Native Races and the War eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 172 pages of information about Native Races and the War.

Native Races and the War eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 172 pages of information about Native Races and the War.

“An adverse influence with which the mission had to contend was the vicinity of the Boers of the Cashan Mountains,[13] otherwise named ‘Magaliesberg.’  These are not to be confounded with the Cape Colonists, who sometimes pass by the name.  The word ‘Boer,’ simply means ‘farmer,’ and is not synonymous with our word boor.  Indeed, to the Boers generally the latter term would be quite inappropriate, for they are a sober, industrious, and most hospitable body of peasantry.  Those, however, who have fled from English Law on various pretexts, and have been joined by English deserters, and every other variety of bad character in their distant localities, are unfortunately of a very different stamp.  The great objection many of the Boers had, and still have, to English law, is that it makes no distinction between black men and white.  They felt aggrieved by their supposed losses in the emancipation of their Hottentot slaves, and determined to erect themselves into a republic, in which they might pursue, without molestation, the ‘proper treatment’ of the blacks.  It is almost needless to add, that the ‘proper treatment’ has always contained in it the essential element of slavery, namely, compulsory unpaid labour.

“One section of this body, under the late Mr. Hendrick Potgeiter, penetrated the interior as far as the Cashan Mountains, whence a Zulu chief, named Mosilikatze, had been expelled by the well known Kaffir Dingaan, and a glad welcome was given these Boers by the Bechuana tribes, who had just escaped the hard sway of that cruel chieftain.  They came with the prestige of white men and deliverers; but the Bechuanas soon found, as they expressed it, ’that Mosilikatze was cruel to his enemies, and kind to those he conquered; but that the Boers destroyed their enemies, and made slaves of their friends.”  The tribes who still retain the semblance of independence are forced to perform all the labour of the fields, such as manuring the land, weeding, reaping, building, making dams and canals, and at the same time to support themselves.  I have myself been an eye-witness of Boers coming to a village, and according to their usual custom, demanding twenty or thirty women to weed their gardens, and have seen these women proceed to the scene of unrequited toil, carrying their own food on their heads, their children on their backs, and instruments of labour on their shoulders.  Nor have the Boers any wish to conceal the meanness of thus employing unpaid labour; on the contrary, every one of them, from Mr. Potgeiter and Mr. Gert Kruger, the commandants, downwards, lauded his own humanity and justice in making such an equitable regulation.  ’We make the people work for us, in consideration of allowing them to live in our country.’

“I can appeal to the Commandant Kruger if the foregoing is not a fair and impartial statement of the views of himself and his people.  I am sensible of no mental bias towards or against these Boers; and during the several journeys I made to the poor enslaved tribes, I never avoided the whites, but tried to cure and did administer remedies to their sick, without money and without price.  It is due to them to state that I was invariably treated with respect; but it is most unfortunate that they should have been left by their own Church for so many years to deteriorate and become as degraded as the blacks, whom the stupid prejudice against colour leads them to detest.

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Native Races and the War from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.