Posts Tagged With: South Africa

The Adventure

We got out of Atlanta by the skin of our teeth.  The flight to Johannesburg on the following day was canceled and Delta texted passengers to advise them that they could fly on the 11th if they could get there.  Many appeared to have made the effort.

Meanwhile, I had selected our seats with one goal in mind…to have enough room to lay down and sleep during the 16 hour flight.

Tip:  In a 3 seat row, a couple can book the aisle seat and the window seat with an empty seat between you.  Normally, no one wants to book that seat between two people.  Unless it’s a full flight, often that seat will remain vacant giving you extra space.

I’ve tried this before in the middle section with four seats and just before the doors closed, two people got on with those seats in our row.  This time, I was sure that someone would have the seat between us because of the next day flight cancellation so imagine my surprise when the doors closed and NO ONE claimed that seat!  YES!!!

Well, the result was I actually laid down and slept great and Jim even took a turn laying down to sleep as well.  This 16 hour flight was less exhausting than an 8 hour flight to Europe.

Passport control and customs at Tambo, the airport in JoBurg, was quick and easy.  We took Gautrain into the city and walked to our hotel which is a short distance from the train station in Sandton.

Protea Hotel Balalaika Sandton is lovely.   Pictures from the lobby.

 

Categories: South Africa, Uncategorized | Tags: , , | 2 Comments

Countdown to Africa – South African History Simplified

I’ve long enjoyed reading a novel about the area I’m visiting.  I’m currently reading the classic, Cry, the Beloved Country by Alan Paton about South Africa for this trip.  Some of the following information comes from that novel.

South Africa, referred to as the Cradle of Humankind, has been occupied for many thousands of years.  The earliest occupants were native Bushmen and the Khoikhoi (Hottentots) in the Cape area and the Bantu (Zulu) to the north.  Europeans arrived on the scene in 1652 when the Dutch landed at the Cape of Good Hope and founded a colony.  The Cape Colony gradually expanded, driving the native people from the land and eventually the need for additional workers resulted in the import of slaves.  (Sound familiar?)

By the early 1800’s, the British took over rule of the area from the Dutch and British settlers moved in causing resentment among the Dutch Boers. (Boer is the Dutch word for farmer.  These people were later called Afrikaners.)  Soon after the abolition of slavery in 1834, the Boers began the Great Trek to escape British rule and eventually established 2 republics of their own, the Orange Free State and Transvaal.

Eventually, the British wanted control of the Dutch republics to unite the area and by 1900 the Anglo-Boer War ensued.  The British prevailed and in 1910 the Union of South Africa was formed.  Lack of agreement between the British and the Afrikaners over the treatment of the majority native population, however, resulted in the policy of separate development later known as apartheid.

Apartheid became the official policy of racial segregation and subjugation in South Africa following WWII.  People were classified by race as black, white, colored, or Indian.  Racial injustice to dispossess and disenfranchise the majority native population flourished in South Africa in spite of international pressure until apartheid was finally abolished in 1993.  Nelson Mandela, the resistance leader who was jailed for 27 years, was elected the first black President in 1994.

Today, 20 years later, the struggle to establish social and economic justice in post-apartheid South Africa continues.

Categories: South Africa, Uncategorized | Tags: , , | 1 Comment

Powered by WordPress.com.