Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Van Zyl Slabbert - hero?


This is excerpt from a Statement by "Orde Boerevolk", author: Piet Rudolph

Van Zyl Slabbert, as he was known, has died at the age of 70, on May 14th, 2010. Boer courtesy forces me to pay my respects to his family, even though I have not known the man personally.

Slabbert was a public figure who held a political view totally different from the freedom loving Boer peoples. In that light I will judge accordingly. It was not the Nat-Sap view we had been familiar with. It was politics strewn with intrigue and treason with the purpose to humiliate the whites and to exterminate the Boer people. Today we are confronted with the results of this treason.

Van Zyl Slabbert had never been a Boer, even the concept of being an Afrikaner fitted him like a scanty cloak. He was indeed an example of a tragically neglected child who in his bewilderment and loneliness, sought the warmth and comfort of their servant Florina while being abandoned by their inebriated mother.

He (Van Zyl Slabbert) writes in book about Florina: I was much more terrified of the dark and the loneliness of night than my sister and I used to strain my ears for a car that would slow down and enter our driveway signaling my mother’s return. Eventually creaking with fright, I would suggest to my sister that we go and lie with Florina. She was larger than life-size: enormous buttocks and stomach with two medium-sized watermelons for bosoms and shiny round cheeks. Her bed was raised on bricks at all four corners to keep away the Tokolishi (an evil spirit in the shape of a dwarf) and was behind a makeshift curtain which she used to split the garage into different rooms. Once she had drawn that curtain and we had snuggled in behind her ample frame it was like bedding down in a bomb shelter of security. Florina’s comfort and love predisposed me kindly and instinctively towards black mamas for the rest of my life.”

He added in glowing terms how his black friend taught him how to masturbate, and “...I remember flushing hot with confusion when he fondled the young maidens in the field.” Quoted from "The last white parliament", p 13.

While reading this book written by Van Zyl Slabbert, one is reminded of the quote from the late pres. Steyn, which fitted the situation when he referred to denationalized Afrikaners who are like bats and not being trusted by (the other) birds. (Editor's explanation: "Bats" share roots from Germanic words describing a (hybrid or conjunction) of "winged mice".) Conservatives didn't trust Slabbert. To those he represented a strange being and to the Jews and their allies he was a "useful idiot". He had to succeed in doing that which he couldn't manage on his own, therefore he became leader of the opposition.

However, Slabbert had not been without support, especially amongst the liberal Afrikaners. An example is to be found in the papers "Die Beeld" and "Rapport" and their left winged allies while they didn't fail to gush over Slabbert being the significant savior of the doomed nation. Eulogies like "Quiet, here passes a big man..." and suggestions that he may have been the biggest Afrikaner leader were rife. This serves only one purpose: to emphasize the unlimited admiration of the liberals while Slabbert is nothing more than an ordinary traitor in the same vein as Piet de Wet and Andries Cronje during the Anglo Boer war.

Unrealistic dream
Much has been said about the grip Slabbert had on the reality of our situation. Nothing is further removed from the truth. The unrealistic dream that white and black can fuse together into a "rainbow nation" becomes increasingly impossible. Dr. Verwoerd predicted that during a black power transition the whites will eventually disappear, thus not leading to integration but disintegration. This has already become increasingly evident.

The misconception that blacks can be anything other than racists and that they would embrace whites, has become an illusion in Slabbert's case. His friendship with Thabo Mbeki, his Dakar comrade, gave birth to animosity and it is apparent that this was one of Slabbert's disappointments along with the fact that he was never recognized and honored by the black regime.

Let us not beat about the bush: Van Zyl Slabbert was NO hero. He was an ordinary traitor who collaborated with other traitors of this nation, who also lost contact with all reality and are responsible for the quagmire South Africa is in as well as the suffering of every white man, woman and child.

End quote from "Orde Boerevolk" statement

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Eugene Terre'Blanche

See photographs of the funeral.

"If we wish to free ourselves from enslavement, we must choose freedom and the responsibility this entails." - Leo Buscaglia

I am not one for overly sentiment in public as my emotions don't come cheap, however! ...allow me to travel along this path on merits here presented.

It was the week of the politically loaded murder of Eugene Terre'Blanche and subsequent funeral on Friday, April 9th, 2010.

After the funeral on my way back, my thoughts became clearer on the matter after the initial shock and continuous stream of hatred being sent into the air by the master revolutionaries governing (or disrupting) my good country South Africa.

Initial disbelief about the one sided coverage in the international press made way for an acceptance that it has never been different. What the hell did I expect now?

He is called a "white supremacist" and all the drivel usually accompanying that stereotype. Locally he is hated by the government for wanting exactly what they had been "struggling" for. He is called a "Hitler" and who knows what...

I think we deal with double standards here. Not in one of his speeches, writings or poems, did he ever incite violence against other races or nations just for the hell of it. Of course he was outspoken and very clear about what he would love to happen if threatened. He threatened the previous white government for that exact reason, but threats against whites are quite acceptable, it's only when it's aimed at other races that its not ok. If my point is not very clear, I admit to being sarcastic if you haven't picked it up yet.

On the other hand, Julius Malema and many other blacks before him, chanted the dreaded "Kill the Boer, kill the farmer!" or messages to that effect aimed against whites. So, they are not black supremacists huh? No, I suppose not, after all they are black and they are the only ones with rights which Eugene demanded: self rule, own homeland and freedom!

I dare you, if you are as open minded as you may claim to be:
Read beyond the first crap you are offered on the news and the Internet and judge for yourself, but be fair, that's all I ask of you. When you are done, please submit your verdict to me as to what justification you found for Eugene to deserve being beaten to death in such a barbaric way...

Yes, he did make mistakes, he was not perfect but he paid his dues to society and his fellow men and he sacrificed a great deal of his life for ideals which will never die as long as the Boer nation is alive.

He was a family man;
a Boer leader;
an Afrikaans poet; and
an animal lover - especially his horses and dogs.
(What a feeble rendition and summary of his life, please forgive me, you can add to the list.)

In the words of J.F.E. Cilliers (freely translated):

"Quiet brethren! there passes a great man, he bids a last farewell. Your people honors your memory"

More reading. See photographs of the funeral.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Eheke - pain yes! but we remember our heroes

Today, October 27th, 1977 the South African recces (reconnosaince) and 32 Bn fought one of the most grueling battles in African history againts communist oppression.

We remember all those who fought bravely despite the losses we had. No air support or artillery against as much as 700 of the enemy - Swapo and Cubans - who had been well dug in and armed with heavy artillery and rockets.

Read an eyewitness account and also a shortened Afrikaans version.