fbpx
Wikipedia

Coloureds

Coloureds (Afrikaans: Kleurlinge or Bruinmense, lit.'Brown people') refers to members of multiracial ethnic communities in Southern Africa who may have ancestry from more than one of the various populations inhabiting the region, including African, European, and Asian. South Africa's Coloured people are regarded as having some of the most diverse genetic background. Because of the vast combination of genetics, different families and individuals within a family may have a variety of different physical features.[6][7]

Coloureds

Luco Meyer's extended Coloured family, omitting wife, Latisha Rootman, with roots in Cape Town, Kimberley and Pretoria
Total population
5,600,000~ in Southern Africa
Regions with significant populations
South Africa, Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe
 South Africa5,339,919 (2022 Estimate)[1]
 Namibia130,000[2]
 Zimbabwe17,923[3]
 Zambia3,000[4]
Languages
Afrikaans, English
Religion
Predominantly Christianity, minority Islam
Related ethnic groups
Africans, Cape Dutch, Cape Coloureds, Cape Malays, Griquas, San people, Khoikhoi, Zulu, Xhosa, Saint Helenians, Rehoboth Basters, Tswana
Coloured people as a proportion of the total population in South Africa.
  •   0–20%
  •   20–40%
  •   40–60%
  •   60–80%
  •   80–100%
Density of the Coloured population in South Africa.
  •   <1 /km²
  •   1–3 /km²
  •   3–10 /km²
  •   10–30 /km²
  •   30–100 /km²
  •   100–300 /km²
  •   300–1000 /km²
  •   1000–3000 /km²
  •   >3000 /km²
A genetic clustering of South African Coloured and five source populations.[5] Each vertical bar represents individual.

Coloured was a legally defined racial classification during apartheid referring to anyone not white or not a member of one of the aboriginal groups of Africa on a cultural basis, which effectively largely meant those people of colour not speaking any indigenous languages. [7][8]

In the Western Cape, a distinctive Cape Coloured and affiliated Cape Malay culture developed. In other parts of Southern Africa, people classified as Coloured were usually the descendants of individuals from two distinct ethnicities. Genetic studies suggest the group has the highest levels of mixed ancestry in the world.[9][10] Mitochondrial DNA studies have demonstrated that many maternal lines of the Coloured population are descended from African Khoisan women.

Coloureds are mostly found in the western part of South Africa. In Cape Town, they form 45.4% of the total population, according to the South African National Census of 2011.[11]: 56–59 

The apartheid-era Population Registration Act, 1950 and subsequent amendments, codified the Coloured identity and defined its subgroups. Indian South Africans were initially classified under the act as a subgroup of Coloured.[12] As a consequence of Apartheid policies and despite the abolition of the Population Registration Act in 1991, Coloureds are regarded as one of four race groups in South Africa. These groups (blacks, whites, Coloureds and Indians) still tend to have strong racial identities and to classify themselves and others as members of these race groups.[8][7] The classification continues to persist in government policy, to an extent, as a result of attempts at redress such as Black Economic Empowerment and Employment Equity.[7][13][14]

Background

 
Adam Kok III, leader of the Coloured Griqua People

The Cape Coloured community is predominantly descended from numerous interracial sexual unions, primarily between Western European men and Khoisan or mixed-race women in the Cape Colony from the 17th century onwards.[15][16]

In KwaZulu-Natal, the Coloured possess a diverse heritage including British, Irish, German, Mauritian, Saint Helenian, Indian, Xhosa and Zulu.[17][18]

Zimbabwean Coloureds are descended from Shona or Ndebele, British and Afrikaner settlers, as well as Arab and Asian people. Griqua, on the other hand, are descendants of Khoisan women and Afrikaner Trekboers. Despite these major differences, as both groups have ancestry from more than one naturalised racial group, they are classified as coloured in the South African context. Such mixed-race people did not necessarily self-identify this way; some preferred to call themselves black or Khoisan or just South African.[citation needed]

The Griqua were subjected to an ambiguity of other creole people within Southern African social order. According to Nurse and Jenkins (1975), the leader of this “mixed” group, Adam Kok I, was a former slave of the Dutch governor who was manumitted and provided land outside Cape Town in the eighteenth century.[19] With territories beyond the Dutch East India Company’s administration, Kok provided refuge to deserting soldiers, runaway slaves, and remaining members of various Khoikhoi tribes.[17] In South Africa and many neighbouring countries, the white minority governments historically segregated Africans from Europeans after settlement had progressed, and inreasingly classified all mixed race people together into a third group, despite their numerous ethnic and national differences in ancestry. The imperial and apartheid governments categorized them as Coloured. In addition, other distinctly homogeneous ethnic groups also traditionally viewed the mixed-race populations as a separate group, and a growing number of mixed-race people also embraced a shared identity.

During the apartheid era in South Africa of the second half of the 20th century, the government used the term "Coloured" to describe one of the four main racial groups it defined by law (the fourth was "Asian," later "Indian"). This was an effort to impose white supremacy and maintain racial divisions. Individuals were classified as White South Africans (formally classified as "European"), Black South Africans (formally classified as "Native", "Bantu" or simply "African" and comprising the majority of the population), Coloureds (mixed-race) and Indians (formally classified as "Asian").[7]

Coloured people may have ethnic ancestry from Indonesia, mixed-race, and Khoisan ancestry. The apartheid governments treated them as one people, despite their differences. 'Cape Muslims' were also classified as 'coloured.' They generally have Indonesian and black ancestry, as many Indonesian slaves had children with African partners. Many Griqua began to self-identify as Coloureds during the apartheid era, because of the benefits of such classification. For example, Coloureds did not have to carry a dompas (a pass, an identity document designed to limit the movements of the black population), while the Griqua, who were seen as an indigenous African group, did.

Colin speaking Afrikaans.

In the 21st century, Coloured people constitute a plurality of the population in the provinces of Western Cape (48.8%), and a large minority in the Northern Cape (40.3%), both areas of centuries of mixing among the populations. In the Eastern Cape, they make up 8.3% of the population. Most speak Afrikaans, as they were generally descendants of Dutch and Afrikaner men and grew up in their society. About twenty percent of the Coloured speak English as their mother tongue, mostly those of the Eastern Cape and KwaZulu-Natal. Virtually all Cape Town Coloureds are bilingual.[20][21]

Genetics

At least one genetic study indicates that Cape Coloureds have ancestries from the following ethnic groups; not all Coloureds in South Africa had the same ancestry.[22]

The Malagasy component in the Coloured composite gene pool is itself a blend of Malay and Bantu genetic markers.

