The Boers in East Africa
Ethnicity and Identity
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:28th Oct '98
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Recounts the migration of the Boers from South Africa to East Africa after the Anglo-Boer War in 1902, and traces the ways in which ethnicity was kept alive.
At the end of the Anglo-Boer War in May 1902, the defeated Boers emigrated en masse out of South Africa. In East Africa, the denominations of the Dutch Reformed Church established congregations and sent ministers. This book tells how they became central to the preservation of Afrikaner ethnicity.The end of the Anglo-Boer War in May 1902 left the Boers (Afrikaners) defeated and bitter in a ravaged land. Poverty and disillusionment spurred many to leave the post-war British-administered South Africa. This book studies one group of emigres who trekked northward to German East Africa and British East Africa. The author relies heavily on primary sources written in both Dutch and Afrikaans to describe the experiences of the Boers in East Africa. The literature dealing with the Afrikaners documents a people known for their independent insistence upon their language and culture, for their territorial sovereignty established in southern Africa, and for their characteristic religiosity and reliance on Old Testament-based Calvinism. Large numbers of Boers would not or could not adjust to living under an administration with whom they had been at war, and those who tried did not receive much support. As one eyewitness wrote, Not much was needed to stimulate the desire to trek. And so the Afrikaner Diaspora began.
ISBN: 9780897896115
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 510g
224 pages