<div dir="ltr">I would like to begin by briefly addressing Steve’s specific questions before sharing my broader experience of life in South Africa.<br><br>First, I strongly refute Donald Trump’s claim that white South African farmers are widely subjected to personal violence, leading to their deaths and the confiscation of their land. That narrative is simply not true. Yes, farm murders do occur and are more than isolated incidents. While there might be a small political component to some of them, I believe they are primarily criminal in nature.<br><br>South Africa has implemented a structured land restitution program, through which many white farmers have been compensated fairly for their land. A law was passed last year allowing land expropriation without compensation under certain circumstances, but to the best of my knowledge, it has not yet been applied. It is certainly not a free-for-all license for Black South Africans to seize white-owned farmland. Should expropriation be implemented, I believe it will be in very limited cases, based on sound reasoning, and executed in an orderly, legal manner.<br><br>There is also a Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) program in South Africa, which many Afrikaners view as reverse discrimination. I have mixed feelings about BEE and support it reluctantly. On the one hand, the economic disparities between Blacks and Whites must be addressed — it is a sine qua non for building a fair society. On the other hand, the BEE program has notable shortcomings. However, since I cannot offer a better alternative, I support it despite its flaws. I do, however, criticize aspects of the program and acknowledge its unintended negative consequences.<br><br>Please keep in mind that these are my personal views. Many white Afrikaners hold very different opinions — you’ll often hear their voices on popular American podcasts these days.<br><br>Now, let me share my general experience of living in South Africa.<br><br>As in the United States, South Africa is not one single experience — there are many different “South Africas.” I live on a farm just outside the small town of Gouritsmond in the Western Cape, and I feel very safe here. The crime rate is low, and there is a high level of trust between people of all races. For example, a local farmer sells honey from a box at his gate on the honour system — you take a bottle and leave the money in a box. For my wife and me, our life on the farm is paradise.<br><br>But there are other parts of South Africa where life is very different.<br><br>In many deep rural areas and urban townships, especially around major cities, Black South Africans live in appalling conditions. The social fabric is weak, and crime — including violent crime — is rampant. However, if you choose not to spend time in these areas, it generally doesn’t affect your daily life. But if you do, you are at high risk of becoming a crime statistic.<br><br>That said, if you are educated — and there are now probably more educated Black South Africans than Whites — you are not bound to those dangerous areas. There are plenty of safe, livable areas where people of all backgrounds can lead happy and fulfilling lives.<br><br>Let me give you some examples from my own family.<br><br>My wife and I have three married children. Our son lives and works in Johannesburg. While he might be open to emigrating, I don’t think his wife is — they are deeply embedded in a strong, active community and would have to give up a lot to leave. Recently, the small company he works for was acquired by a Boston-based firm. He assures us there are no plans to relocate, but I’m not so sure. As newlyweds, they spent two years in Boston and, although they have nothing against it, their hearts are in South Africa.<br><br>Our eldest daughter, her husband, and their two young sons have emigrated to Denmark. It seems unlikely they will return to South Africa, except for visits. They met as students and, after graduating, took a month-long holiday in London. They came back inspired and determined to find a country where they would want to live and work. Over the next few years, they travelled widely and studied different cultures before deciding that Denmark ticked all the boxes. They made a plan, followed through, and are now very happy there.<br><br>Our youngest daughter also lives in Johannesburg with her husband and children. They, too, have a vibrant community life. Even if the opportunity arose, I cannot imagine them choosing to emigrate. Her husband’s mother, perhaps compensating for the lack of warmth in her own marriage, now pours all her care into supporting their children — our grandchildren. Our daughter is currently expecting another baby, and it would make no sense for them to move abroad under these circumstances.<br><br>I believe my children’s situations are typical of young families within my social circle in South Africa. Those who wish to stay can build a fulfilling life here. Those who wish to leave have options. Perhaps this will change in the future, but it has been true for the past few decades.<br><br>In conclusion, I want to reference Nietzsche’s concept of the interplay between chaos and order.<br><br>While a fulfilling life requires a balance between the two, that balance differs from person to person. Some are more comfortable with order; others thrive amid chaos.