This genetic admixture appears to be gender-biased. A majority of maternal genetic material is Khoisan. The Cape Coloured population is descended predominantly from unions of European and European-African males with autochthonous Khoisan females.[15][16]

Coloureds in KwaZulu-Natal tend to be descended from unions between Zulu women and British settlers, and the group includes people with Mauritian and St Helenian ancestry.[18][17]

Pre-apartheid era

Coloured people played an important role in the struggle against apartheid and its predecessor policies. The African Political Organisation, established in 1902, had an exclusively Coloured membership; its leader Abdullah Abdurahman rallied Coloured political efforts for many years.[23] Many Coloured people later joined the African National Congress and the United Democratic Front. Whether in these organisations or others, many Coloured people were active in the fight against apartheid.

The political rights of Coloured people varied by location and over time. In the 19th century they theoretically had similar rights to Whites in the Cape Colony (though income and property qualifications affected them disproportionately). In the Transvaal Republic or the Orange Free State, they had few rights. Coloured members were elected to Cape Town's municipal authority (including, for many years, Abdurahman). The establishment of the Union of South Africa gave Coloured people the franchise, although by 1930 they were restricted to electing White representatives. They conducted frequent voting boycotts in protest. Such boycotts may have contributed to the victory of the National Party in 1948. It carried out an apartheid programme that stripped Coloured people of their remaining voting powers.

Coloured people were subject to forced relocation. For instance, the government relocated Coloured from the urban Cape Town areas of District Six, which was later bulldozed. Other areas they were forced to leave included Constantia, Claremont, Simon's Town. Inhabitants were moved to racially designated sections of the metropolitan area on the Cape Flats. Additionally, under apartheid, Coloured people received education inferior to that of Whites. It was, however, better than that provided to Black South Africans.

Apartheid era

 
Explanation of South African identity numbers in an identity document during apartheid in terms of official White, Coloured and Indian population subgroups

J. G. Strijdom, known as "the Lion of the North", continued the impetus to restrict Coloured rights, in order to entrench the new-won National Party majority. Coloured participation on juries was removed in 1954, and efforts to abolish their participation on the common voters' roll in the Cape Province escalated drastically; it was accomplished in 1956 by a supermajority amendment to the 1951 Separate Representation of Voters Act, passed by Malan but held back by the judiciary as unconstitutional under the South Africa Act, the Union's effective constitution. In order to bypass this safeguard, enforced since 1909 to ensure Coloured political rights in the then-British Cape Colony, Strijdom's government passed legislation to expand the number of Senate seats from 48 to 89. All of the additional 41 members hailed from the National Party, increasing its representation in the Senate to 77 in total. The Appellate Division Quorum Bill increased the number of judges necessary for constitutional decisions in the Appeal Court from five to eleven. Strijdom, knowing that he had his two-thirds majority, held a joint sitting of parliament in May 1956. The entrenchment clause regarding the Coloured vote, known as the South Africa Act, were thus eliminated and the Separate Representation of Voters Act passed, now successfully.

Coloureds were placed on a separate voters' roll from the 1958 election to the House of Assembly and forward. They could elect four Whites to represent them in the House of Assembly. Two Whites would be elected to the Cape Provincial Council and the governor general could appoint one senator. Both blacks and Whites opposed this measure, particularly from the United Party and more liberal opposition. The Torch Commando was very prominent, while the Black Sash (White women, uniformly dressed, standing on street corners with placards) also made themselves heard. In this way, the question of the Coloured vote became one of the first measures of the regime's unscrupulous nature and flagrant willingness to manipulate its inherited Westminster system. It would remain in power until 1994.

Many Coloureds refused to register for the new voters' roll and the number of Coloured voters dropped dramatically. In the next election, only 50.2% of them voted. They had no interest in voting for White representatives — an activity which many of them saw as pointless, and only persisted for ten years.

Under the Population Registration Act, as amended, Coloureds were formally classified into various subgroups, including Cape Coloureds, Cape Malays and "other coloured". A portion of the small Chinese South African community was also classified as a coloured subgroup.[24][25]

In 1958, the government established the Department of Coloured Affairs, followed in 1959 by the Union for Coloured Affairs. The latter had 27 members and served as an advisory link between the government and the Coloured people.

The 1964 Coloured Persons Representative Council turned out to be a constitutional hitch[clarification needed] which never really got going. In 1969, the Coloureds elected forty onto the council to supplement the twenty nominated by the government, taking the total number to sixty.

Following the 1983 referendum, in which 66.3% of White voters supported the change, the Constitution was reformed to allow the Coloured and Indian minorities limited participation in separate and subordinate Houses in a tricameral Parliament. This was part of a change in which the Coloured minority was to be allowed limited rights and self-governance in "Coloured areas", but continuing the policy of denationalising the Black majority and making them involuntary citizens of independent homelands. The internal rationale was that South African whites, more numerous at the time than Coloureds and Indians combined, could bolster its popular support and divide the democratic opposition while maintaining a working majority. The effort largely failed, with the 1980s seeing increased disintegration of civil society and numerous states of emergency, with violence increasing from all racial groups. The separate arrangements were removed by the negotiations which took place from 1990 to hold the first universal election.

Post-apartheid era

During the 1994 all-race elections, Coloured people voted heavily for the white National Party, which in its first contest with a non-white majority won 20% of the vote and a majority in the new Western Cape province – much due to Cape Coloured support. The National Party recast itself as the New National Party after De Klerk's departure in 1996, partly to attract non-White voters, and grew closer to the ANC. This political alliance, often perplexing to outsiders, has sometimes been explained in terms of the culture and language shared by White and Coloured New National Party members, who both spoke Afrikaans. In addition, both groups opposed affirmative action programmes that might give preference to Black South Africans, and some Coloured people feared giving up older privileges, such as access to municipal jobs, if African National Congress gained leadership in the government. After the absorption of the NNP into the ANC in 2005, Coloured voters have generally drawn to the Democratic Alliance, with some opting for minor parties such as Vryheidsfront and Patricia de Lille's Independent Democrats, with lukewarm support for the ANC.

Since the late 20th century, Coloured identity politics have grown in influence. The Western Cape has been a site of the rise of opposition parties, such as the Democratic Alliance (DA). The Western Cape is considered as an area in which this party might gain ground against the dominant African National Congress. The Democratic Alliance drew in some former New National Party voters and won considerable Coloured support. The New National Party collapsed in the 2004 elections. Coloured support aided the Democratic Alliance's victory in the 2006 Cape Town municipal elections.

