loppar:
I’m sure you’ll post links to foaming-at-the-mouth white supremacists who desperately (and unsuccessfully) tried to refute JA Hese’s 1971 study - Hese himself ironically was an Afrikaner and published his work under the apartheid regime - but the uncomfortable truth still stands.
The first documented marriage between an European settler and a slave was in 1656 at the Cape. Jan Woutersz married Catherine of Bengal- Jan was a caretaker on Robben Island and the family lived without discrimination in the community.
In 1664 a Danish soldier, Pieter van Meerhoff, became the first white person to marry a Khoikhoi, Eva. She acted as an unpaid interpreter and intermediary between Jan van Riebeeck, the governor of the Cape Colony, and various Khoikhoi chiefs.
Christoffel Snyman, the son of a freed slave Anthony of Bengal and Catharina of Palicatte, married Marguerite de Savoy. The De Savoys were a prominent Huguenot family in the Cape.
Such ‘mixed’ marriages were initially more common amongst soldiers and lower grade Dutch East India Company (Verenigde Oostindische Compagnie, VOC) officials, but once burghers were allowed to pursue farming for their own account, rather than being directly tied to the VOC, it became more widespread. Senior grade VOC officials tended not to marry in the Cape since they would at some stage be returning home to Holland, where a mixed marriage would be frowned upon, or posted to another colony after a relatively short period.
Soldiers and others tended to stay.
http://africanhistory.about.com/od/southafrica/p/AfrikanerGene.h
None of this proof and it’s evident that you’re lying just by the appearance of Afrikaaners - they all have light colored hair and blue and green and eyes. These features are recessive.
On a side note, Cape Colored women are often ridiculously hot - you should travel to Cape, try hooking up with one of them and when she inevitably turns you down because you’re a basement dwelling creep you can always accuse her of being “impure”, “subhuman” and shout out racial abuse.
Yeah I forgot to ask: do you prefer I call you loppar or by the number tattooed on your arm?