0:00:00.080,0:00:04.480 One historical legacy that nearly all of [br]Africa shares is that of colonization: 0:00:04.480,0:00:08.000 big European empires coming in, [br]throwing down arbitrary borders, 0:00:08.000,0:00:11.680 and exploiting the indigenous Africans in [br]their quest for continental domination. 0:00:11.680,0:00:17.040 And, yeah, when the map looked like this[br]in the 1900s, it’s pretty hard to not 0:00:17.040,0:00:20.960 picture those imperialist scenes in your mind.[br]But as with most things in Africa, 0:00:20.960,0:00:24.960 big sweeping characterizations obscure[br]much more complex realities. 0:00:24.960,0:00:28.160 There are myriad corners of the map [br]where the relationship between native 0:00:28.160,0:00:32.000 and newcomer was far more complex,[br]and few places where that dynamic had 0:00:32.000,0:00:37.520 bigger long-term implications than South Africa.[br]Home to an astonishingly bustling web of narratives 0:00:37.520,0:00:41.760 in the past few centuries, the southern end of [br]the continent is a prime example of how Africans 0:00:41.760,0:00:46.400 have taken and retaken the reins of their story.[br]Now, before I spend any more time pontificating 0:00:46.400,0:00:50.320 in this intro, I have a lot of ground[br]to cover, so let’s do some history! 0:00:50.320,0:00:54.480 Recognizably human settlement in southern [br]Africa is about half a million years old, with 0:00:54.480,0:00:58.960 anatomically modern Homo Sapiens evolving around [br]200,000 years ago, during the Middle Stone Age. 0:00:58.960,0:01:02.960 Eventually, and we’re talking about human [br]evolution here so that is a long “eventually”, 0:01:02.960,0:01:07.440 there was some new technology in town, as the [br]first or second century BC saw the arrival of 0:01:07.440,0:01:11.360 agriculture into southern Africa, and the [br]early centuries AD brought ironworking! 0:01:11.360,0:01:15.680 In the southwest, semi-nomadic pastoralists [br]domesticated livestock and cultivated small 0:01:15.680,0:01:19.280 plants, while the east saw larger and more [br]permanent settlement after the arrival 0:01:19.280,0:01:22.560 of the Bantu peoples from central Africa.[br]These groups brought with them the handy 0:01:22.560,0:01:27.200 knowledge of how to make and use iron, which made [br]farming significantly easier, and helped their 0:01:27.200,0:01:31.600 urban settlements sustain hundreds of people.[br]By the medieval period, it was several thousands, 0:01:31.600,0:01:36.640 as the Mapungubwe kingdom in the Limpopo valley [br]became a huge commercial hub in the 11 and 1200s, 0:01:36.640,0:01:39.440 with strong links to trading centers[br]on the Indian Ocean coast. 0:01:39.440,0:01:44.720 Mapungubwe and the Limpopo valley later came under [br]the umbrella of Great Zimbabwe, but that is a tale 0:01:44.720,0:01:48.960 for another time. So by the middle of the second [br]millennium, southern Africa was rocking a variety 0:01:48.960,0:01:53.760 of different ethnic and linguistic groups…[br]but that diversity was of slim concern to 0:01:53.760,0:01:57.280 the Europeans who would make their way [br]into Africa over the next few centuries. 0:01:57.280,0:02:01.440 In 1487, Portuguese sailors crossed southern [br]Africa to pass into the Indian Ocean, 0:02:01.440,0:02:05.440 and for the next century and a half, they [br]simply treated the south coast as a rest-stop. 0:02:05.440,0:02:09.600 Not so after 1652, when the Dutch [br]officially founded Cape Colony 0:02:09.600,0:02:13.600 and set about a much bigger operation.[br]From their port in Table Bay, they traded 0:02:13.600,0:02:17.920 European and Asian goods with the local Khoekhoe [br]people to get provisions for passing sailors. 0:02:17.920,0:02:21.760 The port was built primarily for use by [br]the Dutch East India Company, but was also 0:02:21.760,0:02:25.920 open to foreign ships, for a price.[br]Keen to min-max this business model, 0:02:25.920,0:02:29.760 colonists ventured beyond Table Bay in [br]order to do some of the farming themselves. 0:02:29.760,0:02:32.000 EZ Money. [br]The problem was that the Khoekhoe 0:02:32.000,0:02:36.880 were slightly nomadic, moving around seasonally[br]just as the early pastoralists in the region had done. 0:02:36.880,0:02:41.520 But when Dutch farmers (or Boers) wandered onto a [br]nice plot of land that wasn’t occupied right this 0:02:41.520,0:02:45.920 very second, they assumed it was "finders keepers".[br]When the Khoekhoe politely informed them that the 0:02:45.920,0:02:49.680 land was, in fact, theirs, the Dutch [br]revised their initial statement to 0:02:49.680,0:02:55.280 "conquerors keepers" and fought two wars [br]between 1659 and 1677 to assert their claim. 