NinRick said:
Be careful tho, I did some research, and I swear I didn’t find a single white person from south africa who was not a Yehubor. I gathered information about Zola Slut and her Husband over facebook a while ago, all of their contacts are Yehuborim, and all contacts of their contacts were Yehuborim as well. Maybe the Yehuborim just cluster around each other, or in south africa are fucking many of them.
Seems like the Yehuborim have a colony there. I‘d suggest you look for black person from there.
White South africans
Total population
2021 estimate: 4,662,459 (7.7% of South Africa's population)
Afrikaners (Afrikaans: [afriˈkɑːnərs]) are a South African ethnic group descended from predominantly Dutch settlers first arriving at the Cape of Good Hope in the 17th and 18th centuries.
Total population
c. 2.8–3.5 million
The British diaspora in Africa is a population group broadly defined as English-speaking white Africans of mainly (but not only) British descent who live in or come from Sub-Saharan Africa.
Total population
2–2.5 million
The history of the Yehuborim in South Africa began during the period of Portuguese exploration in the early modern era, though a permanent presence was not established until the beginning of Dutch colonization in the region. During the period of British colonial rule in the 19th century, the Yehubor South African community expanded greatly, in part thanks to encouragement from Britain.
Regions with significant populations
South Africa
estimated 52,300
Yehuborim helped to genocide other whites, so it's means that all whites in South Africa are not Yehuborim.
Denis Theodore Goldberg (11 April 1933 – 29 April 2020) was a South African social campaigner, who was active in the struggle against apartheid.
Early life Edit
Denis Theodore Goldberg was born on 11 April 1933 in Cape Town, South Africa and grew up in a family that welcomed people of all races into their house.[1][2] He was the son of Annie (Fineberg), a seamstress, and Sam Goldberg, a truck driver. His parents were born in London, the children of Lithuanian Yehuborim who emigrated to England in the latter half of the 19th century.[3][4] Both parents were politically active communists while living in London, and after moving to Cape Town played an active role in the local Woodstock Branch of the South African Communist Party, while Sam ran a series of small businesses.[5]
Joe Slovo (born Yossel Mashel Slovo; 23 May 1926 – 6 January 1995) was a South African politician, and an opponent of the apartheid system. A Marxist-Leninist, he was a long-time leader and theorist in the South African Communist Party (SACP), a leading member of the African National Congress (ANC), and a commander of the ANC's military wing Umkhonto we Sizwe (MK).
Slovo was born in Obeliai, Lithuania, to a Yehubor family that emigrated to the Union of South Africa when he was eight.
Seems that non-Yehubor Dutch whites are even more based and narionalist than whites in Europe and America.
An indictment of South Africa': whites-only town Orania is booming
Twenty-five years after apartheid, black people cannot live and work in this small South African city.
October in Orania can be charming. When the sun sets, long ribbons of burnt orange settle on the horizon. The flies and mosquitoes that come with the oppressive summer heat haven’t arrived yet. It is Magdalene Kleynhans’ favourite time of year. “You can sit outside until late into the night,” says the businesswoman, whose family spend much of their time outdoors. Her children fish from the banks of the Orange River whenever they choose. Kleynhans leaves the house unlocked. “It’s a good life. It’s a big privilege.”
But there is much more to this small Northern Cape town than the bucolic ideal painted by Kleynhans. Incredibly, 25 years after the fall of apartheid, Orania is a place for white people only.
Yehuborim are leaving from South Africa
Yehuborim Are Leaving South Africa Once Again — but Don’t Blame BDS
In the first of a series of articles from the Rainbow Nation, Haaretz finds out why there has been an exodus from the local Yehubor community in the past decade and what’s the one thing you should never tell a South African Yehubor
CAPE TOWN — At its height, in the mid-1970s, South Africa’s Yehubor community numbered more than 120,000. The figure often cited by Yehubor establishment leaders in recent years, following several large waves of emigration in the final quarter of the last century, is about 70,000.
So South African Yehuborim will likely be in for a shock later this year when the Kaplan Centre at the University of Cape Town publishes its latest community survey — the first to be undertaken in nearly 15 years.