Amangwane, a section of the Amabomyu tribe,
+who at the beginning of the rebellion were raw recruits,
+but who, after three months' drill and manoeuvring, were as expert
+in their drill and use of the rifle and riding as any corps in the field.
+In all my dealings with all these men and many more, I found them
+most attentive, most orderly, most careful about their arms,
+most alert on duty, perfectly reliable, and in and out loyal
+to the Government and those they were under. Having been a volunteer
+for many years, and a cadet at college in the Cape, I can safely say
+that I never found our people as a body so easy to manage and train
+in the military art, and so orderly and attentive as these natives were.
+
+I had the honour to be called upon to summon 50 of the Zulu war and Boer war
+heroes to be reviewed by the Duke of Connaught; many of these
+had the Zulu war medal on, which the Duke took special notice of,
+but the Boer war medal was not there. These people were highly complimented
+by the Duke, and afterwards gave a free concert to the Royal party
+in the Maritzburg Town Hall, which was attended by immense crowds,
+the chief song of the evening being a Zulu song specially prepared
+by these men, and set to music by them, in honour of the Royal party,
+which was also embossed and presented to the Royal party.
+The Royal party expressed their appreciation by sending forward to me
+one of the officers in waiting on them to thank the singers.
+
+ "Izwe Lakiti" Aug. 12, 1914.
+==
+
+The writer has received several letters expressing the native resentment
+of the idea that they should fold their arms and cogitate
+while other British subjects, irrespective of colour,
+are sacrificing their lives for the defence of the Empire in this,
+the darkest period of His Majesty's reign. Our reply to each of these letters
+was that the natives should subscribe, according to their small means,
+to the several war funds; and our latest information
+is that they are subscribing to the Prince of Wales' Fund,
+the Governor-General's and the Belgian Relief Fund.
+When we last heard from home the Basutos had given 2,700 Pounds
+to the National Relief Fund, the list being headed by Chief Griffiths
+with a donation of 100 Pounds. Chief Khama of Bechuanaland gave 800 Pounds,
+Chief Lewanika of Barotseland 200 Pounds, Chief Lekoko and two other Chiefs,
+each 30 Pounds, while the Zulus, Tembus and Pondos were still collecting.
+At Kimberley the Natives gave concerts for the benefit of
+the Mayor's Relief Fund. At their Beaconsfield concert the Kimberley Band
+under Herr Carl Rybnikar, known as the best volunteer band in South Africa,
+attended and gave selections; and Chief Molala of the Batlhaping
+gave General Botha 200 bullocks to feed the Union troops.
+
+In April 1915 the Minister of Native Affairs gave the following
+testimony of native loyalty and co-operation. Speaking from
+his place in Parliament Mr. Malan said -- "he thought it his duty
+to say that the attitude of the large number of the Natives
+entrusted to their care, all through the troubles, had been
+most exemplary and most patriotic. There was one exception to which
+he would refer,* but from the commencement, from all parts of the Union,
+resolutions came to the Government of expressions of loyalty
+on the part of the Natives, and of their support in the measures
+Government was taking in connexion with the war. They (the Natives)
+gave oxen and supported liberally, according to their means,
+the different patriotic funds which had been established,
+and generally gave the Government every assistance. The Government
+had been able to enrol between 23,000 and 24,000 Natives for service
+in German S.W. Africa, in building railways and in transport work.
+The chief of the Tembus had volunteered to send his own son
+to German S.W. Africa for the purpose of superintending
+the members of his tribe, a large number of whom had volunteered
+for the front. All that spoke well for the Natives, and he would be
+neglecting his duty if he did not testify to that."
+
+--
+* The "one exception" referred to by Mr. Malan was the Hlubis
+ of Matatiele district, who forcibly resisted the cattle dipping regulations
+ because, they said, the frequent dipping killed their cattle.
+--
+
+In opening the Rhodesian Legislative Council, on April 28,
+Mr. Administrator Chaplin concluded by saying that the behaviour and attitude
+of the native population since the outbreak of the war left nothing
+to be desired. All information available showed that any attempts
+by emissaries of the enemy to stir up trouble would fail to meet with support.
+"Numerous expressions of loyalty to His Majesty have come from leading Chiefs,
+taxes are readily paid, and perfect order has been maintained."
+
+What a happy land in which to live South Africa would be if,
+instead of the present god of colour prejudice, we had some such confidence
+as is reposed in the blacks by the British authorities
+in East Africa and elsewhere. The naughty white piccaninnies
+who always insult inoffensive black passers-by would be taught
+that the Native is a useful neighbour whose strong right arm
+may be depended upon in times of trouble, instead of being taught,
+as they are taught in Transvaal, that every man Jack of them
+is a black peril monster who must not only be discriminated against,
+but who must be indiscriminately insulted and repressed.
+The following dispatch, published in the `Daily Chronicle',
+illustrates the confidence of the British authorities in East Africa
+towards the blacks: --
+
+==
+ East African Battle won by Native "Non-Com".
+
+About the end of September the Germans advanced 600 strong,
+with six machine guns, from the Vanga side. They were held
+at Margerini on September 25 by Captain Wavel's Arab Company,
+and some King's African Rifles under Captain Stoner arrived from Jubaland
+on the 27th, none too soon to reinforce Captain Wavel,
+the enemy in the meanwhile having become very aggressive.
+
+The German plan of attack was to destroy the Salisbury bridge,
+which connects Mombasa island with the mainland, thus securing
+one of the most important strategical positions in East Africa.
+
+The "Koenigsberg" did not arrive, perhaps because of the nearness
+of British warships, and the little British force of 300 men
+dislocated the land operations of the enemy. "C" Company held off the Germans
+until October 2, when they were reinforced by Indian troops.
+The Jind Infantry behaved particularly well at Gazi, where they had to face
+a very heavy fire from the six machine guns of the enemy.
+
+The King's African Rifles deserve special mention. Major Hawthorn,
+who was in command, and all the European officers, were wounded
+early in the engagement, thus leaving the little force leaderless.
+
+Colour-Sergeant Sumani quietly took charge, and led on his men as if nothing
+had happened. He gave the order to charge, and the enemy broke and fled.
+This incident has not yet appeared in the bald official announcements,
+but it is hoped the splendid conduct of the native colour sergeant
+will receive recognition.*
+
+--
+* Sergeant Sumani has since been decorated with the D.S.O.
+--
+==
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXI Coloured People's Help Rejected / The Offer of Assistance
+ by the South African Coloured Races Rejected
+
+ The Africans and their descendants in America have proven to the world
+ that they do not lack courage and military ardour. This the French
+ have recognized by enlisting them in their present struggle.
+ We hope for the sake of the Africans that they will give
+ a good account of themselves, but the coloured race is like the Irish
+ who are invincible in fighting for other nations, but not for themselves.
+ An American on the Great War.
+
+
+
+The African Political Organization was early in the field.
+Dr. Abdurahman, its president, during the first week of the war,
+had a force of 3,000 coloured men at Capetown ready to take the field
+against the Germans. These men included those who had fought
+for the British flag, side by side with the British troops
+in the Matabele wars and other South African campaigns in various capacities.
+In a few days the number of this force rose to 5,000 able-bodied men
+ready to go to the front. A definite offer of the service of this force
+was communicated to the Union Government, who replied that the offer
+was under consideration.
+
+Mr. William Hosken, the famous Johannesburg politician,
+member of the Transvaal Parliament before the unification of South Africa
+-- a gentleman whose legislative talents are now unfortunately in abeyance,
+because his liberal views on colour are too advanced
+for the palates of the lily-white voters of his State --
+offered to pay the cost of recruiting such a coloured force.
+Application forms were scattered throughout the country, asking volunteers
+to send in their names and addresses to the A.P.O. headquarters
+signifying their intention to serve as units of the Hosken Division.
+Our old friend Mr. N. R. Veldsman, a coloured political organizer
+of considerable ability, who had been in retirement for the past year or two,
+came forward, took his place among the coloured leaders,
+and addressed patriotic meetings at Saron and other Cape districts
+on behalf of the recruiting movement.
+
+==
+ PATRIOTIC DEMONSTRATION
+
+The City Hall, Capetown, was packed on Monday night, August 31, 1914,
+with coloured citizens of Capetown, who had assembled to express
+their loyalty to King George and their determination to support the Government
+during the present crisis.
+
+Sir Frederick Smith, who presided, thought the coloured people
+had taken a wise course in calling that meeting to tender
+their assistance to the Government while Britain was engaged in war.
+He was confident that that demonstration would receive
+the grateful appreciation of the Prime Minister, his Cabinet,
+and also of H.M. King George.
+
+Dr. Abdurahman said that the coloured people had met in public meeting
+on many occasions, but never in the history of South Africa
+had they been called together on a more solemn occasion,
+nor at a more critical juncture, and never when the issues were fraught
+with greater consequences.
+
+The coloured people had many grievances, but all that must be forgotten
+while danger was threatening the very existence of the Empire.
+If the Empire fell, South Africa would fall, Capetown would fall,
+and Capetown might even be laid in ruins.
+
+Although England was engaged in a life and death struggle,
+South Africans felt secure and could sleep in peace. That security was due
+to the supremacy of the British Navy. They had met that night to decide
+how they could assist the Empire. He moved the following resolution:
+
+"That the coloured citizens of Capetown, in mass meeting assembled,
+under the auspices of the A.P.O., hereby express their loyalty
+to H.M. King George V, and take this opportunity of placing on record
+their recognition of the fact that the security that they at present enjoy
+is due primarily to the supremacy of the British Navy; and further,
+they pray that Britain's efforts during the war will be crowned with success.
+That a copy of this resolution be forwarded to H.E. the Governor-General
+for transmission to H.M. the King." (Applause.)
+
+Mr. J. C. Carelse, in seconding the resolution, remarked that that
+was not the time to consider their own troubles, but to show the enemy
+that they stood together as a united Empire against any foe who dared
+to lower the Union Jack. The resolution was adopted with enthusiasm.
+
+Mr. N. R. Veldsman appealed to the coloured people to assist those
+who as a result of the war might suffer. The coloured people
+should spend less on bioscopes and trivialities, and contribute to a fund
+which it was proposed to raise. He moved the following resolution:
+
+"That, in order to alleviate the suffering which inevitably accompanied war,
+an appeal is hereby made to the coloured citizens of the Union
+to contribute to a fund to be administered by the following committee:
+The Rt. Rev. Bishop J. A. Johnson, Mrs. Wooding, Mrs. Abdurahman, Mrs. Gow,
+Dr. Gool, Dr. Abdurahman, the Rev. F. Gow, Messrs. C. J. Carelse, S. Reagon,
+N. R. Veldsman, S. F. Geyer, P. Grever, H. Hartog, B. Baron, H. Cressy,
+A. Arendze, H. J. Gordon, R. Hoedemaker, W. A. Roberts, M. J. Fredericks,
+Fred Hendricks, H. A. Gamildien, Pfieffer, and George Fife."
+
+The Rev. Mr. Gow seconded the resolution, and said that
+although the spirit of war was in the air, there was also
+a spirit of helpfulness in the air. They should at this period
+forget race and creed and contribute to the fund.
+
+Mrs. Wooding, who spoke in support of the resolution,
+remarked that the coloured women would be found ready to do their duty
+whenever the call went forth. The best way to show loyalty to the Empire
+was by rendering some service. The resolution was unanimously adopted.
+
+Dr. Gool said that another way of giving practical assistance to the Empire
+was by raising volunteer corps for active service. He moved:
+
+"That the offer made through the A.P.O. to raise volunteers
+for active service at home or abroad be approved, and that this meeting
+tenders to the Union Government its loyal support during the present crisis."
+
+Mr. S. Reagon, who seconded, said that they were excluded
+from the Defence Force. But as the Empire was endangered
+he hoped an opportunity would be given the coloured people
+to take a part in the fighting line.
+
+The resolution was agreed to. The sum of 37 Pounds was raised
+during the evening.
+
+Mr. H. Seymour rendered some patriotic selections on the organ.
+The meeting concluded with the singing of the National Anthem.
+==
+
+At Johannesburg, Mr. Koopman presided over a crowded meeting
+of the Rand branches of the Coloured Organization, which unanimously
+endorsed the proposal to raise the corps. Similar meetings,
+under the respective chairmanship of Mr. Keiler, Mr. Samuels,
+and Mr. I. Joshua, were held by the Pretoria town and country branches
+and at Kimberley. At Pretoria, Revs. G. Weavind and Mr. Hanford,
+both missionaries, also spoke offering to associate themselves
+with the coloured people in any benevolent efforts undertaken
+to alleviate the distress that might follow the outbreak of the war.
+Port Elizabeth and other district branches also moved
+in the same direction. Capetown, the headquarters of the Organization,
+was the centre of these activities, and a number of coloured women
+wrote to the A.P.O. secretary offering their services as nurses
+to accompany the coloured volunteer force to German South-West Africa,
+so that the coloured people, as the A.P.O. newspaper puts it,
+"have closed their book with its ugly record against the Botha Government,
+and offered the Prime Minister their loyal support during the war."
+
+But while these things were in progress, the Union Defence Force,
+which had mobilized near the German frontier under Colonel Maritz,
+rebelled against the Crown, and with their arms and ammunition
+they joined the Germans. This act of rebellion occasioned the greatest alarm
+among the coloured population near the boundaries of German South-West Africa.
+And they appealed to the Government for arms to protect
+their homes and properties. They remembered what happened
+during the Boer War, when the Dutch inhabitants of those districts
+joined their kinsmen from across the Vaal, and how that Natives who were armed
+always remained free from molestation. That their present fear
+was not groundless the following declaration shows: --
+
+==
+I herewith declare that my brother and I were on a visit
+to the farm Groen Doorn, Cape Province, on the morning of September 16, 1914.
+
+When we got opposite the police camp, we were surprised to see the camp
+invaded by Germans. The Germans then beckoned us to come up,
+and told us that we were prisoners, and that we must go with them
+to the station of Ukamas. My brother on hearing that
+turned his horse and galloped back. The Germans called on him
+to halt at once, but he did not stop. Then they fired at him,
+and shot him dead.
+
+My brother was left lying where he fell. After he was shot
+I asked if I could go to him, but the Germans would not allow me.
+Afterwards I was taken to the German camp, where I found
+all the coloured people of Groen Doorn that were captured by the Germans.
+Two old women who were too weak to walk all the way were left half-way
+without either food or water; one of the two was a cripple,
+and the other an old woman between sixty and seventy years of age.
+
+I stayed at the German camp at Nakob till the first German patrol
+went back to Groen Doorn to guard. Then that same evening I ran away
+from the German camp, and fortunately got safe home to my house at Nudab.
+
+I again declare that this story is an exact reproduction of what I have seen
+with my own eyes.
+
+ (X his mark)
+ Jacobus Bezuidenhout.
+Witness: T. Kotzee.
+ Signed at Keimoes this 6th day of October, 1914.
+==
+
+This statement was conveyed to the Union Government by Mr. M. J. Fredericks,
+secretary of the African Political Organization. With it there was a request
+by a meeting of coloured people at Calvinia and adjacent districts
+near the German frontier asking for arms. General Smuts replied,
+regretting the situation in which the coloured residents of
+the districts of Calvinia, Kenhardt, Keimoes, and Upington found themselves;
+and said that he hoped the Union forces would ere long remove the cause
+of their anxiety. He added that the question of arming coloured citizens
+had been carefully considered by the Government, but that, for reasons
+already published, their request for arms could not be complied with.
+
+Finally General Smuts expressed regret at the shooting of the brother
+of Jacobus Bezuidenhout. "Apparently the deceased had been shot
+because he attempted to escape, and in the circumstances," added the General,
+"the Germans were clearly justified in shooting him."
+
+If General Smuts is right in his concluding remarks, then the Germans are
+quite justified in pillaging Belgium, as the reason they ravaged that country
+was because the Belgians refused to comply with a plain request
+to allow German troops to proceed through Belgium to France. But whatever
+the view of the South African Government might be on these subjects,
+we would like to point out that it is against a coloured man's grain
+to obey the orders of a man, no matter who, if he is at war
+with the coloured man's chief. It would be nothing unusual for a German
+to order a coloured man about in times of peace, but once war was declared,
+it became an outrage upon the traditions of the blacks to obey Germans
+who were now the enemies of their country.
+
+General Smuts will no doubt remember his own operations in 1901,
+before he became a British subject. How he then invaded Cape Colony,
+and got a number of recruits from among the Dutch inhabitants
+of certain Cape districts. How eventually, when he came
+to the district of Calvinia, his burghers, reinforced by rebels,
+found a coloured blacksmith there, by the name of Abraham Ezau.
+How the burghers demanded certain information from this man,
+and he refused to supply enemies and rebels of the Crown with any information.
+That the man was severely ill-treated and tortured, but that
+he would not disclose anything. And how that a gang of Boers
+dragged this coloured man out of the town and shot him down;
+that they also looted Abraham Ezau's shop and took away
+the murdered man's tools, which his widow never recovered, and for which
+the writer has been informed she never received any compensation.
+The Cape Government, prior to the Union, erected a tombstone
+over the grave of this man, who sacrificed his life for it rather than betray
+his country. And the sight of that memorial stone was no doubt
+a grim reminder to the inhabitants of Calvinia of what would happen
+if the rebels invaded Calvinia once more.
+
+ Burra dur hai Tipperary
+ Bahoot lumbah koouch wo
+ Burra dur hai Tipperary
+ Sakki pas pownchenay ko
+ Ram ram Piccadilly
+ Salaam Leicester Square
+ Burra, burra dur hai Tipperary
+ Lakin dil hoaye phus-gayah.
+ "Tipperary" in Hindustani.
+
+The Natives and the Cape coloured Afrikanders were not alone in tendering
+loyal offers of service to the Government. The Indians of Natal
+and other coloured residents likewise offered their services
+to the Government, besides subscribing liberally according to their means
+to the various war funds. The St. Helenians of Capetown passed
+the following resolutions, which Mr. S. Reagon, the secretary,
+forwarded to the Government: --
+
+(1) That this meeting of St. Helenians expresses its unswerving and devoted
+ loyalty to His Majesty King George and His Governments.
+
+(2) That it expresses its full confidence in the Union Government
+ in the present crisis through which the Empire and Union are passing,
+ and congratulates General Botha, and expresses its deep appreciation
+ of his practical patriotism in having taken command of the Union Forces
+ in the field.
+
+(3) That the services of the Association and its members be hereby offered
+ to the Union Government in whatever manner they may be of assistance
+ to ensure the triumph of the Empire and for the maintenance
+ of law and order.
+
+Shortly after the outbreak of the present war, Dr. Abdurahman
+offered the Government the services of the 5,000 coloured warriors
+recruited through the A.P.O., and General Smuts replied that the offer
+was under consideration. Meanwhile the A.P.O. recruiting agency
+had been continuing its work, and no fewer than 13,000 coloured men
+had sent in their names and addresses and signified their intention to take
+the field. So Mr. Fredericks, the secretary of the A.P.O., wrote once more
+to General Smuts, on October 23, offering the services of these men
+in the name of the Coloured People's Organization. This offer brought forth
+the following definite reply, which is couched in identical terms
+to the one sent on the same date to Dr. Rubusana, who wrote offering
+the services of 5,000 Natives: --
+
+==
+ Department of Defence,
+ Pretoria,
+ November 6, 1914.
+
+Sir, -- With reference to your letter of the 23rd ult.,
+I beg to inform you that the Union Government greatly appreciates
+the offer of service of the Cape coloured people.
+
+I am, however, to refer you to the provisions of Section 7
+of the South African Defence Act, 1912, and to state that the Government
+does not desire to avail itself of the services in a combatant capacity
+of citizens not of European descent in the present hostilities.
+Apart from other considerations, the present war is one which has its origin
+among the white peoples of Europe, and the Government is anxious to avoid
+the employment of coloured citizens in a warfare against whites.
+==
+
+No doubt the Government of British South Africa was actuated
+by the loftiest motives in rejecting voluntary offers of service
+from citizens of non-European descent; but it is clear that such a reply
+at such a time ought not to please many people in Great Britain who had
+to offer the cream of British manhood to defend their portion of the Empire,
+and then to offer in addition more men to lay down their lives
+for the safety of the Colonies, including South Africa,
+a land with thousands of able-bodied and experienced warriors
+who are willing to defend their own country. For the same reason
+this decision ought not to please our French Allies, who,
+besides sacrificing men and money on the battlefields of Continental Europe,
+must provide more men and money to guard their colonial possessions
+in different parts of the globe. This decision ought not also to cheer
+any one in Belgium, where fathers and mothers and their children
+are separated and starving, a nation living practically in exile,
+or in bondage, its brave monarch sojourning in foreign territory.
+On the other hand, if there is any one place where this decision
+of the Government of British South Africa would be hailed
+with the liveliest satisfaction, it is certainly Berlin,
+and that particularly after the bitter experiences of German troops
+in encounters with native African troops, both in Continental Europe
+and in East and West Africa.
+
+Similarly this decision of the South African Government ought not to please
+the Boers themselves, inasmuch as, finding the request for volunteers
+amongst the whites failed to secure sufficient men, the Union Government
+had perforce to resort to coercion, in that some 300 Boers who refused
+to enlist for service in the expedition to German South West Africa
+were fined or imprisoned. This course, which is practically conscription,
+would have been unnecessary had the Union Government accepted
+the offered service of the 18,000 and more volunteers whom it curtly rejected.
+
+The coloured people, judging by the letters that many of them have sent
+to the Press, felt humiliated to find that during the Empire's darkest hour
+a Government to which they pay taxation is publishing decisions
+that ought to wound the feelings of the Allies' sympathizers
+and give satisfaction to the enemy.
+
+It is just possible that the Government refused the offer
+of the coloured people in deference to the wishes of a section
+of the white people of the Union; but judging from the African Press,
+that section, although somewhat noisy, was an infinitesimal one.
+This section, as is shown from the extract below, also discussed
+the voyage of the Indian troops to Europe. The `East Rand Express', a paper
+published in one of the most important suburbs of Johannesburg, said: --
+
+==
+ COLOURED TROOPS AND THE WAR
+
+The news that Great Britain intends to employ Indian native troops
+against the Germans has come as a shock to many South Africans.
+We can but hope the news is incorrect. In our opinion it would be
+a fatal mistake to use coloured troops against the whites, more especially
+as plenty of whites are available. From the English standpoint
+there is probably nothing offensive in the suggestion. Most Home people
+do not seem to see anything repugnant in black boxers fighting whites,
+but they have not had to live in the midst of a black population.
+If the Indians are used against the Germans it means that
+they will return to India disabused of the respect they should bear
+for the white race. The Empire must uphold the principle that a coloured man
+must not raise his hand against a white man if there is to be any law or order
+in either India, Africa, or any part of the Empire where
+the white man rules over a large concourse of coloured people.
+In South Africa it will mean that the Natives will secure pictures of whites
+being chased by coloured men, and who knows what harm such pictures may do?
+That France is employing coloured troops is no excuse.
+Two blacks in any sense do not make a white. The employment of native troops
+against Germany will be a hard blow on the prestige of the white man.
+==
+
+These emotionalists urge the Imperialists against the use of black warriors
+for the simple reason that it would give them (the emotionalists) "a shock".
+So that the agony of British troops and the anxiety of British
+wives and mothers is not to be lessened, nor the perils of non-combatants
+greatly minimized, or the war hastened by a decisive concentration
+of the Empire's forces on the battlefield, because of the "shock"
+it would give the emotionalists for black to fight against white.
+The common-sense view would show the advantage in permitting all subjects,
+including the coloured races of South Africa, to take part in the struggle
+and thus enable the authorities to place more men on the Continent,
+instead of sending drafts of Imperial troops to take the places of men
+at the outposts of the Empire, who are disqualified solely by their colour.
+
+Last New Year the author received a letter from a well-known British mother
+conveying her well-wishes besides the following moving particulars: --
+
+==
+We are almost beside ourselves with grief over this awful war.
+My young nephew has been home on a nine days' holiday at Christmas
+and he has now returned to the front. He has been awarded the D.S.O. for
+blowing up a bridge and so delaying the Germans in the march upon Paris.
+My cousin, Mrs. ----, has lost her two only sons -- both killed
+on the same day -- December 21. Besides other English friends and relatives
+fighting on the British side, I have also a young German cousin
+fighting on the other side. He has been so badly wounded in his throat
+that the vocal chords have received such an injury as to lead
+to the loss of his voice, and his career as a barrister is probably at an end.
+His poor mother is a widow and has only one other son, who is very delicate.
+==
+
+The writer has during the past six months come across
+instances of the loss of an only son, but all these agonies count as nothing
+to your colourphobic emotionalists, who must, at any price,
+be spared their "shock" regardless of the sufferings of others.
+Now ask these men what they would offer the Empire as a substitute
+for the coloured troops whose employment against the enemy
+gives them "the shock", and you will find that they have nothing to offer
+but their colour prejudice.
