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CULTURE OF SOUTH AFRICA


There is no single 'Culture of South Africa'. As South Africa is so ethnically diverse, it is not surprising that there are vast cultural differences as well.

Contents
Main Cultural differences
Black people
White people
Coloured (Mixed-Race) people
Asian people
Protection of Cultural Rights
Sex and gender
Gender issues
Sexual orientation
International cultural boycott
Famous South Africans
Sport
Major sports
Food
TV and films
See also
References
External links

Main Cultural differences


Because of the legacy of Apartheid segregation, many cultural differences correspond closely to the racial groups defined by Apartheid (Blacks, Whites, Coloureds, Asians). This may change as assimilation progresses, although currently (2004) many cultural differences between Apartheid-defined racial groups persist.
Black people

The country's black majority still has a substantial number of rural inhabitants who lead largely impoverished and necessarily simple lives. However, blacks are increasingly urbanised and westernised, and usually speak English or Afrikaans in addition to their native tongue, which may be one of nine Bantu languages with official status since 1994. These include the Nguni languages, Zulu, Xhosa, Ndebele, Swazi, and Tsonga, and the Sotho languages, which include Tswana, Sotho, Northern Sotho and Venda. Cultural differences between speakers from the two language groups are comparable to those between speakers of German and Italian. Many urban blacks speak several indigenous languages, with Zulu being a lingua franca in the Johannesburg area.
Most are Christian, with membership of the Anglican and Roman Catholic churches being strong as is membership of the predominantly black Zion Christian Church, although many still follow traditional beliefs, many often consulting a ''sangoma''. There is a vibrant indigenous culture, with local popular music forms, such as ''kwaito'', locally mixed house while black South African musicians such as Ladysmith Black Mambazo, Mahotella Queens, Miriam Makeba, and Hugh Masekela are well known internationally.
White people

The white minority lead lifestyles similar in many respects to whites found in Europe, North America and Australasia, with sport being immensely popular. The ''braai'' (short for ''braaivleis'' or barbecue) is another national pastime, epitomised by an old advertising slogan for Chevrolet cars in the 1960s: ''Braaivleis, rugby, sunny skies and Chevrolet''.
Religious beliefs are also strong, with most Afrikaners adhering to the Dutch Reformed Church. Most English-speaking whites are either Anglican or Roman Catholic. Perhaps 90,000 whites are Jewish, with a similar number being of Portuguese origin. There are some Greeks and Christian Lebanese.
Apartheid was abandoned as a policy by the government when 68% of voters supported change in a whites only referendum.
According to research by FutureFact on the evolving South African consumer, Afrikaans speakers have shown the most radical change in political outlook of all groups in South Africa since 1994. Afrikaans speakers are 300% more accepting of affirmative action in 2004 than they were in 2000. This contrasts with the total population which has not shown radically increased support for the concept.
Coloured (Mixed-Race) people

The mixed-race Coloureds are, culturally speaking, much closer to whites, especially Afrikaans speakers, whose language and religious beliefs they share, than they are to black South Africans, despite suffering considerable discrimination under apartheid. A small minority of Coloureds, known as Cape Malays are Muslim. Well known members of the community include Springboks rugby players Chester Williams and Breyton Paulse and jazz musicians Jonathan Butler and Abdullah Ibrahim (also known as Dollar Brand).
Asian people

Asians, (predominantly Indian origin) preserve their own cultural heritage, languages and religious beliefs, being either Hindu or Muslim, and speaking English, with Indian languages like Tamil, Hindi, Telugu or Gujarati being spoken less frequently.
Although Indian languages are seldom spoken or understood, English-subtitled Bollywood films and television programmes are popular among South African Indians.
There is a much smaller Chinese community in South Africa, although its numbers have been increased by immigration from Taiwan (although the Taiwanese were classified as "White", rather than Asian by the Apartheid regime.)
Protection of Cultural Rights

The rights of Cultural, Religious and Linguistic Communities are protected in the constitution by the Commission for the Protection and Promotion of the Rights of Cultural, Religious and Linguistic Communities. This is a Chapter 9 Institution which was created by the constitution.