0:02:55.280,0:03:00.480 This would start a bit of a trend, as Boers pushed [br]further inland with the specific intent to stay. 0:03:00.480,0:03:05.280 The accidental importation of smallpox [br]in 1713 hit the Khoekhoe especially hard, 0:03:05.280,0:03:08.160 and significantly widened the [br]opening for the Boers to step into. 0:03:08.160,0:03:11.840 By the latter 1700s, the Khoekhoe [br]weren’t widely enslaved or exported 0:03:11.840,0:03:15.440 like West Africans had been for the Atlantic [br]Triangle trade, but they were definitely 0:03:15.440,0:03:19.680 suppressed into a servile working class.[br]That said, there were chattel slaves in the 0:03:19.680,0:03:24.160 Cape Colony, but they just weren’t South African.[br]Dutch sailors had actually imported slaves 0:03:24.160,0:03:28.800 from the Indian Ocean, mostly Muslims, which [br]further stratified the racial class system. 0:03:28.800,0:03:33.120 Keep that in mind, ‘cause it’ll show up later.[br]But soon, even the Dutch would no longer be 0:03:33.120,0:03:36.720 atop the pyramid, because some [br]European geopolitical slapstickery... 0:03:37.570,0:03:41.520 (it’s a Napoleon thing) resulted in Britain [br]annexing the Cape Colony for themselves in 0:03:41.520,0:03:45.280 the early 1800s, sending their own [br]settlers to Port Elizabeth in 1820. 0:03:45.280,0:03:49.040 They also sent tax collectors and [br]abolished slavery, and this is where 0:03:49.040,0:03:52.800 the colonial dynamic starts to get weird[br]— because the Boers had been living in 0:03:52.800,0:03:57.110 southern Africa for a century and a half, in which [br]time they’d incorporated French and Germans 0:03:57.110,0:04:02.800 and now, beyond just Dutch colonists, they considered [br]themselves Afrikaners, a local population that, 0:04:02.800,0:04:07.120 after the arrival of the British, was [br]now being oppressed by alien invaders. 0:04:07.120,0:04:12.800 That, my friends, is one heck of a swerve.[br]But they were serious, so they adopted the 0:04:12.800,0:04:16.640 not-uncommon strategy of Running Away [br]From Britain, leaving the Cape Colony 0:04:16.640,0:04:20.800 in the mid-1830s to trek northeast, and [br]establish the Oranje Vrystaat and the 0:04:20.800,0:04:26.000 Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek by the early 1850s.[br]As we noted earlier, this land was very much 0:04:26.000,0:04:30.080 inhabited, so let’s hop eastward to [br]see what the Bantu groups were up to. 0:04:30.080,0:04:34.080 As it happens: lots. Since the late [br]1700s, the entire structure and 0:04:34.080,0:04:37.920 demography of their societies were changing.[br]With new approaches to militarization, 0:04:37.920,0:04:42.160 small states were consolidating under stronger [br]kings to form large states and confederations 0:04:42.160,0:04:46.480 to better compete for Indian Ocean trade.[br]By far, the biggest player in this process was 0:04:46.480,0:04:50.880 the Zulu kingdom under the leadership of Shaka.[br]Much to the enjoyment of biographers everywhere, 0:04:50.880,0:04:55.760 Shaka was an intricate and unusual character.[br]Exiled from the royal family at a young age and 0:04:55.760,0:05:00.560 treated horribly by his peers, he came back [br]determined, bordering on cruel sometimes, 0:05:00.560,0:05:05.760 he never married or had any recognized children, and [br]his most trusted advisor was his mother. Good son! 0:05:05.760,0:05:09.920 At a young age, Shaka proved himself as a warrior [br]for the neighboring Mtethwa confederation, 0:05:09.920,0:05:14.240 and with their support, he became leader of [br]the Zulu after his father’s death in 1816. 0:05:14.240,0:05:16.960 And when the Mtethwa king died [br]two years later, Shaka became 0:05:16.960,0:05:21.840 the dominant player in that confederation.[br]From there, it was Go Time, and the Zulu expanded 0:05:21.840,0:05:26.400 rapidly, fighting hard but working to incorporate [br]conquered kingdoms into the new Zulu state. 0:05:26.400,0:05:31.520 Still, many were not fans, and migrated away [br]from the conflict, which led to huge demographic 0:05:31.520,0:05:36.960 redistribution, with some displaced groups like [br]the Lozi and Ngoni going almost 1,000 miles north. 0:05:36.960,0:05:41.040 But Shaka wouldn’t live to see the longer-term [br]success of his kingdom, as he was assassinated 0:05:41.040,0:05:45.520 in 1828 by one of his half-brothers.