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Chapter 11 - Migrants from Zebediela and Shifting Identities on the Rand, 1930s–1970s

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 July 2018

Sekibakiba Peter Lekgoathi
Affiliation:
Associate Professor of History at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg.
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Summary

Zebediela is an area in the Limpopo province, situated approximately 40 kilometres south-east of Mokopane (previously known as Potgietersrus). It is home to ethnically mixed communities consisting primarily of Northern Ndebele and Northern Sotho/Pedi people under the Kekana-Ndebele chieftaincy. The chiefdom of Zebediela existed as an autonomous polity until 1885 when it was beaconed off and demarcated as a ‘native location’ by the Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek (ZAR). In the years before it was reduced to a native location, however, groups of male migrants from this chiefdom had been travelling hundreds of kilometres on foot to white settlements further south, where they engaged in wage labour. With their earnings, they paid colonial taxes and bought guns, which were required to safeguard the independence of their chiefdom. In 1879, the Native Commissioner for the district described Zebediela as ‘rich and well-to-do’ and lamented the fact that none of the young men from this chiefdom would work elsewhere, other than at the diamond fields (Kimberley) where they earned higher wages. By the early twentieth century, however, the wages had been depressed and the flood of young men to the diamond fields turned into a trickle.

In 1917, entrepreneur and financier IW Schlesinger purchased a massive tract of land on the southern side of the location and immediately commenced with the establishment of the Zebediela Citrus Estates. Consequently, many people were dispossessed of their land and turned into wage labourers. The largest undertaking of its kind in the southern hemisphere, the development of the Zebediela Citrus Estate (starting in 1918) and the damming of the Gompies River (Nkumpi), which served as a major source of water for the communities and their livestock downstream, caused massive displacement and disruption of people's livelihoods in the location. Within a decade of the citrus estate's establishment, the supply of labour, according to the estate management's reports, had become so plentiful that many from the Zebediela location itself accepted wages as low as 25 shillings per month, excluding provisions. However, as the South African economy moved from a period of depression to one of rapid growth in the 1930s, the demand and competition for labour increased accordingly and migrants from the location once again pursued the more well-paid labour markets of the Witwatersrand (also referred to as the Rand or Reef).

Type
Chapter
Information
A Long Way Home
Migrant Worker Worlds 1800–2014
, pp. 155 - 168
Publisher: Wits University Press
Print publication year: 2014

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