Sex and gender


Gender issues

South Africa demonstrates significant differences between the experiences of men and women. Cultural attitudes towards women tend to demonstrate inequality. The poorest and most disadvantaged people in South Africa remain black women, and women are disadvantaged in terms of their earning power, their access to education and their employment status. In addition, South African women face cultural chauvinism in other areas: for example, in some traditional southern African cultures, a woman cannot own property.
Sexual orientation

South Africa offers all its citizens, including gay men and lesbians, equality under the 1996 constitution. In July 2002, the High Court of South Africa in Bloemfontein ruled that to deny same-sex couples the right to marry equally is discriminatory and thus unconstitutional. While many conservative white South African people remain opposed to homosexuality [1], in some southern African cultures sex between adolescent males is normal and unremarkable (e.g. the Swazi practice of ''amantanyula'' [2]).

International cultural boycott


Many countries imposed cultural boycotts on the apartheid regime, meaning that South Africa was banned from the Olympic Games until 1992, as well as rugby and cricket. The 1971 Springbok rugby tour to Australia sparked mass protest and a state of emergency was even declared in Queensland. When the all-white national rugby team, the Springboks, toured New Zealand in 1981, it provoked public outrage, as did the decision of the British rock group Queen to perform in the Sun City resort in the bantustan of Bophuthatswana. Paul Simon caused controversy when he recorded his ''Graceland'' album with the South African group Ladysmith Black Mambazo, even though all its members were black.
Until the 1990s, the British actors' union, Equity, imposed a boycott on the sale of TV programmes to South Africa, although the state-controlled South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) happily bought U.S. programmes instead.

Famous South Africans


Nelson Mandela is perhaps the most famous South African. Other famous politicians include F. W. de Klerk and Steve Biko. From the early 20th century there is also Jan Smuts (who was perhaps South Africa's only international statesman until Mandela). D. F. Malan, Hendrik Verwoerd and J G Strijdom were architects of Apartheid. Perhaps the world's most famous Anglican churchman is Desmond Tutu. Winnie Mandela is loved by some and despised by others, but known by all. Helen Suzman was for years the only "one person, one vote" democrat in parliament.
J. R. R. Tolkien, author of ''The Hobbit'', ''The Lord of the Rings'' and ''The Silmarillion'' was born in Bloemfontein, South Africa in 1892.
Well known South African sports stars include Gary Player, Ernie Els and Retief Goosen; Jody Scheckter; Kevin Curren; Zola Budd; Jonty Rhodes.
While South Africa was isolated by the cultural boycott in the 1980s, there are now many well-known South African performing artists and writers. They include playwrights such as Athol Fugard, and satirist Pieter Dirk Uys, actors like Anthony Sher, Hollywood stars like Oscar-winner Charlize Theron, and ''The Mummy Returns'' co-star Arnold Vosloo.
In music, the groups African Jazz Pioneers and Ladysmith Black Mambazo have found popularity worldwide. Ladysmith Black Mambazo's collaboration with Paul Simon in 1986 (which resulted in their extreme fame across the world) paved the way for many other South African musicians to gain popularity amongst international audiences, such as Mahlathini and the Mahotella Queens, who popularized ''mbaqanga'' music across the world. Two white rock artists of South African origin are Dave Matthews, lead singer of the Dave Matthews Band, and Manfred Mann. Miriam Makeba, a singer who first found fame in the anti-apartheid movie ''Come Back, Africa'', Dudu Pukwana, a gifted jazz musician, and Abdullah Ibrahim (Dollar Brand), being on the wrong side of the colour bar, had to leave South Africa to fully exploit their talents — their music was not played on South African radio. Johnny Clegg and Sipho Mchunu formed the massively successful band Juluka, which went onto gain worldwide fame (as did Clegg's later band, Savuka). The alt-metal group Seether also features two prominent members of South African origin, guitarist and vocalist Shaun Morgan and bassist Dale Stewart and have received considerable play on mainstream radio and music television in the U.S. James Phillips was a prominent liberal rock musician of the 1980s.
Writers like Nadine Gordimer and J. M. Coetzee have also found international acclaim, both being winners of the Nobel Prize for Literature. Also, the creator of the popular children's show ''Thomas The Tank Engine And Friends'', Britt Allcroft was born in Johannesberg.
The infamous apartheid-era, Afrikaner bank robber and ex-Johannesburg police chief Andre Stander retained folklore status in South Africa since his death and has been the subject of several biographies and a 2004 feature film in the U.S. called ''Stander'' with American actor Thomas Jane portraying him. His last remaining accomplice Allan Heyl is almost as notorious and was released from prison in 2005. Director Bronwen Hughes interviewed him at length for research regarding the film.