Patricia de Lille, who became mayor of Cape Town in 2011 on the platform of the now-defunct Independent Democrats, does not use the label Coloured but many observers would consider her as Coloured by visible appearance. The Independent Democrats party sought the Coloured vote and gained significant ground in the municipal and local elections in 2006, particularly in districts in the Western Cape with high proportions of Coloured residents. The firebrand Peter Marais (formerly a provincial leader of the New National Party) has sought to portray his New Labour Party as the political voice for Coloured people.

Coloured people supported and were members of the African National Congress before, during and after the apartheid era: notable politicians include Ebrahim Rasool (previously Western Cape premier), Beatrice Marshoff, John Schuurman, Allan Hendrickse and Trevor Manuel, longtime Minister of Finance. The Democratic Alliance won control over the Western Cape during the 2009 National and Provincial Elections and subsequently brokered an alliance with the Independent Democrats.

The ANC has had some success in winning Coloured votes, particularly among labour-affiliated and middle-class Coloured voters. Some Coloureds express distrust of the ANC with the comment, saying that the Coloured were considered "not white enough under apartheid and not black enough under the ANC."[26] In the 2004 election, voter apathy was high in historically Coloured areas.[27] The ANC faces the dilemma of having to balance the increasingly nationalistic economic aspirations of its core black African support base, with its ambition to regain control of the Western Cape, which would require support from Coloureds.[14]

Southern Africa

 
Racial-demographic map of South Africa published by the CIA in 1979, with data from the 1970 South African census.

The term Coloured is also used in Namibia, to describe persons of mixed race, specifically part Khoisan, and part European. The Basters of Namibia constitute a separate ethnic group that are sometimes considered a sub-group of the Coloured population of that country. Under South African rule, the policies and laws of apartheid were extended to what was then called South West Africa. In Namibia, Coloureds were treated by the government in a way comparable to that of South African Coloureds.

In Zimbabwe and to a lesser extent Zambia, the term Coloured or Goffal was used to refer to people of mixed race. Most are descended from mixed African and British, or African and Indian, progenitors. Some Coloured families descended from Cape Coloured migrants from South Africa who had children with local women. Under Rhodesia's predominantly white government, Coloureds had more privileges than black Africans, including full voting rights, but still faced social discrimination. The term Coloured is also used in Eswatini.

Culture

Lifestyle

As far as family life, housing, eating habits, clothing and so on are concerned, the Christian Coloureds generally maintain a Western lifestyle. Marriages are strictly monogamous, although extramarital and premarital sexual relationships can occur and are perceived differently from family to family. Among the working and agrarian classes, permanent relationships are often officially ratified only after a while if at all.

The average family size of six does not differ from those of other Western families and, as with the latter, is generally related to socio-economic status. Extended families are common. Coloured children are often expected to refer to any extended relatives as their "auntie" or "uncle" as a formality.

While many affluent families live in large, modern, and sometimes luxurious homes, many urban coloured people rely on state-owned economic and sub-economic housing.

Cultural aspects

There are many singing and choir associations as well as orchestras in the Coloured community. The Eoan Group Theatre Company performs opera and ballet in Cape Town. The Kaapse Klopse carnival, held annually on 2 January in Cape Town, and the Cape Malay choir and orchestral performances are an important part of the city's holiday season. Kaapse Klopse consists of several competing groups that have been singing and dancing through Cape Town's streets on New Year's Day earlier this year. Nowadays the drumlines in cheerful, brightly Coloured costumes perform in a stadium. Christmas festivities take place in a sacred atmosphere but are no less vivid, mainly including choirs and orchestras that sing and play Christmas songs in the streets. In the field of performing arts and literature, several Coloureds performed with the CAPAB (Cape Performing Arts Board) ballet and opera company, and the community yielded three major Afrikaans poets the well-known poets, Adam Small, S.V. Petersen, and P.J. Philander. In 1968, the Culture and Recreation Council was established to promote the cultural activities of the Coloured Community.

Education

Until 1841 missionary societies provided all the school facilities for Coloured children.

All South African children are expected to attend school from the age of seven to sixteen years, at the minimum.

Economic activities

Initially, Coloureds were mainly semi-skilled and unskilled labourers who, as builders, masons, carpenters and painters, made an important contribution to the early construction industry in the Cape. Many were also fishermen and farm workers, and the latter had an important share in the development of the wine, fruit and grain farms in the Western Cape.

The Malays were, and still are, skilled furniture makers, dressmakers and coopers. In recent years, more and more Coloureds have been working in the manufacturing and construction industry. There are still many Coloured fishermen, and most Coloureds in the countryside are farm workers and even farmers. The largest percentage of economically active Coloureds is found in the manufacturing industry. About 35% of the economically active Coloured women are employed in clothing, textile, food and other factories.

Another important field of work is the service sector, while an ever-increasing number of Coloureds operate in administrative, clerical and sales positions. All the more professional and managerial posts are. In order to stimulate the economic development of Coloureds, the Coloured Development Corporation was established in 1962. The corporation provided capital to businessmen, offered training courses and undertook the establishment of shopping centres, factories and the like.

Distribution

A majority of those who identify as coloured live in the Western Cape, where they make up almost 49% of the province's population. In the 2011 South African census the distribution of the group per province was as follows:[28]

Province Population % of coloureds % of province
Eastern Cape 541,850 11.74 8.26
Free State 83,844 1.82 3.05
Gauteng 423,594 9.18 3.45
KwaZulu-Natal 141,376 3.06 1.38
Limpopo 14,415 0.31 0.27
Mpumalanga 36,611 0.79 0.91
North West 71,409 1.55 2.03
Northern Cape 461,899 10.01 40.31
Western Cape 2,840,404 61.54 48.78
Total 4,615,401 100.0 8.92

Language

Coloured people were the first speakers of Afrikaans; their dialect would later be called "pure" or "true" Afrikaans[citation needed]. The language was originally an informal dialect of Dutch that was spoken amongst the different ethnic slaves to understand each other and also converse with their Dutch masters. Later the language was adopted by white Afrikaners. According to the 2011 South African census, more than 95% of those who identified as Coloured spoke either Afrikaans (74.6%) or English (20.5%) natively, while 4.93% reported a different first language, the largest of those being Setswana which was spoken by 0.87% of the group.[28]

Language 2011 Number %
Afrikaans 3,442,164 74.58%
English 945,847 20.49%
Setswana 40,351 0.87%
isiXhosa 25,340 0.55%
isiZulu 23,797 0.52%
Sesotho 23,230 0.50%
Sign language 11,891 0.26%
isiNdebele 8,225 0.18%
Sepedi 5,642 0.12%
siSwati 4,056 0.09%
Tshivenda 2,847 0.06%
Xitsonga 2,268 0.05%
Sign language 5,702 0.12%
Not applicable 74,043 1.60%
Total 4,616,401 100.0%

