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In December 1990, about 40 Afrikaner families, headed by [[Carel Boshoff]], the son-in-law of former SA prime minister [[Hendrik Verwoerd]], bought the dilapidated town for a price of around $200,000USD. This was a few months after the repeal of [[Apartheid]] laws and the release of [[Nelson Mandela]] from prison. The town is privately owned by the '''Vluyteskraal Aandeleblok''' or (whistling shareholders) company, and the town is managed through them. The chairman of this company, Prinsloo Potgieter, acts as de facto mayor. The purpose of Orania, according to its founders, is to create a town where the preservation of Afrikanerdom's cultural heritage is strictly observed and '''selfwerksaamhied''' (self reliance) is actual practice, not just an idea. All jobs, from management to manual labour, are filled by whites. "We do not want to be managed by people who are not Afrikaners", says Potgieter. "Our culture is being oppressed and our children are being brainwashed to speak English." No non-Afrikaners are allowed to take up residence or hold jobs within the town, by the logic that their presence would go aginst the principle of Afrikaner self reliance. In a country that is facing an exponential rise in violent crime, the city boasts a very low crime rate - minor infractions are dealt with through the company, usually with small fines. Despite this, Orania has been for the most part shunned by mainstream Afrikaners as an anchronism, especially since the 1994 elections.
In December 1990, about 40 Afrikaner families, headed by [[Carel Boshoff]], the son-in-law of former SA prime minister [[Hendrik Verwoerd]], bought the dilapidated town for a price of around $200,000USD. This was a few months after the repeal of [[Apartheid]] laws and the release of [[Nelson Mandela]] from prison. The town is privately owned by the '''Vluyteskraal Aandeleblok''' or (whistling shareholders) company, and the town is managed through them. The chairman of this company, Prinsloo Potgieter, acts as de facto mayor. The purpose of Orania, according to its founders, is to create a town where the preservation of Afrikanerdom's cultural heritage is strictly observed and '''selfwerksaamhied''' (self reliance) is actual practice, not just an idea. All jobs, from management to manual labour, are filled by whites. "We do not want to be managed by people who are not Afrikaners", says Potgieter. "Our culture is being oppressed and our children are being brainwashed to speak English." No non-Afrikaners are allowed to take up residence or hold jobs within the town, by the logic that their presence would go aginst the principle of Afrikaner self reliance. In a country undergoing a dramatic increase in violent crime, the city boasts a very low crime rate - minor infractions are dealt with through the company, usually with small fines. Despite this, Orania has been for the most part shunned by mainstream Afrikaners as an anchronism, especially since the 1994 elections.


The idea of a strictly Afrikaner settlement in modern South Africa is not new. In the 1980s, a group of right wing Afrikaners, led by [[HF Verwoerd]]'s son formed a group called the [[Oranjewerkers]]. They also planned a community based on "Afrikaner Self-Determination", and attempted to create a neo-"boerstaat" (Afrikaner state) in the remote community of Morgenzon. It failed.
The idea of a strictly Afrikaner settlement in modern South Africa is not new. In the 1980s, a group of right wing Afrikaners, led by [[HF Verwoerd]]'s son formed a group called the [[Oranjewerkers]]. They also planned a community based on "Afrikaner Self-Determination", and attempted to create a neo-"boerstaat" (Afrikaner state) in the remote community of Morgenzon. It failed.

Revision as of 22:06, 20 August 2004

Orania is an South African town located along the Orange River in the Northern Cape province in the arid Karoo region. Orania is unique among South African cities as it is possibly the last all-Afrikaner enclave in South Africa-it has a stringent policy of not allowing any non-white residents or workers.


In December 1990, about 40 Afrikaner families, headed by Carel Boshoff, the son-in-law of former SA prime minister Hendrik Verwoerd, bought the dilapidated town for a price of around $200,000USD. This was a few months after the repeal of Apartheid laws and the release of Nelson Mandela from prison. The town is privately owned by the Vluyteskraal Aandeleblok or (whistling shareholders) company, and the town is managed through them. The chairman of this company, Prinsloo Potgieter, acts as de facto mayor. The purpose of Orania, according to its founders, is to create a town where the preservation of Afrikanerdom's cultural heritage is strictly observed and selfwerksaamhied (self reliance) is actual practice, not just an idea. All jobs, from management to manual labour, are filled by whites. "We do not want to be managed by people who are not Afrikaners", says Potgieter. "Our culture is being oppressed and our children are being brainwashed to speak English." No non-Afrikaners are allowed to take up residence or hold jobs within the town, by the logic that their presence would go aginst the principle of Afrikaner self reliance. In a country undergoing a dramatic increase in violent crime, the city boasts a very low crime rate - minor infractions are dealt with through the company, usually with small fines. Despite this, Orania has been for the most part shunned by mainstream Afrikaners as an anchronism, especially since the 1994 elections.

The idea of a strictly Afrikaner settlement in modern South Africa is not new. In the 1980s, a group of right wing Afrikaners, led by HF Verwoerd's son formed a group called the Oranjewerkers. They also planned a community based on "Afrikaner Self-Determination", and attempted to create a neo-"boerstaat" (Afrikaner state) in the remote community of Morgenzon. It failed.

Today, Orania is home to about 500 to 600 Afikaner families. Many of the poorer arrivals to Orania take up residence in small tract houses located in downtown Kleingeluk (small happiness). Many of the more wealthy residents, including the city's founders, live in the nearby neighbourhood of Grootdorp (big town). This has caused some friction between the two groups, as many of the poorer whites were put off by the idea of coming to Orania to do "a black man's job" - meaning jobs that are customarily held by non-whites in South Africa, such as groundskeeping and street sweeping.

There is a plan to create their own currency, the Ora, to be used strictly within the town.