[br]Still, the Zulu kingdom stayed strong, 0:05:45.520,0:05:49.040 and ran up against the Afrikaner [br]Voortrekkers in the mid-1850s. 0:05:49.040,0:05:53.200 And this is where our two plotlines [br]converge, and the resulting frontier 0:05:53.200,0:06:00.000 zone between Afrikaner and British and Zulu [br]and other Bantu groups is, whoo! Complex. 0:06:00.000,0:06:05.120 This frontier, like many, saw trade and cultural [br]exchange as well as conflict, with alliances 0:06:05.120,0:06:09.840 forming and ending based on pure circumstance.[br]So even though the map in the 1800s was already 0:06:09.840,0:06:13.360 a giant checkerboard, it’s important [br]to note that even within all of those 0:06:13.360,0:06:17.920 states was a dynamic cast of players —[br]The southern coasts didn’t just turn 0:06:17.920,0:06:22.320 Oops! All British after they started pushing inland.[br]Many of the absorbed groups were able to carry on 0:06:22.320,0:06:26.720 more or less as they had been, such as the Basotho [br]up in the Drakensberg mountains, who had formed 0:06:26.720,0:06:31.680 an alliance in the wake of the Zulu conquests, and [br]became an autonomous British Protectorate in 1868. 0:06:31.680,0:06:36.080 The Zulu, however, weren’t about to take that [br]offer, and rather preferred to kick the pants off 0:06:36.080,0:06:40.960 of anyone who tried to muscle in on their land.[br]Unfortunately, Britain took that as a challenge. 0:06:40.960,0:06:46.640 In 1879 they invaded Zululand but suffered [br]a fierce defeat at Isandlwana, losing 2/3 0:06:46.640,0:06:51.360 of their soldiers and instantly making “Zulu” a [br]worldwide byword for valor and strength against 0:06:51.360,0:06:55.840 colonial aggression, with even the British army[br]holding them in a kind of dreaded reverence. 0:06:55.840,0:06:58.880 Later that year, Britain returned [br]with five times the soldiers, 0:06:58.880,0:07:02.960 leaving absolutely nothing to chance.[br]By the summer, the Zulu had been defeated, 0:07:02.960,0:07:06.480 their kingdom partitioned, and the [br]last major Bantu state conquered. 0:07:06.480,0:07:10.400 From there, the last obstacle to dominating [br]the subcontinent were the Boers in the north, 0:07:10.400,0:07:14.480 who had just made the literally earth-shattering [br]discovery of diamonds and gold in the 0:07:14.480,0:07:18.960 Orange Free State and Transvaal.[br]So, naturally, Britain did the 0:07:18.960,0:07:24.640 shooty-shoot grabby-grab. First failing in 1881, [br]and then succeeding in 1902, with the help of half 0:07:24.640,0:07:29.280 a million soldiers from across the empire.[br]In 1910, the disparate British colonies 0:07:29.280,0:07:33.740 were reorganized into the Union of [br]South Africa, and it wasted precisely zero time 0:07:33.740,0:07:38.400 restructuring the mines for peak efficiency.[br]What began as a simple resource-rush now 0:07:38.400,0:07:43.920 developed into a highly-organized and ultimately [br]nation-defining industry, with no piece of South 0:07:43.920,0:07:48.480 Africa untouched by the consequences of mining.[br]The almost inconceivable power of these 0:07:48.480,0:07:53.040 mining enterprises was largely a product of [br]control: over the outbound supply of diamonds 0:07:53.040,0:07:56.320 so that the prices would stay high,[br]and over the wages, workspace, 0:07:56.320,0:07:59.280 and even living conditions of the [br]miners who dug and refined it all. 0:07:59.280,0:08:03.120 This was especially hard on black South [br]Africans from outside the posh city centers, 0:08:03.120,0:08:07.680 who left their rural families to do dangerous, [br]labor-intensive goldmining work for extremely low 0:08:07.680,0:08:11.920 pay because even that was still the best option.[br]And it was probably harder on the women, 0:08:11.920,0:08:14.800 who had to take care of the [br]entire family and do the farming. 0:08:14.800,0:08:19.920 In the early 1900s, South Africa was definitely [br]not being subtle about the unequal distribution 0:08:19.920,0:08:24.320 of land, the rampant wage discrimination, [br]or the white monopoly on political power. 0:08:24.320,0:08:28.480 This wasn’t slavery, but it was a [br]very robust system of discrimination, 0:08:28.480,0:08:33.040 which history has come to know as apartheid.[br]This overtly white-supremacist ideology 0:08:33.040,0:08:37.920 became official policy after the Afrikaner [br]Nationalist Party won the elections of 1948, 0:08:37.920,0:08:42.720 but the economic, social, and political [br]mechanisms that enabled apartheid were already 0:08:42.720,0:08:46.560 hard at work in the decades prior.[br]What changed here was their intensity, 0:08:46.560,0:08:50.480 and the rigid legal framework intended [br]to make this system permanent. 