Cuisine

Numerous South African cuisines can be traced back to Coloured people. It is said that bobotie, snoek based dishes, koe'sisters, bredies, Malay roti and gatsbies are staple diets of Coloureds and other South Africans as well. A popular Coloured cuisine also include braai (English: barbecue).[29] Most dishes are passed down for many generations.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Mid-year population estimates, 2020" (PDF). Statistics South Africa. Retrieved 15 March 2021.
  2. ^ "Namibia" CIA World Factbook. Retrieved 22 July 2016.
  3. ^ (PDF). Zimbabwe National Statistics Agency (ZIMSTAT). October 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 September 2014. Retrieved 16 February 2015.
  4. ^ Milner-Thornton, Juliette Bridgette (2012). The Long Shadow of the British Empire: The Ongoing Legacies of Race and Class in Zambia. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 9–15. ISBN 978-1-349-34284-6.
  5. ^ Calafell, Francesc; Daya, Michelle; van der Merwe, Lize; Galal, Ushma; Möller, Marlo; Salie, Muneeb; Chimusa, Emile R.; Galanter, Joshua M.; van Helden, Paul D.; Henn, Brenna M.; Gignoux, Chris R.; Hoal, Eileen (2013). "A Panel of Ancestry Informative Markers for the Complex Five-Way Admixed South African Coloured Population". PLOS ONE. 8 (12): e82224. Bibcode:2013PLoSO...882224D. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0082224. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 3869660. PMID 24376522.
  6. ^ . Oxford Dictionaries. Oxford University. Archived from the original on March 9, 2014. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
  7. ^ a b c d e Posel, Deborah (2001). (PDF). Transformation: 50–74. ISSN 0258-7696. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-11-08.
  8. ^ a b Pillay, Kathryn (2019). "Indian Identity in South Africa". The Palgrave Handbook of Ethnicity. pp. 77–92. doi:10.1007/978-981-13-2898-5_9. ISBN 978-981-13-2897-8.
  9. ^ Schmid, Randolph E. (April 30, 2009). "Africans have world's greatest genetic variation". NBC News. Retrieved 2009-10-23.
  10. ^ Tishkoff SA, Reed FA, Friedlaender FR, et al. (April 2009). "The Genetic Structure and History of Africans and African Americans". Science. 324 (5930): 1035–44. Bibcode:2009Sci...324.1035T. doi:10.1126/science.1172257. PMC 2947357. PMID 19407144.
  11. ^ (PDF). Statistics South Africa. 2012. ISBN 978-0-621-41459-2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 November 2015. Retrieved 30 November 2016.
  12. ^ "1950. Population Registration Act No 30 - the O'Malley Archives".
  13. ^ "Manyi: 'Over-supply' of coloureds in Western Cape". February 24, 2011.
  14. ^ a b "BBC News - How race still colours South African elections". April 20, 2011 – via www.bbc.co.uk.
  15. ^ a b Quintana-Murci, L; Harmant, C; H, Quach; Balanovsky, O; Zaporozhchenko, V; Bormans, C; van Helden, PD; et al. (2010). "Strong maternal Khoisan contribution to the South African coloured population: a case of gender-biased admixture". The American Journal of Human Genetics. 86 (4): 611–620. doi:10.1016/j.ajhg.2010.02.014. PMC 2850426. PMID 20346436.
  16. ^ a b Schlebusch, CM; Naidoo, T; Soodyall, H (2009). "SNaPshot minisequencing to resolve mitochondrial macro-haplogroups found in Africa". Electrophoresis. 30 (21): 3657–3664. doi:10.1002/elps.200900197. PMID 19810027. S2CID 19515426.
  17. ^ a b c Palmer, Fileve T. (2015). Through a Coloured Lens: Post-Apartheid Identity amongst Coloureds in KZN (PhD). Bloomington, Ind: Indiana University. hdl:2022/19854.
  18. ^ a b Fynn, Lorraine Margaret (1991). The "Coloured" Community of Durban: A Study of Changing Perceptions of Identity (PDF) (Master of Social Science). Durban: University of Natal.
  19. ^ Nurse 1975:71
  20. ^ Deumert, Ana (2005). "The unbearable lightness of being bilingual: English–Afrikaans language contact in South Africa" (PDF). Language Sciences. 27 (1): 113–135. doi:10.1016/j.langsci.2004.10.002. ISSN 0388-0001.
  21. ^ . Encounter.co.za. 2011-09-17. Archived from the original on 2012-06-16. Retrieved 2012-08-01.
  22. ^ de Wit, E; Delport, W; Rugamika, CE; Meintjes, A; Möller, M; van Helden, PD; Seoighe, C; Hoal, EG (August 2010). "Genome-wide analysis of the structure of the South African Coloured Population in the Western Cape". Human Genetics. 128 (2): 145–53. doi:10.1007/s00439-010-0836-1. PMID 20490549. S2CID 24696284.
  23. ^ . South African History Online. Archived from the original on 2007-11-21. Retrieved 2009-10-23.
  24. ^
  25. ^ Graham Leach, South Africa : no easy path to peace (1986), p. 70: Population Registration Act, 1959 cape coloured
  26. ^ Welsh, David (2005). . Helen Suzman Foundation. Archived from the original on 2011-07-25. Retrieved 2009-10-23.
  27. ^ Faull, Jonathan (June 21, 2004). . Institute for Democracy in Africa. Archived from the original on June 18, 2008. Retrieved 2009-10-23.
  28. ^ a b Statistics South Africa: Interactive data "SuperWEB2"; Census 2011 Data (Login required)
  29. ^ Zainab Lagardien, Traditional Cape Malay Cooking, Random House Struik 2008

Bibliography

  • Gekonsolideerde Algemene Bibliografie: Die Kleurlinge Van Suid-Afrika, South Africa Department of Coloured Affairs, Inligtingsafdeling, 1960, 79 p.
  • Mohamed Adhikari, Not White Enough, Not Black Enough: Racial Identity in the South African Coloured Community, Ohio University Press, 2005, 252 p. ISBN 9780896802445
  • Vernie A. February, Mind Your Colour: The "coloured" Stereotype in South African Literature, Routledge, 1981, 248 p. ISBN 9780710300027
  • R. E. Van der Ross, 100 Questions about Coloured South Africans, 1993, 36 p. ISBN 9780620178044
  • Philippe Gervais-Lambony, La nouvelle Afrique du Sud, problèmes politiques et sociaux, la Documentation française, 1998
  • François-Xavier Fauvelle-Aymar, Histoire de l'Afrique du Sud, 2006, Seuil