+
+What, for instance, could the leader-writer of the `East Rand Express'
+offer to the Empire in place of the generous help rendered to it
+by the Maharajah of Mysore, a lad of only eighteen years of age,
+who besides the services of his men gave the "trifle" of 330,000 Pounds,
+or in place of the present of the Nizam of Hyderabad,
+who contributed 396,000 Pounds towards the cost of the Hyderabad contingent;
+or the Maharajah Scindia of Gwalior, who handed to King George,
+as a Christmas present for the troops, a "tiny fleet"
+of forty-one motor-ambulances, four motor-cars for officers,
+five motor-lorries and repair wagons, and ten motor-cycles;
+or to come nearer home, and to deal with a more modest gift,
+the two hundred bullocks which Chief Molala Mankuroane, near Kimberley,
+gave General Botha to feed the Union troops?
+
+And when these liberal sacrifices are made by black men
+for the safety of the Empire, INCLUDING BRITISH SOUTH AFRICA,
+one is constrained to ask: Where are those loud-mouthed pen-men who,
+possessed of more pretension than foresight, wrote bombastic articles
+in the Transvaal Press before the war, threatening that "South Africa
+will cut the painter", and "paddle her own canoe", if men and women in Europe
+made themselves a nuisance by advocating ideas of justice
+in favour of the blacks? General Botha confessed last September
+that the South African Government tried to, but could not,
+borrow more than 2,000,000 Pounds; that the Imperial Government
+had come to the rescue and "helped the Union out of its embarrassment
+with a loan of 7,000,000 Pounds" of British money. When from his seat
+in the Union House of Assembly the Prime Minister announced this failure,
+why did not these secessionists come forward and display
+their "paddling" capacity? What has suddenly become of them?
+
+Is it not about time that the Empire recognized the unprofitableness,
+and even the ruinous policy, of these gentlemen, and that it ceased
+paying so much attention to those whose views are distorted
+by colour prejudice, whose object is to inflict unnecessary harm
+on the minds, bodies and spirits of loyal subjects of the Crown?
+One cannot help saying that if their career in this respect is not checked,
+their evil policy will land the Empire in a tangle of difficulties
+from which its rescue will require the highest statesmanship,
+much expenditure of treasure, if not also the shedding of blood.
+
+We have already stated that coloured men ARE serving the Empire at the front,
+but mainly in capacities that do not involve their recognition.
+We have recently read of the trial of two coloured men at Willowmore,
+in the Cape Province. They were said to have expressed the view
+that if coloured persons are not fit to fight for the Empire "in a war
+originating entirely among Europeans", they could not be considered fit
+to drive military wagons in the same war. Recruiting of military drivers
+was in progress at the time, so they were charged under martial law,
+and sentenced to nine months, with hard labour, for obstructing
+the recruiting work. In this case our difficulty is that, not being a lawyer,
+we are not able to draw the fine distinctions between legal phrases.
+But to our untutored lay mind it seems that if to give expression
+to such logic (whereby ten drivers may think twice before enlisting)
+is a crime under martial law, then it should be over ten times more criminal,
+under the same law, for a Government to refuse the offer of service,
+in the same war, of 18,000 warriors and thereby barring
+the enlistment of a possible 80,000.
+
+One of the best replies to colour sentimentalists which we have ever read
+on this subject is quoted from the `New York World' by the `Crisis'
+(Professor Du Bois's paper) of the same city. Says the `New York World': --
+
+==
+The German Ambassador has announced to the United States
+that he is "unconditionally opposed" to the use of coloured troops.
+This is a curious prejudice on the part of the diplomatic representative
+of a Government that is seeking to bring Turkey into the conflict
+and trying to persuade the Turk to instigate a "holy war" in Egypt and India
+against all non-Mohammedans.
+
+When Germany went to war with the British Empire she must have expected
+to fight the British Empire, and not merely a selected part of the population,
+the colour of whose skin happened to meet the approval of Berlin.
+
+It is natural enough that Great Britain should bring up her Indian troops,
+who, by the way, are as completely identified with the Aryan race
+as the Prussians. But no matter what their race may be, they are
+part of the Empire and part of Great Britain's regular military power.
+
+If Germany were at war with the United States her troops would have to meet
+our Negro Cavalry, than whom there are no better soldiers in uniform.
+
+German denunciation of the Indian troops is as futile as German denunciation
+of the Japanese as "yellow-bellies". It is too late to draw
+the colour line in war. That line was erased more than fifty years ago
+by Abraham Lincoln in that noble letter to the Springfield Convention:
+"And there will be some black men who can remember that,
+with silent tongue and clenched teeth and steady eye and well-poised bayonet,
+they have helped mankind on to this great consummation."
+==
+
+One South African writer to the Press had humanitarian reasons
+against the employment on the Continent of coloured troops from India.
+He said that 70,000 of them will be like a morning meal
+to the trained soldiers of Germany. This sympathetic view
+does not appear to be shared by German writers to the `Berliner Tageblatt',
+who have a high regard for the ferocity of "these Eastern devils".
+Apparently this is the only German view which is in harmony with
+the dispatches of Generals French and Joffre. His Majesty the King has since
+been to the front, where, in the presence of H.R.H. the Prince of Wales,
+Sir Pertabh Singh and other high Imperial officers, His Majesty personally
+decorated Havildar Darwan Sing Negi (an Indian) of the 39th Garhwal Rifles,
+with the Victoria Cross, and we need hardly add that V.C.'s are not awarded
+for fun.
+
+On the first Saturday in March, 1915, King George went to Aldershot and acted
+as starter in the big military race in which over 500 soldiers competed.
+Her Majesty the Queen was also present and graciously distributed the prizes.
+The race was won by Private Stewart, a black trooper from Jamaica.
+Even the Coldstream Guards have their coloured private in training
+for the front; but South Africans inform you that the heavens will fall
+if coloured troops are sent against the white Germans,
+who, from the beginning, never scrupled to send black warriors
+against the British.
+
+In regard to the award of the V.C. to Indians, many writers sent letters
+to the Press claiming that it was unprecedented for coloured warriors
+to wear the V.C. Whitaker and similar publications might have told them
+that a Native African sergeant of the West Indian Regiment wears
+the V.C. won on the Gambia River as long ago as 1892.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXII The South African Boers and the European War
+
+ I slept and had a vision; and what was it about? For lo and behold,
+ the sky was covered with a dark cloud on which was impressed
+ the number 15, and blood issued from this cloud. Thereupon I beheld
+ General Jacobus De la Rey returning to his Lichtenburg home
+ without a hat on his head, and he was closely followed by a carriage
+ full of flowers.
+ Niklaas Rensburg (the Boer Prophet).
+
+
+
+When the war broke out, there was no question, as far as
+one section of the whites were concerned, as to the duty of South Africans,
+but the majority of the unofficial Dutch and German sections
+were for remaining neutral and taking no part whatever in the struggle,
+either for or against the Crown. Among the Backvelders there appeared
+to have been some misunderstanding as to whether the South Africans
+were subjects or merely friends of the British Government.
+This bewilderment became more confusing during the interval
+between the outbreak of the war and the meeting of the Union Parliament.
+All kinds of ideas were expressed in the Press. The progressive section,
+mainly English, urged not only that South Africa had no alternative
+but to join the struggle, but they actually raised volunteer corps,
+which they proceeded to equip for service in Europe.
+
+The regular volunteer forces of the country went forward
+at an early period of the campaign, and took the German ports.
+In connexion with the mobilization of these forces a regrettable catastrophe
+must be recorded here. The long train in which the Kaffrarian Rifles,
+mostly English, were going from King Williamstown, via Capetown, to the front,
+was derailed near the Hex River, and the gallant Riflemen
+had eight killed and about a hundred wounded. They are sons
+of the old English settlers of the Eastern Province, and some are members
+of European families who are very popular with the Natives of the Cape,
+so that white and black alike felt deeply the result of the catastrophe.
+General Lukin, who was in charge of the advance forces, quickly went up
+the South-Western Coast, and forced the enemy to evacuate his ports
+and retreat inland towards Windhuk, the capital of the German Colony.
+General Beyers and the rest of the Defence Forces which were entrusted
+with the land operations also mobilized. The mobilization of this force
+took an extraordinarily long time, but it was satisfactorily explained that
+the marshalling of the citizen forces had to await the sanction of Parliament,
+which did not meet until September 10, 1914.
+
+A special session of the Union Parliament took place on this day,
+at which General Botha, the Union Premier, made a great speech.
+
+==
+In the course of his speech General Botha said that the Imperial Government
+had informed the Government that certain war operations
+in German South-West Africa were considered to be of strategic importance.
+The Imperial Government added that if the Union Government
+could undertake these operations they would be regarded as of great service
+to the Empire. The Empire to which South Africa belonged was involved
+in one of the greatest and cruelest wars which had ever befallen humanity.
+General Botha continued:
+
+The Government, after careful consideration, had decided to comply
+with the request in the interests of South Africa as well as of the Empire.
+(Cheers.) There could only be one reply to the Imperial Government's request.
+There were many in South Africa who did not recognize
+the tremendous seriousness and great possibilities of this war,
+and some thought that the storm did not threaten South Africa.
+This was a most narrow-minded conception. The Empire was at war;
+consequently South Africa was at war with the common enemy. (Cheers.)
+Only two paths were open -- the path of faithfulness to duty and honour
+-- (cheers) -- and the path of disloyalty and dishonour.
+A characteristic of the South African people was their high sense of honour,
+and they would maintain their reputation for honourable dealing untarnished.
+(Cheers.) To forget their loyalty to the Empire in this hour of trial
+would be scandalous and shameful, and would blacken South Africa
+in the eyes of the whole world. Of this South Africans were incapable. . . .
+
+With regard to the operations in South-West Africa, General Botha declared
+that there could be only one response to the Imperial Government's wishes
+unless they wished to contemplate a situation much more serious
+than that which now confronted them. The mode of operations
+could not be discussed in the House; it must be left
+to the commander of the Union forces.* The Government had summoned Parliament
+so that the representatives of the people should know exactly
+what had happened.
+
+--
+* General Beyers.
+--
+
+He wished them to understand the seriousness of the position,
+and to accept the responsibility which they would be called upon to accept.
+He placed himself with confidence in the hands of the House.
+General Botha detailed the German entry into Union territory at Nakob.
+This force was entrenched in kopjes in Union territory at the present time.
+He also described an affair at Schuitdrift in August. In addition to this,
+armed German forces were on the Union frontier in large numbers
+before there was any question of Union mobilization. The Premier said
+he quoted the foregoing to show the hostile attitude adopted by Germans
+in the neighbouring territory.
+
+He next referred to the White Paper on the diplomatic proceedings
+on the eve of war. These documents, he declared, showed that
+if ever Great Britain entered upon a war with clean hands it was this war.
+It was abundantly clear that Great Britain did not want war,
+and did her utmost to maintain peace; but war was forced upon them.
+Only when it became impossible, without loss of prestige and honour,
+to remain out of war did the Imperial Government take that supreme step.
+(Cheers.) By the Imperial Government's decision the whole Empire
+was involved in the war. (Cheers.) He emphasized that the war
+was not a war of aggrandisement or for the acquisition of land,
+but that it was undertaken out of a sense of duty and in discharge of
+solemn treaty obligations to defend other nations who were
+being trampled upon, and whose territory was being violated.
+He wished the House to realize that South Africa's future was being decided
+on the battlefields of Europe. . . .
+
+He appealed to South Africans to be tolerant with each other
+at the present time. No one could blame the Dutch South African
+who did not feel exactly as the British South African felt.
+It did not follow that Dutch South Africans were disloyal.
+There was no question of disloyalty. Although there might be many
+who in the past had been hostile towards the British flag,
+he could vouch for it that they would ten times rather be
+under the British flag than under the German flag.
+
+Great confidence had been reposed in the people of South Africa.
+They had received a constitution under which they could create
+a great nationality. Great Britain had given them this constitution,
+and ever since had regarded them as a free people and as a sister State.
+As an example of how the Imperial Government treated them,
+General Botha said that last July the Union Government wanted to raise
+a loan of 4,000,000 Pounds. They had raised only two millions.
+As things were it would be fatal to go into the money market just now,
+so the Imperial Government had now come to the assistance
+of the Union Government and had lent the Union 7,000,000 Pounds.
+(Loud cheers.) That was the spirit of co-operation and brotherhood
+which invariably animated the Imperial towards the Union Government.
+Notwithstanding its own difficulties, the Imperial Government had come forward
+and helped the Union Government out of its embarrassment. (Cheers.)
+
+In conclusion, the Premier said he felt it was the duty of South Africa
+to assist in relieving the sufferings and privations inflicted by the war.
+The Government therefore proposed to offer South African products
+like mealies and tobacco for the soldiers, and brandy for medical purposes.
+The farmers had already come forward with offers of products,
+and the Government would undertake their dispatch. General Botha indicated
+that the matter would be dealt with more fully later, and closed his speech
+with an eloquent expression of his belief that South Africa
+would acquit herself honourably in the eyes of the world.
+
+ Opposition Views
+
+Sir Thomas Smartt, Leader of the Opposition, said the message
+which the Prime Minister by his speech had given to the Home Country
+would send a thrill of pride through the Empire -- a thrill of pride
+at knowing that in the day of danger South Africa had
+been true to her trust and had remembered her obligations
+as well as her privileges of free citizenship. (Cheers.)
+
+Mr. Cresswell, the Labour Leader, urged that an expedition should be sent
+to fight side by side with the Allies on the Continent.
+
+General Hertzog said that General Botha's motion had come as a great surprise,
+and moved the adjournment. Other members supported General Hertzog,
+but the motion for the adjournment was rejected by 85 votes to 12.
+==
+
+After this short session of Parliament, enthusiastic meetings were held
+throughout the country. Those in the cities were mainly attended
+by citizens of English descent. Strong resolutions of confidence
+in the Union Government, and of approval in the proposed expedition
+to German South-West Africa, were passed at these meetings.
+At country meetings, however, the enthusiasm was in the opposite direction.
+There, the resolutions condemned the Government's military policy,
+and General Botha was roundly accused of not taking the country
+into his confidence. When the loyalists urged that the Parliamentary
+representatives of the critics, who, by the way, enjoy manhood suffrage,
+had authorized the Government policy, the growlers replied that their members
+did not consult their wishes.
+
+General Botha made it as plain as the Dutch language could put it
+that the Germans had been in camp near Nakob in their own territory.
+That they left their Nakob base on the German side of the Border and came over
+to the Union territory for water, and proceeded to entrench themselves
+amongst the ridges and kopjes which commanded the water-holes,
+and that in addition to the duty of the Union as part of the Empire,
+this military trespass on the part of the German forces further strengthened
+the case for an expedition into German South-West Africa.
+
+At these Backveld meetings the story about the Germans crossing the border
+was characterized as a bit of ministerial concoction.
+Clever geographical students, who mounted the platforms
+with maps in their hands, were reported to have demonstrated
+to the satisfaction of their auditors that the new map
+showing the German position was falsified by the railway surveyors
+and that Nakob Sued was clearly depicted in the old maps
+as laying in German territory. The Dutch reporters, however,
+do not state that the ridges and kopjes referred to by General Botha
+were also stated to be on the German side of the line
+according to the old maps. So that the position was like this:
+at first the Boers would not sanction an expedition against the Germans
+until the latter invaded Union territory, and when the Government proved
+by means of police reports that the Germans had actually crossed
+into Union territory the critics accused the Ministry of telling untruths.
+This, then, must have been the cause of so much delay in mobilization,
+and which Ministers had to contend against. It must be added, however,
+that most of the meetings mentioned took place in Transvaal.
+At the Cape the discontent was almost insignificant, whilst as much of it
+as had existed promptly ranged itself on the side of the Government
+when the "Free" State and Transvaal hoisted the standard of rebellion.
+
+Matters went ahead somewhat after the meeting of Parliament.
+But a rude awakening awaited the people of the Union, if not
+the peoples of the Empire, when they got up one September morning and read
+the following correspondence relating to the resignation of General Beyers,
+the head of the Union forces: --
+
+==
+ GENERAL BEYER'S EXTRAORDINARY ATTITUDE
+
+ Ex-General Beyers to General Smuts
+ Pretoria,
+ September 15, 1914.
+
+Honourable Sir, -- You are aware that during the month of August last
+I told you and General Botha by word of mouth that I discovered
+the sending of commandos to German South-West Africa for the purpose
+of conquering that territory. I was on the point then of resigning,
+but hearing that Parliament would be called together I decided to wait,
+hoping a way out of the difficulty would be found. To my utmost surprise,
+however, Parliament confirmed the resolution adopted by the Government --
+namely, to conquer German South-West Africa, without any provocation
+to the Union from the Germans. The Government must be aware
+that by far the great majority of the Dutch-speaking people of the Union
+decidedly disapproved of our crossing the frontier,
+and that two conferences of commandants recently held at Pretoria
+bore eloquent testimony to this. I challenge the Government
+by an appeal to the people, without making use of compulsion,
+to obtain another result.
+
+It is said that Great Britain has taken part in the war
+for the sake of right and justice, in order to protect
+the independence of smaller nations, and to comply with treaties,
+but the fact that three Ministers of the British Cabinet have resigned
+shows that even in England there is a strong minority
+who cannot be convinced of the righteousness of a war with Germany.
+History teaches us, after all, that whenever it suits her interests,
+Great Britain is always ready to protect smaller nations,
+but unhappily history also relates instances in which the sacred rights
+of independence of smaller nations have been violated and treaties disregarded
+by that same Empire. In proof of this I have only to indicate
+how the independence of the South African Republic and Orange Free State
+was violated, and of what weight the Sand River Convention was.
+It is said that war is being waged against the barbarity of the Germans.
+I have forgiven, but not forgotten, all the barbarities
+perpetrated in this our own country during the South African war.
+With very few exceptions, all farms, not to mention many towns,
+were so many Louvains, of which we now hear so much.
+
+At this critical moment it is made known in Parliament that our Government
+was granted a loan of 7,000,000 Pounds by the British Government.
+This is very significant. Any one can have his own thoughts about this.
+In the absence of legitimate grounds for the annexation policy
+of the Government you endeavour to intimidate the public by declaring
+that the Government are in possession of information showing that Germany
+has decided, should the opportunity arise, to annex South Africa.
+My humble opinion is that this will be hastened if from our side
+we invade German territory without having been provoked thereto
+by the Germans, and as to the alleged German annexation scheme,
+this is nothing more than the result of the usual native suspicion
+attending such matters. The allegations made in Parliament
+-- namely, that the Germans have already violated our frontier --
+are ungrounded. See the report of the Information Bureau, corroborated by
+Colonel Maritz* and his officers, who are on and near the frontier.
+Apparently the Government longed for some transgression by
+the Germans of German South-West Africa, and have been disappointed in this,
+for so far not a single German soldier has crossed our frontier,
+as you know very well. The report is perfectly correct regarding
+an involuntary transgression of the frontier some time ago
+and the tendering of an apology for so doing.
+
+--
+* Maritz was at this time on active service, nominally as a Colonel
+ at the head of a British regiment, but in reality as a General
+ in the German Army, using British arms, stores, railways, and telegrams
+ in the service of the Kaiser.
+--
+
+Whatever may happen in South Africa, the war will be decided in Europe
+in any case, so if Germany triumphs and should decide to attack us,
+then even Great Britain would be unable to help us. We shall at least
+have a sacred and clean cause in defending our country to the utmost
+provided we stay inside our borders. Meanwhile, in case we are attacked,
+our people will arise as one man in defence for its rights.
+Besides, I am convinced that a commando of about 8,000 Germans,
+as at present stationed in German territory, will not be so foolish
+as to attempt an attack on our country. I have always said,
+and represented at Booysens recently, that if the Union is attacked
+Boer and Briton will defend this country side by side,
+and in such case I will deem it a great honour and privilege
+to take up my place at the head of our forces in defence of my fatherland.
+I accepted the post of Commander-General under our Defence Act,
+the first section of which provides that our forces can only be employed
+in defence of the Union. My humble opinion is that this section cannot
+thus be changed by informal resolution of Parliament, such being contrary
+to Parliamentary procedure. So the Defence Act does not allow us
+to go and fight the enemy over the frontier, and to light the fire
+in this way. But should the enemy penetrate into our country
+it will be our duty to drive him back and pursue him in his own territory.
+
+In his speech General Botha speaks about the help we had
+from the Belgians and French after the South African War.
+That assistance is still appreciated by us and by all our people,
+but we must not forget that the Germans also were not behindhand,
+and have always been well-disposed towards us. So why should we
+deliberately make enemies of them? As circumstances are,
+and seeing no way of taking the offensive, and as I sincerely love
+my country and people, I must strongly protest against
+the sending of Union citizen forces over the frontier. Who can foretell
+when the fire the Government has decided to light shall end?
+For the reasons enumerated above I feel constrained to resign
+my post as Commandant-General, as also my commissioned rank.
+For me this is the only way of faith, duty, and honour towards our people,
+of which mention was made by General Botha. I have always tried to do my duty
+to my best convictions, and it sorely grieves me that it must end in this way.
+
+ I remain, etc.,
+ (Signed) C. L. Beyers.
+==
+
+==
+ General Smuts to Ex-General Beyers
+ Pretoria,
+ September 19, 1914.
+
+Sir, -- It was with regret that I received your letter of the 15th inst.
+tendering your resignation as Commandant-General of the Union Defence Forces
+and as officer of the Union. The circumstances under which
+the resignation took place and the terms in which you endeavour
+to justify your action tend to leave a very painful impression.
+It is true that it was known to me that you entered objections
+against war operations in German South-West Africa, but I never received
+the impression that you would resign. On the contrary,
+all information in the possession of the Government was communicated to you,
+all plans were discussed with you, and your advice was followed
+to a large extent. The principal officers were appointed
+on your recommendation and with your concurrence, and the plan of operations
+which is now being followed is largely the one recommended by yourself
+at a conference of officers. My last instructions to you
+before I left for Capetown to attend the special session of Parliament were
+that in my absence you should visit certain regiments on the German border,
+and it was well understood between us that immediately the war operations
+were somewhat further advanced and co-operation among the various divisions
+would be practicable you should yourself undertake the chief command
+in German South West Africa. The attitude of the Government after this
+remained unchanged, and was approved by Parliament after full discussion.
+
+One would have expected that that approval would make the matter
+easier for you, but now I find that you anticipated that Parliament
+would disapprove the policy of the Government, and that
+your disappointment in this became the reason for your unexpected action.
+In order to make your motives clearer the reasons for your resignation
+were explained in a long political argument which was immediately
+communicated to the Press and came into the hands of the Government
+long after publication. I need not tell you that all these circumstances
+in connexion with your resignation have made a most unpleasant impression
+on my colleagues and myself.
+
+But this unpleasant impression has even been aggravated by the allegations
+contained in your letter. Your bitter attack on Great Britain
+is not only baseless, but is the more unjustifiable coming as it does,
+in the midst of a great war, from the Commandant-General
+of one of the British Dominions. Your reference to barbarous acts
+during the South African War cannot justify the criminal
+devastation of Belgium, and can only be calculated to sow hatred and division
+among the people of South Africa. You forget to mention
+that since the South African War the British people gave South Africa
+her entire freedom, under a Constitution which makes it possible for us
+to realize our national ideals along our own lines, and which, for instance,
+allows you to write with impunity a letter for which you would,
+without doubt, be liable in the German Empire to the extreme penalty.
+As regards your other statements, they have been answered and disposed of
+in Parliament. From these discussions it will be apparent that neither
+the British Empire nor South Africa was the aggressor in this struggle.
+War was, in the first instance, declared by Austria-Hungary,
+and thereafter by Germany, under circumstances in which the British Government
+employed its utmost powers to maintain the peace of Europe and to safeguard
+the neutrality of Belgium. So far as we ourselves are concerned,
+our coast is threatened, our mail-boats are arrested, and our borders
+are invaded by the enemy. This latter does not occur, as you say,
+in an involuntary manner and with an apology, which latter, at any rate,
+was never tendered to our Government. Under these circumstances
+it is absurd to speak about aggressive action on the part of the Union,
+seeing that together with the British Empire we have been drawn,
+against our wish and will and entirely in self-defence, into this war.
+As regards your insinuation concerning the loan of seven million pounds
+which the British Government was kind enough to grant us,
+and for which the public of the Union, as evidenced recently
+in Parliament, are most grateful it is of such a despicable nature
+that there is no necessity to make any comment thereon.
+It only shows to what extent your mind has been obscured by political bias.
+You speak about duty and honour. My conviction is that
+the people of South Africa will in these dark days, when the Government,
+as well as the people of South Africa, are put to the supreme test,
+have a clearer conception of duty and honour than is to be deduced
+from your letter and action. For the Dutch-speaking section in particular
+I cannot conceive anything more fatal and humiliating
+than a policy of lip-loyalty in fair weather and of a policy
+of neutrality and pro-German sentiment in days of storm and stress.
+It may be that our peculiar internal circumstances and our backward condition
+after the great war will place a limit on what we can do,
+but nevertheless I am convinced the people will support the Government
+in carrying out the mandate of Parliament, and in this manner, which is
+the only legitimate one, fulfil their duty to South Africa and to the Empire
+and maintain their dearly won honour unblemished for the future.
+Your resignation is hereby accepted.
+
+ (Signed) J. C. Smuts.
+==
+
+When the war broke out, the Natives of South Africa, who, in many instances,
+are much better in touch with the backvelders than the Dutch editors
+who reside in towns, fully expected a general revolt among
+the unofficial section of the Boers. But when Holland declared her neutrality
+the Natives began to breathe more freely, as that declaration
+led them to believe that the Boers would not now rise.
