The Scramble for Land between the Barokologadi Community and Hermannsburg Missionaries

A Challenge for South African Land Claim Commission, 1950-2007

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/2412-4265/7807

Keywords:

Land claim, Church land, Barokologadi, Missionary movement, Hermannsburg, Melorane, Lutheran

Abstract

This article investigates the land claim of the Barokologadi of Melorane, with their long history of disadvantages in the land of their forefathers. The sources of such disadvantages are traceable way back to tribal wars (known as “difaqane”) in South Africa. At first, people were forced to retreat temporarily to a safer site when the wars were in progress. On their return, the Hermannsburg missionaries came to serve in Melorane, benefiting from the land provided by the Kgosi. Later the government of the time expropriated that land. What was the significance of this land? The experience of Melorane was not necessarily unique; it was actually a common practice aimed at acquiring land from rural communities. This article is an attempt to present the facts of that event. There were, however, later interruptions, such as when the Hermannsburg Mission Church became part of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Southern Africa (ELCSA).

 

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Author Biography

Victor MS Molobi, University of South Africa

Acting Head: Research Institute for Theology and Religion (RITR)

University of South Africa

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Published

2020-10-26

How to Cite

Molobi, Victor MS. 2020. “The Scramble for Land Between the Barokologadi Community and Hermannsburg Missionaries: A Challenge for South African Land Claim Commission, 1950-2007”. Studia Historiae Ecclesiasticae 46 (2):17 pages. https://doi.org/10.25159/2412-4265/7807.
Received 2020-05-14
Accepted 2020-05-28
Published 2020-10-26