Novels

External links

coloureds, coloured, redirects, here, component, ethnic, group, originating, cape, cape, usage, term, outside, southern, africa, colored, other, uses, color, disambiguation, afrikaans, kleurlinge, bruinmense, brown, people, refers, members, multiracial, ethnic. Coloured redirects here For the component ethnic group originating in the Cape see Cape Coloureds For usage of the term outside Southern Africa see Colored For other uses see Color disambiguation Coloureds Afrikaans Kleurlinge or Bruinmense lit Brown people refers to members of multiracial ethnic communities in Southern Africa who may have ancestry from more than one of the various populations inhabiting the region including African European and Asian South Africa s Coloured people are regarded as having some of the most diverse genetic background Because of the vast combination of genetics different families and individuals within a family may have a variety of different physical features 6 7 ColouredsLuco Meyer s extended Coloured family omitting wife Latisha Rootman with roots in Cape Town Kimberley and PretoriaTotal population5 600 000 in Southern AfricaRegions with significant populationsSouth Africa Namibia Botswana Zimbabwe South Africa5 339 919 2022 Estimate 1 Namibia130 000 2 Zimbabwe17 923 3 Zambia3 000 4 LanguagesAfrikaans EnglishReligionPredominantly Christianity minority IslamRelated ethnic groupsAfricans Cape Dutch Cape Coloureds Cape Malays Griquas San people Khoikhoi Zulu Xhosa Saint Helenians Rehoboth Basters TswanaColoured people as a proportion of the total population in South Africa 0 20 20 40 40 60 60 80 80 100 Density of the Coloured population in South Africa lt 1 km 1 3 km 3 10 km 10 30 km 30 100 km 100 300 km 300 1000 km 1000 3000 km gt 3000 km A genetic clustering of South African Coloured and five source populations 5 Each vertical bar represents individual Coloured was a legally defined racial classification during apartheid referring to anyone not white or not a member of one of the aboriginal groups of Africa on a cultural basis which effectively largely meant those people of colour not speaking any indigenous languages 7 8 In the Western Cape a distinctive Cape Coloured and affiliated Cape Malay culture developed In other parts of Southern Africa people classified as Coloured were usually the descendants of individuals from two distinct ethnicities Genetic studies suggest the group has the highest levels of mixed ancestry in the world 9 10 Mitochondrial DNA studies have demonstrated that many maternal lines of the Coloured population are descended from African Khoisan women Coloureds are mostly found in the western part of South Africa In Cape Town they form 45 4 of the total population according to the South African National Census of 2011 11 56 59 The apartheid era Population Registration Act 1950 and subsequent amendments codified the Coloured identity and defined its subgroups Indian South Africans were initially classified under the act as a subgroup of Coloured 12 As a consequence of Apartheid policies and despite the abolition of the Population Registration Act in 1991 Coloureds are regarded as one of four race groups in South Africa These groups blacks whites Coloureds and Indians still tend to have strong racial identities and to classify themselves and others as members of these race groups 8 7 The classification continues to persist in government policy to an extent as a result of attempts at redress such as Black Economic Empowerment and Employment Equity 7 13 14 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Genetics 2 Pre apartheid era 3 Apartheid era 4 Post apartheid era 5 Southern Africa 6 Culture 6 1 Lifestyle 6 2 Cultural aspects 6 3 Education 6 4 Economic activities 7 Distribution 8 Language 9 Cuisine 10 See also 11 References 12 Bibliography 12 1 Novels 13 External linksBackground Edit Adam Kok III leader of the Coloured Griqua People The Cape Coloured community is predominantly descended from numerous interracial sexual unions primarily between Western European men and Khoisan or mixed race women in the Cape Colony from the 17th century onwards 15 16 In KwaZulu Natal the Coloured possess a diverse heritage including British Irish German Mauritian Saint Helenian Indian Xhosa and Zulu 17 18 Zimbabwean Coloureds are descended from Shona or Ndebele British and Afrikaner settlers as well as Arab and Asian people Griqua on the other hand are descendants of Khoisan women and Afrikaner Trekboers Despite these major differences as both groups have ancestry from more than one naturalised racial group they are classified as coloured in the South African context Such mixed race people did not necessarily self identify this way some preferred to call themselves black or Khoisan or just South African citation needed The Griqua were subjected to an ambiguity of other creole people within Southern African social order According to Nurse and Jenkins 1975 the leader of this mixed group Adam Kok I was a former slave of the Dutch governor who was manumitted and provided land outside Cape Town in the eighteenth century 19 With territories beyond the Dutch East India Company s administration Kok provided refuge to deserting soldiers runaway slaves and remaining members of various Khoikhoi tribes 17 In South Africa and many neighbouring countries the white minority governments historically segregated Africans from Europeans after settlement had progressed and inreasingly classified all mixed race people together into a third group despite their numerous ethnic and national differences in ancestry The imperial and apartheid governments categorized them as Coloured In addition other distinctly homogeneous ethnic groups also traditionally viewed the mixed race populations as a separate group and a growing number of mixed race people also embraced a shared identity During the apartheid era in South Africa of the second half of the 20th century the government used the term Coloured to describe one of the four main racial groups it defined by law the fourth was Asian later Indian This was an effort to impose white supremacy and maintain racial divisions Individuals were classified as White South Africans formally classified as European Black South Africans formally classified as Native Bantu or simply African and comprising the majority of the population Coloureds mixed race and Indians formally classified as Asian 7 Coloured people may have ethnic ancestry from Indonesia mixed race and Khoisan ancestry The apartheid governments treated them as one people despite their differences Cape Muslims were also classified as coloured They generally have Indonesian and black ancestry as many Indonesian slaves had children with African partners Many Griqua began to self identify as Coloureds during the apartheid era because of the benefits of such classification For example Coloureds did not have to carry a dompas a pass an identity document designed to limit the movements of the black population while the Griqua who were seen as an indigenous African group did source source source source source source source source source source source source source source Colin speaking Afrikaans In the 21st century Coloured people constitute a plurality of the population in the provinces of Western Cape 48 8 and a large minority in the Northern Cape 40 3 both areas of centuries of mixing among the populations In the Eastern Cape they make up 8 3 of the population Most speak Afrikaans as they were generally descendants of Dutch and Afrikaner men and grew up in their society About twenty percent of the Coloured speak English as their mother tongue mostly those of the Eastern Cape and KwaZulu Natal Virtually all Cape Town Coloureds are bilingual 20 21 Genetics Edit At least one genetic