<br><br>Many Afrikaners long for the perceived order of apartheid-era South Africa and struggle to adapt to the more chaotic reality of the present — and, sadly, racism often plays a role in these sentiments. I am ashamed to admit that, because these are my people. But not all Afrikaners are racist. My family, for example, are not — my daughter and her family simply prefer the orderly nature of life in Denmark - there really is no racism attached to this.<br><br>Others, however, embrace the dynamic, changing environment of South Africa, and find meaning in its challenges and opportunities.<br><br></div><br><div class="gmail_quote gmail_quote_container"><div dir="ltr" class="gmail_attr">On Sun, 18 May 2025 at 20:18, steve smith <<a href="mailto:sasmyth@swcp.com">sasmyth@swcp.com</a>> wrote:<br></div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0px 0px 0px 0.8ex;border-left:1px solid rgb(204,204,204);padding-left:1ex">Pieter -<br>
> I'm an Afrikaner living on a farm in South Africa. I recently came <br>
> across some of the claims circulating—especially from the Trump <br>
> camp—about how dire things supposedly are for white Afrikaner farmers <br>
> here.<br>
<br>
Do you actually refute Trump's characterizations?<br>
<br>
Like his statements effectively painting all Mexicans (immigrant or <br>
not?) as "criminals and rapists", his statements suggest that there is <br>
widespread personal violence against white South African farmers leading <br>
to their death and then to confiscation of their land. Is there any <br>
evidence that this *ever* happens? Or are there isolated incidents of <br>
criminal violence (people are murdered everywhere in the world from time <br>
to time) juxtaposed with culture/government-wide movements to provide <br>
some level of restitution for the manner in which land was transferred <br>
from indigenous peoples to colonists (of all stripes... e.g. wealthy and <br>
powerful as well as those drawn along by them to do the dirty work of <br>
breaking and working new land including possibly displacing the current <br>
residents)?<br>
<br>
> Just to set the record straight: I don't identify with that narrative. <br>
> Personally, I live very happily on the farm. I don’t farm — I'm here <br>
> for the lifestyle, not agriculture — and to me, it honestly feels like <br>
> paradise. I don’t feel threatened at all.<br>
> Of course, not all white farmers in South Africa have the same <br>
> experience. Some do face real challenges, and discrimination does <br>
> exist. But the situation is complex, and like in every society, there <br>
> are both positives and negatives. No country is perfect.<br>
I also live on a plot of rural land which is nominally "farmland" though <br>
the only farming that has occurred here is a homestead garden (60' <br>
diameter circle), a handful of fruit trees and a small flock of <br>
chickens, all established by myself through my 25 years present. My 1.5 <br>
acres is roughly 1/5 of 6 acres that were carved out of the middle of a <br>
sovereign "pueblo" that was "granted" by the King of Spain in 1623 to <br>
the Tewa speaking people living here, very likely direct descendents of <br>
the "ancestral puebloans" (formerly termed "Anasazi"). The grant <br>
stated "1 league in each cardinal direction from the entrance to the <br>
cemetary of the Catholic church). this measure (nearly) abuts another <br>
4-league-square granted at the same time by the same time with the same <br>
"stride" (vara) which defined what a league was (5000 varas - 2.6 <br>
miles)... Mine was *taken* from the pueblo in the early 60s by the <br>
private electric company serving much of NM (PNM) to build a transformer <br>
station which was in fact never built. I couldn't find records but <br>
standard practice (and law) at the time would have involved a (forced) <br>
payment to the Pueblo. In the 70s the first private title to the <br>
whole plot showed up under the name of a couple and a single man who <br>
apparently were contriving to build a modest mobile home (aka trailer) <br>
park on the property. My well and the electric power feed (a co=op not <br>
PNM) were sized for this purpose (for better and worse). Ultimately <br>
the mobile home park failed to materialize and the property was <br>
subdivided into my 1.5 acres and 4 other plots just over 1 acre each. 3 <br>
of those plots now have modern construction/styled commuter homes owned <br>
by folks who were commuting to LANL (as I was when I bought in 2001) 15 <br>
miles up the hill. I believe that the Pueblo had the opportunity to <br>
reclaim the land at the point it was sold into private hands and missed <br>
it (likely for the price they were paid).<br>
> I just wanted to say: yes, I’m a white Afrikaner living on a farm in <br>
> South Africa—but I’m not one of those Trump talks about. For me, this <br>
> is the best place on earth.<br>
<br>
I can imagine that it is similar but quite different from my own <br>
experience here. Another Pieter from South Africa (Mathematician at <br>
LANL) declares that the only place he finds more beautiful than his <br>
homeland of SA is right here. I think he is at least partly <br>
referencing the distance from the Apartheid context he grew up in (but <br>
left for college at 18) and the *opportunities* he found a US national <br>
laboratory with (historically) good funding and broad areas of <br>
application for a pure mathematician (working in the T/Theoretical <br>
Division).<br>
<br>
My main purpose in opening this response to your statements about <br>
