The Awkward Positioning of a Dutch Reformed Missionary in Apartheid South Africa

Rev. D. P. Botha and the Cape Coloured question

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/2412-4265/6805

Keywords:

apartheid, group areas, South Africa, theology, Coloureds, Dutch Reformed Mission Church (DRMC)

Abstract

The Rev. D. P. (David) Botha was a lifelong apartheid critic and minister in the Dutch Reformed Mission Church (DRMC) and later the Uniting Reformed Church in Southern Africa (URCSA). Early in his career, he served as a “missionary” in a DRMC congregation in Wynberg, and subsequently in other congregations in the Western Cape, South Africa. During his career, he wrote an important book and engaged in public discourse through contributions in newspapers and other mainstream publications. Focusing on these sources, most of which now form part of his private collection in the Dutch Reformed Church (DRC) Archive, this article traces Botha’s growing agitation regarding the implementation of apartheid policies, in the aftermath of the institution of the 1950 Group Areas Act. Among other things it illuminates the early apartheid-era white view of the other, as experienced and critiqued by this insider-outsider minister with respect to his assessment of general white perceptions of so-called “coloureds” in the Cape Town area. Through specific attention to Botha’s correspondences with A. P. Treurnicht and Beyers Naudé, this article also shows the problematic perspective of a white missionary seeking to alleviate the impact of policy decisions on his church members, while simultaneously buying into the predominant ideology of racial categorisation.

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Author Biography

Retief Muller, Stellenbosch University

Nagel Institute for the Study of World Christianity, Calvin University

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Published

2020-07-16

How to Cite

Muller, Retief. 2020. “The Awkward Positioning of a Dutch Reformed Missionary in Apartheid South Africa: Rev. D. P. Botha and the Cape Coloured Question”. Studia Historiae Ecclesiasticae 46 (1):15 pages. https://doi.org/10.25159/2412-4265/6805.

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Section

Articles
Received 2019-09-10
Accepted 2020-01-09
Published 2020-07-16