Phokeng

Phokeng
Phokeng
Phokeng
Phokeng

 Phokeng shown within North West

Coordinates: 25°35′S 27°08′E / 25.583°S 27.133°E / -25.583; 27.133Coordinates: 25°35′S 27°08′E / 25.583°S 27.133°E / -25.583; 27.133
Country South Africa
Province North West
District Bojanala Platinum
Municipality Rustenburg
Area[1]
  Total 34.28 km2 (13.24 sq mi)
Population (2011)[1]
  Total 34,597
  Density 1,000/km2 (2,600/sq mi)
Racial makeup (2011)[1]
  Black African 99.1%
  Coloured 0.3%
  Indian/Asian 0.1%
  White 0.1%
  Other 0.4%
First languages (2011)[1]
  Tswana 77.1%
  English 6.2%
  Zulu 3.2%
  Tsonga 2.1%
  Other 11.4%
Postal code (street) 0335
PO box 0335
Area code 014

Phokeng is a town in the North West province of South Africa. It is the capital of the Royal Bafokeng Nation and lies near Rustenburg. Historically, it was known as Magatostad among white South Africans.[2]

Etymology

Phokeng gained its name from the Setswana word for dew, Phoka, hence Place of dew. It is believed to have first been settled in the late 17th century.[3]

History

Phokeng is one of a number of unusual Tswana towns in the Northwest Province that were founded by Sotho-Tswana people who had been displaced by years of war in the late 18th and early 19th centuries—first the difaqane wars caused by the invasion of the Matebele, and then the wars of conquest by the Boers. Just a few years after the wars, the famous missionary and explorer, David Livingstone, visited the Bakwena of chief Mokgatle, and found that in addition to farming and raising cattle, they made ornaments out of copper that they mined and smelted themselves.

The Tswana people of the area had been living in the area for hundreds of years, but by the mid-19th century, many had been scattered among Boer farms and indentured to work for white farmers. Several chiefs began gathering their old followers around the 1850s and 1860s, asking for donations of cattle to create a fund to purchase land. With the help of German missionaries of the Hermannsburg Mission Society, several chiefs succeeded in buying land and re-establishing villages and chiefdoms. Phokeng was the largest and most famous of these villages in what was then the Western Transvaal. The chief who organized the purchases was named Chief Mokgatle, and the missionary who helped him was named Reverend Penzhorn. In 1908, a very old man who lived in Phokeng told a court how the Bafokeng of Phokeng bought their land:

We were told once that the land in which we lived was white man's land. We were told we [could] buy from the white man, a white man could take transfer for us. The tribe determined to buy land and all contributed to buy [the chief's, i.e., Mokgatle Mokgatle's] kraal. Then it was allowed that any petty chief should buy themselves ground. The chief [Mokgatle] said those who were able to do so could. My father was there and he told me.

By 1900, there were many such villages scattered through this part of the Transvaal, including the Bakwena Ba Magopa villages of Bethanie, Kgabalatsane and Ga-Rankuwa and the Bakgatla village of Saulspoort north of the Pilanesberg mountains.

One thing that made these villages unusual was that they owned the land somewhat in the way white people did. In other words, villages like Phokeng were not just "reserves," but were owned by villagers, although through a system of trusts controlled by the missionaries and the chief. For this reason, when platinum was discovered under the lands of Phokeng, the chiefdom was able to earn some revenue from mining and at one point, the Bakwena Bafokeng of Phokeng were described as one of the wealthiest tribes in South Africa.

Phokeng was included in the "Scheduled Native Areas" under the 1913 Natives Land Act. This essentially transformed Phokeng and its surrounding lands into a "reserve."

One of South Africa's most important Black writers of the 20th century, Naboth Mokgatle, was from Phokeng. He wrote a memoire entitled, Autobiography of an Unknown South African and the first chapters of the book contain a very detailed description of what it was like to grow up in the village in the late early 20th century. He describes wearing traditional clothing made of animal skins, walking far off into the veld herding cattle for father and uncle and working for neighboring white farmers.

By the 1930s, a Black American minister, Rev. Spooner, had come to live in Phokeng and he founded a church that was separate from the German missionary church. The split between Christians who followed the German missionaries and those who followed the new churches created a great deal of turmoil in the 1930s in all these villages, including Phokeng.

During the apartheid era, the "reserve" that Phokeng was part of was transformed into the "homeland" of Bophutatswana.

People

The inhabitants are part of the Batswana tribe and their totem is a crocodile, and they refer to each as kwena or mokwena meaning crocodile.

Demographics (2001)[4]

Gender Population %
Female 1,026 48.6
Male 1,085 51.4
Race Population %
Black 2,111 100
White 0 0
Coloured 0 0
Asian 0 0
First language Population %
IsiZulu 21 0.99
IsiXhosa 66 3.13
Afrikaans 15 0.71
Sepedi 12 0.57
Setswana 1,961 92.89
English 6 0
Sesotho 12 0.57
Xitsonga 0 0
SiSwati 6 0.28
Tshivenda 0 0
IsiNdebele 0 0
Other 18 0.85

Sport

The Royal Bafokeng Stadium, a venue for the 2009 FIFA Confederations Cup and the 2010 FIFA World Cup, is located in Phokeng. The England national football team was based in Phokeng during the 2010 FIFA World Cup.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Main Place Phokeng". Census 2011.
  2. "Magatostad". Royal Bafokeng Digital Archive. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
  3. http://www.tourismnorthwest.co.za/bojanala/phokeng.html
  4. , Census 2001 — Sub Place "Phokeng"
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/25/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.