Opinion Ade Adepitan: ‘I went to the whitest place on Earth – and saw a global shift to the far-Right’ - Black wheelchaired journo travels to insular community, disses pecan farms.

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Ade Adepitan: ‘I went to the whitest place on Earth – and saw a global shift to the far-Right’

Thirty years after the end of apartheid, the tiny enclave of Orania in South Africa is still traumatised by its own oppressive hierarchy

Of all the strange places I’ve visited in two decades of presenting travel documentaries, there’s no doubt that Orania, South Africa, was the most bizarre and unsettling. As a black man with a disability, as far back as I can remember wherever I’ve travelled, I’ve always been in the minority. It’s something I’ve got used to; these days when I arrive at a new destination I barely notice the awkward stares.

The all-white community of Orania felt different; for the first time in many years I felt uneasy about being literally the only black man in town.

Created in 1991, a year after Nelson Mandela’s release from Robben Island, Orania’s community (which now numbers around 3,000 white Afrikaners) was established by Carel Boshoff, the son-in-law of the former prime minister, Hendrik Verwoerd, often dubbed the “architect of apartheid”, and is currently run by his descendants.

Some of my initial anxiety probably derived from this historical context. South Africa is a country with deep wounds created by a brutal regime based on division. Given that April of this year marks the 30th anniversary of the end of apartheid, my unease was outweighed by my curiosity to understand why this group of Afrikaners wanted to once again live in a monoculture, segregated from black South Africans.

Orania has its own currency – the “ora”. Anyone wishing to settle in the town must prove their Afrikaner credentials and commit to a conservative, Christian lifestyle that includes the prohibition of unmarried couples living together. Although the Oranians deny all accusations of racism, they told me they believe that monoculturalism is a “healthier” way to live. One older man that I met (the partner of one of our contributors) told me: “I like your people. But you have to admit you feel better among your own.”

Because of their beliefs, I was surprised they consented to be interviewed by a black journalist. In truth, I think being a wheelchair user, and also not someone that was well known, made their PR team feel confident they could control the narrative – they thought I would be less willing to confront their ideology head on. They certainly didn’t expect me to be as spiky as I was, but also seemed to think they could convince me they were on the right track.

It’s obvious I don’t believe in racial segregation. I’m married to a white woman [the Scottish singer Elle Exxe] after all. We have a three-year-old son. I believe racism is a manufactured construct. There is only one race. Back in 2000, the Human Genome Project revealed skin colour plays little or no part in determining differences in humans. There is more genetic difference between a flock of penguins than there is between some of the Oranians I interviewed and me. But many of the Afrikaners I met in South Africa are a minority group raised with the idea that they were genetically superior and the indigenous black people were inferior. It’s a narrative that helped justify the historic theft of the land.

However, I can also see that 21st century South Africans have some justification for seeing the world this way, because the current ANC government has been accused of corruption and is running the country into the ground. Nelson Mandela would be turning in his grave. I find it incredibly frustrating that the ANC has given racists an excuse to say: “When we ran the country, things were more organised.”

I genuinely had some sympathy for some of the white working-class guys coming in to do all the construction work. They’re being exploited. Like all tightly knit groups, Oranians maintain a strict hierarchy, driven by money and power and maintained seemingly by brainwashing. These construction workers are at the bottom of the pile, so they get drunk frequently because their life is so hard. They’re the new blacks.

Learning more about South Africa’s violent history, I also came to understand that it isn’t only the oppressed who are traumatised by systems like apartheid. Such systems traumatise the oppressors, too. Doing that much horrible stuff affects you. White South Africans had so much power – they’ve felt so safe and superior – and it must be difficult watching that power slowly drain away. No wonder they’ve created this weird little “Disneyland for Afrikaners” where they can pretend none of it happened.

But while casual observers might think Orania is just a weird, irrelevant community, I think it’s actually part of a scarier global shift to the far Right.

In my view these people are aiming to create their own state. They’ve got weapons. I hope viewers of my documentary find themselves asking where the money is coming from. Because I’ve travelled all around Orania and I’ve seen that they have hardly any industry. They have no manufacturing base. They’ve got this tiny population in the middle of the desert and yet it’s able to sustain itself. You can’t tell me a few pecan farms are funding that town.

This was one of the most difficult films I’ve ever made. The subconscious barriers created by the Oranian monoculture made even the wide open spaces of the town feel claustrophobic. Orania should be a warning to all of us. Trump and Le Pen-style leaders all over the world will be watching closely, using it as a test case to prove monoculture is the way. I mean, Suella Braverman – the daughter of Indian immigrants married to a Jewish man – has also been saying that multiculturalism has failed, which seems crazy. But we have to accept it’s obviously a seductive idea for some people who feel afraid.

I was very relieved to get out of Orania. Being there wasn’t good for my mental health. I could talk quite easily to some of these people, even laugh off their views. But I fear if we continue to take for granted what humans have done for millennia – bringing different cultures together to create stronger and more harmonious societies – more Oranias could start to appear all over the world. This would be a huge move backwards for all of us.

Whites Only: Ade’s Extremist Adventure is on Channel 4, 18 March at 10pm
 
There is only one race. Back in 2000, the Human Genome Project revealed skin colour plays little or no part in determining differences in humans.
That's a disingenuous assertion. I've seen it invoked before. Race, as the term is and was commonly understood, encompasses far more than skin color alone. Various peoples in different geographical places and times adopted through natural selection different physical traits, so yes, we're all still human, of course, but different in ways that go far deeper than skin.