+When General Beyers's resignation was published, however,
+the Natives again felt that the outbreak was only a matter of days.
+In the country, especially the Orange "Free" State, our people
+are helplessly mixed up with the Boers, and it can readily be understood
+that they felt somewhat insecure, notwithstanding the Government's assurances.
+One native farmer sent the following letter to the author in England: --
+
+==
+I am glad to find that your newspaper, the `Tsala ea Batho', is as up to date
+in your absence as when you are at home. It was the first to publish
+General Botha's statement to the Natives (about the war), and again the first
+to comment on the treacherous resignation of General Beyers.
+The resignation was handed to the Government on the 15th,
+and the `Tsala' commented on it on September 19, before the daily papers.
+I think that the daily papers were still trying to reconcile
+their previous articles about the loyalty of ALL WHITE SOUTH AFRICANS with
+the resignation. The fact that General De la Rey was shot while travelling
+in the same car with General Beyers on the same day that Beyers resigned
+is cited as a further proof of the unswerving loyalty of all the Boers.
+One cannot understand how these white folks reason;
+but the attitude of the Imperial Government and of the Union Government
+is incomprehensible. Fancy telling the loyal Rhodesians to come and fight
+under a man like that! General Botha ought himself to go to the front,
+if a civil war is to be averted, leaving General Smuts
+to watch the next Dutch move and nip it in the bud.
+==
+
+One of the tragedies of the first few weeks of the war
+was the death of Senator General De la Rey of Lichtenburg,
+who was accidentally shot by a "Rand" policeman on the night of September 15,
+while travelling with General Beyers in a motor-car.
+
+His funeral took place on September 20, at Lichtenburg, and was attended
+by a large number of Boers, including the Prime Minister, General Smuts,
+General De Wet, and other Dutch generals. Mourners and their friends
+came to Lichtenburg by the ordinary train and by the special train
+which conveyed the body from the Rand. They came in all manner of vehicles
+from the surrounding farms, and, for the first time,
+the Dutch Reformed Church at Lichtenburg opened its doors to the blacks,
+who came to pay their last respects to, and view the body of, a popular Boer,
+known among the Bechuana as Koos La Rey. A commando of 400 Burghers
+came from Wolmaranstad on horseback. English merchants
+from Johannesburg were also present, including Senator Tucker,
+representing the Unionist party. The body was draped WITH TWO FLAGS --
+the flag of the old Transvaal Republic and of the old "Free" State Republic.
+Besides the officiating clergy, three Dutch statesmen also spoke
+at the funeral service, viz., Generals Botha, Beyers, and De Wet.
+
+The loyalists returned from the funeral service to their path of duty,
+while the sullen section of the Dutch remained at Lichtenburg
+to fan the embers of rebellion -- though it must be added
+that the operations at Lichtenburg were more or less in camera.
+
+At 8 o'clock on Monday morning, September 21, the day after
+General De la Rey's funeral, General Kemp, standing on
+General Beyer's motor-car, presided over a gathering of
+from 800 to 1,000 Boers. The Rev. Mr. Broeckhuizen opened the meeting
+with a short prayer. A verbatim report of this prayer appeared
+in the Dutch papers as follows: "Lord, we thank Thee
+that Thou rulest our nation through these dark days and stormy circumstances.
+We have buried our hero and have gathered to speak in his spirit.
+We thank Thee for such a man as General Beyers, beside whom
+his friend was shot. We thank Thee also for General De Wet and General Kemp,
+and that Thou hast given us such men to lead us. We stand for our people.
+Help us, O Lord, towards the salvation of our people and the salvation
+of our fatherland. Amen."
+
+The three personalities mentioned in this prayer became active participants
+in the rebellion, and so did the reverend gentleman who prayed.
+In fact the latter sent a letter to his congregation three months later
+from the Johannesburg prison, resigning his pastorate at Pretoria.
+
+In opening the meeting the chairman disclaimed all ideas about a revolution.
+They had come to consider calmly a decision by the Union Parliament
+to invade German South West Africa; but while he was speaking,
+some one produced a flag of the old Free State Republic,
+and General Kemp rebuked the person for this puerile action.
+Whether the rebuke was due to the fact that the Boers
+had not yet then made up their minds to rebel, or because Maritz's plans
+with the Germans on the south-western frontier had not yet matured,
+we do not know. Anyway, General Beyers, in supporting the chairman,
+added that his cause was a clean one and there was no necessity
+for nonsensical flag-waving. They were there, he said,
+to pass a calm resolution and forward it to the Government.
+
+One Mr. van der Hoff inquired why General Beyers resigned.
+The chairman replied that the reasons were clearly set forth
+in the letter of resignation. At the request of the gathering
+the Rev. Mr. Broeckhuizen read the letter aloud, the reading throughout
+being punctuated with cheers. It does not appear, however,
+that General Smuts's reply was also read, presumably because
+there was no call for it.
+
+General Liebenberg wanted to know what the situation was that morning;
+then he proceeded to say: "The enemy is already inside our borders.
+Some one had disturbed a beehive and the result is what
+might have been expected. We have three generals before us"
+-- (apparently in addition to the speaker) -- "yesterday we buried
+the dearest of them all. I want a reply from Generals De Wet and Beyers.
+We are British subjects, and it is not improbable that the Government
+might instruct their officers to call us out to-morrow."
+
+General De Wet, the man of the hour, then stepped on to the motor-car
+to speak, prefacing his speech with the remark that he could not help
+remembering his brother buried the previous day. Then, in beginning
+his speech, he said: "Burghers and Brethren, -- If there be any one present
+who is not a brother, let him walk away. Since nobody is leaving
+I conclude that we are brothers all. If there be any stepbrothers here,
+they are all welcome, but a traitor always reminds me of Judas."
+Proceeding, he said that "the Germans had been made enemies by the Government.
+The fire was already burning, so let us adopt a calm resolution,
+expressing the will of the people. Not that I wish to praise my people,
+but we are not going to soil our hands, no not even to show our loyalty.
+Let us be cool, remembering that we have many sympathizers
+in South Africa and elsewhere. If any one wished to gnash his teeth
+and hath no teeth his best course is to consult the dentist for a set.
+Better an hour too late than a minute too early. We do not all reside
+near a telephone or a telegraph office and cannot be conversant with
+what goes on at the frontier. Even when Generals Beyers and Kemp are asleep,
+keep a watch and remain cool. I believe there are numerous Christians
+among us. When it is time the whole of the people will rise up like to-day."
+
+Some one wished to know if it was possible to recall the forces
+already at the border. That, said the chairman, would be decided later.
+
+The Rev. Mr. de Klerk said General Beyers's letter translated
+the real feeling of the people. Even though Generals Beyers, Kemp, and De Wet
+had resigned, they still remained Generals. They honoured other officers
+who had the pluck to resign with General Beyers (whose names the Government
+had not published but had suppressed), including Lieutenant Kol Bezuidenhout.
+One Field Cornet to the speaker's knowledge had resigned,
+but his name had not been announced." The reverend gentleman
+then betrayed his flagrant ignorance of South African history when he said:
+"Our people were never known to have robbed any one of land.
+All (?) their land had been acquired by means of purchase or barter.
+The history of South Africa was a spotless one." After stating
+that the Afrikander must express his disdain with respect to
+the Jameson raid and the unrighteous annexation of the Republics,
+he concluded: "Blood is flowing in Belgium, but is it
+in the interest of South Africa to draw the sword on that account?
+It may be in the interests of the Empire; but the hem of my coat
+is nearer to my body than the coat itself. The sending of troops
+to Damaraland is nothing but an attack upon a people that had done us no harm.
+I believe it to be our duty to sit still."
+
+Rev. Mr. Van der Merwe, who said he spoke on behalf of the young people,
+said all their officers should resign like General Beyers and others.
+He hoped that any officers present would resign before noon that day.
+
+General De Wet pointed out that the appointment of any Jack, Tom, and Harry
+might follow such wholesale resignations, for although he lived in
+the "Free" State he held a share in the affairs of that (Transvaal) Province.
+
+General Beyers: "I consider my own resignation a sufficient protest.
+The other representatives of our people should remain at their posts."
+(Cries of "No, no, no.")
+
+Rev. Mr. Broeckhuizen implored the people to stand by
+their Commander-in-Chief, General Beyers, as he himself was going to do,
+no matter how barking lap-dogs raved. Despite any letters
+that some fellows might write to the papers to the contrary,
+the world must know that the people stood behind General Beyers.
+Although he was still going to suffer -- (as he truly did) --
+they should support him till everything was in order.
+
+As a parting shot General Liebenberg said: When peace was declared in 1902
+he had such implicit faith in the late General De la Rey
+that he (General Liebenberg) remained quietly on his farm and was always
+obedient to him. He expected these troubles since 1912.
+And now it had become impossible to keep quiet much longer.
+According to the latest accounts the Germans were 150 miles
+across the boundary. (A voice: "We will beat them back.")
+
+The speaker: "The same thing was said when they were in Belgium,
+but they are now marching on Paris."
+
+A revised resolution was then put: it declared the reported
+action of the Government to be "in conflict with --
+
+"1. The wishes of the overwhelming majority of the population of the Union."
+(An extravagant assertion considering that there are six million
+people in the Union and that the meeting only represented
+a section of the half a million Boers.)
+
+A reply was demanded from the Government before September 30, so as to get it
+in time for consideration at a subsequent people's gathering.
+
+When this was carried, General De Wet said in parting: "If there be still
+a few lap-dogs here, friends, don't take any notice of them.
+They have now no teeth. We are now more united than when
+the difference between the Government and `the People' first began."
+(Obviously General De Wet was here alluding to the rupture
+between the Government and General Hertzog in 1912, when,
+to the disgust of himself and his followers, the latter was forced
+to leave the Ministry. One reason why the Natives' Land Act was passed
+was in order to "dish the Whigs" and placate the Hertzogites.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On September 24, General De Wet held another meeting at Kopjes,
+Orange "Free" State. The Resident Magistrate of Parys
+attended the meeting and read a telegram from the Government
+announcing that no Burghers would be forced to proceed to the front;
+that only volunteers would be asked to serve. This wire, however,
+did not satisfy the Burghers. They contended that the expedition
+to German South-West Africa was a policy of setting the prairie on fire,
+and it did not matter who the originator of the fire was,
+for when it was raging the Burghers would be called upon to quench it.
+
+After the meeting had passed votes of condolences to Mrs. De la Rey,
+General De Wet said he was opposed to a war against a nation
+that had done him no harm. Whether or not the Government used volunteers,
+"who," he asked, "would be responsible for the harm that is likely to follow
+a provocation of the Germans? This expedition is to coax them
+into our country. You may go if you like," added General De Wet emphatically,
+"but I won't."
+
+Now, the Boers in certain respects are not unlike the Natives; thus when
+a grey-haired Native, or a Boer, addresses a crowd of his compatriots
+and says to them, "You may do such and such a thing if you like,
+but I will not," it is understood by them to be a roundabout way of saying,
+"Take my advice and don't." And so when such a declaration is made
+by a man as influential amongst his people as General De Wet,
+it is not surprising that the crowd shouted in response, "We won't go.
+Let the authorities adjust the result of their own bungling.
+Ninety-two men in Parliament voted for the expedition
+without consulting their constituents, and we are not satisfied."
+Thereupon some one shouted, "Where is Mr. Van der Merwe?"
+Others said, "Call him; perhaps he is in the crowd."
+So the stentorian voice of a Boer equipped with a powerful pair of lungs
+called out, "Van der Merwe! Van der Merwe!! Van der Merwe!!!"
+and then announced "He is not here."
+
+Mr. Van der Merwe is the Parliamentary representative of the district
+where the meeting was held.
+
+In conclusion, General De Wet said: "Here is the Magistrate
+and there is the prison. If I have said anything that I cannot substantiate
+I will willingly surrender myself into their hands."
+
+The motion against the expedition was then put, 512 Boers voting for it
+and only two against it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Es ist sehr weit nach Tipperary,
+ Es ist sehr weit zu gehn;
+ Es ist sehr weit nach Tipperary,
+ Meinen liebsten Schatz zu sehn.
+ Leb' wohl, Piccadilly,
+ Adieu, Leicester Square,
+ Es ist sehr sehr weit nach Tipperary
+ Doch dahin sehnt mich sehr.
+ "Tipperary" in German.
+
+On September 29, General Botha addressed his constituents
+at a Transvaal station called Bank, on the Kimberley-Johannesburg line.
+A thousand Burghers met the Premier as he left his special travelling saloon
+for the place of the meeting and gave him a rousing reception.
+Before General Botha spoke, he permitted his opponents
+(to the evident displeasure of the majority of the audience)
+to unbosom their alleged grievance. Appreciative addresses were read
+expressing confidence in the Government and approval of the expedition
+to German South West Africa. Addresses opposing the expedition
+were also read; they included one that was said to be a petition
+from Boer women, strongly objecting to the expedition.
+The reading of these addresses took up much time and must have tried
+the patience of the Premier's admirers who were anxious to hear
+the speech of the day. They called on the readers to "Shut up!"
+but the Prime Minister urged them to give both sides a chance.
+
+After these lengthy preliminaries, the Prime Minister amid cheers delivered
+a speech justifying the projected invasion of German South West Africa,
+in obedience to the desire of the Imperial Government. He reminded the Boers
+that the expedition had been voted for by a Parliament elected by them.
+He added that he personally would always lead his people
+along the white man's path of honour and Christianity,
+and that he would never choose the coward's way of disloyalty and treason.
+The whole of the speech might be summed up in a few lines
+taken out of General Smuts's reply to General Beyers: "I cannot conceive
+anything more fatal and humiliating than a policy of lip-loyalty
+in fair weather and a policy of neutrality and pro-German sentiment
+in days of storm and stress."
+
+The Prime Minister further asked what reliance could be placed
+on Germany who ravaged Belgium. He pointed out that when
+the late President Kruger arrived in Europe -- a fugitive from his country --
+the French and the Belgians welcomed him, while the Kaiser
+would not even see the old man.
+
+General Botha made some remarks at this meeting which displeased
+the coloured loyalists. Without wishing to defend the Premier, the remark,
+in our opinion, was justifiable. It was more of a recruiting speech
+than a declaration of policy, and naturally he had to appeal
+to the sentiments of his hearers. Nothing goes down so easily
+with the northern Boers as colour prejudice, and in the circumstances
+General Botha was justified in denouncing the neutrality party, who advocated
+a policy of "sitting with folded arms until German South West Africa
+fell into their lap like a ripe apple. The Imperial Government,"
+he went on to say, "could send a force of 50,000 coolies*
+to capture the German Colony, and tell them that, after the war,
+they could make a coolie settlement there. Would this have been
+in the interest of the country? (Cries of No, no.) But instead,
+the Imperial Government had asked the Union to do the work,
+and I am proud to have been asked."
+
+--
+* A contemptuous term for British Indians.
+--
+
+Nor could Englishmen, having regard to the circumstances,
+very well take umbrage at another remark of General Botha's
+in the same speech. It was, we believe, a clever appeal
+to the feelings of Backvelders when he said: "Can you rely
+on the Kaiser's promises? In the South African war, WHEN I GAVE THE ENGLISH
+A SOUND THRASHING at Colenso, what did the Kaiser do?
+He sent a telegram to Lord Roberts advising him how to stab me in the back,
+by marching across the `Free' State."
+
+The danger that would follow a German victory in South Africa
+was so lucidly put by the Premier that many waverers were at once imbued
+with the patriotic spirit. Carping criticism, it is true, continued,
+but many wobbling defence officers resolved to follow General Botha
+to the uttermost. The opposition, on the other hand, told the Boers
+that the official element among them who supported the Government did so,
+not through patriotic motives, but for the sake of their jobs.
+The most credulous section among the Boers seemed to believe that the Germans
+would never invade British South Africa. This section at first was baffled
+by the contention of the neutrality party that the Government was maligning
+the Germans; but they were soon disillusioned.
+
+On September 26, Colonel Grant took possession of some water-holes
+on the line of advance. This step was essential to
+the success of the proposed expedition. The enemy retired,
+but only to mount their artillery on some ridges overlooking
+the camp of the advancing British forces. From those positions
+the enemy shelled our troops till their ammunition was exhausted.
+The British casualties amounted to sixteen killed, forty-three wounded,
+eight missing, and thirty-five captured. These figures
+would be insignificant on the battlefields of Europe,
+but to lose so many men in only one attack in South Africa
+was almost appalling. This reverse having brought home to the waverers
+the danger of procrastination, a fresh spirit set in
+among the passive loyalists. But the opposition was busy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the same day that General Botha carried the day at Banks,
+Commandant Vermaas addressed over 100 Burghers at a Transvaal farm
+called Korannafontein. There were present such notable Dutchmen
+as Mr. Sarel Du Plessis and Mr. Cornelius Grobbelaar.
+They were so provocative that Commandant Vermaas asked the meeting
+with some warmth: "Who do you believe about the occurrences
+at the German frontier, the Government who receive all the police reports,
+or General Beyers? All I can say is that you will weep
+when General Botha gets shot, for I know what he did for this country.
+And if you disbelieve the Government, what will be the use of telling you
+that the Germans were the aggressors?"
+
+Sensible speeches were delivered by Mr. D. Louw and others.
+This speaker deeply regretted the resignation of General Beyers, and said:
+"He had charge of all the Defence secrets and it cost us much money
+to let him travel about this country and abroad; and at a critical moment,
+when we are face to face with trouble he tenders his resignation."
+The meeting, however, insisted that the Union Government were the delinquents.
+The Germans, they said, had crossed the border accidentally,
+for which little relapse they had tendered a suitable apology. Some speakers
+said that the Ministry's ambitious annexation policy was actuated
+by a desire for posthumous fame regardless of the blood of Afrikanders,
+which was more precious than the deserts of German South West Africa.
+The issue would be decided on the battlefields of Europe,
+so why the premature invasion, and why the forgery of the railway map
+in respect to the position of Nakob where the German forces are?
+"Supposing the Germans win in Europe," asked one of the speakers,
+"what would be our position after the raid? We prefer to follow
+General Beyers."
+
+While Commandant Vermaas, the Government emissary, was still speaking,
+some one shouted: "Three cheers for General Hertzog!"
+These were vociferously accorded.
+
+At this stage one of the young bloods came out with a brand-new defence
+of Germany's desertion of the Boer cause during the South African war.
+Germany, he said, had a ten years' treaty with England and could not go to war
+against the British, who were there again too smart for us.
+When Queen Wilhelmina was in Germany the Kaiser said to her:
+"Tell the Transvaal not to declare war against England just yet ----."
+
+Commandt. Vermaas: "And you call it friendship. Why promise us help
+when they had a treaty with England?"
+
+After some dialogues, in which the Bible was quoted on both sides,
+for and against the expedition, a resolution was adopted, by eighty-nine votes
+to twenty-three, against the invasion of German South-West Africa.
+
+An aged Dutch gentleman remarked that the late Republican Government
+made a mistake in first sending an ultimatum to the English,
+and in attacking German South-West Africa the Union Government was repeating
+the same mistake.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Oom: Who set this ancient quarrel new abroach?
+ Speak, nephew, were you by when it began?
+
+ Neef: Here were the servants of your adversary
+ And yours, close fighting ere I did approach:
+ I drew to part them; in the instant came
+ The fiery Tielman, who swung about his head
+ And breathed defiance in my ears . . .
+ While we were interchanging, thrusts and blows
+ Came more and more, and fought on part and part
+ Till the Judge came, who parted either part.
+
+According to `Het Westen' of Potchefstroom, over a thousand Burghers
+packed the Lyric Hall on Friday, October 2, 1914, to hear General De Wet
+speak against the invasion of German South West Africa.
+Apparently this was an attempt by the Backvelders to challenge
+the enthusiasm of the townspeople in the various centres who had been passing
+loyal resolutions in favour of the expedition and of confidence in
+the Union Government. Not all the supporters of the Backvelders' cause
+could gain admission to the hall, which was packed almost to suffocation
+before the hour of meeting. Several prominent "Free" Staters
+were on the platform with General De Wet. A rabble of roughs
+had been brought from the outskirts of the town by opponents of the cause,
+so the paper says, to interrupt the proceedings and to create disturbance.
+They waited outside and were "responsible for a state of things
+which is wholly unknown in the history of South Africa."
+
+Admission was by ticket, and everything was in order up to eight o'clock,
+when Commandant Erasmus took the chair. General De Wet
+was carried shoulder high into the meeting amid thunderous applause.
+The local police force had had timely notification that the meeting
+was arranged for, but the paper complains that only seven of them
+were to be seen about the building, and these seven apparently were seized
+with a blindness of a mysterious kind, for they saw nothing of the disturbance
+that occurred during the meeting, except when it was thought necessary
+to arrest an Afrikander.
+
+The chairman having opened the meeting, Professor Duvenage welcomed
+the visitors from near and far, including the ladies in the gallery.
+The professor, alluding to the English meeting which took place
+in the town hall a few evenings before, observed it was not interrupted
+by any one. This meeting, he said further, had been called
+to discuss the South African aspect of the war. It had nothing to say
+about the operations in Europe; all that they wished to protest against
+was the invasion of German South West Africa. Hereupon dead cats, brickbats,
+stale eggs and other things were hurled into the hall through the windows,
+occasioning an indescribable commotion. Angry Afrikanders
+jumped out of the windows and seized some of the offenders and administered
+such a sound thrashing to one of them that he only escaped serious bodily harm
+by lying down.
+
+The dead cats, bricks, etc., were picked up and thrown out of the window;
+but, as the interrupted meeting was about to proceed,
+some one disconnected the electric cable and plunged the building in darkness.
+The confusion became confounding. Matches were struck
+in several parts of the hall, and it was with considerable difficulty
+Generals De Wet and Kemp were heard suggesting an adjournment of the meeting
+to the Dutch Reformed Church Square. The crowd passed out of the Lyric Hall
+and marched in the direction of the Dutch Reformed Church Square,
+closely followed by the hooting band of interrupters.
+
+A handy carriage procured from somewhere served as a platform and,
+under the light of Africa's silvery moon, 1,500 Burghers
+crowded round the improvised platform while the turbulent interrupters
+screeched some English national airs. General Kemp, who warned the crowd
+against the danger of being struck by missiles, asked them to squat
+on the ground, so as to be better able to hear General De Wet.
+The guerrilla General, having stepped upon the carriage-platform,
+said to the audience: "Yes, sit down flat so that those disturbance-makers
+may hurl their missiles at me on top of the carriage. (Laughter.)
+Some of those who came to interrupt peaceful Afrikanders
+may yet become children of death before the evening is far gone.
+(Boos from the opponents.)
+
+"That may be European or Downing Street civilization, but it is unknown
+in South Africa; but let us hope that folks with such upbringing will yet live
+to change their manners. Those who are standing against the wire fence
+are asked to come nearer and not be afraid, if not, then let them go
+to their homes, wherever those may be, and leave us alone.
+I promise you that within a year this disrespectful crowd
+will have been taught to respect the rights of Afrikanders.
+That I promise you, and the Afrikander will do it with his own hands.
+(Loud cheers.) If I am wrong in this, there is your jail,
+your police and the Magistrate, and let them punish me if I am guilty."
+(Voices: "They dare not touch you!").
+
+Proceeding the General went on to refer to an article of the `Volkstem',
+the Ministerial organ of Pretoria. The `Volkstem', he said
+"had for long been crowing King, King, but the sun will rise
+when the cock will cease to crow. (Laughter.) The Government
+has now issued regulations under which we may not speak, but, friends,
+bear in mind, and the `Volkstem' must know, that we have not yet a Popedom,
+and we are not yet in Russia, for you will search in vain for the truth
+in a newspaper." -- (We would very much like to know the opinion hereanent
+of the Backveld newspaper organ in which we read of this meeting. -- Author.)
+-- "Friends, a newspaper can do a lot of harm, and much of the condition
+in which our country finds itself may be attributed to the `Volkstem' --
+that Government adulator (`de regeering se vetsmeer' document).
+
+"Whereas our people could freely express their views,
+the Government now wants to prevent an expression of their bitter feelings
+over the land-robbery now engaged in at German South West."
+(At this stage, an egg thrown from the back of the crowd
+fell uncomfortably near the speaker and aroused some angry remarks
+in the crowd, but the speaker continuing said: "Never mind, friends,
+I have another coat. The Government talk of calling out volunteers only;
+but many children were surreptitiously torn away from their mothers,
+and many were taken against the will of the parents. I am ready
+to bow under the law, but not when it is broken by the Government.
+Our law authorizes us to defend our borders, not to wage war outside."
+After some more quarrels, interruptions, blows and fights
+in several parts of the crowd, the police arrested a Burgher.
+But some men who surrounded the police rescued the prisoner and, it was said,
+assaulted a policeman.)
+
+Proceeding with his speech after the interruption, General De Wet said:
+"We can never thank the English sufficiently for their gift of self-government
+under a free constitution approved by His Majesty the King;
+but it was not implied thereby that we should go and commit a theft."