study indicates that Cape Coloureds have ancestries from the following ethnic groups not all Coloureds in South Africa had the same ancestry 22 Indigenous Khoisan 32 43 Indigenous Bantu peoples chiefly from Southern Africa 20 36 Peoples from Europe 21 28 Peoples from South and Southeast Asia 9 11 Studies also show that coloured also have Xhosa ancestry Coloureds from the Eastern Cape have British Xhosa and IrishThe Malagasy component in the Coloured composite gene pool is itself a blend of Malay and Bantu genetic markers This genetic admixture appears to be gender biased A majority of maternal genetic material is Khoisan The Cape Coloured population is descended predominantly from unions of European and European African males with autochthonous Khoisan females 15 16 Coloureds in KwaZulu Natal tend to be descended from unions between Zulu women and British settlers and the group includes people with Mauritian and St Helenian ancestry 18 17 Pre apartheid era EditColoured people played an important role in the struggle against apartheid and its predecessor policies The African Political Organisation established in 1902 had an exclusively Coloured membership its leader Abdullah Abdurahman rallied Coloured political efforts for many years 23 Many Coloured people later joined the African National Congress and the United Democratic Front Whether in these organisations or others many Coloured people were active in the fight against apartheid The political rights of Coloured people varied by location and over time In the 19th century they theoretically had similar rights to Whites in the Cape Colony though income and property qualifications affected them disproportionately In the Transvaal Republic or the Orange Free State they had few rights Coloured members were elected to Cape Town s municipal authority including for many years Abdurahman The establishment of the Union of South Africa gave Coloured people the franchise although by 1930 they were restricted to electing White representatives They conducted frequent voting boycotts in protest Such boycotts may have contributed to the victory of the National Party in 1948 It carried out an apartheid programme that stripped Coloured people of their remaining voting powers Coloured people were subject to forced relocation For instance the government relocated Coloured from the urban Cape Town areas of District Six which was later bulldozed Other areas they were forced to leave included Constantia Claremont Simon s Town Inhabitants were moved to racially designated sections of the metropolitan area on the Cape Flats Additionally under apartheid Coloured people received education inferior to that of Whites It was however better than that provided to Black South Africans Apartheid era Edit Explanation of South African identity numbers in an identity document during apartheid in terms of official White Coloured and Indian population subgroups J G Strijdom known as the Lion of the North continued the impetus to restrict Coloured rights in order to entrench the new won National Party majority Coloured participation on juries was removed in 1954 and efforts to abolish their participation on the common voters roll in the Cape Province escalated drastically it was accomplished in 1956 by a supermajority amendment to the 1951 Separate Representation of Voters Act passed by Malan but held back by the judiciary as unconstitutional under the South Africa Act the Union s effective constitution In order to bypass this safeguard enforced since 1909 to ensure Coloured political rights in the then British Cape Colony Strijdom s government passed legislation to expand the number of Senate seats from 48 to 89 All of the additional 41 members hailed from the National Party increasing its representation in the Senate to 77 in total The Appellate Division Quorum Bill increased the number of judges necessary for constitutional decisions in the Appeal Court from five to eleven Strijdom knowing that he had his two thirds majority held a joint sitting of parliament in May 1956 The entrenchment clause regarding the Coloured vote known as the South Africa Act were thus eliminated and the Separate Representation of Voters Act passed now successfully Coloureds were placed on a separate voters roll from the 1958 election to the House of Assembly and forward They could elect four Whites to represent them in the House of Assembly Two Whites would be elected to the Cape Provincial Council and the governor general could appoint one senator Both blacks and Whites opposed this measure particularly from the United Party and more liberal opposition The Torch Commando was very prominent while the Black Sash White women uniformly dressed standing on street corners with placards also made themselves heard In this way the question of the Coloured vote became one of the first measures of the regime s unscrupulous nature and flagrant willingness to manipulate its inherited Westminster system It would remain in power until 1994 Many Coloureds refused to register for the new voters roll and the number of Coloured voters dropped dramatically In the next election only 50 2 of them voted They had no interest in voting for White representatives an activity which many of them saw as pointless and only persisted for ten years Under the Population Registration Act as amended Coloureds were formally classified into various subgroups including Cape Coloureds Cape Malays and other coloured A portion of the small Chinese South African community was also classified as a coloured subgroup 24 25 In 1958 the government established the Department of Coloured Affairs followed in 1959 by the Union for Coloured Affairs The latter had 27 members and served as an advisory link between the government and the Coloured people The 1964 Coloured Persons Representative Council turned out to be a constitutional hitch clarification needed which never really got going In 1969 the Coloureds elected forty onto the council to supplement the twenty nominated by the government taking the total number to sixty Following the 1983 referendum in which 66 3 of White voters supported the change the Constitution was reformed to allow the Coloured and Indian minorities limited participation in separate and subordinate Houses in a tricameral Parliament This was part of a change in which the Coloured minority was to be allowed limited rights and self governance in Coloured areas but continuing the policy of denationalising the Black majority and making them involuntary citizens of independent homelands The internal rationale was that South African whites more numerous at the time than Coloureds and Indians combined could bolster its popular support and divide the democratic opposition while maintaining a working majority The effort largely failed with the 1980s seeing increased disintegration of civil society and numerous states of emergency with violence increasing from all racial groups The separate arrangements were removed by the negotiations which took place from 1990 to hold the first universal election Post apartheid era EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Coloureds news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message During the 1994 all race elections Coloured people voted heavily for the white National Party which in its first contest with a non white majority won 20 of the vote and a majority in the new Western Cape province much due to Cape Coloured support The National Party recast itself as the New National Party after De Klerk s departure in 1996 partly to attract non White voters and grew closer to the ANC This political alliance often perplexing to outsiders has sometimes been explained in terms of the culture and language shared by White and Coloured New National Party members who