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Hendrik Frensch Verwoerd

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Hendrik Frensch Verwoerd
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Hendrik Frensch Verwoerd

Hendrik Frensch Verwoerd (8 September 1901 - 6 September 1966) was Prime Minister of South Africa from 1958 to 1966, when he was assassinated. Unlike his predecessors, Verwoerd was not born in South Africa, but came with his parents from the Netherlands. A polarizing figure, he is widely considered the architect of the apartheid system of racial segregation, and presided over the Sharpeville Massacre, the banning of the African National Congress and Pan Africanist Congress, and the sentencing of Nelson Mandela to life imprisonment. However, he also presided over the establishment of a republic, and in a controversial 2004 SABC poll asking South Africans to name the top 100 South Africans of all time, was voted 19th (see List of South Africans).

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Architect of Apartheid

Verwoerd was born near Amsterdam in the Netherlands. His father, Wilhelm Verwoerd, was a building contractor and a missionary for the Dutch Reformed Church who relocated the family to South Africa in 1903. Verwoerd wrote his doctorate in Afrikaans at Stellenbosch University. In the 1930s he made brief visits to Germany and the USA.

Verwoerd, formerly Minister for 'Native Affairs', believed in apartheid. He believed that the black majority had no political role to play in the Republic of South Africa, as they were citizens of different countries, or 'homelands'. His government created several supposedly independent Bantustans, which he argued, were the original areas of descent for the black South African population. (But in practice were the areas not yet settled by white farmers.) Mass population transfers occurred when blacks were forcibly moved out of the cities and into these areas, and many died. He also stripped the mixed race Coloureds of their right to vote, by amending an entrenched clause in the Union's Constitution. As his party did not have a two-thirds majority in both Houses of Parliament allowing him to do this, he packed the Senate with his own appointees. Once the legislation was passed, the Senate's membership was changed back to its original size.

A Republic

During Verwoerd's term in office, South Africa ceased to be a Commonwealth realm known as the Union of South Africa under Queen Elizabeth II and became a republic in 1961 known as the Republic of South Africa. The creation of a republic was one of the National Party's cherished goals since originally coming to power in 1948, however the opposition United Party and many English-speaking whites were against such a change. Once again, Verwoerd changed the law to his advantage. He lowered the voting age for whites to 18, and allowing whites in South West Africa (now Namibia), which was then under South African rule, to vote. On October 5, 1960, 52 per cent of white voters voted 'Yes' to a republic. However, this brought into question South Africa's status within the Commmonwealth, which included many of South Africa's main trading partners, such as the United Kingdom. Since India had become a republic in 1949, republic status was no longer incompatible with membership, but the Commonwealth now had new Asian and African members who saw the apartheid regime's membership as an affront to the organization's democratic principles. Consequently, South Africa left the Commonwealth on becoming a republic, although many in the National Party welcomed this as a clean break with the colonial past.

Assassination

In 1966, Verwoerd was stabbed to death in the House of Assembly by Dimitri Tsafendas, a parliamentary clerk, who escaped the death penalty on the grounds of insanity.

Tsafendas's motive for killing Verwoerd remains unclear. Tsafendas had a Mozambican mother and, although not racially classified as a "coloured", he had a dark skin. He had recently fallen in love with a coloured woman and had applied for reclassification as a coloured. (Sexual relations between people of different races were illegal under apartheid.) This background may have played a role. It is still not clear today to what degree Tsafendas' assasination of Verwoerd, the architect of apartheid, was a political act. The trial of Tsafendas dealt mainly with the question of whether he was capable of fully understanding the consequences of his actions, and possible motives were never discussed. The attorney general alleged that Tsafendas was a "hired killer" but this was not accepted by Judge Beyers, who ordered Tsafendas to be imprisoned indefinitely at the "State President's pleasure".

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Last updated: 08-16-2005 00:45:57