+More interruptions, during which it became impossible for the speaker
+to continue. In the turmoil cheers were given for General De Wet,
+who, resuming at length, remarked: "You fellows, along the wire fence,
+the Lord have mercy on you when I turn my back. You will be responsible
+if blood flows in this meeting to-night. As I have had a better up-bringing
+I am keeping the people back from tackling you. I have not been brought up
+in what they call Waaihoek at Bloemfontein. It was not General Botha's place
+to get this country to snatch chestnuts out of the fire for England.
+They bluff us with the statement that the coolies* might be asked
+to come and take German South West Africa for themselves. Well, let it be so.
+They will be in their proper surroundings there amongst the Hottentots.
+And if it amounts to that, Kafirs armed with assegais can be sent
+against them, for as it now happens the Kafir has got to work for the coolie
+in Natal."
+
+--
+* Contemptuous South African term for British Indians.
+--
+
+After more disturbances, the General said he was not so certain
+that the police were doing their duty, and he would have to report them
+to the Government. These men were paid out of his pocket and the pockets
+of other Burghers, but the people got no protection from them.
+And when in self-defence an Afrikander remonstrates with the hooligans,
+he is arrested. He thought there was a Magistrate present,
+and can they not get protection?
+
+Assistant Magistrate Cronin then ascended the carriage and said:
+"I expect you all to give the Burghers a fair opportunity to speak."
+
+Concluding General De Wet said: "It was not a question of Hertzog v. Botha.
+The burning point was German South West Africa. The reason
+why the people were unarmed was because the Government did not trust them.
+Things being so, they should not be surprised that the people
+had no confidence in the authorities. Many had guns but no cartridges;
+how then could the country be expected to defend itself?"
+
+Mr. Paul Schutte moved the resolution which was put to the meeting,
+protesting against the expedition to German South West Africa.
+"At this time," says the Dutch paper that reported these proceedings,
+"the throats of the interrupters, not being made of steel,
+had become so hoarse and weak that their interruption was ineffective,
+except, perhaps, when they dealt out blows."
+
+Mr. Paul Schutte said, in moving the resolution, that the hand of God
+was pressing heavily on the land: poverty, misery, and the drought
+finishing the people. Was it not dangerous for the Government
+to embark on such an undertaking without the backing of the unanimous will
+of the people?
+
+Mr. Serfontein (presumably one of the two members of Parliament of that name)
+said he was going to speak the whole truth, and nothing but the truth.
+
+He said he would give documentary proof that a map has been forged;
+he did not know by whom. It is said that Nakob is in Union territory,
+yet according to the original Government map, that place was
+on German territory. "There is the map," he said, apparently flaunting it,
+"satisfy yourselves."
+
+Proceeding he said: "General Tobias Smuts had declared that he knew
+the Government decision was against the wishes of his constituents,
+yet he wanted to support the Government in favour of the war.
+General Beyers, who knew all the circumstances, denies that Nakob
+is in Union territory. In these circumstances, how can we, as Christians,
+ask God to guide us in the undertaking?"
+
+Professor Postma and the Rev. Mr. De Klerk, the two next speakers,
+quoted the Bible to show that to proceed against German South West Africa
+was forbidden by Providence. Mr. Furstenburg, who followed,
+called on the Burghers to maintain the high character of their people.
+After a few words of thanks from General Kemp to the audience
+for their attendance, the 1,000 Burghers, amid interruptions,
+signified their objection to the expedition by standing on one side.
+This act closed a most exciting meeting.
+
+One of the opponents, the paper says, smacked a Dutch lady on her mouth
+and caused it to bleed. She coolly turned round and gave him
+such a heavy blow with her fist that he collapsed, saying in
+the purest English accent as she did so: "It takes but one woman
+to fight a Britisher." Another of the interrupters had to be taken
+to the hospital.
+
+Commandant Els and Mr. Rocco de Villiers, the "Free" State lawyer,
+on their way to the meeting, had a mishap with their motor-car,
+fifteen miles distant, so that they reached Potchefstroom on foot,
+after the meeting.
+
+"Three cheers for our brown people," shouted one of the disturbers.
+"You have forgotten the coolies," retorted a Dutch lady.
+
+After the meeting, the opposition formed itself into a procession
+and marched through the town. They also delivered short speeches
+confirming what had been done at a previous meeting of townspeople,
+which supported the expedition. They booed General De Wet and his followers,
+and dispersed after giving cheers for Generals Botha and Smuts
+and singing the National Anthem.
+
+One item on the programme of the meeting was an address which
+should have been presented to General Beyers, the ex-Commander-in-Chief,
+but as for some reason or other he was not present, the address
+was sent to him instead. It congratulated him on his resignation,
+a step which the signatories were sure he would never regret, as it was
+in accord with the peace-loving and the most pious part of his people,
+who resent the "capture" of German South West Africa.
+Further, they thanked him for coming to address them and hoped he would
+deliver a speech that would shut the mouths of mischief-makers
+who accused him of being a German agent.
+
+A similar drama was enacted at Johannesburg during the following week,
+when General De Wet carried his campaign of protest into
+the stronghold of the sections in favour of the Government expedition.
+His meeting at the Lewis Cinema was only in progress a few minutes
+when bricks, etc., came through the fanlights, and the lights went out.
+The meeting was adjourned to Church Square, where supporters of the Government
+gained the upper hand and overpowered the "neutral" party so completely
+that General De Wet, Mr. Serfontein and Rev. Mr. Postma could not be heard.
+Cheers were continually given for the King, for Generals Botha and Smuts,
+and the speeches were drowned by the patriotic airs sung by the throng,
+and the meeting proved a complete fiasco.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXIII The Boer Rebellion
+
+ Arm, arm, Burghers; we never had more cause!
+ The Goths have gathered head; and with a power
+ of high-resolved men, bent to the spoil,
+ They hither march amain, under conduct
+ Of Manie, son to old Gerit Maritz,
+ Who threats in course of his revenge, to do
+ As much as ever Black Bambata did.
+
+
+
+The following telegram was published by the South African Government: --
+
+==
+ October 13, 1914.
+
+Ever since the resignation of General C. F. Beyers as Commandant-General
+of the Citizen Force, there have been indications that something was wrong
+with the forces in the north-west of the Cape Province, which were placed
+under the command of Lieutenant-Colonel S. G. Maritz.
+
+The Government at once arranged to send Colonel Conraad Brits
+to take over the command from Lieutenant-Colonel Maritz.
+
+On the 8th instant Colonel Brits sent a message to Maritz
+to come in and report to him. To this message Maritz replied
+in a most insolent manner that he was not going to report to anybody.
+All he wanted was his discharge, and Colonel Brits must come himself
+and take over his command.
+
+Colonel Brits then sent Major Ben Bouwer to take over the command.
+
+ An Ultimatum
+
+On arrival at Maritz's camp, Major Bouwer was taken prisoner
+with his companions, but personally was subsequently released and sent back
+with an ultimatum from Maritz to the Union Government to the effect that:
+
+Unless the Government guaranteed to him before ten o'clock on Sunday morning,
+October 11, that they should allow Generals Hertzog, De Wet, Beyers,
+Kemp, and Muller to meet him where he was, in order that he might receive
+instructions from them, he would forthwith make an attack
+on General Brits's forces and proceed further to invade the Union.
+
+Major Ben Bouwer reported that Maritz was in possession of some guns
+belonging to the Germans, and that he held the rank of General
+commanding the German troops.
+
+He had a force of Germans under him in addition to his own rebel commando.
+
+He had arrested all those of his officers and men who were unwilling
+to join the Germans, and had then sent them forward as prisoners
+to German South West Africa.
+
+Major Bouwer saw an agreement between Maritz and the Governor
+of German South West Africa guaranteeing the independence of the Union
+as a republic, ceding Walfish Bay and certain other portions of the Union
+to the Germans, and undertaking that the Germans would only invade the Union
+on the invitation of Maritz.
+
+Major Bouwer was shown numerous telegrams and helio messages
+dating back to the beginning of September. Maritz boasted
+that he had ample guns, rifles, ammunition, and money from the Germans,
+and that he would overrun the whole of South Africa.
+
+In view of this state of affairs the Government is taking
+the most vigorous steps to stamp out the rebellion and inflict
+condign punishment on all rebels and traitors. A proclamation
+declaring martial law throughout the Union will appear
+in a Gazette Extraordinary to-day.*
+
+--
+* "U. G. No. 10-'15", pp. 22-24.
+--
+==
+
+This treachery was more fully described by a Cape Attorney
+-- a subaltern in the Citizen Force under Maritz -- in the following letter
+to the `Transvaal Leader':
+
+==
+"We arrived at Kakamas," he writes, "after a long and wearisome trek
+through Bushmanland, a company of about eighty, consisting mostly
+of raw farmer youths.
+
+"We remained in camp for about six weeks, and, in the first week of October,
+orders came from Maritz for 200 troops, comprising the Calvinia, Clanwilliam,
+and Kenhardt men, to strike camp and trek toward the German border.
+
+"Two days later the remaining men in camp, consisting of
+the Kakamas members of the Defence Force, some Kakamas Volunteers,
+and our own troop, altogether about 300 men, likewise trekked
+in that direction. After two days' riding, we came to a farm
+called Blokzijnputs, where we met the first 200 men.
+
+"The village of Keimoes was crowded with German troops; our men and officers
+were walking and talking among them on the friendliest possible terms,
+and the German and the old Transvaal Republican flags were flying
+side by side.
+
+"In a very short time we were made fully aware of the position.
+The act of treachery which led up to it was being freely discussed
+by everybody, and then I realized that `we' -- I say `we',
+for I never for one second doubted that most of our men would refuse
+to turn rebels -- had been caught like rats in a trap.
+
+"But a further shock awaited me. About half an hour after our arrival
+we were summoned to fall in before Maritz, who then addressed the crowd.
+
+"He first spoke about the Government wishing to force him over the border
+with a lot of untrained and unarmed youngsters, and went on to say
+that he refused to sacrifice their lives.
+
+"After a bitter attack on the characters of Generals Smuts and Botha,
+he denounced the British Empire as a whole, and wound up by declaring himself
+an out and out rebel.
+
+"He stated that he was going to fight against the Union
+and Imperial Governments for the independence of South Africa,
+and called upon all who were unwilling to follow him,
+or `had the English feeling in them', to stand on one side.
+
+ "Ten Loyal out of Six Hundred"
+
+"This speech was followed by a short speech in German
+by the representative of the Governor-General of German South-West Africa.
+
+"Then followed a scene which can never be forgotten by those who witnessed it.
+All our men started to shout, cheer, and throw up their hats -- all except
+ten of us, who stood there looking, I suppose, more dead than alive.
+Just imagine, out of 600 men actually trekking towards the border
+to invade German territory only ten refused to turn rebels.
+
+"However, after recovering somewhat, we approached our captain (Beukes)
+and told him we were not going to join Maritz, and asked him to see
+that we were not sent to Windhuk. This Maritz had given us to understand
+was the only alternative to joining him."
+
+The writer proceeds to state that after being kept prisoners for some time
+they were set free forty miles from a Union troop frontier post.
+-- `Central News'.*
+
+--
+* See also Appendix to the "Report of the Select Committee on Rebellion",
+ S.C. 1-'15.
+--
+==
+
+ In the "Free" State
+
+General De Wet organized large commandos and took possession
+of the town of Heilbron, held up a train and captured
+Government stores and ammunition, some prominent Burghers
+being among his active supporters; so much so that, a week later,
+when President Steyn was endeavouring to get him to Bloemfontein,
+in order to persuade him to discuss terms of peace with General Botha,
+he had no fewer than 3,000 men under him.
+
+General De Wet publicly unfurled the rebel banner in October,
+when he entered the town of Reitz at the head of an armed commando.
+Some of his men assaulted the postmaster, who was in the act
+of telegraphing the news to the capital, and destroyed his instruments.
+The guerrilla General addressed an open-air meeting, which he ordered
+the Magistrate to attend. When that official "refused to attend
+a rebel meeting" General De Wet sent six men to compel him,
+and to use violence if necessary.
+
+Having thus forcibly secured the attendance of the Magistrate,
+he proceeded to unbosom himself as follows: "Ladies, gentlemen, and burghers,
+I have asked you to come together here to explain to you my position."
+
+Then turning to the Magistrate, he said: "Magistrate, I want you to get
+a shorthand writer to take down every word that I am going to say,
+because whatever I may do in future I can never commit
+a greater act of rebellion than I have already committed.
+I am going through to Maritz, where we will receive arms and ammunition,
+and from there we are going to Pretoria to pull down the British flag
+and proclaim a free South African republic. All those who side with me
+must follow me, and those who side with the Government must go to it.
+I signed the Vereeniging Treaty and swore to be faithful to the British flag,
+but we have been so downtrodden by the miserable and pestilential English
+that we can endure it no longer. His Majesty King Edward VII
+promised to protect us, but he has failed to do so, and allowed a Magistrate
+to be placed over us who is an absolute tyrant, and has made it impossible
+for us to tolerate it any longer. I was charged before him for beating
+a native boy. I only did it with a small shepherd's whip, and for that
+I was fined 5s.* (Here the Magistrate interrupted him and asked him
+whether he did not plead guilty. He admitted that he had pleaded guilty,
+and ordered the Magistrate to keep quiet, and he would allow him
+to say as much as he liked when he had finished speaking,
+and if he would not hold his tongue he would make him hold it.)
+
+--
+* General Smuts, after this, christened the rising as
+ "the Five Shilling Rebellion".
+--
+
+"But," continued General De Wet, "after the Magistrate had delivered judgment,
+instead of reprimanding the boy and ordering him in future
+to be obedient and do his duty, he looked at the Native as if he would like
+to give him a kiss. The Magistrate is a brother-in-law of a man
+for whom I have the greatest respect and who is very dear to me
+(President Steyn), and for that reason I will give him another chance,
+otherwise I would have taken him prisoner and handed him over to the Germans.
+The Magistrate's father was one of the staunchest pillars of the church,
+and if he were alive to-day he would be heart and soul with me
+in this movement, and condemn the dastardly act of robbery
+which the Government are going to commit.
+
+"The ungodly policy of Botha has gone on long enough; the South African Dutch
+are going to stand as one man to crush this unholy scandal.
+Some of my friends have advised me to wait a little longer
+until England has received a bigger knock, but it is beneath me and my people
+to kick a dead dog. England has got her hands full enough.
+I hate the lies which are continually being spread to the effect
+that thousands of Australians, Canadians and Indians can be sent to fight us.
+Where will England get them from? She has enough to fight her own battles.
+
+"I am going through the town to take the following six articles,
+viz., horses, saddles, bridles, halters, arms and ammunition,
+and if anybody should refuse to hand to my men these articles,
+if they should be found in their possession, I will give him a thrashing
+with a sjambok. I now order the storekeepers to go and open their shops
+and I will select men to go round and take whatever I require
+apart from the above articles, and they will give receipts for what they take;
+and if they do not open their shops willingly I will open them in another way.
+My advice to you English is to remain quiet in your houses and not interfere
+with my men, and if you don't, beware when I come back!
+I have got my eight sons and sons-in-law here with me,
+and the only people left on my farm are my wife and daughter.
+Anybody can go and see if they like, and I request the Magistrate
+to give them any help they may require, if he will do so."
+
+Mr. Wessel Wessels, a famous "Free" State politician,
+having taken possession of Harrismith in the name of General De Wet,
+was alleged to have had the audacity to send letters to Chief Ntsane Mopedi,
+of the Harrismith district, and to the Paramount Chief of Basutoland,
+informing them that, with the assistance of the Germans, the Boers were going
+to drive away the English and re-proclaim a Dutch Republic
+in South Africa; and requesting those chiefs to remain neutral
+while the annihilation of the English was in progress.
+Only in case the English should arm the Indians, were they to mobilize
+their warriors (the Basutos) on the side of the Boer-German combination.
+
+ Dit is ver weg na Tippererie,
+ Dit is ver om te gaan;
+ Dit is ver weg na Tippererie,
+ Om my hart se punt te zien.
+ Goen dag, Pikadillie
+ Vaarwel, Lester-squeer;
+ Dit is ver, ver weg na Tippererie
+ Maar my hart le net daar.
+ "Tipperary" in Cape Dutch.
+
+The Dutch, like other people, also had a prophet. Many stories
+were told since the outbreak of the war by the seer, Van Rensburg,
+and among other visions credited to him he was said to
+have dreamt of the impending "removal of the British yoke
+from the necks of Afrikanders", and the forthcoming expulsion
+from South Africa of the English people and their flag,
+with the aid of Germany.
+
+Whatever might be said about what the prophet Van Rensburg
+had foretold in other respects, the prophecies attributed to him
+in regard to the European War resemble other war prophecies
+(credited to French, Russian, and German women), in that the wish, it seems,
+is often father to the thought.
+
+The lower middle-class Boers attach great weight to the guesses
+of native bonethrowers. It is strange sometimes when a Malay charmer
+is prosecuted for imposing on the public to find Dutch witnesses
+giving evidence of the healing powers possessed by the accused and emphasizing
+the absurdity of prosecuting a man who benefited them and their relatives
+more than many a certificated medical man.
+
+Moreover, the forecasts credited to Van Rensburg seemed to have found
+ample corroboration in the cabled newspaper accounts of the rapid advance
+of the armies of General Von Kluck through Belgium towards Paris,
+and in the minds of such gullible patriots as the South African Boers
+this telegraphic war news acted like manure on a fertile field.
+
+==
+ The Seer Van Rensburg*
+
+--
+* "U.G. No. 10-'15".
+--
+
+The seer was Nicolas van Rensburg, of Lichtenburg, a simple
+and illiterate farmer. He was a prophet not without honour
+in his own country. On many occasions he had given proof positive
+of the possession of extraordinary powers of prevision,
+so men said and believed. It would be out of place here
+to give examples of the many telepathic forecasts (or happy guesses)
+with which he was credited. It is certain that he had a great hold
+on the imagination of thousands of his people. During the Anglo-Boer War
+some commandos, when Van Rensburg was in their lager,
+neglected all precautions. If "Oom Niklaas" declared that the English
+were not in the neighbourhood, it was a waste of energy
+to post sentries and keep a look out.
+
+His reputation had, strangely enough, not diminished since the war.
+This was perhaps due to several causes. He had never attempted
+to exploit his "gift" and impressed most of those who came
+in contact with him with his apparent sincerity. If he duped others,
+it seemed he also duped himself. Moreover, and this was perhaps
+the secret of his continued success, his "visions" were invariably
+symbolic and mysterious; they possessed an adaptability of character
+that was truly Delphic. Indeed, his hearers were compelled
+to put their own interpretation upon his visions. The seer seldom pretended
+to understand or explain them himself.
+
+General De la Rey took a great interest in the seer, who had belonged
+to his commandos during the Anglo-Boer War. Van Rensburg again
+had the greatest admiration for General De la Rey, and had frequently
+hinted to his circle that great things were in store for the General.
+One of his visions had been well known to General De la Rey and his friends
+for some years. The seer had beheld the number 15 on a dark cloud,
+from which blood issued, and then General De la Rey returning home
+without his hat. Immediately afterwards came a carriage covered
+with flowers.* What these things portended, Van Rensburg could not say.
+He believed that they signified some high honour for the General. . . .
+
+--
+* General De la Rey was accidentally shot on the night of September 15.
+ The last house he stayed in was No. 15, and the funeral train
+ that brought his body to Lichtenburg had a carriage full of floral tributes.
+--
+
+When the war at last broke out, the effect in Lichtenburg was instantaneous.
+The prophecies of Van Rensburg were eagerly recalled, and it was remembered
+that he had foretold a day on which the independence of the Transvaal
+would be restored. One officer actually called up his men
+to be in readiness on Sunday, August 9, as that would be the day on which
+the prophecy would be fulfilled. After this, too, certain individuals
+could be seen daily cleaning their rifles and cartridges in order to be ready
+for THE DAY. Several men in this district claimed to be
+in regular communication with German South-West Africa before August, 1914.
+Within a week of the declaration of war between England and Germany
+the district was further profoundly stirred by the news
+(now become generally known) that a great meeting of local burghers
+was to be held at Treurfontein on August 15, and that certain local officers
+were commandeering their burghers to come to this meeting
+armed and fully equipped for active service. . . .
+
+The meeting was to be addressed by General De la Rey,
+and it was generally believed that the assembled burghers
+would march on Potchefstroom immediately after the meeting.
+
+The prophecies of Van Rensburg had a great deal to do with the excitement
+which had been produced locally. The strange vision of the number 15,
+which had long been common knowledge, was now discussed with intense interest.
+The 15, it was said, signified August 15, the day of the meeting.
+That would be THE DAY, which had been so long expected --
+the day of liberation. Van Rensburg was now the oracle.
+His prophecies with regard to the great war had been signally fulfilled.
+Germany was at grips with England, and her triumph was looked upon
+as inevitable.
+
+The day had arrived to strike a blow for their lost independence.
+Van Rensburg assured his following that the Union Government was "finished".
+Not a shot would be fired. The revolution would be complete and bloodless.
+
+Between the 10th and the 15th the plotters in Lichtenburg
+were actively preparing for the day. There is evidence
+that German secret agents were working in concert with them.
+The 15th would mark the beginning of a new era. When doubters asked
+how they could be so certain that the 15 signified a day of the month
+-- and of the month of August in particular -- they were scornfully
+if illogically told that "in God's time a month sooner or later
+made no difference."
+
+The Government had been informed by its local supporters
+of these alarming preparations. It was quite clear that an attempt
+was to be made on the 15th to start a rebellion. Everything would depend
+on the meeting which was to be addressed by General De la Rey.
+General De la Rey's position in the Western Transvaal was unique.
+He possessed an unrivalled influence and was looked up to
+as the uncrowned King of the West. His attitude at the meeting
+would sway the mass of his adherents and decide the question of peace or war.
+
+General Botha summoned General De la Rey to Pretoria some days
+before the meeting, and was able to persuade him to use his best endeavours
+to calm the excited feelings which had been aroused and to use his influence
+to see that no untoward incidents should occur.
+
+On Saturday, the 15th, the great meeting was held. About 800 burghers
+were present. General De la Rey addressed them and explained
+the situation in Europe. He exhorted his audience to remain cool and calm
+and to await events. After the address "a strange and unusual silence"
+was observed. A resolution was passed unanimously expressing complete
+confidence in the Government to act in the best interests of South Africa
+in the present world-crisis. The address seemed to have had
+a very good effect. The burghers appeared to have taken their leader's advice
+to heart, as they dispersed quietly to their homes.
+==
+
+All danger of a rebellious movement had apparently been averted,
+but only for a time.
+
+The Potchefstroom `Herald' tells a story of what it describes
+as "the inner history of a damnable plot", and of how near
+Potchefstroom* was to falling into the hands of the rebels through
+the treachery of Beyers and his accomplices on the night of September 15,
+which was the date on which the late General De la Rey was killed.
+
+--
+* The old capital of Transvaal where General De Wet and General Kemp
+ held the dramatic meeting on October 2, 1914.
+--
+
+==
+It is unquestionable (says the `Herald') that Beyers, who was forced to admit
+that he was on his way to Potchefstroom when the accident happened,
+was to have started an attempt to overthrow the Government
+with the aid of the men, over 2,000 in number, who had just finished
+their period of three weeks' training in the Active Citizen Camp
+at Potchefstroom. Both he and Kemp had resigned their positions,
+and, knowing the treacherous mission upon which he was setting out that night
+as the emissary of the German enemy, little wonder was it that at Langlaagte
+Beyers cowered with fear, and lost his nerve entirely, because he thought
+his own arrest was at hand.
+
+Continuing the account, the paper says: On the morning parade
+on Tuesday morning the rebel Colonels Bezuidenhout and Kock
+had each addressed their men in an attempt to imbue them
+with a spirit of revolt against their own Government.
+All the Dutch-speaking Afrikanders were advised not to volunteer
+for German South-West; that was the job of the Englishman.
+The officers plainly said that they had no intention of doing their duty:
+they had other fish to fry. And they permitted the few volunteers
+who stood out in spite of them to be jeered at by the "neutrals".
+The disgrace of that early morning parade scene must for ever be upon
+the traitors concerned. It was certain that dastardly influences
+were at work, but thanks to the sterling loyalty of certain men
+from among the Dutch population, the plans of the conspirators
+were more or less known, and arrangements were made to checkmate them.
+All honour to these true patriots who took a big risk
+for the safety of the country.
+
+That evening a meeting of Britishers took place in Potchefstroom
+to discuss the situation (says the `Herald'), and it was agreed
+that its seriousness was such as to necessitate direct communication
+with General Smuts, which was duly carried out. For one thing,
+practically all Britishers were unarmed. How critical was the position,
+or how near Potchefstroom was to complete disaster, was not then
+fully realized. On that night, too, there was another and more sinister
+meeting in the town. It was at a certain house in Berg Street,
+where a number of residents, male and female, who can be named,
+expected the arrival of the chief conspirator. Then, too,
+at the Defence Force headquarters Kemp had stored a quantity of ammunition
+that was altogether out of proportion to the requirements of his district,
+and during the week there had been frequent communications with
+the Lichtenburg "prophet". Beyers had arranged to reach the Defence Force
+at 3 a.m., where motor-cars waited.