both spoke Afrikaans In addition both groups opposed affirmative action programmes that might give preference to Black South Africans and some Coloured people feared giving up older privileges such as access to municipal jobs if African National Congress gained leadership in the government After the absorption of the NNP into the ANC in 2005 Coloured voters have generally drawn to the Democratic Alliance with some opting for minor parties such as Vryheidsfront and Patricia de Lille s Independent Democrats with lukewarm support for the ANC Since the late 20th century Coloured identity politics have grown in influence The Western Cape has been a site of the rise of opposition parties such as the Democratic Alliance DA The Western Cape is considered as an area in which this party might gain ground against the dominant African National Congress The Democratic Alliance drew in some former New National Party voters and won considerable Coloured support The New National Party collapsed in the 2004 elections Coloured support aided the Democratic Alliance s victory in the 2006 Cape Town municipal elections Patricia de Lille who became mayor of Cape Town in 2011 on the platform of the now defunct Independent Democrats does not use the label Coloured but many observers would consider her as Coloured by visible appearance The Independent Democrats party sought the Coloured vote and gained significant ground in the municipal and local elections in 2006 particularly in districts in the Western Cape with high proportions of Coloured residents The firebrand Peter Marais formerly a provincial leader of the New National Party has sought to portray his New Labour Party as the political voice for Coloured people Coloured people supported and were members of the African National Congress before during and after the apartheid era notable politicians include Ebrahim Rasool previously Western Cape premier Beatrice Marshoff John Schuurman Allan Hendrickse and Trevor Manuel longtime Minister of Finance The Democratic Alliance won control over the Western Cape during the 2009 National and Provincial Elections and subsequently brokered an alliance with the Independent Democrats The ANC has had some success in winning Coloured votes particularly among labour affiliated and middle class Coloured voters Some Coloureds express distrust of the ANC with the comment saying that the Coloured were considered not white enough under apartheid and not black enough under the ANC 26 In the 2004 election voter apathy was high in historically Coloured areas 27 The ANC faces the dilemma of having to balance the increasingly nationalistic economic aspirations of its core black African support base with its ambition to regain control of the Western Cape which would require support from Coloureds 14 Southern Africa EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Coloureds news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Racial demographic map of South Africa published by the CIA in 1979 with data from the 1970 South African census The term Coloured is also used in Namibia to describe persons of mixed race specifically part Khoisan and part European The Basters of Namibia constitute a separate ethnic group that are sometimes considered a sub group of the Coloured population of that country Under South African rule the policies and laws of apartheid were extended to what was then called South West Africa In Namibia Coloureds were treated by the government in a way comparable to that of South African Coloureds In Zimbabwe and to a lesser extent Zambia the term Coloured or Goffal was used to refer to people of mixed race Most are descended from mixed African and British or African and Indian progenitors Some Coloured families descended from Cape Coloured migrants from South Africa who had children with local women Under Rhodesia s predominantly white government Coloureds had more privileges than black Africans including full voting rights but still faced social discrimination The term Coloured is also used in Eswatini Culture EditLifestyle Edit As far as family life housing eating habits clothing and so on are concerned the Christian Coloureds generally maintain a Western lifestyle Marriages are strictly monogamous although extramarital and premarital sexual relationships can occur and are perceived differently from family to family Among the working and agrarian classes permanent relationships are often officially ratified only after a while if at all The average family size of six does not differ from those of other Western families and as with the latter is generally related to socio economic status Extended families are common Coloured children are often expected to refer to any extended relatives as their auntie or uncle as a formality While many affluent families live in large modern and sometimes luxurious homes many urban coloured people rely on state owned economic and sub economic housing Cultural aspects Edit There are many singing and choir associations as well as orchestras in the Coloured community The Eoan Group Theatre Company performs opera and ballet in Cape Town The Kaapse Klopse carnival held annually on 2 January in Cape Town and the Cape Malay choir and orchestral performances are an important part of the city s holiday season Kaapse Klopse consists of several competing groups that have been singing and dancing through Cape Town s streets on New Year s Day earlier this year Nowadays the drumlines in cheerful brightly Coloured costumes perform in a stadium Christmas festivities take place in a sacred atmosphere but are no less vivid mainly including choirs and orchestras that sing and play Christmas songs in the streets In the field of performing arts and literature several Coloureds performed with the CAPAB Cape Performing Arts Board ballet and opera company and the community yielded three major Afrikaans poets the well known poets Adam Small S V Petersen and P J Philander In 1968 the Culture and Recreation Council was established to promote the cultural activities of the Coloured Community Education Edit Until 1841 missionary societies provided all the school facilities for Coloured children All South African children are expected to attend school from the age of seven to sixteen years at the minimum Economic activities Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Initially Coloureds were mainly semi skilled and unskilled labourers who as builders masons carpenters and painters made an important contribution to the early construction industry in the Cape Many were also fishermen and farm workers and the latter had an important share in the development of the wine fruit and grain farms in the Western Cape The Malays were and still are skilled furniture makers dressmakers and coopers In recent years more and more Coloureds have been working in the manufacturing and construction industry There are still many Coloured fishermen and most Coloureds in the countryside are farm workers and even farmers The largest percentage of economically active Coloureds is found in the manufacturing industry About 35 of the economically active Coloured women are employed in clothing textile food and other factories Another important field of work is the service sector while an ever increasing number of Coloureds operate in administrative clerical and sales positions All the more professional and managerial posts are In order to stimulate the economic development of Coloureds the Coloured Development Corporation was established in 1962 The corporation provided capital to businessmen offered training courses and undertook the establishment of shopping centres factories and the like Distribution EditA majority of those who identify as coloured live in the Western Cape where they make up almost 49 of the