Jan Smuts and the Bulhoek Massacre : race and state violence in the making of South Africa, 1919-1920s
Abstract
The purpose of this article is to examine the role played by General JC Smuts,
the prime minister of the Union of South Africa at the time, in the incident
known as the Bulhoek Massacre which took place in May 1921. The discussion
locates the Bulhoek incident in the broader context of Smuts’s attitude towards
black people in South Africa. It explores his ideas and views on the subject of
race, and scrutinises the policies that the government introduced under his
premiership. It shows how he steered the country towards shoring up minority
government and the political and economic exclusion, marginalisation and
domination of African people in South Africa. In this it follows on the works
of many other historians who have written in this vein and contend that the
Bulhoek Massacre is the exemplar of Smuts’s views on the matter of race in
South Africa.