+
+Later he was to have marched upon the town with all the armed men
+he could bring under his influence, knowing full well,
+by previous arrangement, that he could rely on the aid of rebels
+within Potchefstroom itself. So intense was the feeling of danger
+in camp that night that loyal officers slept with loaded revolvers at hand
+and all the spare ammunition under the beds. The Union Jack
+was to be supplanted and the new Republic was to be declared
+with the Vierkleur flying -- or would it have been the German flag?
+That was the morning of September 16, and as showing
+the concerted character of the traitorous plans, it should be noted that
+the proclamation signed by the Governor-General of German South-West Africa,
+the "scrap of paper" used as a sop for the Boers, was dated for
+the self-same day.
+
+ Plot Providentially Thwarted
+
+But the motor-car tragedy in the dark at Langlaagte was the second blow
+to this criminal plot (continues the paper), and when Beyers,
+trembling and unnerved, spoke through the telephone at midnight
+on September 15, telling of the fatal shot, and that his journey
+had been cut short, those who had waited in the camp and in the town
+knew that, for the time being at any rate, the little game was up.
+Kemp, of course, at once tried to withdraw his resignation, but luckily
+General Smuts gave the snub direct. Already the names of local men
+to be terrorized, and even shot, were in the mouths of the irreconcilables
+-- skulking cowards for the most part -- of whom more must yet be written
+in the interests of public morality.
+
+That night Potchefstroom might easily have fallen into the hands
+of the rebel crew, sharing the fate of the Free State towns or worse,
+and loyalists, both English and Dutch, must thank an ever-watchful Providence
+for being saved from a position of ignominy and humiliation.
+==
+
+If all this be true,* and the Government had been informed of it,
+one cannot understand why General Beyers, with his fingers steeped in treason,
+was let loose upon the community to poison the loyalty of the Dutch
+along the country-side and to complicate the task of the Government.
+It seems that he should have been detained that evening,
+and thereby, having been turned from the path of suicide, other lives
+would also have been saved. When one considers the amount of harm
+that he was able to do subsequently, it is staggering to think
+what the task of the loyalists would have been had his plans been reinforced
+by the success of this night plot. It would have given
+a link of tremendous power to the rebel movement throughout the country
+if they had captured the stores, munitions, and a ready army that awaited
+General Beyers's arrival at Potchefstroom. The fact that some Burghers
+were found organizing rebel commandos in the "Free" State and Transvaal
+even after the capture of General De Wet and the drowning of General Beyers
+ought to show the prevailing Backveld spirit up to the early months of 1915.
+
+--
+* The `Herald's' story has since been confirmed by the Government Blue Book
+ on the Rebellion.
+--
+
+When the rebels were tried in Pretoria and elsewhere in January and February,
+Burghers crowded the law courts and rose to their feet,
+as if in token of their fellow-feeling with the prisoners,
+each time a rebel was placed in the dock. At Pretoria,
+this vaunting demonstration seems only to have been ended
+by the announcement of the Magistrate that if they did it again
+he would have to clear the court. It is not stated, however,
+whether the prisoners duly acknowledged the sympathy thus shown
+with a bow from the dock. One member of Parliament (not a rebel)
+is said to have swaggered into the Bloemfontein court and, after shaking hands
+with the prisoners, conversed with them in an audible tone.
+
+Nothing better illustrates the unsatisfactory nature of the South African
+military appointments than the Press report that the English artillerymen
+who served under Maritz were in constant danger of their lives, and that,
+realizing this fact, they were compelled sometimes to keep their machine guns
+trained on their comrades. The poor men must have had an awful time,
+literally "sleeping with one eye wide open".
+
+When Colonel Maritz at length threw off the mask and openly proclaimed
+his treachery, he put these artillerymen under arrest and handed them over
+to the Germans as prisoners of war.
+
+Of course, if the Government of the Union was as well administered
+as was the Cape Government before it, such things would have been impossible,
+because only tried men with military experience would have been appointed
+to the command of the Union Forces -- men whose loyalty was beyond reproach --
+that is to say, if high official appointments went by merit and not by favour.
+A professional lawyer like General Beyers would have been the last person
+to get a position which should have been given to a trained soldier,
+of whom there are many in the country. But as his appointment took place
+at a time when some English officials were politely removed
+from high positions to make room for influential Dutchmen,
+and in certain cases useless posts, such as "Inspector of white labour",
+and inspector of goodness-knows-what (all of them carrying high emoluments),
+were created for political favourites, General Beyers's appointment
+caused no surprise, as the "pitchfork" had already become
+part of our Government machinery. But how such a man as Manie Maritz
+became a Colonel in the Colonial Defence Force is one of those things which,
+as Lord Dundreary would say, "no fellah can understand".
+
+The man is not only said to have rebelled during the South African war,
+but he is also said to have escaped to German South Africa
+to evade the consequence, and that he only returned to British South Africa
+when the Boers got their constitution. And when British officers
+like Colonel Mackenzie and Colonel Lukin apparently acquiesce
+in an appointment that places them on a level with a man like that,
+the voteless black taxpayer who has no control over these appointments
+cannot be blamed for feeling perplexed at the turn events are taking.
+
+Here is an expression of this perplexity: The old chief Tshabadira
+asked the Government Secretary in 1913, at Thaba Nchu,
+"How many kings have we? Is there an English King and a Dutch King,
+each trying to rule in his own way? And since we cannot very well
+follow both, which one are we to obey?" Dutch and English colonists
+have ruled the Cape for forty years and no such questions were ever asked.
+
+If General De Wet were to be tried by a court of native chiefs,
+who followed "the wheels of administration" during the past five years,
+they would in all probability decide that the British Government,
+to which he pledged his allegiance, and the semi-Republican Government
+against which he rebelled are two entirely different bodies.
+They would possibly reason that he pledged his allegiance
+to a Greater Britain -- or to localize it, to a Greater Cape Colony,
+not to a Greater Transvaal.
+
+The Cape Colony is often reproached because native taxpayers
+within its boundaries have votes and help their white neighbours
+to elect members of Parliament. But strange to say,
+when a revolutionary mob seized the South African railways in 1914, it was
+the railway men of the much-abused Cape who, in spite of the native vote,
+dragged the Government out of a serious situation. Similarly when
+these high officers of the Defence Force in Transvaal and Orange "Free" State
+rebelled and joined the Germans with their commandos, the Dutchmen of the Cape
+(presumably because "they vote side by side with the Kafirs")
+denounced the treachery in unmistakable terms. The South African party
+at the Cape beat up its followers to the support of the Government,
+and the voice of the Cape section of the Dutch Reformed Church
+rang from pulpit and platform in denunciation of disloyalty and treason.
+But in the Northern Provinces, where white men are pampered and guarded
+by the Government against the so-called humiliation of allowing
+native taxpayers to vote, there the rebellion, having been regarded
+with seeming approval, gained a marvellous impetus.
+
+And the strangest of all these things is how men with bank balances
+like the Dutchmen of Transvaal and the Orange "Free" State
+could fail to appreciate the debt they owe to the British Navy,
+by which the commercial routes from South Africa to the outer world
+are kept open to them, when practically the whole world is ablaze.
+
+The banner of revolt having been unfurled, the "Free" State towns of Reitz,
+Heilbron, and Harrismith being in the hands of "Free" State rebels,
+martial law was proclaimed, and General Botha, as forecasted
+in the native letter quoted in a previous chapter, assumed command
+of the Union Forces and squelched the upheaval. Altogether the rebellion
+cost South Africa some of the finest of its young men.
+Dutch, English, coloured and native families suffered the loss of their sons
+in the flower of their youth, including among many others,
+prominent South Africans, such as Mr. W. Pickering, the general secretary
+of the Kimberley mines, and Mr. Justice Hopley of Rhodesia,
+who each lost a son.
+
+One loss which the Natives, judging by articles in their newspapers,
+will not easily forget is that of Captain William Allan King,
+the late Sub-Commissioner of Pretoria. He was shot by a rebel,
+on November 23, near Hamaanskraal, whilst helping a wounded trooper.
+In his lifetime his duties brought him in touch with employers of labour
+in the Pretoria Labour District and with Natives from all over South Africa.
+A non-believer in the South African policy of least resistance, he was
+without doubt the ablest native administrator in the Transvaal Civil Service,
+and as such the vacancy caused by his death will be very hard to fill.
+He was an expert on Native matters, and no commission ever sat
+without his being summoned to give evidence before it.
+
+The Natives called him "Khoshi-ke-Nna", which means "I am the Chief".
+A firm but just Englishman, with a striking military gait,
+he would have been an ideal leader of the native contingents
+had the offer of native help been accepted by the Union Government.
+
+The casualty list on both sides exceeded one thousand.
+Over ten thousand rebels were imprisoned, of whom 293 leaders will be tried,
+the rest being detained up till the end of the trouble.
+
+After various encounters with the Union forces under General Botha,
+General De Wet suffered a series of heavy defeats. Many of
+his followers surrendered, and his son was killed on the battlefield.
+He tried to escape to German South West Africa, but was overtaken and captured
+in Bechuanaland, with fifty followers, including his secretary, Mr. Oost,
+formerly editor of a Pretoria weekly paper.
+
+Considering his initial bounce and bluster, General De Wet's surrender
+was a particularly tame affair. Said the captive to the captor:
+"I seem to know you -- are you not Jordaan?" "Yes, General,"
+replied the captor. "I saw you at Vereeniging where we made peace."
+"Very well," rejoined the captive, "I must congratulate you
+on your achievement. It was very smart. Anyway, I am glad
+that I am taken by you and not by an Englishman."*
+
+--
+* Gen. De Wet was tried and sentenced by the Special court
+ to six years' imprisonment and a fine of 2,000 Pounds.
+--
+
+General Kemp succeeded in eluding his pursuers by means of forced marches
+across the Kalahari desert, and effected a junction with Maritz
+in German South West Africa; but after only a few weeks' taste of German rule
+he returned to the Union and surrendered with his commando and all arms,
+evidently satisfied with British rule. Some of his men were wearing
+German uniforms. The prophet Rensburg, carrying a big umbrella,
+also surrendered with him.
+
+General Beyers was the first to succumb. Cornered by the loyal forces,
+he was driven up against the Vaal River in flood. With his pursuers
+on the one side and the raging torrent on the other, he was drowned
+in an ill-starred attempt to escape across that treacherous river.
+Parties were sent out to drag the river and search for the body,
+and a reward of 50 Pounds was offered to the finder.
+Mrs. Beyers left Pretoria in a special train with a coffin on board,
+to join the search party. She was accompanied by a few relatives and friends,
+including one doctor of medicine and one minister of religion. They travelled
+along the Johannesburg-Kimberley line as far as Maquasi, near the river,
+where they received tidings of the recovery of General Beyers's body.
+It was found by a Dutch farmer, who promptly claimed the 50 Pound reward.
+
+A telegram to Pretoria brought back a reply from General Smuts
+stating that it was inadvisable to convey the body to the capital
+at the time, so he was buried by the parson on the veld
+to the accompaniment of lightning flashes which blind the eye,
+and salutes of loud peals of African thunder, which shake the earth
+in a manner that is known only to persons who have spent a summer
+in the interior of South Africa.
+
+It is said that the late General insured his life so heavily before
+the outbreak that representatives of the several insurance companies concerned
+had to meet after his death and consider the matter of their liability.
+
+The remainder of the story of the "Five Shilling Rebellion" is soon told.
+After the proclamation of martial law the Premier assumed
+the supreme command of the Union forces and called out all the citizens --
+the whites to arms and the blacks as drivers and manual labourers
+at the front. Some Boers who could not give a satisfactory excuse
+disobeyed the call, and were sentenced to terms of imprisonment
+with hard labour under the Defence Act. Thus backed by the overwhelming
+support of the various peoples of the Union of all creeds and colours,
+the Prime Minister made a clean sweep of the rising,
+and in less than two months the Rt. Hon. Louis Botha was once again
+master of the situation from the shores of the Indian Ocean in the east
+to the Atlantic coast in the west. And when the rebel leaders
+were cogitating over the situation in durance vile, the Prime Minister
+was sending a message from German South West Africa, on February 26,
+asking Parliament to deal leniently with the rebels.
+
+ Keise qusa Tipereri,
+ Kgam'se gaqu ha;
+ Keise qusa Tipereri
+ Artie ti gxawo si mu.
+ Hamnci gqo Pikadili.
+ Hamnci Gqo Lester Skuer
+ Keise qusa, qusa Tipereri
+ Mar, ti xawo nxeba ha.
+ "Tipperary" in Qoranna.*
+
+--
+* This language is also spoken by the Namaquas and some of the tribes
+ in German South West Africa.
+--
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXIV Piet Grobler
+
+ Lecture delivered by Mr. Sol T. Plaatje before the "Marsh Street Men's Own"
+ Literary Society in the Lecture Room of their Institute,
+ Hoe Street, Walthamstow, on February 26, 1915.
+
+ Keep me in chains? I defy you.
+ That is a pow'r I deny you!
+ I will sing! I will rise!
+ Up! To the lurid skies --
+ With the smoke of my soul,
+ With my last breath,
+ Tar-feathered, I shall cry:
+ Ethiopia shall not die!
+ And hand in hand with Death,
+ Pass on.
+
+ I shall not curse you. But singing --
+ My singing fatefully ringing
+ Till startled and dumb
+ You falter, the sum
+ Of your crime shall reveal --
+ This do I prophesy . . .
+ O Heart wrung dry,
+ Awake!
+ Startle the world with thy cry:
+ Ethiopia shall not die!
+ Otto L. Bohanan.*
+
+ --
+ * In the Kalahari language, BOHANAN means: `Be combined'.
+ --
+
+
+
+The gentleman whose name forms the title of my lecture
+is a lawyer, a grand-nephew of the late President Kruger and,
+till lately, a member of the Union Parliament. He represented
+the Dutch constituency of Rustenburg, a district whose Burghers
+were responsible for a kind of administrative native land arrangement
+in the Transvaal Republic. This arrangement, the result of a petition
+from Rustenburg, made it compulsory for native landowners in the Republic
+to register their farms in the names of white people.
+In accordance with it, Natives who bought land had to register it
+in the name of the Minister of Native Affairs. But as such Ministers
+did not always command the trust of the Natives they resorted to the expedient
+of registering their farms in the names of some European friends,
+missionaries or otherwise. Some European gentlemen thus became
+the registered owners of land belonging to Natives, giving the Natives
+receipts for the money and documents explaining the nature of the transaction.
+Other Europeans, including missionaries, were not so scrupulous.
+They gave the Natives no receipt, so that after their death
+the properties of these Natives passed into the estates of the deceased.
+The following case is an example.
+
+The native peasants on a Transvaal farm found themselves in such a dilemma
+after the death of General Joubert, late Superintendent of Natives
+of the Transvaal Republic. The black "owners" had no document showing
+that they were the real owners of the farm and that General Joubert's name
+was only registered to meet the requirements of the Volksraad.
+In such circumstances they received notice from his executors
+to leave the General's farm. They appealed to the law-courts and adduced
+verbal evidence in support of their purchase and ownership of the farm;
+the sale had been a public one. Besides, according to their ideas,
+it needed no documentary evidence, since they were legally in possession.
+The Court, after listening to the evidence concerning the sums paid
+by individual Natives of the tribe, of the total sum paid for the farm,
+and of the legal reason why the title bore a white man's name,
+held that however unfortunate was the position of those Natives if their story
+was true, it could only give judgment in terms of the title deeds.
+Thus Natives who were originally dispossessed of their land
+by conquest, and who swore to having purchased in hard cash
+land in their own country from the conquerors, were now for the second time,
+so they stated, dispossessed and turned off that land
+all owing to the complicated registration under this "Besluit"
+from Rustenburg.
+
+After the British occupation in 1900, the Courts held
+that the "Besluit" and its practices did not have the force of law,
+and Natives took advantage of the ruling to transfer their properties
+to their own names; but in 1913, Mr. Piet Grobler, M.L.A.,
+moved and succeeded in getting the Natives' Land Act carried
+in the Union Parliament, which has placed the Natives of the whole country
+in a more terrible plight than were the Natives of the Transvaal Republic
+before the war.
+
+Since he took his seat in the Union Parliament, Mr. Piet Grobler,
+like Mr. Keyter of Ficksburg, has given the Natives no rest. He first made
+his power felt in 1911, when General Smuts introduced a Bill to consolidate
+the marriage laws of the four Provinces. Mr. Grobler then moved
+a fatal colour clause which had the effect of killing the Bill,
+for the Ministry, on finding that the Bill could only be carried
+with the assistance of the Unionists, preferred to drop it
+rather than divide the Boer majority; and hence, thanks to Mr. Grobler,
+the chaotic confusion still obtains in the South African marriage laws.
+
+This gentleman, in 1913, led the attack in Parliament on Sir Richard Solomon,
+the Union's representative in London, for not keeping his mouth shut
+when he is among British foreigners, and for daring to suggest
+British emigration to South Africa. As stated above, Mr. Grobler demanded,
+among other things, that the Government should introduce
+"during this session" (1913) a law to stop the purchase and lease of land
+by Natives, and the Natives' Land Act of 1913 was the result of the demand --
+a measure whose destructive severity forced the Natives
+to sue for Imperial protection against the South African Parliament.
+
+When the present European War broke out, Mr. Grobler was among
+the Parliamentary clique of representatives whose Christian principles
+forbade them to vote for an armed expedition against
+their friendly neighbours, the Germans. They said that,
+in Deuteronomy 19:14, God specifically warned the Boers
+against moving the landmarks of their neighbours. But strange to say,
+the religious scruples of these pious objectors never revolted against
+removing the landmarks of their native neighbours and of appropriating,
+not only their land and their labour, but even the persons
+of these neighbours. The Natives, according to Mr. Luedorf,
+a German evangelist among the Bechuana, witnessed the Boer trekkers
+maltreating conquered Natives and taking their children as slaves.
+Children who were unable to walk to their serfdom being
+gathered in a heap and burnt alive. This, says Mr. Luedorf,
+caused the Natives to exclaim: "Mzilikasi, the Matabele King,
+was cruel to his enemies, but kind to those he conquered; whilst the Boers
+are cruel to their enemies and ill-treat and enslave their friends."*
+
+--
+* "The Boer States" (Keane), pp. 137-138.
+--
+
+Now, Mzilikasi had no Bible, but the Boer has the Bible and professes
+to honour it. But his Bible, being of a flexible sort,
+it did not prevent a certain clique of Boers from taking up arms
+against the Government of which Mr. Lloyd George (a gentleman
+who staked his reputation and risked his life in his fearless protests
+against the annexation of the Boer Republics) was a prominent member;
+and against the Liberal Government, which, as compensation
+for the mere change of flags, made them a nice little present
+in the shape of the two old English Colonies of South Africa
+and the undisturbed permission to rule all that is therein. Mr. Piet Grobler,
+the author of most of our miseries, reached the climax of his career when,
+after voting against the Union expedition to German South West Africa,
+he not only persuaded British subjects not to volunteer for service
+in the expedition, but himself joined a force, as alleged
+by the South African papers to hand by the latest mail, to shoot down
+the King's loyal subjects. He was taken prisoner by General Botha's forces
+at the head of a rebel commando, presumably whilst on the way
+to join the Kaiser's forces in the German Colony. He is thus
+one of the members of the Union Parliament who forfeited their seats
+by breaking the Parliamentary oath and participating in the recent rebellion.
+
+Mr. Solicitor Grobler's ideas about the sacredness of an oath
+are curious and original. Every member of the Union Parliament,
+before taking his seat, has to subscribe to the following oath of allegiance
+"before the Governor-General, or some person authorized by him",
+usually a Judge of the Supreme Court:
+
+==
+I, M. . . . M. . . . do swear that I will be faithful and bear true allegiance
+to His Majesty King George V, his heirs and successors according to law.
+So help me God.
+==
+
+Mr. Grobler, it is said, was caught red-handed in the treasonable act
+of leading a force of fifty armed rebels against the Government,
+and for his breach of the oath he was taken prisoner. Last week,
+whilst his trial was still pending, he applied for bail,
+and in support of his application, he pleaded that he was anxious
+TO ATTEND TO HIS PARLIAMENTARY DUTIES. Here is a bit of Boer candour
+for you!
+
+The honourable and learned member is further stated to have pleaded
+that his district provided the largest proportion of rebels and he was anxious
+to be in Capetown when Parliament opens this afternoon,* in order to be able
+to represent their case when the Legislature discusses the rebellion.
+That is South African logic in a nutshell. The Judge, however,
+took a rational view of things and dismissed the application.
+
+--
+* The S. A. Parliament opened on the afternoon of the same day as the Lecture.
+--
+
+There may be motives other than those stated by the incarcerated
+member of Parliament actuating his desire to get to Capetown.
+
+Every member of Parliament who absents himself without leave
+forfeits 2 Pounds a day out of his Parliamentary emoluments,
+so that Mr. Grobler's continued confinement in prison would entail
+a serious financial deficit. This was not the only instance in which
+anxiety of this kind was betrayed by recipients of Government bounties
+in South Africa. There are a large number of well-to-do Boers
+who draw annually hundreds of pounds from the Union Treasury, salaries which
+a paternal Government taxes the poorly paid labourers of South Africa
+to provide. This is particularly the case in the Transvaal.
+There, princely salaries are paid for filling such superfluous posts
+as that of "Inspector of White Labour", "Field Cornet", and kindred offices.
+The Field Cornet of each sub-district of the Transvaal
+is a very important gentleman, as is evinced by the intense labour
+attached to his office. The duties of this "hard-worked" functionary
+consist of the checking of the Parliamentary voters list of his ward,
+once every two years, and of acting as chief canvasser and election agent
+for the Ministerial candidate, who, however, is usually returned unopposed;
+and for these onerous duties he is rewarded by an ungrateful Government
+with the "beggarly" salary of 260 Pounds a year.
+
+Besides these, there are sundry little sinecures, equally remunerative,
+to which well-to-do Dutch farmers, who are the more
+generally preferred, aspire; and each fills his role
+with acceptable dignity and a serious sense of responsibility.
+Consequently, there is more gnashing of teeth on the farm
+over the loss of one of these appointments than over
+the failure of a whole year's crop.
+
+Several of these nominal "members" of the Union Civil Service
+were said to have taken up arms and joined the rebellion.
+According to the South African papers, the wife of one of them
+applied to the defence office for the salary of her husband.
+When it was pointed out to her that her husband was at that time engaged
+in fighting against the forces of the Defence Department,
+she coolly told the official that that had nothing to do
+with his private affairs, i.e., the income from the Government.
+In regard to the faithfulness of the class of officials just mentioned,
+I cannot refrain from drawing the attention of my audience
+to the fact that, as the electoral supporters of the Cabinet, they guided
+the policy of the Union Government during the past five years, and they are
+the type of legislators in whose tender care the Imperial Government
+would fain entrust the liberties of the voteless Natives
+without even the safeguard of a right of appeal.
+
+Personally I am not revengeful, and would wish Mr. Grobler every success
+in his defence; the Transvaal native taxpayer, on the other hand,
+earns an average wage of 20 Pounds per annum: out of this he pays taxation
+on the same scale as the white labourer who earns 25 Pounds a month;
+in addition, he pays a native tax of 3 Pounds 4s. per year, presumably as
+a tax on the colour of his skin, for no white man pays that. This extra tax,
+apparently, is in order that Transvaal Field Cornets and members of Parliament
+should more easily draw their pay. In return for all these payments,
+and as a result of Mr. Grobler's legislative efforts,
+the Transvaal native taxpayer got the Natives' Land Act of 1913;
+and I am afraid that HE will not be very sorry to know that some one else
+enjoys the 400 Pounds per annum hitherto received by Mr. Grobler,
+together with his free first-class travelling ticket
+over the South African railways.
+
+British pioneer officials, in Africa and elsewhere, have for generations
+been left in charge of mixed communities of white Colonials and black Natives
+and other immigrants. In spite of occasional human lapses,
+they have ruled these communities successfully throughout the past century,
+and maintained the high administrative reputation of the English
+in Africa, Asia and other parts of the globe. The dominant race
+in South Africa, on the other hand, may be fit to govern themselves,
+but their dealings with us show them to be wholly unfit to rule
+the native races. There is no more glaring illustration of this weakness
+than the conduct of the rebel Boers and the loyal Boers
+during the present war. According to my latest information
+from different centres of South Africa, native peasants were horsewhipped
+into the enemy's service as soon as the standard of rebellion was unfurled.
+There can be no reason to doubt the veracity of my information
+when the Press reports have clearly shown that even a white skin
+has ceased to be a protection against illtreatment. At least
+one loyal Magistrate and a postmaster were violently assaulted by
+General De Wet's Burghers, so the official dispatches say. Those shopkeepers
+who hesitated to open their stores to the rebels were sjambokked
+as were the ordinary Natives, and the Mayor of a "Free" State town
+was also flogged.
+
+After the proclamation of martial law General Botha marshalled
+the loyal Boers throughout the country. These loyal Burghers,
+taking advantage of the presence of martial law, committed all kinds
+of excesses against loyal coloured civilians. These atrocities
+not only took place away in the Backveld, but sometimes
+in Capetown and Kimberley, the centres of African civilization;
+there black men were frequently tied to the wagon-wheels and lashed
+by the loyal Boers, and some of these coloured victims, I am told,
+have been cruelly done to death.
