New “traditional” strategies and land claims in South Africa: a case study in Hammanskraal.
Abstract
In post-apartheid South Africa, many hopes were pinned on the process
of land-restitution to be a major part of power and wealth redistribution.
However, as the land claims process is linked to demonstrable historical
legitimacy, this process has sometimes necessitated both the restating
and reinventing of local histories and “ethnic identities”, in line with new
political structures or moral frameworks. This article addresses continuity and
innovation in strategies around historical adaptation to governance structures,
ethnicity and “traditional” structures in South Africa. These themes will be
explored using Hammanskraal, located in the north of Gauteng, as a case
study, examining the way legitimacy has been gained, constructed and
established in two specific periods: around 1911-1944 and 1995-2010. In
1944, government ethnographer NJ Van Warmelo produced a history of
Johannes “Jan Tana” Kekana’s Ndebele, depicting the history and lineage of
the AmaNdebele-a-Moletlane group. In 1995, a substantial land-claim was
lodged by a contestant for the chieftaincy of the AmaNdebele-a-Moletlane,
presenting a different historical background that contested the narrative
produced by Van Warmelo. The contestant for the chieftaincy, not currently
officially recognised by South African state structures, has used various
strategies to concretise his position. These strategies show how entrenched
historical legitimacy is being counteracted by popular modes of expression,
construction and communication. This new politics, consciously constructed
around ideas of traditional structures and legitimacy, interacts with new
power structures, adding the importance of political connections or resources
to the construction of the claim. Contextualising this historically shows how
continuities regarding “traditional” authorities have interacted with the state
before, during and after apartheid.