Sport


Major sports

:''See also Sport in South Africa
Many Sports have a passionate following, although it remains largely divided on ethnic lines and is still largely seen (in the words of a former member of Women and Sport South Africa) as ''"the domain of men"''. In 1997, one writer described ''"massive gender inequalities in the sporting structures of the country, and a strong association between sport and masculinity"''. The most popular sport among black South African men is soccer, with the national team being nicknamed ''Bafana Bafana'' (meaning 'The Boys'). Soccer in the past has tended to be less segregated than white-dominated sports, like rugby union or cricket, though this is no longer the case.
Rugby union is one of the most popular sports in South Africa, which is especially popular among Afrikaners, the Springboks. The Springboks famously hosted and won the 1995 Rugby World Cup, it was their first appearance at the World Cup. The defeat of the All Blacks in the final is remembered as one of the most famous South African sporting moments. The domestic league - the Currie Cup is also played annually, as well as the international Super 14.
Cricket is traditionally popular among English-speaking whites.
After being tainted by associations with apartheid, the Springboks (or 'Boks') have sought to become part of the 'New South Africa', with President Nelson Mandela wearing the Springbok jersey, once only worn by whites, at the final of the 1995 Rugby World Cup.
The country has a number of disabled athletes, most notably the double amputee world record holder at 100 m, 200 m and 400 m - Oscar Pistorius.
South Africa will be hosting the 2010 World Cup Tournament, the first soccer World Cup to be held in Africa.

Food


:''See also Cuisine of South Africa
The braai or barbecue is widely popular, especially with whites, and includes meat, especially boerewors or spicy sausages, and mielies (maize) or Mielie-meal, often as a porridge, or pearl millet, a staple food of black South Africans. Pastries such like koeksusters and desserts like melktert (milk tart) are also universally popular. Vegetarianism is becoming widely accepted.
Another favourite among most South Africans is ''biltong'', a form of dried meat usually made from beef or game, and often consumed while watching sporting events.
Indian food like curry is also popular, especially in Durban with its large Indian population. Another local Indian Durban speciality is the 'bunny' or bunny chow, which consists of a hollowed-out loaf of white bread filled with curry. Cape Malay dishes have their origins in Southeast Asia. Bobotie is a popular dish (originating in Europe) which was adapted to suit the Cape Malay palate. It is made from curried lamb, fruit and bread, served with rice, and sosatie, a type of barbecued meat. More recently, Pakistani and Indian restaurants have been opened in major cities by recent immigrants, and provide a more "authentic" South Asian dining experience.
The Portuguese community has also made its mark, with spicy peri-peri chicken being a favourite. The South African Portuguese-themed restaurant chain Nando's now has restaurants in the UK, Australia, Malaysia and Kenya.

TV and films


Television, which for political reasons was not introduced in South Africa until 1976, is also popular. Traditionally, U.S. programmes have dominated TV schedules. Programmes like ''The Bold and the Beautiful'' have been popular with South Africans of all races, but locally produced soap operas or 'soapies' now draw a large audience and are exported all over Africa. The SABC drama series ''Shaka Zulu'', based on the true story of the Zulu warrior King Shaka, was shown around the world in the 1980s, but had to be marketed by a US distributor.
While many foreign films have been produced about South Africa (usually involving race relations), few local productions are known outside South Africa itself. One exception was the film ''The Gods Must Be Crazy'' in 1980, set in the Kalahari. This is about how life in a traditional community of Bushmen is changed when a Coke bottle, thrown out of an aeroplane, suddenly lands from the sky. The late Jamie Uys, who wrote and directed ''The Gods Must Be Crazy'', also had success overseas in the 1970s with his films ''Funny People'' and ''Funny People II'', similar to the TV series ''Candid Camera'' in the US. Leon Schuster's ''You Must Be Joking!'' films are in the same genre, and hugely popular among South Africans.
Other notable exceptions are the film ''Tsotsi'', which won the Academy Award for Foreign Language Film at the 78th Academy Awards in 2006 as well as ''U-Carmen e-Khayelitsha'', which won the Golden Bear at the 2005 Berlin International Film Festival.
In 2004, the New South African TV channel (NSAT) began broadcasting on Sky Digital in the UK, thereby reaching the large (predominantly white) expatriate community, showing a mix of South African entertainment, films, sport and news coverage.

See also





Rugby union in South Africa

References



Race, Gender and Sport in Post-Apartheid South Africa, Robert Chappell, 2005.

South African government report on gender equality, Statistics SA 2002

''Gender Inequality and the Economy: Empowering Women in the New South Africa'', by Zarina Maharaj

External links



SA Rugby, the national governing body of Rugby Union.

SA Football Association

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