+
+Of course, if the particular Burgher who dealt the death-blow
+can be identified he will be prosecuted, but that will not resuscitate
+the victims. It will only add misery to the innocent family of the offender.
+But the fact remains that during the South African War,
+South Africa was a huge military camp, yet the unarmed Natives,
+many of whom were then in the enemy's service, suffered nothing but kindness
+at the hands of Imperial troops, and there never was any conflict
+between the military and native civilians. And it but reveals
+the unfitness for self-government of the dominant race out there
+that the Natives, who sympathize with the Government,
+should be exposed to violence immediately the loyal Burghers are armed.
+That is the condition of life under true South African ideals.
+
+Having had the ear of the Union Government since the federation of the
+South African States, Mr. Piet Grobler and other men of his way of thinking
+have been largely responsible for the repressive native laws
+that have found their way into the statute book of the Union.
+If the Natives of the other three Provinces had votes
+like those of the Cape Province, they would help to return
+sober-minded members to Parliament who are not inimical to the public welfare,
+instead of which they have been represented in the South African Parliament
+by budding subalterns of the German Army in South-West Africa.
+But since the Imperial Government in its wisdom when granting
+a Constitution to South Africa saw fit to withhold from the blacks
+their only weapon of protection against hostile legislation,
+viz., the power of the ballot, they surely, in common fairness
+to the Natives and from respect for their own honour,
+cannot reasonably stand aside as mere onlookers while
+self-condemned enemies of the Crown ram their violent laws
+down the throats of the Natives. The Imperial Government
+by the obligations of its overlordship and its plighted word
+to the Natives, at the time of the federation, is in duty bound
+to free the unrepresented Natives from the shackles of these laws,
+or otherwise, declare its guardianship of the interests of the Natives
+to have ceased, and counsel these weaker races to apply elsewhere for relief.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ Epilogue
+
+ Oh, hear us for our native land,
+ The land we love the most:
+ Our fathers' sepulchres are here,
+ And here our kindred dwell;
+ Our children, too; how should we love
+ Another land so well?
+ Wreford.
+
+
+
+After partaking of hot cross buns at the family table
+of a dear old English family the day before yesterday (Good Friday),
+I went to Walthamstow, and there heard a moving discourse
+delivered by the Rev. James Ellis on the sufferings and death of Christ
+for the redemption of mankind.
+
+At my abode this morning, after receiving such tokens of friendship
+as Easter eggs and artistic picture cards, I attended an Easter service
+at the London University Hall and heard the little choir of four voices
+rendering mellifluous anthems to the glory of God. At the invitation
+of the Rev. R. P. Campbell this afternoon I went to Lloyds Park
+to tell the P.S.A. there about a South African Easter and to deliver
+at the same time the native message to the British public.
+
+In the evening I went to the City Temple, where I listened to
+an intellectual Easter sermon, by the Rev. R. J. Campbell,
+on the triumph of Christianity, and heard the uniformed choir
+artistically sing doxologies to the risen Christ.
+
+As I recall these services, I am transported in thought
+to St. Martin's Church in the heart of the "Free" State,
+6,000 miles away, where thirty-seven years ago, as an unconscious babe
+in my godmother's arms, I went through my first religious sacrament,
+performed by an aged missionary who made the sign of the cross
+on my forehead and on my breast. I think also of another church
+on the banks of the Vaal River where, over twenty years ago,
+another missionary laid his white hands on my curly head and received my vow
+to forsake the Devil and all his works. I know that in these two places,
+as well as in all other native churches and chapels throughout
+South Africa, native congregations have this day been singing
+in their respective houses of worship and in a variety of tongues
+about the risen Christ. But thinking also of the lofty spires
+of the Dutch Reformed churches in the South African towns and dorps,
+I am forced to remember that coloured worshippers are excluded from them.
+Still, in these churches as well, Dutch men and Dutch women have this day
+been singing of the triumphs of the risen Christ. Yet to-morrow
+some of these white worshippers, in the workshops and in the parks,
+will be expressing an opposite sentiment to that conveyed
+in their songs of praise, namely, "Down with the verdoemde schepsels"
+(damned black creatures) -- the Natives -- for whom also,
+these white worshippers say, Christ died.
+
+The Infant Christ, when King Herod sought to murder Him,
+found an asylum in Africa.
+
+The Messiah, having been scourged, mocked, and forced to bear His cross
+up to Golgotha, and sinking under its weight, an African,
+by name Simon of Cyrene, relieved Him of the load.
+
+To-day British troops are suffering untold agony in the trenches
+in a giant struggle for freedom. In this stupendous task
+they are assisted by sable Africans from the British, French,
+and Belgian colonies of the Dark Continent, thus fulfilling
+the Biblical prophecy, "From Africa (Egypt) I have called my son."
+But other Africans, again, are debarred by the South African Constitution
+on account of their colour from doing their share in this war of redemption.
+This prohibition surely carries the conviction that the native complaint
+against the South African Constitution is something more
+than a mere sentimental grievance.
+
+The newspapers are telling us of "a growing spirit of justice
+in South Africa"; but in the face of what is happening to-day,
+the Natives are wondering if the word `justice', in this newspaper allegation,
+is not a misprint for `hatred', for up till as late as 1914
+whole congregations have been arrested on leaving some of their farm chapels
+on "Free" State and Transvaal farms. They had their passes in their pockets,
+but the police contended that they had no special permits,
+signed by the landowners on whose farms the chapels are situated,
+to attend divine service at the particular places of worship
+on that particular day, and the courts upheld this contention.
+Up to five years ago no such sacrilegious proceedings interfered
+with the Sunday attendances of native worshippers in the same country,
+so that there is no mistake as to the kind of spirit that is
+"growing in South Africa".
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When a man comes to you with stories about a "growing spirit of justice
+in South Africa", ask him if he knows that in 1884 there was a great debate
+in the Cape Parliament as to whether Natives should be permitted
+to exercise the franchise, and that the ayes had it. Ask him, further,
+if he thinks that such a proposal could ever be entertained to-day
+by any South African Parliament. If he is honest, he will be bound
+to say "no". Then ask him, "Where is your growing spirit of justice?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In 1909, a South African Governor made a great speech in which
+ he declaimed against the South African policy of pinpricking the blacks.
+
+In 1911, another South African Governor authorized the publication
+ of regulations in which, by prohibiting the employment of coloured artisans
+ on the South African mines, the pinpricks were accentuated.
+
+In 1913, a South African Governor signed the Natives' Land Act
+ which made the Natives homeless in South Africa. Whereas the Government
+ have announced their intention not to disfranchise the South African rebels,
+ judging from the present legislative tendency we fear that,
+ unless the Imperial Government can be induced to interfere,
+ it is not improbable that should the rebels return to power
+ after the general election
+
+In 1916, there will be horrible enactments in store for the blacks.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In 1906, His Majesty's Government gave the Transvaal Colony
+ self-government under a constitution which included a clause placing
+ the voteless native taxpayers under the special protection of the Crown.
+
+In 1907, His Majesty's Government likewise gave the Orange River Colony
+ (now Orange "Free" State) self-government under a constitution
+ which contained a similar provision. At this time the Governor of Natal,
+ as representing the King, was Supreme Chief of the Zulus in that Colony.
+ The Natives lived happily under these protecting reservations,
+ and the white people had no complaint against the just restraint
+ of the Imperial suzerainty.
+
+In 1909, His Majesty's Government passed the Union Constitution, sweeping away
+ all these safeguards. In that Act they practically told South Africa to do
+ what she liked with the Natives in these three Colonies and South Africa
+ is doing it. Where, then, is this "growing spirit"?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+During the South African War in 1901, the Imperial Government
+ informed the Federal (Dutch) Government that no peace terms
+ could be considered which did not extend to the native races
+ the same privileges -- the rights of the franchise -- which are enjoyed
+ by the Natives of the Cape Colony.
+
+In 1902, the British Imperial and Dutch representatives signed the Peace terms
+ at Vereeniging. In these, the rights of the coloured citizens
+ were postponed till after the old Republics had responsible Government.
+ Responsible Government has since been granted, and has in turn
+ been succeeded by the Union. But when the Imperial Parliament,
+
+In 1909, considered the Act of Union, English and Dutch South Africans
+ came over and represented to the Imperial authorities that there would be
+ a striking demonstration (or words to that effect) against the federation,
+ and even against South Africa's relation to the Mother Country
+ if native rights were as much as mentioned in the Constitution;
+ and the South African Native Franchise has now receded as far off
+ as the Greek calends. So where is that "growing spirit of justice"?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When you speak of converting Mohammedans, let the question be asked:
+"What must Mohammedans think of those whose religion having said
+`In the sweat of thy brow shalt thou eat bread,' they nevertheless
+uphold the policy of rulers who pass regulations debarring
+one section of the community from following an honest occupation
+in their native land? And what impression must be created
+in the minds of black converts who are subjected to discriminations,
+including prohibitions that were not in existence five years ago?"
+
+And if in spite of beautiful voices that I have heard this Easter Sunday
+singing anthems concerning the triumph of the kingdom of love the British flag
+continues to defend the policy of repression and colour hatred
+in South Africa, then I fear that the black victims of this policy,
+many of them converted to Christianity through your efforts,
+might very well class your Easter anthems and their great teaching
+with the newspaper canard relative to a "growing spirit of justice
+in South Africa"; for our bitter experience proves that spirit to be at best
+but a dwindling one.
+
+Two years ago I was alarmed by the impious utterances of a coloured man
+whose friendship I valued. He being influential among our people,
+I gently remonstrated with him lest through his action many of our people
+become unsettled in their faith. This was his explanation:
+He was going along an East Rand suburb at eleven o'clock one Sunday morning
+when the bells were ringing. He saw a number of people entering
+a Dutch church, and as he was far from home he mingled with them,
+intending to spend the hour at worship instead of continuing his walk.
+But no sooner was he inside than the usher jostled him out of the church,
+hailed a policeman and handed him in charge, so that he spent the next hour
+in the charge office instead of at chapel. On the Monday morning
+he was convicted by the East Rand Magistrate and fined 1 Pound
+for trespassing on a private place, to wit, a church.
+And that was a Dutch Reformed church, the State Church of South Africa.
+Others had reproached him before me for such utterances, he said,
+but he will have "no more of our religious mockery with its theoretical
+`Come unto Me' and its practical `1 Pound or a month with hard labour'."
+
+John Ruskin, writing on `State Intervention', says:
+
+==
+"When a peasant mother sees one of her careless children fall into a ditch,
+her first proceeding is to pull him out; her second, to box his ears;
+her third, ordinarily, to lead him carefully a little way by the hand,
+or send him home for the rest of the day. The child usually cries,
+and very often would clearly prefer remaining in the ditch;
+and if he understood any of the terms of politics, would certainly
+express resentment at the interference with his individual liberty:
+but the mother has done her duty."
+==
+
+Ruskin goes further and depicts the calamities of a mother nation which,
+like a foxhunter, complies with the request of its daughter nations
+"to be left in muddy independence."*
+
+--
+* `Political Economy of Art': Addenda (J. E., Section 127).
+--
+
+Let us appeal to you, in conclusion, to remember that the victorious Christ
+"has gathered your people into a great nation, and sent them
+to sow beside all waters and multiply sure dwellings on the earth. . . .
+
+"Let not the crown of your pride be as a fading flower.
+But be equal to your high trust: reverent in the use of freedom,
+just in the exercise of power, and generous in the protection of the weak."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+This has been the most strenuous winter that the writer has ever experienced:
+a dark, dreary winter of almost continuous rains, snowflakes, cold,
+mud and slush. Reading of the severity of English winters at a distance,
+I never could have realized that the life I have lived in England
+during the past four months was possible. An existence from which
+the sun's rays are almost always obliterated by the inclement weather,
+by snow and by fog. I cannot describe the sensations caused
+by the dismal gloom of the sunless days -- a most depressing life --
+especially in December, when it would suddenly turn dark,
+compelling one to work by gaslight when the clocks indicated
+that it was high noon. Not till then did I realize why some people are said
+to worship the sun. I find that I have unlearned my acquaintance with
+the larger planets and heavenly bodies (a knowledge acquired since boyhood)
+because the winter fog and clouds have continually hidden the moon and stars
+from view.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But now that the country is throwing off its winter cloak and dressing itself
+in its green, gorgeous array; now that King Day shines in all his glory
+through the mist by day, and the moon and stars appear in their brilliancy
+in the evenings; now that, as if in harmony with the artistic rendering
+of Easter anthems by your choirs, the thrush and the blackbird twitter forth
+the disappearance of the foggy winter with its snow, sleet and wet;
+now that the flocks of fleecy sheep, which for the past four months
+have been in hiding and conspicuous by their absence,
+come forward again and spread triumphantly over the green
+as if in celebration of the dawn of the new spring;
+now that the violet and the daffodil, the marguerite and the hyacinth,
+the snowdrop and the bluebell, glorious in appearance, also announce,
+each in its own way, the advent of sunny spring, we are encouraged
+to hope that, "when peace again reigns over Europe", when white men
+cease warring against white men, when the warriors put away
+the torpedoes and the bayonets and take up less dangerous implements, you will
+in the interest of your flag, for the safety of your coloured subjects,
+the glory of your Empire, and the purity of your religion, grapple with
+this dark blot on the Imperial emblem, the South African anomaly
+that compromises the justice of British rule and seems almost to belie
+the beauty, the sublimity and the sincerity of Christianity.
+
+Shall we appeal to you in vain? I HOPE NOT.
+
+
+
+
+
+[ Map was inserted here. ]
+
+
+
+
+
+ Report of the Lands Commission
+
+ An Analysis
+
+ To attempt to place the different people of the country
+ in water-tight compartments is very attractive in a general way,
+ but it is bound to fail.
+
+ You have got a comparatively small European population
+ -- a million and a quarter -- and something like
+ half a million mixed race, and then you have got between
+ four and five million of the aboriginal inhabitants of the country.
+
+ Any policy that aims at setting off a very small proportion
+ of the land of the country for the use and occupation
+ of the very vast majority of the inhabitants, and reserving
+ for the use and occupation of a very small minority of the inhabitants
+ the great majority of the land of the country, is a policy
+ that economically must break somewhere. You can start and move
+ in that direction to a certain extent, but you will be driven back
+ by the exigencies of a law that operates outside the laws of Parliament --
+ the law of supply and demand.
+
+ This theory of segregation is to some minds attractive,
+ but the forgotten point is that you need the Native.
+ You cannot segregate him because you need him. If you drive him
+ out of his existing life and occupation, you run a great risk
+ that you will lose many of your Natives.
+ Hon. W. P. Schreiner, K.C., C.M.G.,
+ (High Commissioner for the Union of South Africa,
+ Ex-Premier of Cape Colony,) before the Lands Commission.
+
+ If we are to deal fairly with the Natives of this country,
+ then according to population we should give them
+ four-fifths of the country, or at least half.
+ Hon. C. G. Fichardt, M.L.A.
+
+ The best way to segregate the races would be by means of a boundary fence
+ along the main line of Railway from Port Elizabeth,
+ straight through to Bloemfontein and Pretoria, to Pietersburg,
+ putting the blacks on one side and the whites on the other side
+ of the Railway line.*
+ M. J. M. Nyokong, before the Native Affairs Commission.
+
+ --
+ * This would give about one-third of the Union to the four and a half
+ million blacks, the one and a quarter million whites retaining two-thirds.
+ --
+
+
+
+During the past two years while the Empire was involved in
+one of the mightiest struggles that ever shook the foundations of the earth,
+South Africa was wasting time and money in a useless and unprecedented attempt
+at territorial segregation betwixt white and black. Judging by
+the recently published Report of the Lands Commission, however,
+she has failed ignominiously in the task.
+
+Whenever, on behalf of the Natives, the hardships disclosed in this book
+were mentioned, the South African authorities invariably replied
+that these hardships would cease as soon as the Commission submits its Report.
+This has now been done. General Botha laid the Report
+on the table of the house on May 3, 1916, and intimated as he did so
+that "the Government propose to take no immediate action
+upon the recommendations, but will give the country twelve months to consider
+the Report and the evidence." Meanwhile the eviction of Natives from farms
+continues in all parts of the country, and the Act debars them
+from settling anywhere, not even in Natal, although Natal witnesses
+(like the Chairman of the Commission) have definitely claimed
+the exemption of their Colony from this form of Union tyranny.
+
+It is a Report of many parts. A good deal of it is instructive and much of it
+is absurd. Most of the Commissioners and many of the witnesses have
+expressed themselves with a candid disregard for the rights of other people.
+
+Government publications, at least, should be beyond question;
+thus, old Government archives give correct histories of native tribes
+for 500 years back, because their compilers invariably sought and obtained
+reliable evidence from Natives about themselves. But this Commission's Report
+(to mention but one instance among several inaccuracies) tells us,
+on page 27 of U.G. 25-'16, of "the original inhabitants of Moroka ward
+who had lived in Bechuanaland under the Paramount Chief Montsioa (sic).
+Their original chief was Sebuclare" (!)
+
+No Barolong tribe ever had a chief by this name. The fact is,
+that Governments of to-day frequently publish unreliable native records,
+for they are mainly based on information obtained from self-styled experts,
+who, in South Africa, should always be white.
+
+Again, it is not explained why the Commission publishes,
+in a permanent record, particulars of encumbrances on native farms
+such as we find on page 29 of the same volume. Is it to damage
+the credit of the native farmers? Supposing some of the hypothecations given
+in the "list of mortgaged native-owned farms in the Thaba Ncho District"
+were wiped off before the Report was issued, will it be fair
+to the native owners to read, say in 1999, that their farms are mortgaged
+for those amounts?
+
+In the published evidence given before other Commissions
+questions put to the witnesses are usually printed along with the answers.
+This has not been done in the present instance, and consequently
+some of these replies are so clumsily put that the reader cannot even guess
+what the witness was answering. If the questions had also been printed,
+the whole Report might have been illuminating. It is interesting,
+for instance, to read what was apparently a lively dispute
+between the Commissioners and one witness -- Mr. J. G. Keyter, M.L.A.,
+the arch-enemy of the blacks and one of the promoters of the whole trouble --
+as to what is, or is not, the meaning of the Natives' Land Act.
+Indeed the various definitions and explanations of the Act,
+given by the Commissioners and some of the witnesses, contradict those
+previously given by the Union Government and Mr. Harcourt.
+And while the ruling whites, on the one hand, content themselves
+with giving contradictory definitions of their cruelty the native sufferers,
+on the other hand, give no definitions of legislative phrases
+nor explanations of definitions. All that they give expression to
+is their bitter suffering under the operation of what their experience
+has proved to be the most ruthless law that ever disgraced
+the white man's rule in British South Africa.
+
+The Report and the evidence at any rate bear out the statement
+set forth in this book, namely, that the main object in view
+is not segregation, but the reduction of all the black subjects of the King
+from their former state of semi-independence to one of complete serfdom.
+
+
+ The Commission's Awards
+
+The population of South Africa is very commonly overestimated.
+As a matter of fact there are in South Africa about
+one and a quarter million whites and four and a half million blacks.
+According to the Census of 1911, the exact figure is a million less
+than the population of London, -- viz., 5,973,394 -- scattered over
+an area of 143,000,000 morgen -- nearly ten times the size of England.
+A morgen is about 2 1/9 English acres.
+
+But if we are to understand what is proposed, we would have to consider
+the position in the sub-continent under different heads: --
+
+ I. English or Urban Areas, inhabited by 660,000 whites and 800,000 blacks:
+ 1 3/4 quarter million morgen; and
+
+ II. The remaining 141 1/4 million morgen, which the Commission
+ would divide as follows: --
+
+ (a) NATIVE AREAS, for the Bantu and such other coloured races as are
+ classed along with them numbering just about 4,000,000 SOULS:
+ 18 1/4 MILLION MORGEN.
+
+ (b) EUROPEAN AREAS, or nearly the whole of Rural South Africa,
+ for the occupation of 660,000 RURAL WHITES (mainly Boers):
+ 123,000,000 MORGEN.
+
+The English Areas (I) are not affected by the troubles which form
+the subject of this book. None but the four million blacks will be allowed
+to buy land in the Native Area (II(a)); while all the blacks
+who hitherto lived on the Boer Areas (II(b)) must clear out.
+They would only be allowed to come back to Union territory
+as servants to the white farming population.
+
+That, in a nutshell, is the Report of the Segregation Commission.
+
+
+ The Chairman Dissents
+
+On the whole these drastic findings are against the weight of evidence.
+The Report, moreover, shows that the decisions were not carried through
+without some difference of opinion. It would seem that Sir William Beaumont,
+the Chairman of the Commission, a retired Judge of the Supreme Court
+(whose legal training and experience were assuredly entitled to more respect
+than they received) gave a saner interpretation of the Natives' Land Act.
+He evidently wished to treat the amount of land awarded to Natives
+as an instalment to which additions might be made in the future.
+This, he said, was quite within the power of the Commission to recommend.
+But his colleagues presumably preferred, not the legal,
+but their own interpretation, namely, that this sane interpretation was
+"contrary to the intention of the legislature". The Chairman's well-weighed
+judicial verdict appears on page 42 of volume one of the Report: --
+
+==
+In my opinion, neither the Natives' Land Act, nor the terms of its reference,
+require the Commission to delimit the whole extent of the Union
+into European and Native Areas respectively . . . and I think
+it is quite competent for this Commission, where this cannot
+be conveniently done, to leave undefined areas which would be open alike
+to white and black for the acquisition of land. But this opinion
+is not shared by my fellow-commissioners, who regard it as contrary
+to the intentions of the legislature and the terms of the Act.
+==
+
+Sir William Beaumont's rejected opinion is supported by
+the evidence of Senator T. L. Schreiner, who said: --
+
+==
+When the Bill was before the House, I brought to its notice the fact
+that there were areas in the country which it was impossible to declare
+native areas or non-native areas. The late Minister said
+it was not the intention to divide the whole country of the Union;
+therefore I thought that the difficulty was covered (p. 224 vol. ii).
+==
+
+But as in Parliament so also in the Commission it would appear
+that the steam-roller was set in motion; and it operated in each instance
+in favour of repressing the black races.
+
+These four Commissioners presumably thinking that Imperial attention
+would be too much engrossed with the war to notice such insignificant affairs
+as the throttling of the South African Blacks, seem to have decided
+that now or never was the opportune moment for degrading the aborigines
+into helots; therefore, the Chairman, finding that he could not persuade
+his colleagues to adopt his view of things, indited the following
+minority report respecting his own Province of Natal and Zululand
+(vol. i. p. 41): --
+
+==
+The conditions in Natal are, and have been, totally different
+to those in the other Provinces. There has been no demand in Natal
+for the enforcement of a Squatters Act or for any further
+segregation of the natives. Indeed, the opinion of Natal, as expressed
+in the evidence given before the Commission by those best qualified to know,
+is against the application of the Natives' Land Act to Natal.
+
+In Natal, since it became a British possession, the Natives have always had,
+and largely exercised, the right to purchase land outside
+their defined locations, and they regard any infringement of this right
+as a breach of the terms of the Proclamation issued by Her late Majesty
+Queen Victoria at the time the country was annexed by Great Britain.
+(See the petitions presented to the Commission.) The Natives in Natal
+now privately own about 359,000 acres, on which are residing
+some 37,000 Natives. These lands are, in certain areas,
+so intermixed with lands owned by Europeans that any line of demarcation
+can only be arbitrarily made, and may result in serious hardship or injustice
+to both European and Native owners.
+
+The area set aside for native occupation (including mission reserves)
+and preserved for their use by Royal Letters Patent and by
+the South Africa Act, amount to nearly two and a half million acres,
+or about 15 per cent. of the whole of Natal. These areas are,
+according to the native mode of occupation, almost all fully occupied,
+and do not afford more than a very limited opportunity
+for the introduction of Natives from outside.
+
+A further point which has to be considered, and it is one
+on which the Natives lay great stress, is that it seems unjust
+to debar the native from purchasing land in areas where the Indian,
+who is alien to the country, is free to do so.
+
+
+ Zululand
+
+As regards Zululand, it is sufficient here to point out
+that Zululand was delimited into native reserves and Crown lands
+by the Zululand Delimitation Commission of 1902-1904,
+the Crown lands being made available for disposal by the Natal Government,
+to which the country was annexed. It was not, however, intended,
+nor did the Zulus understand, that they were to be deprived of their right
+to acquire any portion of the reserved Crown lands by purchase.
+
+The delimitation was made after a very thorough inquiry
+by persons well acquainted with the Zulus and their country;
+but, even so, we find that whole tribes or large portions of tribes
+who had long been in occupation of their lands -- some of which
+were not acquired by conquest but by voluntary surrender --
+were not provided for, and were left on the reserved Crown lands.
+There are to-day some 24,328 Zulus and Amatonga occupying these lands,
+and they are asking to-day for their lands to be restored to them.
+The delimitation was acquiesced in by the Zulus only because
+they had no alternative, and the inevitable had to be accepted.
+Since the delimitation they have remained loyal and peaceful
+and the bitterness of the losses suffered is past.