Insofar as superior or inferior are concerned, you only have to look at the predominant ethnicities of theoretical physicists compared to, say, professional basketball players, which beg the questions, superior in what sense? Inferior how? The mental and physical advantages a human being needs to flourish in sub-Saharan Africa naturally differ from those needed in northern Europe. It's always been adapt or die and this is reflected at a genetic level in the way we look and think and function as a community, as a people.

Race is real.
 
Ya know I've seen that before, while I'm sure it's also "cultural" thing I think it could also just be from tinnitus. It's harder to enjoy the quiet when there's a constant ringing in your ears. Of course the cultural part is a normal person would suck it up or use headphone as opposed to ghettoblasting shitty rap out of their phone for everyone to hear.
I’ve seen grown as black men shriek in terror at the sight of anything that isn’t a cat or a pigeon. I remember letting one of those giant pythons hang out on my shoulders on a zoo trip as a teenager and the 6’6 black guy in the group passed out when it arc’s off my shoulders to stick it’s tongue out in his direction.

The female English teacher (black) had some weird drum circle bullshit later to talk about it. Basically all, but three black people at the trip were afraid of small animals and wouldn’t willingly pet exotic animals. One of the three was foreign and mixed though.
 
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Where the leftist sees difference he sees only hierarchy. And where he sees hierarchy he sees only one person getting oppressed and another oppressing. He says he’s in the side of the oppressed but really, he just wants to be in charge

Look no further than South Africa itself -
It is not the hierarchy they have an issue with, it's that weren't the ones at the top of it.
 
"Multiculturalism" can work... for a time. However, you need an overarching monoculture, and you need the component cultures to be compatible... or brutally oppressed into losing their incompatible edges.

I would say this is the take home message. That is why the US is on a downward trajectory, the white majority is disappearing. Soon, as in very soon, it will be a white plurality, rather than a majority. Once that happens the downward trajectory will accelerate.
 
I would say this is the take home message. That is why the US is on a downward trajectory, the white majority is disappearing. Soon, as in very soon, it will be a white plurality, rather than a majority. Once that happens the downward trajectory will accelerate.
Niggers and race traitors
America's down fall began once Whites dropped below 90%
 
Ya know I've seen that before, while I'm sure it's also "cultural" thing I think it could also just be from tinnitus. It's harder to enjoy the quiet when there's a constant ringing in your ears. Of course the cultural part is a normal person would suck it up or use headphone as opposed to ghettoblasting shitty rap out of their phone for everyone to hear.

It's a phenomenon known as "background tone". When we live somewhere we are used to a certain level of background sound, which is known as "tone" which our brains use as a baseline for reference regarding other sounds around us. When we are somewhere the tone is substantially louder or quieter, our brains tend to put us on alert because the typical reference we use is missing. For people from cities that spend time in a rural area it can manifest as something akin to tinnitus, but is actually the brain attempting to use its typical background tone in an environment where it doesn't apply. Typically people tend to adapt with 7-10 days, 14 days on the outside, to a new background tone as the brain establish a new baseline. Interestingly, once someone leaves the new environment and returns to the former environment, such as a person returning to the city, they will typically note the difference in background sound they never noticed before, because their brain has to readjust to the background tone again.
 
SA is rapidly turning into another Zimbabwe. Saw a video from Durban, shit's piled up on the side of the roads.

Just a damned shame seeing the two best-run countries on the African continent turned into basket cases.

The OP fears Orania is the future. Better an Oranian future than a Zimbabwean future.
 
When i did go on twitter i followed some boer accounts and its really fucked up what they have to deal with. Even the african helpers get targeted. There was a few tweets about this guys farm hand getting serious lacerations to his back and legs.
 
Every time I read an article like this I wonder what the reaction would be if it were an intentional community with a more "diverse" ethnic group.

"I went to a kibbutz and it was all Jews, here's why that's bad."
"I went to the rez and it was all feather Indians, here's why that's bad."
"I went to Bumfuck, Honshu, and it was all Japs, here's why that's bad."
"I went to Wakanda and it was all blacks, here's why that's bad."

I guess the question I have is whether the people of a different ethnicity down the road have a problem with it that goes beyond butthurt.

"They live with their own kind and don't really welcome outsiders" is hardly a stinging denunciation, especially when it sounds like they have a strict no-bong policy.
 
Every time I read an article like this I wonder what the reaction would be if it were an intentional community with a more "diverse" ethnic group.
It's because white people have a history of being racists, slave owners, slave traders, and so on. White people bombed Japan and invented the apartheid in Africa.

I'm going with the most common things that people would answer.
 
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He should try asking black Africans why they tormented and murdered the black African farmhands the white Boer hired. They were hard workers and willing to be taught to carry on what they learned from the Boer. But the 'Kill the Boer' campaigns chased off and killed those blacks with the whites, and all that was left were the stereotype bulbheads that let the machines fall apart. They felt justified because they decided the white Boer carried the sins of their history, nevermind the Boer fed everyone and didn't just hoard their crops for other whites. The Boer farms were rewarded to the murderers and opportunists who let the land go sour and built garbage shanties on them. Then, because they're retarded, they'd crap out kids they couldn't feed and complain they have no food since they didn't know how to work the land and never wanted to learn anyway. The black Afrikaans took from the Boer and worse, they took from their own people who were trying to improve things for everyone.
 
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