Trump's characterization of Afrikaner "refugees" is to reflect on the <br>
implications of European, exploration, colonization, the ensuing <br>
displacements and genocide of indigenous populations followed by <br>
variations on "Apartheid" as well as the importation of literal <br>
*enslaved peoples* and the related "indentured servitude" and "company <br>
store" tactics that the capitalist/ruling class often uses to establish <br>
and maintain a virtually free workforce.<br>
<br>
My acutely "Conservative" friends would call my self reflection on such <br>
topics "Liberal Self-Loathing" when in fact I experience it as an <br>
attempt to reflect on my place and part in history (including <br>
future-history) and looking for opportunities *within my jurisdiction* <br>
to act differently than I might if I bought into one of the outstanding <br>
narratives. My 3 modestly MAGA neighbors hold that "this was an <br>
original Spanish Homestead passed down generationally" ,in spite of all <br>
of our Title histories when purchased showing the PNM (first) title. <br>
It is also the case that our area was entirely unbuildable (or farmable) <br>
before the US highway right next to us was built, redirecting <br>
floodwaters. Our properties were essentially a (mild) floodplain which <br>
are now protected by the roadbed which directs the water through everal <br>
culverts, collecting the runoff into one large and two small arroyos. <br>
The pueblo acequias end about 200 meters uphill from us in a field <br>
intermittently planted with (ritual) corn. We have an acutely high <br>
water table because of our topography and proximity to the Rio Grande so <br>
pumped well irrigation is reasonable in spite of the landscape being <br>
acutely dry high-desert in a growing drought context.<br>
<br>
Reviews of the maps of the Pueblo reflect the incremental addition of 3 <br>
acequias (irrigation ditches) over the 17,18,19c opening up <br>
significantly more land for irrigation farming. Many argue that the <br>
land was "useless" until the Spanish Colonists (aka Conquistadors) built <br>
these acequias (designed after the Moorish tradition/style) and <br>
therefore should "belong" to the Spanish Colonists who directed the <br>
natives themselves in the construction of the acequias. Of course, the <br>
conquistadors brought no women with them in the early waves of conquest <br>
so all descendants of proud Spanish noblemen are very much indigenous <br>
genetically. For the most part the "land grants" held through the <br>
Mexican revolution and then the Mexican-American war and US <br>
Territoriality in 1848. There are very few Tewa surnames remaining in <br>
the pueblos, most are Spanish, and there are a very few distinctly <br>
European Spanish descendants among the local populations. The <br>
boundaries of the pueblos have expanded a little through various US <br>
grants and trades to include their traditional range... to include some <br>
of their hunting grounds in the mountains *outside* the 2 leagues <br>
square. Many pueblo members live off pueblo, unrecognizeably different <br>
than many of the Hispanic and even Anglo populations.<br>
<br>
My "liberal self-loathing" instinct is to repatriate the land I bought <br>
25 years ago to the Pueblo in some way. Their own governance is <br>
dysfunctional enough as are their attempts to *buy* back inholdings such <br>
as mine that I am not clear on how to do that without making a bigger <br>
mess. There is a Tewa Womens Alliance which formed 40 years ago <br>
originally to respond to domestic violence within the native families <br>
which has expanded their charter to do quite a few progressive things <br>
including re-establishing traditional farming and craft techniques and <br>
preserve the Tewa language (there are 4 distantly related puebloan <br>
language groups in the region). I believe they might be able to parlay <br>
my little "homestead" into something which vaguely supports the people <br>
that it nominally belonged to when De Vargas and Onate (later) came <br>
charging in with "guns, germs, steel" 500 years ago.<br>
<br>
I was fascinated, BTW to discover that your own (Capetown) European <br>
history predates even Columbus' journey with a visit in 1488 by <br>
Dias... the complexity of Portuquese, Dutch, French Huguenaut, English <br>
exploration/colonization is quite fascinating and at least as hard to <br>
untangle as any.<br>
<br>
The bigger question is how to embrace the complexity and diversity that <br>
comes with these overlays of overlays without compounding the errors of <br>
the past. If Trump's framing of the Afrikaner "plight" is accurate then <br>
someone has been perpetuating the original problem in a (tiny) way <br>
similar to what the victims of the Jewish Holocaust are perpetrating on <br>
the Palestinians (particularly Gaza at this moment). The only "open" <br>
hostilities amongst the folks in this region express themselves moslty <br>
in struggles over water rights and roadway and utility right-of-ways <br>
with the Spanish land-grant descendants mostly antagonistic with the <br>
Pueblos. Most Anglos recognize they are latecomers and that for the <br>
most part the legal system supports them (us) well.<br>
<br>
Our (Euro-American colonists) genocide and slavery history does not <br>
leave us much room for criticizing others... most of the ugliness is <br>
well hidden but non-trivial.<br>
<br>
- Steve<br>
<br>
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