+
+The Delimitation Commission in its report expressed the hope
+that the delimitation would be: "as final a settlement
+as it is possible to effect, and that no further changes
+will be initiated in the near future . . ."; but if the question
+is now re-opened and European and native areas are defined anew,
+I think endless trouble is likely to ensue. If any alterations may be found
+necessary in the future, either in the interests of black or white,
+the machinery exists whereby such alteration can be effected
+with little or no disturbance of the natives.
+==
+
+
+ Colonel Stanford Reverses His Views
+
+One redeeming feature in a Report which otherwise is melancholy reading
+is to be found in the consistency of the statesmen of Natal,
+which is admirable in comparison with the fast degenerating land policy
+of Cape Statesmen. Ten years ago the Native Affairs Commission
+reported on the question of Land Tenure in South Africa.
+Messrs. Marshall Campbell and S. O. Samuelson, Natal representatives
+on that Commission -- ably supported by Colonel Stanford,
+the Cape representative -- expressed themselves unambiguously against
+this limitation of native progress. History was about to repeat itself
+in favour of justice in the latest Commission but for the manner
+in which Colonel Stanford completely reversed his former attitude.
+He is the only member of this Commission who had a seat
+on the first Commission, and in 1905 he was reported thus: --
+
+==
+Col. Stanford dissented from the view of the majority
+on the question of restricting to certain areas only
+the right of the individual Native to purchase land. He holds that
+the acquisition by the more advanced Natives of vested individual interests
+in the land is a powerful incentive to loyalty. In his opinion
+sufficient cause has not been shown for the curtailment of privileges
+enjoyed for many years in the British Colonies. . . .
+
+The contention that the safety of European races must be guarded
+by such restrictions as have been under discussion he does not hold
+to be sound. The Church, professions, commerce, trade and labour
+are open to the ambition and energy of the Natives, and with so many avenues
+open to their advance the danger of their swamping Europeans, if a real one,
+is not avoided by denying them the right individually to buy land.
+
+He can see no decadence of the vigour, the enterprise and the courage which,
+since the occupation of the Cape Peninsula by the early Dutch settlers,
+have resulted in the extension of European control and occupation
+to the limits now reached. Moreover, artificial restrictions
+of the occupation of land in the late Dutch Republics
+resulted in the evasion of the law by various forms of contract
+whereby native occupation of farms was effected, while at the same time
+advantage was taken of the opportunities thus afforded of fraudulent practices
+on the part of Europeans employed as agents or so-called trustees. . . .
+
+If the design be to allow purchase by Natives in localities
+regarded as unsuitable for Europeans, sight is lost of the fact
+that usually the Native who desires to become a landed proprietor
+belongs to the civilized class, and such localities offer to him
+no attraction.
+
+Europeans are more and more entering into occupation of land regarded
+as set aside for Natives. Missionaries, traders and others are permitted
+to establish themselves and carry on the duties of their respective callings.
+Townships spring up at the various seats of magistracy and Census Returns
+clearly show that such influx is steadily increasing in volume.
+It is thus demonstrated that the idea of separate occupation of land
+by Natives, even in their own Reserves, is not maintained at the present time,
+nor can it be in the future.*
+
+--
+* `Colonies and British Possessions -- Africa (Session 1905)',
+ vol. lv. pp. 102-103.
+--
+==
+
+But now we must conclude that the gallant Colonel has fallen a victim
+to the new reactionary spirit, for he has deserted Sir W. Beaumont,
+the Natal Commissioner, and taken up with the Northerners,
+a position diametrically opposed to the noble sentiments he then laid down.
+
+
+ The Cape Land Policy
+
+The pronounced inconsistency of the Cape representative on these Commissions
+is in harmony with the reaction which has set in as regards
+the Land Policy of the Cape. It is true that the Cape, so far,
+has been more liberal in the matter of the Franchise. And the very fact
+that some of the Cape voters' lists included some native names
+has had a restraining influence on the utterances of certain
+Cape members of Parliament who would otherwise have given expression
+to reactionary sentiments. But it is no less true that in later years
+the same native Franchise has been hypocritically used as a cloak
+to cover a multitude of political sins, such, for instance, as free trade
+in liquor among the Natives and the systematic robbery of native lands.
+To my own personal knowledge, the Cape Government have on several occasions,
+arbitrarily, on the slightest pretext, or none whatever, confiscated lands
+that were awarded to native tribes by Imperial representatives,
+in the name of Queen Victoria, and parcelled them out to Europeans.
+
+A striking instance of such rapacity on the part of successive
+Cape administrations appears on page 30 of the Minute by Sir William Beaumont,
+Chairman of the Lands Commission. Sir William shows how
+loyal black taxpayers in Griqualand West had been systematically
+robbed of Queen Victoria's gifts and driven from pillar to post.
+Commission after Commission had been sent out to them
+at intervals of ten years, systematic spoliation and pillage following
+the visit of each commission. It has been my sorrow to be among those
+who witnessed the coming and going of some of these decennial commissions
+and the truculent attitude of the Cape Government, who,
+trading on the people's ignorance, treated Queen Victoria's awards
+like so many scraps of paper, drove these tax-payers from their homes,
+and invited white men to occupy their territories.
+
+This is what Sir William writes about the Commission of the last decade: --
+
+==
+The case of these Natives calls for special consideration. They were promised
+that they would never be removed so long as they remained loyal,
+and in the end they were burnt out. There is a very strong feeling
+amongst them that there has been a want of faith towards them.
+
+The subject was specially reported on by Mr. P. Dreyer,
+Civil Commissioner of Kimberley, on August 27, 1909.
+He made specific recommendations, which appear to be quite sound,
+but do not appear to have been adopted.
+==
+
+Now, this is only with reference to Griqualand West. But similar
+acts of violence have marked the land-grabbing propensity of the Cape
+in Bechuanaland, in Peddie and the Transkei, even during my lifetime.
+
+
+ The So-Called Native Areas
+
+Turning to the evidence, we find that if we omit the depositions
+of Natal whites, of Missionaries and of Natives, the remaining witnesses
+-- a minority of the whole -- emphatically declared that the aborigines
+were not entitled to a square yard of their ancestral lands and that
+they should be tolerated only as servants. Those, at any rate, who thought
+that we were entitled to some breathing space, were willing to concede
+certain little "reserves" in the centre of groups of white men's farms,
+into which black men and women could be herded like so many heads of cattle,
+rearing their offspring as best they could and preparing them
+for a life of serfdom on the surrounding farm properties.
+They held it to be the duty of the parent serfs to hand over their children,
+as soon as they were fit, to the farmers who would work them out;
+and when age and infirmity had rendered them unfit for further service,
+they could be hustled back to the reserved pens, there to spend
+the evening of their lives in raising more young serfs
+for the rising white generation. The Commission's findings
+seem to have been influenced largely by the latter type of white witness,
+for all that they award us, in our ancestral South Africa,
+might be called human incubators considering the amount of space.
+
+A contemplation of the circumstances attending these selfish recommendations
+leads one to wonder whether the Commissioners suffered from
+the lack of a sense of humour or an undue excess of it.
+In North and South America, for instance, we read that the slave-pens
+were erected and maintained by the farmers at their own cost.
+That "the interest of the master demanded that he should direct
+the general social and moral life of the slave, and should provide
+especially for his physical well-being;" but the pens proposed
+by the South African Land Commission, on the other hand, are to be maintained
+entirely by the slaves, at their own cost, the farmer's only trouble being
+to come to the gate and whistle for labourers.
+
+It is lawful in certain parts of South Africa for Natives
+to dispose of or "sell" their daughters to men, the purchase price
+being sometimes fixed by the Government. It is thus that white magistrates
+have at times condemned unfortunate black girls to cohabit with men
+they hated, provided the latter have paid the price; and having regard
+to the object for which the proposed native pens are to be set aside,
+the reader can picture to himself the coming commercial traffic in black girls
+within the enclosures of the said "native areas".
+
+Several of the witnesses have made the statement that Natives are not making
+economic use of the land. As far as we have read, not one of such witnesses
+supported his point with figures. But most of those who expressed
+the contrary view -- that native lands are shockingly overcrowded --
+have backed their statements with figures. Prominent among them,
+there was Mr. Adamson, the Natal Magistrate. In answer to further questions
+by Commissioner Wessels -- questions which this Report does not disclose --
+the same witness also said: "I say the Location is crowded because
+there are too many Natives for the ground, which is very poor and precipitous.
+It is only down towards the valley where they can do a little cultivation.
+The population is 12,368."
+
+Other magistrates and farmers gave similar evidence regarding their districts.
+They included Mr. J. S. Smit, the Klerksdorp Magistrate,
+who incidentally exploded the stale old falsehood about Natives living
+on the labour of their wives. The Rev. J. L. Dube said inter alia:
+"It is a fact that none can deny that the white man has got the best land.
+In the Free State you can go for miles without seeing anything;
+but if it had been native land there would have been an outcry,
+`Look at this beautiful land, and the Kaffirs not cultivating it.'
+Going to Johannesburg by the mail from here any day one can see waste land
+belonging to white people."
+
+Mr. E. T. Stubbs, Commissioner of Louis Trichardt, said: "The density
+of the native population on reserves is 106 to 177 per square mile;
+on white farms only 28, and on Crown land 3 to the square mile."
+Yet in the face of these and similar official figures,
+the Commission reiterates the unsupported allegation of prejudiced witnesses
+that "Natives are not making economic use of their land."
+But on turning to the Census figures one sees at once how unfounded
+is the repeated charge. Take only one of the Provinces -- Cape Colony --
+in which it is said the Natives hold (and therefore "waste") the most land.
+
+
+ Province of the Cape of Good Hope
+
+Cape Colony is about 83 3/4 million morgen in extent. It is usually
+referred to as: --
+
+ (a) THE COLONY PROPER: 78,800,000 MORGEN, feeding 560,000 WHITES
+ and 1,090,000 BLACKS, with their 1,603,625 cattle,
+ 240,000 horses and 20 million sheep and goats; and
+
+ (b) THE TRANSKEIAN NATIVE TERRITORIES: 5,000,000 MORGEN,
+ feeding 20,000 WHITES and 900,000 BLACKS, with their
+ 1,111,700 cattle, 90,000 horses, 3 1/2 million sheep and goats,
+ and more poultry and pigs than in the Colony Proper.
+
+Surely, no further mathematical demonstration is needed to show
+on which side of the Kei there is a waste of land, if any.
+But it is a maxim in South Africa that, except as mechanical contrivances,
+Natives do not count, and cattle in their possession are not live-stock;
+thus the districts in which they eke out an existence
+are so much derelict land. The Commission, therefore,
+propose the following alterations: --
+
+The 20,000 whites in the Transkei must not be disturbed. A million morgen
+in the Transkei is set aside for them, and it shall be unlawful
+for the blacks to live there except as servants. On the other hand
+the million odd Natives in the Colony Proper must betake themselves
+to the remainder of the Transkei, with their cattle and other belongings.
+A million morgen of Kalahari sand-dunes, worthless for farming purposes,
+and the small tribal communes near Queenstown and King Williamstown,
+are also set aside as native areas. And then the whole of Cape Colony
+(supposing the Commission's extraordinary recommendations be enforced)
+will balance itself as follows: --
+
+ (a) EUROPEAN AREAS: 76,392,503 MORGEN, feeding 560,000 WHITES,
+ their 1,030,000 CATTLE, 180,300 HORSES AND 15 MILLION
+ SHEEP AND GOATS.
+
+ (b) NATIVE AREAS: 7,356,590 MORGEN, feeding 1,500,000 BLACKS,
+ with their 1,580,000 HEAD OF CATTLE, 154,630 HORSES AND 8 MILLION
+ SHEEP AND GOATS.
+
+At first sight it would appear that these awards allotted
+say 288 acres per white and 7 acres per black person;
+but, as the bulk of the English (a quarter of a million)
+live in towns and are not affected by this trouble,
+we may deduct the Urban districts and their white and black populations.
+Then the Commission's allotments really work out at about 589.31 acres
+per Boer (man, woman or child) and only 10.3 acres per Native.
+And even then, this would be by no means the limit of the disproportion.
+Appendix VIII (Annexure I) of the same Report recommends
+future inroads by whites upon these attenuated native reservations,
+but, to the blacks, there is to be no territorial compensation
+from the Colony, which an adoption of all these recommendations
+would practically depopulate.
+
+As things are at present, the black population of these areas
+is as much as 70 to 90 persons to the square mile. In density of population,
+some of these "rural" native districts are second only to Capetown,
+Durban, and Johannesburg -- South Africa's most populous centres.
+Not one of the other South African "cities" can show
+a population of more than 20 to 30 persons to the square mile.
+So that every individual inhabitant of a city occupies a larger space
+than some of these native farmers can have for themselves,
+their livestock and agricultural pursuits. So says the Census Report
+(U.G. 32-'12), which is fully borne out by the writer's own observations
+in a travelling experience of more than ten years.
+
+The average density of the rural population in white areas
+is about five to eight persons per square mile. In native areas
+the average is ten times that number, while the black belt
+along the Indian Ocean contains from 100 to 140 Natives per square mile
+(see Schedule F. and Tables XIII-XVI, of the Census Report).
+Yet the Commission would saddle these congested native areas
+with additional populations from the Colony Proper and raise the density
+to something over 200 souls per square mile.
+
+The density of cattle to the square mile in Cape Colony
+is 6.39 in white areas, and 61.15 in native areas (see U.G. 32h. 1912.
+pp. 1227-1228). Adopt the Commission's Report and you will have
+in white areas 0.24 and in Native areas 163.26 cattle per square mile.
+
+Is it fair or reasonable that the indigenes of an open country
+who pay taxation for the benefit of their rulers and not of themselves,
+should be forced to live the overcrowded lives of the Belgians without
+Belgium's sanitary arrangements, or the precautionary hygienic measures
+necessary in other thickly populated areas?
+
+Is it natural that their cattle should be subjected to this
+starvation process, while the grassy tracts of their God-given territories
+are mainly untenanted and preserved as breeding grounds
+for venomous snakes and scorpions?
+
+Has it come to this that the standard of our unfortunate country
+has sunk so low that dog-in-the-manger stories are now read
+in Parliamentary publications?
+
+It is clear that under the proposed arrangement native cattle must starve
+and their owners with them. For it has come out in evidence
+that even now (while many Europeans hold large tracts of idle land)
+some of the blacks have not enough grazing for their stock.
+But that little difficulty the Commission solves by proposing
+that Natives should be taught to give up cattle breeding,
+which alone stands between them and the required serfdom!
+
+An African home without its flock and herd is like an English home
+without its bread-winner.
+
+==
+"Von Franzius considers Africa the home of the house cattle
+and the Negro the original tamer. . . . Among the great Bantu tribes
+extending from the Soudan toward the South, cattle are evidence of wealth;
+one tribe, for instance, having so many oxen that each village
+had ten or twelve thousand head. Lenz (1884), Bouet-Williaumez (1848),
+Hecquard (1854), Bosman (1805), and Baker (1868) all bear witness
+to this, and Schweinfurth (1878) tells us of great cattle parks
+with two to three thousand head, and of numerous agricultural
+and cattle-raising tribes . . . while Livingstone describes
+the busy cattle raising of the Bantu and Kaffirs."*
+
+--
+* `The Negro' (Du Bois), pp. 108-109.
+--
+==
+
+But the Commission would force us to give up our agrarian occupation
+when we are debarred by Acts of Parliament from following
+other profitable industries in our own country. This is equivalent to saying
+that Englishmen must be taught to close down their shops,
+stop their shipping industry and give up their maritime trade.
+
+
+ The Orange "Free" State
+
+The Provincial difficulties I have endeavoured to point out become
+more serious when we regard the conditions in the so-called "Free" States.
+There the native position is rendered exceptionally desperate
+by a number of rigorous class enactments. Formerly these discriminating laws
+were eased by the action of the State Presidents who were in the habit
+of issuing exemption certificates to Natives who wished to buy land,
+either from other Natives or from Europeans; but now, these harsh laws,
+besides being rigidly enforced against all Natives, were made more acute
+in 1913, while there is no one in the position once occupied by the President,
+who might be able or inclined to grant any relief.
+
+Whenever by force of character or sheer doggedness one Native has tried
+to break through the South African shackles of colour prejudice,
+the Colour Bar, inserted in the South African Constitution in 1909,
+instantly hurled him back to the lowest wrung of the ladder
+and held him there. Let me mention only one such case.
+
+About ten years ago Mr. J. M. Nyokong, of the farm Maseru,
+in the Thabanchu district, invested about 1,000 Pounds
+in agricultural machinery and got a white man to instruct his nephews
+in its use. I have seen his nephews go forth with a steam sheller,
+after garnering his crops every year, to reap and thresh
+the grain of the native peasants on the farms in his district.
+But giving evidence before the Lands Commission two years ago,
+this industrious black landowner stated that he had received
+orders from the Government not to use his machinery except under
+the supervision of a white engineer. This order, he says,
+completely stopped his work. The machinery is used only at harvesting time;
+no white man would come and work for him for two months only in the year,
+and as he cannot afford to pay one for doing nothing
+in the remaining ten months, his costly machinery is reduced
+to so much scrap iron. This is the kind of discouragement and attrition
+to which Natives who seek to better their position are subjected
+in their own country.
+
+
+ The Native Affairs Department
+
+Perhaps the greatest puzzle in this ocean of native difficulties,
+to which one can but slightly refer in this chapter, is the attitude
+of some of the gentlemen in charge of the Native Affairs Department --
+the only Branch of the South African administration run exclusively
+on native taxes. It is perhaps as well to cite one instance
+illustrative of their methods of administering native affairs.
+The Rev. J. L. Dube, President of the Native Congress,
+gave evidence before the Lands Commission and produced letters
+addressed to him by certain Natal firms, from which I extract
+the following passages: --
+
+==
+If you are prepared to purchase this land my Company would be prepared
+to do business with you. . . . In view of the fact that you and Cele
+have already purchased portion of the Company's property adjoining the land
+now offered for sale, we think there would be no objection
+on the part of the Governor General in giving his consent to the transfer.*
+
+--
+* U.G. 22, p. 557.
+--
+==
+
+Another extract runs: --
+
+==
+"We have a piece of land at the edge of our estate cutting right into land
+owned by various Natives, and we are willing to dispose of this land to Cele
+for this reason. We understood that the Department of Native Affairs raised
+no objection, but we were astonished when everything was "cut and dried"
+to find them refusing the application."*
+
+--
+* U.G. 22, p. 557.
+--
+==
+
+How then can the Native be expected to survive this organized opposition,
+on the part of the authorities, and also of these official beneficiaries
+and prospective pensioners of native taxes? Will it be believed
+that these gentlemen of the Native Affairs Department, whose salaries
+are actually paid by us, should have sent messengers at our expense
+to convene a meeting of their colleagues, at which letters were dictated
+prohibiting the sale of this land to Zulus -- the stationery,
+the typewriter and the typist's labour, to say nothing of the cigarettes
+smoked by those present, being paid for out of native money?
+
+Is it surprising if we feel that their adverse interference in matters
+which so vitally affect us has long since become intolerable?
+
+It may be asked what useful purpose is served by the Native Affairs Department
+as it now stands? This would be my answer: --
+
+The Department is responsible for the gathering in of all native taxes
+throughout the Union. And after paying the salaries of the staff,
+it pays over annually a huge surplus to the Union Exchequer
+for the benefit of "a white South Africa". Further, the Transvaal Natives
+believe that they would get along much better with the white population,
+and with officials of other Departments of State, were not
+"the Native Affairs Department continually stirring them up against us."
+The justice of this complaint is well exemplified at Johannesburg,
+where the autocrats of this department are armed with, and liberally exercise,
+the peculiar and exceptional powers of locking up Natives without warrants,
+without any charge, and without a trial -- powers which even
+the Judges of the Supreme Court do not possess.
+
+
+ General Hertzog's Scheme
+
+It may interest the reader to know that General Hertzog
+is the father of the segregation controversy. The writer and other Natives
+interviewed him before Christmas, 1912, at the Palace of Justice, Pretoria,
+when he was still in the ministry. We had a two hours' discussion,
+in the course of which the General gave us a forecast of what he then regarded
+as possible native areas, and drew rings on a large wall-map of the Union
+to indicate their locality. Included in these rings were several Magistracies
+which he said would solve a knotty problem. He told us that white people
+objected to black men in Government offices and magistrates in those areas
+would have no difficulty in employing them.
+
+General Hertzog was dismissed shortly after, and it has been said
+that in order to placate his angry admirers the Ministry passed
+the Natives' Land Act of which this Report is the outcome.
+Judging by the vigour with which the Union administration has been
+weeding Natives out of the public service and replacing them with Boers
+without waiting for the Commission's Report, it is clear
+that they did not share General Hertzog's intention as regards
+these magistracies. I cannot recall all the magistracies
+which General Hertzog mentioned as likely to fall in native areas;
+but I distinctly remember that Pietersburg and Thaba Nchu were among them;
+while Alice and Peddie (and possibly a neighbouring district)
+were to be included in a southern reserve into which the Natives
+round East London and Grahamstown would have to move, the land vacated by them
+to be gradually occupied by the white settlers now scattered over the would-be
+native block. He went on to forecast a vast dependency of the Union
+in which the energies and aspirations of black professional men
+would find their outlet with no danger of competition with Europeans;
+where a new educational and representative system could be evolved for Natives
+to live their own lives, and work out their salvation in a separate sphere.
+But the lands Commission's Report places this plausible scheme beyond
+the region of possibility, for no native area, recommended by this Commission,
+includes any of the magistracies mentioned.
+
+General Hertzog's plan at least offered a fair ground for discussion,
+but the Commission's Report is a travesty of his scheme.
+It intensifies every native difficulty and goes much further
+than the wild demands of the "Free" State extremists.
+Thus even if it be thrown out, as it deserves to be,
+future exploiters will always cite it as an excuse for measures
+subversive of native well-being. In fact, that such legislation
+should be mooted is nothing short of a national calamity.
+
+
+ How They "Doubled" a Native Area
+
+Near the northern boundaries of Transvaal there lies
+a stretch of malarial country in which nothing can live unless born there.
+Men and beasts from other parts visit it only in winter and leave it again
+before the rains begin, when the atmosphere becomes almost too poisonous
+to inhale. Even the unfailing tax-gatherers of the Native Affairs Department
+go there only in the winter every year and hurry back again
+with the money bags before the malarial period sets in.
+A Boer general describes how when harassed by the Imperial forces
+during the South African war, he was once compelled to march through it;
+and how his men and horses -- many of them natives of the Transvaal --
+contracted enough malaria during the march to cause
+the illness of many and the death of several Burghers and animals.
+Of the native inhabitants of this delectable area the Dutch General says:
+"Their diminutive, deformed stature was another proof of the miserable climate
+obtaining there."*
+
+--
+* `My Reminiscences of the Anglo-Boer War' (General Ben Viljoen), p. 222.
+--
+
+When the Land Commissioners contemplated this "salubrious" region,
+their hearts must have melted with generosity, for whereas
+in our own healthy part of South Africa they have indicated
+possible native areas by little dots or microscopical rings
+(as in Thaba Nchu for instance), here, in this malarial area,
+they marked off a reserve almost as wide as that described
+by General Hertzog himself at our Pretoria interview. It is possibly
+in this way, and in such impossible places, that the Commission is alleged
+to have "doubled" the native areas. In the rest of the country
+they ask Parliament to confiscate our birthright to the soil of our ancestry
+in favour of 600,000 Boers and aliens whose languages can show
+no synonym for HOME -- the English equivalent of our IKAYA and LEGAE!
+
+The Britishers' vocabulary includes that sacred word: and that, perhaps,
+is the reason why their colonizing schemes have always allowed
+some tracts of country for native family life, with reasonable opportunities
+for their future existence and progress, in the vast South African expanses
+which God in His providence had created for His Children of the Sun.
+The Englishman, moreover, found us speaking the word `Legae',
+and taught us how to write it. In 1910, much against our will,
+the British Government surrendered its immediate sovereignty over our land
+to Colonials and cosmopolitan aliens who know little about a Home,
+because their dictionaries contain no such loving term;
+and the recommendations of this Commission would seem to express
+their limited conception of the word and its beautiful significance.
+
+
+ Natives Have no Information about the Coming Servitude
+
+All too little (if anything at all) is known of the services rendered
+to the common weal by the native leaders in South Africa. In every crisis
+of the past four years -- and the one-sided policy of the Union
+has produced many of these -- the native leaders have taken upon themselves
+the thankless and expensive task of restraining the Natives
+from resorting to violence. The seeming lack of appreciation
+with which the Government has met their success in that direction
+has been the cause of some comment among Natives. On more than one occasion
+they have asked whether the authorities were disappointed because,
+by their successful avoidance of bloodshed, the native leaders
+had forestalled the machine guns. But, be the reason what it may,
+this apparent ingratitude has not cooled their ardour in the cause of peace.
+
+To-day the Native Affairs Department has handed over 7,000 Pounds
+from native taxes to defray the cost of the Land Commission,
+consisting of five white Commissioners, their white clerks and secretaries --
+the printing alone swallowed up nearly 1,000 Pounds with further payments
+to white translators for a Dutch edition of the Report.
+But not a penny could be spared for the enlightenment of the Natives
+at whose expense the inquiry has been carried through.
