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Cape Coloureds

Cape coloured school children in Mitchell's Plain
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Cape coloured school children in Mitchell's Plain
Cape coloured children in Bonteheuwel township (Cape Town, South Africa)
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Cape coloured children in Bonteheuwel township (Cape Town, South Africa)
The Christmas Bands are a popular Cape coloured cultural tradition in Cape Town
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The Christmas Bands are a popular Cape coloured cultural tradition in Cape Town

The term Cape Coloureds refers to the modern-day descendants of slaves imported into South Africa by Dutch settlers as well as to other groups of mixed ancestry. They are the predominant "population group" found in the Western Cape Province. Their population size is roughly 4 million. Most Cape Coloureds are mother tongue Afrikaans speakers but those from European or Asian origin are English speaking. Slaves of "Malay" ancestry were brought from Indonesia, Malaysia, Madagascar, and Mozambique, and from these diverse origins they gradually developed into a grouping that was subsequently classified as a single major ethnical grouping under the Apartheid regime. In many cases the slaves were imported to be concubines and wives to single male Dutch settlers. People from India and region were also taken to the Cape and sold into slavery by the Dutch settlers. The Indian slaves were almost invariably given Christian names but their places of origin were indicated in the records of sales and other documents so that it is possible to get an idea of the ratio of slaves from different regions. These slaves were, however, dispersed and lost their Indian identity in the course of time, hence being labelled Cape Coloureds. Much racial mixture has thus occurred over the generations, between the Europeans, Indians, Malays, various Bantu tribes, along with indigenous Khoi and San.

Technically, the term "Cape Coloured" referred to a subset of "Coloured" South Africans, with subjective criteria having been used by the Apartheid bureaucracy to determine whether a person was a "Cape Coloured", or belonged to one of a number of other related "Coloured" subgroups such as the "Cape Malays", or "Other Coloureds". Currently this term is used very crudely to distinguish people of mixed ancestry from the phenotypically (and generally more genetically homogeneous) paler South Africans of European descent, and the darker "black" South Africans. There are often exceptions to this generalization, and consequently Apartheid classifications often led to tragi-comic consequences, with some paler family members being classified as "white" and others "coloured". This contentious classification has no consistent meaning among South Africans – opinion, more than anything else, dictates who is classified as "Cape Coloured".

The Cape Coloured group is far from being homogeneous: the divisions within it were accentuated by the Apartheid classifications which defined type hierarchies with this grouping. As a consequence, there is much racial intolerance between self-defined groups of Cape Coloureds. Many Cape Coloureds are from totally different heritages, some having mostly European and others mostly black South African heritage. Many also have mostly Indian or mostly Indonesian/Malay heritage. Religious differences also exist, many being Christian and others Muslim. Therefore many Cape Coloureds feel very insulted being classified into the single "Coloured" racial category.

Cape Coloureds in the media

A group of Cape Coloured were interviewed in the documentary series Ross Kemp on Gangs. One of the gang members who participated in the interview mentioned that black South Africans have been the main beneficiaries of South African social promotion initiatives while the Cape Coloureds have been further marginalized.

For the traveller to the Cape Province, Cape Coloureds are among the many friendly people you'll come across while travelling in South Africa, and to start off a good relationship with any Coloured person, try to avoid speaking about their roots as it is such a controversial and complicated topic, instead if you're really interested in knowing more about the history, and want to hear stories directly from a Coloured person then there are many popular venues you may attend, or visit local museums and heritage sites.


 
 
 

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