0:08:50.480,0:08:55.120 Inter-ethnic marriage was outlawed, schools taught [br]black people they were inferior to whites, 0:08:55.120,0:08:59.920 blacks needed special permission to go anywhere, [br]and every conceivable public and private amenity 0:08:59.920,0:09:04.080 was segregated down to the damn STAIRS![br]While depriving black people of power, 0:09:04.080,0:09:08.320 resources, or the simple ability to enjoy [br]public life, the Nationalist Party knew they 0:09:08.320,0:09:12.640 needed black labor to sustain the economy —[br]so when black civil rights and labor groups 0:09:12.640,0:09:17.280 recognized this and began campaigning against [br]apartheid, the government responded viciously: 0:09:17.280,0:09:21.360 banning the African National Congress, arresting [br]their political and paramilitary leaders, 0:09:21.360,0:09:25.040 firing into crowds of protesters at [br]Sharpeville and Soweto, and killing 0:09:25.040,0:09:30.000 the prominent activist Steve Biko in 1977.[br]Biko was beloved by South Africans for his 0:09:30.000,0:09:33.600 leadership in the Black Consciousness Movement, [br]which shattered the apartheid fallacy that 0:09:33.600,0:09:37.600 black people were inherently lesser.[br]After his activism and his murder, 0:09:37.600,0:09:42.720 black South Africans were rightly furious, [br]but also recognized that Biko was right: 0:09:42.720,0:09:47.600 that it didn’t need to be like this, and [br]some of the Afrikaners noticed it too. 0:09:47.600,0:09:51.760 During the 1980s, the government and economy [br]were under pressure from persistent civilian 0:09:51.760,0:09:55.520 unrest and paramilitary action, the [br]growing strength of black labor unions, 0:09:55.520,0:09:59.440 widespread sympathy abroad, and targeted [br]international economic sanctions. 0:09:59.440,0:10:05.540 Enter Nelson Mandela. Well, not really “enter”,[br]he had been imprisoned since 1962, but 0:10:05.540,0:10:09.630 while still jailed he was cultivating potential[br]reformers from within the National Party, 0:10:09.630,0:10:14.320 looking to convince pliable Afrikaners to let[br]this broken system go and build something new. 0:10:14.320,0:10:20.000 In 1990, F.W. de Klerk became President, and he [br]and Mandela negotiated on a series of reforms, 0:10:20.000,0:10:24.000 such as legalizing all political parties, [br]freeing political prisoners, and holding 0:10:24.000,0:10:29.040 South Africa’s first multi-racial election —[br]which, in 1994, a newly-liberated Mandela 0:10:29.040,0:10:32.560 won by a landslide. He finished [br]de Klerk's process of dismantling 0:10:32.560,0:10:36.800 apartheid and set South Africa on a course[br]to becoming a proudly multiracial democracy. 0:10:36.800,0:10:39.760 Almost 3 decades later, there’s [br]still plenty of work to be done, 0:10:39.760,0:10:45.440 but with institutional racism no longer official [br]policy, it’s now possible to do that work. 0:10:45.440,0:10:50.400 Like most places on the African continent, South [br]Africa has been through an absolute wringer of 0:10:50.400,0:10:54.400 a history in the past few centuries —[br]between migration, commerce, disease, 0:10:54.400,0:10:56.800 colonization, convergence, exploitation, 0:10:56.800,0:11:01.120 oppression, resistance and liberation.[br]And all of the ethnic and cultural groups that 0:11:01.120,0:11:06.000 call South Africa home were playing an integral [br]part, and it’s already my great regret that I 0:11:06.000,0:11:10.800 wasn’t able to discuss them all in this video.[br]But this grand diversity is a real treasure 0:11:10.800,0:11:15.360 that rewards every little bit of inquiry [br]with a new perspective on this story, 0:11:15.360,0:11:20.400 and it’s the reason that South Africa is so [br]deserving of its epithet: “The Rainbow Nation”. 0:11:21.120,0:11:25.040 Thank you so much for watching! As I hope [br]I’ve shown, this history is fascinating in 0:11:25.040,0:11:29.520 its own right, but as an American, the story was [br]especially intriguing because of how many direct 0:11:29.520,0:11:34.560 points of comparison and of contrast there are [br]between the American and South African narratives. 0:11:34.560,0:11:37.680 But that’s part of the joy of [br]Black History Month! Learning 0:11:37.680,0:11:42.080 anything in one area can illuminate other [br]aspects of the global black experience. 0:11:42.080,0:11:45.920 And to help this video serve as a springboard [br]for you to discover more about Black History, 0:11:45.920,0:11:50.400 I’ve linked some cool resources down in the [br]description below. I really hope you check 'em out.