+They have been officially told and had every reason to believe
+that the Commission was going about to mark out reservations
+for them to occupy and live emancipated from the prejudicial conditions
+that would spring from contiguity with the white race.
+For any information as to the real character of the contents
+of the Dutch and English Report of this Commission, they would
+have to depend on what they could gather from the unsalaried efforts
+of the native leaders, who, owing to the vastness of the sub-continent,
+the lack of travelling facilities and their own limited resources,
+can only reach a few localities and groups.
+
+It may be said with some reason that English leaders of thought
+in South Africa have had a task of like difficulty: that they worked
+just as hard to get the English colonists to co-operate loyally
+with a vanquished foe in whose hands the Union constitution has placed
+the destiny of South Africa. It could also be said with equal justice
+that the Boer leaders' task has been not less difficult,
+that it required their greatest tact to get the Boer majority
+-- now in power -- to deal justly with the English who had been responsible
+for the elimination of the two Boer flags from among the emblems of
+the family of nations. But the difficulties of their task is not comparable
+to that of the native leaders. English and Dutch Colonial leaders
+are members of Parliament, each in receipt of 400 Pounds a year,
+with a free first class ticket over all systems of the South African Railways.
+They enjoy, besides, the co-operation of an army of well-paid
+white civil servants, without whom they could scarcely have managed
+their own people. The native leader on the other hand,
+in addition to other impediments, has to contend with
+the difficulty of financing his own tours in a country
+whose settled policy is to see that Natives do not make any money.
+His position in his own country approximates to that of an Englishman,
+grappling single-handed with complicated problems, on foreign soil,
+without the aid of a British consul.
+
+
+ Bullyragging the Natives
+
+For upwards of three years the Government of the Union of South Africa
+has harassed and maltreated the rural native taxpayers as no heathen monarch,
+since the time of the Zulu King Chaka, ever illused a tributary people.
+For the greater part of our period of suffering the Empire was engaged
+in a titanic struggle, which, for ghastliness is without precedent.
+I can think of no people in the Eastern Hemisphere who are absolutely
+unaffected by it; but the members of the Empire can find consolation
+in the fact that almost all creation is in sympathy with them.
+Constant disturbance has brought a realization to the entire universe
+that nature, like the times, is out of joint. The birds of the air
+and the fishes, like other denizens of the deep, are frequently drawn into
+the whirlpool of misery; and a mutual suffering has identified them as it were
+with some of the vicissitudes of an Empire at war. And they too
+have in their peculiar way felt impelled to offer their condolence
+to the dependants of those who have fallen in the combat on land, in the air,
+on sea, and under the sea. And while all creation stands aghast
+beside the gaping graves, by rivers of blood, mourning with us
+the loss of some of the greatest Englishmen that ever lived,
+South Africa, having constituted herself the only vandal State,
+possesses sufficient incompassion to celebrate the protection
+conferred on her by the British Fleet and devote her God-given security
+to an orgy of tyranny over those hapless coloured subjects of the King,
+whom the Union constitution has placed in the hollow of her hands.
+
+Is there nobody left on earth who is just enough to call on South Africa
+to put an end to this cowardly abuse of power?
+
+We appeal to the Colonists of Natal, who have declared themselves against
+the persecution of their Natives; and would draw their attention to the fact
+that in spite of their disapproval, expressed to the Lands Commission,
+the Union Government, at the behest of a prisoner, is still tyrannizing
+over the Zulus.
+
+We appeal to the Churches. We would remind them that in the past
+the Christian voice has been our only shield against
+legislative excesses of the kind now in full swing in the Union.
+But in the new ascendency of self and pelf over justice and tolerance,
+that voice will be altogether ignored, unless strongly reinforced
+by the Christian world at large. We appeal for deliverance
+from the operation of a cunningly conceived and a most draconian law
+whose administration has been marked by the closing down
+of native Churches and Chapels in rural South Africa.
+
+We appeal to the Jews, God's chosen people, who know
+what suffering means. We would remind them that if after 1913
+there was no repetition of a Russian pogrom it was largely because
+the native leaders (including the author) have spared neither pains nor pence
+in visiting the scattered tribes and exhorting them to obey
+all the demands of the South African Government under the Grobler law
+pending a peaceful intercession from the outside world.
+But for this self-imposed duty on the part of the native leaders,
+I am satisfied that numbers of the native peasantry would have been mown down
+early in 1914, and humanity would have been told that they were
+justly punished for disobedience to constituted authority.
+
+We appeal to the leaders of the Empire -- that Empire for which
+my own relatives have sacrificed life and property in order to aid
+its extension along the Cape to Cairo route, entirely out of love for
+her late Majesty Queen Victoria and with no expectation of material reward.
+We ask these leaders to honour the plighted word of their noble predecessors
+who collectively and severally assured us a future of peace and happiness
+as our membership privilege in the Empire for which we bled.
+They were among the noblest Englishmen that ever left their native shores
+to create a prestige for their nation abroad. They included
+heroes and empire-builders too many to mention, who all told us that they
+spoke in the name of Queen Victoria and on behalf of her heirs and successors.
+What has suddenly become of the Briton's word -- his bond -- that solemn
+obligations of such Imperialists should cease to count? And if it is decided
+that the Victorian Englishman and the Twentieth Century Englishman
+are creatures of different clay (and that with the latter honour is binding
+only when both parties to the undertaking are white), surely this
+could hardly be the moment to inaugurate a change the reaction of which
+cannot fail to desecrate the memories of your just and upright forebears.
+
+We would draw the attention of the British people to the fact
+that the most painful part of the present ordeal to the loyal black millions,
+who are now doing all they can, or are allowed to do, to help the Empire
+to win the war, is that they suffer this consummate oppression
+at the bidding of a gentleman now serving his term for participating
+in a rebellion during this war. We feel that it must be
+a source of intense satisfaction to Mr. Piet Grobler in his cell,
+that the most loyal section of the King's South African subjects
+are suffering persecution under his law -- a fact which, looked at
+from whatever standpoint, is equal to an official justification of the ideals
+for which he rose in rebellion. And if there is to be a return
+to the contented South Africa of other days, both the Natives' Land Act
+-- his law -- and the Report of the Lands Commission -- its climax --
+should be torn up.
+
+
+ Courting Retribution
+
+For three years and more the South African Government have persecuted
+my kinsmen and kinswomen for no other crime than that they have meekly
+paid their taxes. I had come to the conclusion, after meeting Colonials
+from all quarters of the globe and weighing the information
+obtained from them, that in no Colony are the native inhabitants
+treated with greater injustice than in South Africa.* Yet in spite of all
+I had seen and heard, I must say that, until this Report reached me,
+I never would have believed my white fellow-countrymen capable of conceiving
+the all but diabolical schemes propounded between the covers
+of Volume I of the Report of the South African Lands Commission, 1916,
+and clothing them in such plausible form as to mislead
+even sincere and well-informed friends of the Natives. There are
+pages upon pages of columns of figures running into four, five or six noughts.
+They will dazzle the eye until the reader imagines himself witnessing
+the redistribution of the whole sub-continent and its transfer to
+the native tribes. But two things he will never find in that mass of figures;
+these are (a) the grand total of the land so "awarded" to Natives;
+and (b) how much is left for other people. To arrive at these he has to do
+his own additions and subtractions, and call in the aid of statistics
+such as the Census figures, the annual blue books, etc., before the truth
+begins to dawn on him. They talk of having "doubled" the native areas.
+They found us in occupation of 143,000,000 morgen and propose to squeeze us
+into 18 million. If this means doubling it, then our teachers
+must have taught us the wrong arithmetic. Is it any wonder
+that it is becoming increasingly difficult for us to continue
+to love and respect the great white race as we truly loved it
+at the beginning of this century?
+
+--
+* Some white South Africans in recent years have migrated
+ to the Katanga region in the Belgian Congo. I have read
+ in the South African daily papers, correspondence from some of them
+ complaining of their inability to make money. They attributed
+ this difficulty to the fact that the Belgian officials will not permit them
+ to exploit the labour of the Congolese as freely as white men are accustomed
+ to make use of the Natives in British South Africa.
+--
+
+We would submit a few problems in this Report for the British People
+and their Parliamentary Representatives to solve: --
+
+First: Who are to become the occupants of the lands from which the Commission
+recommends the removal of the native proletariat?
+
+Secondly: In view of certain upheavals which we have seen not very long ago,
+and others which might take place in the future, it is pertinent to ask,
+concerning the "very small minority of the inhabitants" -- the Whites --
+alluded to by Mr. Schreiner at the head of this chapter,
+(a) what proportion is in full sympathy with the ideals of the British Empire;
+(b) what proportion remains indifferent; and (c) what proportion
+may be termed hostile?
+
+Thirdly: Does the autonomy granted to this "small minority"
+amount to complete independence, or does it not?
+
+Fourthly: Would it not be advisable also to inquire:
+Of "the vast majority of the inhabitants" the King's Black subjects,
+doomed by this Report to forfeit their homes and all they value
+in their own country, (a) how many of these are loyal,
+and (b) how many are not?
+
+Finally and solemnly we would put it to all concerned
+for the honour and perpetuity of British dominion in South Africa,
+can the Empire afford to tamper with and alienate their affections?
+
+As stated already, this "very vast majority of the inhabitants"
+of South Africa has been strafed by the "very small minority"
+for over three years. And when the burden loaded on our bent backs
+becomes absolutely unbearable we are at times inclined to blame ourselves;
+for, when some of us fought hard -- and often against British diplomacy --
+to extend the sphere of British influence, it never occurred to us
+that the spread of British dominion in South Africa would culminate
+in consigning us to our present intolerable position, namely, a helotage
+under a Boer oligarchy. But when an official Commission asks Parliament
+to herd us into concentration camps, with the additional recommendation
+that besides breeding slaves for our masters, we should be made
+to pay for the upkeep of the camps: in other words, that we
+should turn the Colonials into slave raiders and slave-drivers
+(but save them the expense of buying the slaves), the only thing
+that stands between us and despair is the thought that Heaven
+has never yet failed us. We remember how African women have at times
+shed tears under similar injustices; and how when they have been made
+to leave their fields with their hoes on their shoulders,
+their tears on evaporation have drawn fire and brimstone from the skies.
+But such blind retribution has a way of punishing the innocent
+alike with the guilty, and it is in the interests of both
+that we plead for some outside intervention to assist South Africa
+in recovering her lost senses.
+
+The ready sympathy expressed by those British people
+among whom I have lived and laboured during the past two years
+inspires the confidence that a consensus of British opinion will,
+in the Union's interest, stay the hand of the South African Government,
+veto this iniquity and avert the Nemesis that would surely follow
+its perpetration.
+
+Her mind must have been riveted on South Africa when, quite recently,
+Ida Luckie sang: --
+
+ Alas, My Country! Thou wilt have no need
+ Of enemy to bring thee to thy doom. . . .
+ For not alone by war a nation falls.
+ Though she be fair, serene as radiant morn,
+ Though girt by seas, secure in armament,
+ Let her but spurn the vision of the Cross;
+ Tread with contemptuous feet on its command
+ Of mercy, Love and Human Brotherhood,
+ And she, some fateful day, shall have no need
+ Of enemy to bring her to the dust.
+
+ Some day, though distant it may be -- with God
+ A thousand years are but as yesterday --
+ The germs of hate, injustice, violence,
+ Like an insidious canker in the blood,
+ Shall eat that nation's vitals. She shall see
+ Break forth the blood-red tide of anarchy,
+ Sweeping her plains, laying her cities low,
+ And bearing on its seething, crimson flood
+ The wreck of Government, of home, and all
+ The nation's pride, its splendour and its power.
+ On with relentless flow, into the seas
+ Of God's eternal vengeance wide and deep.
+ But, for God's grace! Oh may it hold thee fast,
+ My Country, until justice shall prevail
+ O'er wrong and o'er oppression's cruel power,
+ And all that makes humanity to mourn.
+
+
+
+
+
+[End of original text.]
+
+
+
+
+[Original Advertisements.]
+
+
+Some Opinions of the Press on the First Edition
+
+
+
+"It is difficult to believe that such barbarities are possible;
+but Mr. Plaatje gives chapter and verse for every one of his indictments;
+the Act itself is quoted in extenso; various debates
+in the Colonial Parliament are given, and arguments for and against the Act
+furnished by the different speakers. The whole book is really interesting,
+and will come as a great surprise to many English people
+who know little of the South African Native as an educated,
+thinking human being, and will certainly excite sympathy
+with his present precarious state under colonial laws,
+which seem to be little inspired by the principles of justice and liberty
+which British supremacy formerly guaranteed." -- `Yorkshire Observer'.
+
+"Whatever may have been the intention of the home Government,
+in practice this Act has meant the restriction of Natives
+to their reservations, or to servitude among the white population.
+Mr. Plaatje states his case clearly and asserts that this movement
+is reactionary and a false step on the part of the Government
+to placate the extreme Dutch party in South Africa." -- `Glasgow Herald'.
+
+"The author makes an excellent case for the consideration
+of the Imperial Government. He convincingly proves
+that the fortunes of the native races should not have been
+handed over to the Dutch Republicans without adequate safeguards.
+He gratefully acknowledges the enthusiastic support given to the Natives
+by the British settlers and appeals for an inquiry. The interest of the book
+for the Punjabis consists, not in the similarity of the grievances,
+for we here have no such grievance against the Government,
+but in showing the way for inviting attention to the injustice involved
+in excluding a large class of Hindus from agriculture."
+-- `The Tribune', Lahore.
+
+"It is a serious case, well and ably put, and the evidence embodied in it
+is very disquieting. Here at any rate is a book which makes
+the native agitation intelligible and may conceivably have an influence
+on future events in South Africa -- and at home, for by no legal fiction
+can the Imperial power dissociate itself from responsibility
+for Native affairs." -- `Birmingham Post'.
+
+"The supporters of the Act do not make the principles attractive
+in explaining them. Mr. J. G. Keyter, Member for Ficksburg,
+said "they should tell the Native as the Free State told him,
+that it was white man's country, that he was not going to be allowed
+to buy land there or hire land there, and that if he wanted to be there
+he must be in service." -- `New Statesman'.
+
+"There is the spice if not the charm of novelty about this book.
+It is written by a South African native and he holds strong views
+on some recent public questions. He occasionally expresses himself
+well and forcibly, and it is all to the good that South African publicists
+should have the advantage of reading the opinions of a native observer
+when dealing with legislation affecting his race." -- `South Africa'.
+
+"In this well arranged and lucidly written book the author shows
+from authentic sources how changeable and often unreasonable has been
+the treatment of the loyal Natives under the South African flag.
+Mr. Plaatje is no fire-brand; he writes with moderation,
+and his book should attract sympathetic attention." -- `Booksellers' Record'.
+
+"Mr. Plaatje has marshalled his facts with considerable skill.
+He sets forth the case of his countrymen with energy and moderation.
+His conclusions seem to be warranted by the information at his disposal,
+and the facts he adduces seem to bear but one interpretation.
+And lastly, in the existing circumstances, he is fully justified
+in appealing to the court of public opinion." -- `United Empire'.
+
+
+
+
+Books by the same author
+
+
+
+730 Sechuana Proverbs
+With Literal Translations and their European Equivalents
+(Diane Tsa Secoana, Le Maele a Sekgooa, Aa Dumalanang Naco).
+By Solomon T. Plaatje.
+
+An interesting and instructive comparison of African and European Proverbs
+
+
+
+A Sechuana Reader
+(In International Phonetic Orthography, with English Translations)
+By Daniel Jones, M.A., and Sol. T. Plaatje.
+
+The Texts include native fables and stories of adventure,
+and form a collection of reading matter suitable either
+for native Bechuanas or for foreign learners.
+
+Both word-for-word translations and free translations are given throughout.
+
+In the introduction will be found detailed information with regard to
+the pronunciation of the Sechuana language.
+
+
+[End Original Advertisements.]
+
+
+
+
+Notes to the text:
+
+
+
+The Titles listed in the Table of Contents are not always identical
+to those in the text. Therefore, the longer versions have been used,
+or in those cases where they are significantly different,
+both titles have been given.
+
+Cases of battered type, and even missing letters, where obvious,
+are too numerous to be commented on in detail. Less obvious cases
+are noted.
+
+
+Chapter II:
+
+(p. 42)
+[ delivered by the Governor-General at the opening af the session ]
+ changed to:
+[ delivered by the Governor-General at the opening of the session ]
+
+(p. 44)
+[ H. Mentz and G. A. Louw, teller ]
+ changed to:
+[ H. Mentz and G. A. Louw, tellers. ]
+
+
+Chapter VI:
+
+(p. 82)
+[ my hushand's and children's peculiar wants, if Anna ]
+ changed to:
+[ my husband's and children's peculiar wants, if Anna ]
+
+
+Chapter VIII:
+
+(p. 106)
+[ under notice to leave, We informed them ]
+ changed to:
+[ under notice to leave. We informed them ]
+
+(p. 110)
+[ Pieter Dout consented, and joined the exlpedition ]
+ changed to:
+[ Pieter Dout consented, and joined the expedition ]
+
+(p. 112)
+[ to mulct them in more money than the land. is worth. The best legal advice
+they have received is that they should sell their inheritances to white men ]
+ changed to:
+[ to mulct them in more money than the land is worth. The best legal advice
+they have received is that they should sell their inheritances to white men. ]
+
+
+Chapter IX:
+
+(p. 120)
+[ says Dr. Kellog, ]
+ changed to:
+[ says Dr. Kellogg, ]
+ (This is the correct spelling of the name of a doctor who was famous
+ about the time that Plaatje was writing, and who was undoubtedly
+ the source for the quote.)
+
+(p. 132)
+[ Hence, let the leaders direct them into cruel way as they are seemingly ]
+ changed to:
+[ Hence, let the leaders direct them into cruel ways as they are seemingly ]
+
+
+Chapter X:
+
+(p. 142)
+[ went unarmed to hold with the Matebele chiefs ]
+ changed to:
+[ went unarmed to hold with the Matabele chiefs ]
+ (in accordance with other usage, and another edition.)
+
+(p. 144)
+[ the papers and the public chorus with joy hear that the C.S.A.R. ]
+ changed to:
+[ the papers and the public chorus with joy to hear that the C.S.A.R. ]
+
+
+Chapter XIV:
+
+(p. 178)
+[ and Mid-Illovu, ] (end of paragraph)
+ changed to:
+[ and Mid-Illovu. ]
+
+(p. 179)
+[ July 20, 191. ]
+ changed to:
+[ July 20, 1913. ]
+
+
+Chapter XVI:
+
+(p. 197)
+[ (Mr Alden) and the hon. Baronet th Member for Hackney (Sir A. Spicer ]
+ changed to:
+[ (Mr. Alden) and the hon. Baronet the Member for Hackney (Sir A. Spicer) ]
+
+(p. 221)
+Regarding the reference to `The Biglow Papers', the quote is from No. VI,
+and `The Biglow Papers' was written by J. R. Lowell (see below).
+
+
+Chapter XVIII:
+
+(p. 225)
+(subtitle) [ Bear ye one another's Burdens" ]
+ changed to:
+[ "Bear ye one another's Burdens" ]
+
+(p. 231)
+[ F. R. Lowell ]
+ changed to:
+[ J. R. Lowell ]
+James Russell Lowell [1819-1891], the Massachusetts poet, wrote these lines,
+under the title "Stanzas on Freedom". As the italic forms of "J" and "F"
+are similar, and frequently confused, this error is not to be wondered at.
+The 1st, 3rd, and 4th stanzas are quoted in the text. The complete text
+is presented here:
+
+
+ Stanzas on Freedom
+
+
+Men! whose boast it is that ye
+Come of fathers brave and free,
+If there breathe on earth a slave,
+Are ye truly free and brave?
+If ye do not feel the chain,
+When it works a brother's pain,
+Are ye not base slaves indeed,
+Slaves unworthy to be freed?
+
+Women! who shall one day bear
+Sons to breathe New England air,
+If ye hear, without a blush,
+Deeds to make the roused blood rush
+Like red lava through your veins,
+For your sisters now in chains, --
+Answer! are ye fit to be
+Mothers of the brave and free?
+
+Is true Freedom but to break
+Fetters for our own dear sake,
+And, with leathern hearts, forget
+That we owe mankind a debt?
+No! true freedom is to share
+All the chains our brothers wear,
+And, with heart and hand, to be
+Earnest to make others free!
+
+They are slaves who fear to speak
+For the fallen and the weak;
+They are slaves who will not choose
+Hatred, scoffing, and abuse,
+Rather than in silence shrink
+From the truth they needs must think;
+They are slaves who dare not be
+In the right with two or three.
+
+
+Chapter XIX:
+
+(p. 242)
+[ to those of the Barolongs, who used their own rifles, ]
+ changed to:
+[ to those of the Barolongs who used their own rifles, ]
+
+The Crest of Queen Victoria, mentioned in brackets, is, of course,
+unavailable in ASCII. The letters V R. are for "Victoria Regina",
+or, "Queen Victoria".
+
+
+Chapter XXI:
+
+(p. 276)
+[ both missionaries, also poke offering to associate themselves ]
+ changed to:
+[ both missionaries, also spoke offering to associate themselves ]
+
+(p.278)
+[ the districts of Calvania, Kenhardt, Keimoes, and Upington ]
+ changed to:
+[ the districts of Calvinia, Kenhardt, Keimoes, and Upington ]
+ in accordance with other use in the surrounding text.
+
+
+Chapter XXII:
+
+(p. 291)
+[ her privileges of free citizenship (Cheers.) ]
+ changed to:
+[ her privileges of free citizenship. (Cheers.) ]
+
+(p. 302)
+[ half a million Boers. ] & [ people's gathering.) ]
+ changed to:
+[ half a million Boers.) ] & [ people's gathering. ]
+ Closing parenthesis was at end of wrong paragraph.
+
+(p. 303)
+[ the harm that as likely to follow a provocation ]
+ changed to:
+[ the harm that is likely to follow a provocation ]
+
+(p. 308)
+[ in addition to his own rebels commando. ]
+ changed to:
+[ in addition to his own rebel commando. ]
+
+(p. 312)
+[ assaulted a policeman. ]
+ changed to:
+[ assaulted a policeman.) ]
+ Clause missing closing parenthesis.
+
+
+Chapter XXIV:
+
+(p. 336)
+[ a petition from Rustenberg, made it compulsory ]
+ changed to:
+[ a petition from Rustenburg, made it compulsory ]
+ in accordance with other use in the surrounding text.
+
+(p. 338)
+[ Deuteronomy xix. 14, ]
+ updated to:
+[ Deuteronomy 19:14, ]
+
+
+Epilogue:
+
+(p. 348)
+[ signed the Natives' Lant Act ]
+ changed to:
+[ signed the Natives' Land Act ]
+
+(p. 351)
+[ has done her duty. ]
+ changed to:
+[ has done her duty." ]
+
+
+Report of the Lands Commission:
+
+(p. 357)
+[ Chairman of the Commission a retired Judge ]
+ changed to:
+[ Chairman of the Commission, a retired Judge ]
+
+(p. 358)
+[ and the terms of the Act." ]
+ changed to:
+[ and the terms of the Act. ]
+ unmatched quotation mark removed according to surrounding usage.
+
+(p. 364)
+[ the Klerksdorp Magistrate, who incidentalgl exploded
+the stale old falsehood about Natives liviny on the labour ]
+ changed to:
+[ the Klerksdorp Magistrate, who incidentally exploded
+the stale old falsehood about Natives living on the labour ]
+
+(p. 376)
+[ the Empire was engaged in a titantic struggle, ]
+ changed to:
+[ the Empire was engaged in a titanic struggle, ]
+
+
+
+Terms:
+
+lager/laager: a defensive camp formed by circled wagons.
+
+sjambok: a rhinoceros or hippopotamus-hide whip.
+
+
+
+The following lines contained characters that cannot be presented in ASCII:
+
+under the Republican re/gime, no matter how politicians raved
+ Ils se sont endormis, le c(oe)ur rempli d'espoirs,
+ Dans un re\ve d'amour et de concorde humaine!
+ Qui monte des hameaux consume/s par la flamme,
+ Ni le ge/missement des vie/illards et des femmes!
+the inquiries of the Commission, whose report is nai"vely alleged
+did its best to fill the ro^le of an enemy.
+but who, after three months' drill and man(oe)uvring, were as expert
+and that Nakob Su"d was clearly depicted in the old maps
+(Sued)
+ of high-resolve\d men, bent to the spoil,
+ Goe^n dag, Pikadillie
+of these neighbours. The Natives, according to Mr. Lu"dorf,
+gathered in a heap and burnt alive. This, says Mr. Lu"dorf,
+(Luedorf)
+generally preferred, aspire; and each fills his ro^le
+* `Political Economy of Art': Addenda (J. E., Section 127).
+(Symbol used for "Section")
+
+Also numerous instances of fractions, here presented, for example,
+as 1 1/2 for one and a half, and the symbol for the British Pound,
+so that where the original may have said L100 (where L represents
+the symbol for Pound) it now says 100 Pounds (Pound or Pounds
+has always been capitalized as above in such cases).
+
+
+
+
+
+End of this Etext of Native Life in South Africa, by Sol. T. Plaatje
+
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+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #1452 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/1452)