province s population In the 2011 South African census the distribution of the group per province was as follows 28 Province Population of coloureds of provinceEastern Cape 541 850 11 74 8 26Free State 83 844 1 82 3 05Gauteng 423 594 9 18 3 45KwaZulu Natal 141 376 3 06 1 38Limpopo 14 415 0 31 0 27Mpumalanga 36 611 0 79 0 91North West 71 409 1 55 2 03Northern Cape 461 899 10 01 40 31Western Cape 2 840 404 61 54 48 78Total 4 615 401 100 0 8 92Language EditColoured people were the first speakers of Afrikaans their dialect would later be called pure or true Afrikaans citation needed The language was originally an informal dialect of Dutch that was spoken amongst the different ethnic slaves to understand each other and also converse with their Dutch masters Later the language was adopted by white Afrikaners According to the 2011 South African census more than 95 of those who identified as Coloured spoke either Afrikaans 74 6 or English 20 5 natively while 4 93 reported a different first language the largest of those being Setswana which was spoken by 0 87 of the group 28 Language 2011 Number Afrikaans 3 442 164 74 58 English 945 847 20 49 Setswana 40 351 0 87 isiXhosa 25 340 0 55 isiZulu 23 797 0 52 Sesotho 23 230 0 50 Sign language 11 891 0 26 isiNdebele 8 225 0 18 Sepedi 5 642 0 12 siSwati 4 056 0 09 Tshivenda 2 847 0 06 Xitsonga 2 268 0 05 Sign language 5 702 0 12 Not applicable 74 043 1 60 Total 4 616 401 100 0 Cuisine EditSee also South African cuisine Numerous South African cuisines can be traced back to Coloured people It is said that bobotie snoek based dishes koe sisters bredies Malay roti and gatsbies are staple diets of Coloureds and other South Africans as well A popular Coloured cuisine also include braai English barbecue 29 Most dishes are passed down for many generations See also Edit South Africa portalAnglo Indian Anglo Burmese Arab Berber Basters Burghers Colored Coloured People in Namibia Multiracial people Culture of South Africa South African cuisine Goffal Griqua Half caste Khoisan revivalism Sandra Laing Melungeon Mestizo Mestico Metis Miscegenation Mulatto Negro One drop rule Pardo Passing racial identity Pencil test Person of color VOC Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie References Edit Mid year population estimates 2020 PDF Statistics South Africa Retrieved 15 March 2021 Namibia CIA World Factbook Retrieved 22 July 2016 Zimbabwe Population Census 2012 PDF Zimbabwe National Statistics Agency ZIMSTAT October 2013 Archived from the original PDF on 1 September 2014 Retrieved 16 February 2015 Milner Thornton Juliette Bridgette 2012 The Long Shadow of the British Empire The Ongoing Legacies of Race and Class in Zambia Palgrave Macmillan pp 9 15 ISBN 978 1 349 34284 6 Calafell Francesc Daya Michelle van der Merwe Lize Galal Ushma Moller Marlo Salie Muneeb Chimusa Emile R Galanter Joshua M van Helden Paul D Henn Brenna M Gignoux Chris R Hoal Eileen 2013 A Panel of Ancestry Informative Markers for the Complex Five Way Admixed South African Coloured Population PLOS ONE 8 12 e82224 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 882224D doi 10 1371 journal pone 0082224 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 3869660 PMID 24376522 coloured Oxford Dictionaries Oxford University Archived from the original on March 9 2014 Retrieved 14 April 2014 a b c d e Posel Deborah 2001 What s in a name Racial categorisations under apartheid and their afterlife PDF Transformation 50 74 ISSN 0258 7696 Archived from the original PDF on 2006 11 08 a b Pillay Kathryn 2019 Indian Identity in South Africa The Palgrave Handbook of Ethnicity pp 77 92 doi 10 1007 978 981 13 2898 5 9 ISBN 978 981 13 2897 8 Schmid Randolph E April 30 2009 Africans have world s greatest genetic variation NBC News Retrieved 2009 10 23 Tishkoff SA Reed FA Friedlaender FR et al April 2009 The Genetic Structure and History of Africans and African Americans Science 324 5930 1035 44 Bibcode 2009Sci 324 1035T doi 10 1126 science 1172257 PMC 2947357 PMID 19407144 Census 2011 Municipal report Western Cape PDF Statistics South Africa 2012 ISBN 978 0 621 41459 2 Archived from the original PDF on 13 November 2015 Retrieved 30 November 2016 1950 Population Registration Act No 30 the O Malley Archives Manyi Over supply of coloureds in Western Cape February 24 2011 a b BBC News How race still colours South African elections April 20 2011 via www bbc co uk a b Quintana Murci L Harmant C H Quach Balanovsky O Zaporozhchenko V Bormans C van Helden PD et al 2010 Strong maternal Khoisan contribution to the South African coloured population a case of gender biased admixture The American Journal of Human Genetics 86 4 611 620 doi 10 1016 j ajhg 2010 02 014 PMC 2850426 PMID 20346436 a b Schlebusch CM Naidoo T Soodyall H 2009 SNaPshot minisequencing to resolve mitochondrial macro haplogroups found in Africa Electrophoresis 30 21 3657 3664 doi 10 1002 elps 200900197 PMID 19810027 S2CID 19515426 a b c Palmer Fileve T 2015 Through a Coloured Lens Post Apartheid Identity amongst Coloureds in KZN PhD Bloomington Ind Indiana University hdl 2022 19854 a b Fynn Lorraine Margaret 1991 The Coloured Community of Durban A Study of Changing Perceptions of Identity PDF Master of Social Science Durban University of Natal Nurse 1975 71 Deumert Ana 2005 The unbearable lightness of being bilingual English Afrikaans language contact in South Africa PDF Language Sciences 27 1 113 135 doi 10 1016 j langsci 2004 10 002 ISSN 0388 0001 The Vibrant Colourful Coloured People Encounter co za 2011 09 17 Archived from the original on 2012 06 16 Retrieved 2012 08 01 de Wit E Delport W Rugamika CE Meintjes A Moller M van Helden PD Seoighe C Hoal EG August 2010 Genome wide analysis of the structure of the South African Coloured Population in the Western Cape Human Genetics 128 2 145 53 doi 10 1007 s00439 010 0836 1 PMID 20490549 S2CID 24696284 Dr Abdullah Abdurahman 1872 1940 South African History Online Archived from the original on 2007 11 21 Retrieved 2009 10 23 An appalling science Graham Leach South Africa no easy path to peace 1986 p 70 Population Registration Act 1959 cape coloured Welsh David 2005 A hollowing out of our democracy Helen Suzman Foundation Archived from the original on 2011 07 25 Retrieved 2009 10 23 Faull Jonathan June 21 2004 Election Synopsis How the West was Won and Lost May 2004 Institute for Democracy in Africa Archived from the original on June 18 2008 Retrieved 2009 10 23 a b Statistics South Africa Interactive data SuperWEB2 Census 2011 Data Login required Zainab Lagardien Traditional Cape Malay Cooking Random House Struik 2008Bibliography EditGekonsolideerde Algemene Bibliografie Die Kleurlinge Van Suid Afrika South Africa Department of Coloured Affairs Inligtingsafdeling 1960 79 p Mohamed Adhikari Not White Enough Not Black Enough Racial Identity in the South African Coloured Community Ohio University Press 2005 252 p ISBN 9780896802445 Vernie A February Mind Your Colour The coloured Stereotype in South African Literature Routledge 1981 248 p ISBN 9780710300027 R E Van der Ross 100 Questions about Coloured South Africans 1993 36 p ISBN 9780620178044 Philippe Gervais Lambony La nouvelle Afrique du Sud problemes politiques et sociaux la Documentation francaise 1998 Francois Xavier Fauvelle Aymar Histoire de l Afrique du Sud 2006 SeuilNovels Edit Pamela Jooste Dance with a Poor Man s Daughter Doubleday 1998 ISBN 978 0 385 40911 7 Zoe Wicomb David s Story New York Feminist Press at the City University of New York 2001 Henry Martin Scholtz A Place Called Vatmaar 2000 ISBN 978 0795701047External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Coloured people Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coloureds amp oldid 1135108445, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.