WARNING: This is Version 1 of my old archive, so Photos will NOT work and many links will NOT work. But you can find articles by searching on the Titles. There is a lot of information in this archive. Use the SEARCH BAR at the top right. Prior to December 2012; I was a pro-Christian type of Conservative. I was unaware of the mass of Jewish lies in history, especially the lies regarding WW2 and Hitler. So in here you will find pro-Jewish and pro-Israel material. I was definitely WRONG about the Boeremag and Janusz Walus. They were for real.
Original Post Date: 2005-12-15 Posted By: Jan
From the News Archives of: WWW.AfricanCrisis.Org
Date & Time Posted: 12/15/2005
[Photo] The Afrikaner"s Greatest Monument to God
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From the News Archives of: WWW.AfricanCrisis.Org
Date & Time Posted: 12/15/2005
[Photo] The Afrikaner"s Greatest Monument to God
[We’re celebrating a rather lame, “National Reconciliation Day” on the 16th of December. But I prefer to remember it for its real historical significance. Today, one of the ANC Ministers, Essop Pahad I think, attacked White people for not turning out in greater numbers to celebrate national holidays and national occasions (such as this one for example). To me, it is a great sign that Whites generally stay home and stay away from these functions. Many do go, but I’m sure, MOST don’t even care about many of these new national ANC symbols. And I care even less than the most who don’t care!!! So here, below is the fascinating story I find the story of how the Boers honoured their pact with God very touching. Exactly 100 years after Blood River, the Afrikaners built their monument to God, to honour that day. (See the bottom photo) I’m sure the ANC would just love to smash The Monument into the ground and put up a statue of Nelson Mandela 20 stories high – or build a pyramid to him or something along those lines! Jan] 16 December 1838 In the early hours of the morning of 16 December 1838, a battle was fought between the Voortrekkers under the leadership of Andries Pretorius, and the AmaZulu warriors of Dingane near the Ncome River. The AmaZulu suffered heavy fatalities, losing more than 3000 men, while the Voortrekkers purportedly had only three non-fatal injuries. The Ncome River became red with the blood of the slain. Hence the Ncome River became known as “Blood River”. A reconstruction of the battlesite at the Ncome River, afterwards named Blood River (graphic: Readers Digest Illustrated History of South Africa p. 118) One of the historical events that was used by Apartheid apologists – some of them historians, political leaders and theologians – to construct an exclusivist Afrikaner nationalist identity, to inculcate in this community a sense of having a unique history and place in Africa and thereby legitimise white supremacy in South Africa, was what came to be known as the Battle of Blood River. The background to this event can be found in two concurrent historical processes of the 1820s and the 1830s. First, the great trek (Afrikaans for “great organised migration”) or the political disenchantment of Dutch-speaking farmers on the Eastern Cape frontier with British rule, leading to more than 15 000 of these frontier farmers trekking in groups north-east into the interior of the region to escape British administration. Secondly, the advent of the mfecane (IsiZulu for “the crushing”) or difaqane (Sesotho for “forced scattering or migration”) in the 1820s which was the political and military upheaval with concomitant forced migration of the Nguni people in the eastern region, that marked the rise of the rule of Shaka over the AmaZulu. Once beyond British influence, the Voortrekkers tried to establish states in particularly those areas that were depopulated by the mfecane, such as in parts of Natal. Piet Retief, the leader of the Voortrekkers, met with Dingane, the leader of the AmaZulu, at the latter’s capital at Mgundgundlovu on 6 February 1838 to apparently negotiate the cession of vast areas of land to the Voortrekkers for cattle and rifles. Ceding the land would effectively threaten the integrity of the still fragile Kingdom of the AmaZulu, a fact of which both Dingane and Retief were aware. The Voortrekkers delivered the cattle but not the firearms. At the meeting Retief was murdered at the command of Dingane. Taking advantage of the turmoil that the murder of Retief had caused among the Voortrekkers, the AmaZulu attacked Voortrekker laagers to rid their region of the Voortrekkers whom they saw as intruders. This attack led to hundreds of fatalities at a place called Weenen (Dutch for “weeping”). On 6 April 1838 the Voortrekkers launched an unsuccessful counter-attack. On 9 December 1838 Andries Pretorius, who had assumed leadership of the Voortrekkers as Commandant-General, prepared the retaliatory attack by making a vow to God that in the case of victory, the Voortrekkers would annually observe a day of thanksgiving. The Voortrekkers drew their ox-wagons into a laager (Dutch for a “mobile fort”) on the banks of the Ncome River. In the early hours of the morning of 16 December 1838 they attacked the AmaZulu soldiers. The Voortrekkers with their firearms were militarily superior to the AmaZulu, who tried to escape into the Ncome River. They suffered heavy fatalities, losing more than 3000 men, while the Voortrekkers purportedly had only three non-fatal injuries. The Ncome River became red with the blood of the slain AmaZulu. Hence the Ncome River became known as “Blood River”. After the defeat of Dingane, the Kingdom of the AmaZulu was hurled into political strife. Mpande, the half-brother of Dingane, taking advantage of the political uncertainty overthrew the latter and seized the leadership of the AmaZulu. Since Mpande was open to the demands for land by the Voortrekkers, Andries Pretorius declared him King of the AmaZulu, and a vassal of the Voortrekker Natal Republic. Large areas of his kingdom were annexed by Natal. While Mpande’s vassalage lapsed when the British colonial administration annexed the Natal Republic, the AmaZulu did not regain their land. However, they did undergo a period of stability and economic recovery. Given that this day was observed with varying degrees of political and ideological intensity only in the twentieth century, there is reasonable doubt that such a vow had indeed ever been made. For the greater part of the twentieth century 16 December had been observed as a public holiday, with Afrikaans-speakers attending special church services or visiting the Voortrekker Monument. Until the National Party seized power in 1948, this day was observed as “Dingaan’s Day”. After 1948 the National Party government set about politicising this day to legitimise their apparent uniqueness and historical relationship with God. Hence in 1952 “Dingaan’s Day” officially became the “Day of the Covenant”. In 1980 in the face of protracted resistance towards and rebellion against the white minority state by the black majority, the National Party appealed to old racist sentiments in the Afrikaans community and renamed the day the “Day of the Vow”. In 1994 South Africa elected its first non-racial and democratic government. In the spirit of promoting reconciliation and national unity, the day was given a new meaning and was renamed the “Day of Reconciliation” in 1995. A new meaning and significance had already been accorded this day in the past: on 16 December 1961 the African National Congress launched its military wing, Umkhonto we Siwze, the Spear of the Nation. URL: http://www.sahistory.org.za/pages/chronology/…br> Prior to the battle, the Boers made a pact with God, that if God saved them that day, they would build a monument to him. They kept their promise, and 100 years later, they built this fabulous, multi-storied monument, by far the most spectacular monument in S.Africa in honour of God. You can see it in the photo below. It sits on top of a hill just outside Pretoria. That circle around the monument is a circle of stone wagons. At midday on the 16th of December, the sun shines through a hole in the roof on to a Bible several stories below. Inside the monument, is a museum. Next to it is Fort Schanskop, a remnant of the Boer War. |
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