Inside Cape Town
Tourists are flocking to the city, but a former resident explains how the legacy of apartheid lingers
- By Joshua Hammer
- Photographs by Per-Anders Pettersson
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
I also lived within sight of Table Mountain, the sandstone and granite massif that stands as the iconic image of the city. Formed 60 million years ago, when rock burst through the earth's surface during the violent tectonic split of Africa from South America, the 3,563-foot peak once rose as high as 19,500-foot Mount Kilimanjaro. No other place in Cape Town better symbolizes the city's grand scale, embrace of outdoor life and changing face. Table Mountain National Park—the preserve that Cecil Rhodes, prime minister of the Cape Colony in the late 19th century, carved out of private farms on the slopes of the mountain—has grown into a 60,000-acre contiguous wilderness, extending from the heart of the city to the southern tip of the Cape Peninsula; it includes dozens of miles of coastline. The park is a place of astonishing biodiversity; 8,500 varieties of bush-like flora, or fynbos—all unique to the Western Cape—cover the area, along with wildlife as varied as mountain goats, tortoises, springboks and baboons.
One December day I drive up to the park's rustic headquarters to meet Paddy Gordon, 44, area manager of the park section that lies within metropolitan Cape Town. Gordon exemplifies the changes that have taken place in the country over the past decade or so: a mixed-race science graduate of the once-segregated University of the Western Cape, he became, in 1989, the first nonwhite appointed to a managerial job in the entire national park system. Within 12 years he had worked his way up to the top job. "Before I came along we were only laborers," he says.
We drive high above the city along Kloof Road—a lively strip of nightclubs, French bistros and pan-Asian restaurants. After parking the car in a tourist lot at the base of the mountain, we begin climbing a rocky trail that hundreds of thousands of hikers follow each year to Table Mountain's summit. In a fierce summer wind (typical of this season, when frigid antarctic currents collide with southern Africa's warming landmass), Gordon points out fields of wild olives and asparagus, fynbos and yellow fire lilies, which burst into flower after wildfires that can erupt there. "We've got the greatest diversity in such a small area of anywhere in the world," he says, adding that development and tourism have made the challenges of conservation more difficult. In January 2006, at the height of Cape Town's summer dry season, a hiker dropped a lit cigarette in a parking lot at the base of this trail. Within minutes, fire spread across the mountain, asphyxiating another climber who had become disoriented in the smoke. The fire burned for 11 days, destroying multimillion-dollar houses and requiring the efforts of hundreds of firefighters and helicopters ferrying loads of seawater to extinguish. "It burned everything," Gordon tells me. "But the fynbos is coming up pretty well. This stuff has an amazing ability to regenerate itself."
Gordon points out a clear trailside stream created by mist condensation at the top of the plateau. "It's one of the only water sources on the mountain's western face," he says. The stream, Platte Klipp, was the primary reason that the 17th-century Dutch seaman Jan van Riebeeck built a supply station for the Dutch East India Company at the base of Table Mountain. The station grew into a thriving outpost, Kaapstadt; it became the starting point for the Voortrekkers, Dutch immigrants who crossed desert and veld by ox wagon to establish the Afrikaner presence across southern Africa.
The Mother City has steered the nation's destiny ever since. In 1795, the British seized Cape Town, maintaining their hold over the entire colony for more than 100 years. Even today, English- and Afrikaans-speaking whites gravitate toward opposite corners of the city. English speakers prefer the southern suburbs around Table Mountain and beachfront communities south of the city center. Afrikaners tend to live in northern suburbs a few miles inland from the Atlantic coast. The British introduced the first racist laws in the country, but it was the Afrikaner Daniel François Malan—born just outside Cape Town—who became the main proponent of white-racist philosophy. In 1948, Malan's National Party swept to victory; he became prime minister and codified his racist views into the legal system known as apartheid.
The Group Areas Act of 1950 banished all black Africans from Western Cape province, except those living in three black townships. Cape coloureds (predominantly mixed-race, Afrikaans-speaking descendants of Dutch settlers, their slaves and local indigenous inhabitants) became the main source of cheap labor; they remained second-class citizens who could be evicted from their homes by government decree and arrested if they so much as set foot on Cape Town's segregated beaches. From 1968 to 1982, the apartheid regime forcibly removed 60,000 coloureds from a neighborhood near the city center to the Cape Flats, five miles from downtown Cape Town, then bulldozed their houses to make room for a proposed whites-only development. (Protests stopped construction; even today, the neighborhood, District Six, remains largely a wasteland.)
During the height of anti-apartheid protests in the 1970s and 1980s, Cape Town, geographically isolated and insulated from racial strife by the near absence of a black population, remained quiet in comparison with Johannesburg's seething townships. Then, during the dying days of apartheid, blacks began to pour into Cape Town—as many as 50,000 a year over the past decade. In the 1994 election campaign, the white-dominated National Party exploited coloureds' fear that a black-led government would give their jobs to blacks; most chose the National Party over the ANC. While many blacks resent mixed-race Capetonians for their failure to embrace the ANC, many coloureds still fear black competition for government grants and jobs. "The divide between blacks and coloureds is the real racial fault line in Cape Town," I was told by Henry Jeffreys, a Johannesburg resident who moved to Cape Town last year to become the first nonwhite editor of the newspaper Die Burger. (A former editor was the architect of apartheid, D. F. Malan.)
But the gap is closing. The Western Cape province, of which Cape Town is the heart, boasts one of the fastest-growing economies in South Africa. An infusion of foreign and local investment has transformed the once moribund city center into what civic leader Shaun Johnson calls a "forest of cranes." In late 2006, a Dubai consortium paid more than $1 billion for the Victoria and Alfred Waterfront, a complex of hotels, restaurants and shops—and the terminal for ferries that transport tourists across Table Bay to Robben Island. The price of real estate has skyrocketed, even in once-rundown seaside neighborhoods such as Mouille Point, and the bubble shows no signs of bursting.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (21)
+ View All Comments
I find it intriguing and yet funny..... that so many people can comment on racism, (people of all colours).... And will write fancy words... Ignorance is a blessing to some.. Self Importance to others...... I for one am glad I do not live nor would ever wish or desire to spend my hard earned cash visiting a land full of hate and divide.
Posted by Irish~ Heart on September 5,2012 | 12:40 AM
Not while we have the right to vote! We are winning and gaining ground all the time. The best thing to happen would be to declare a independent Republic of the Western Cape, which most people want here anyway.You think the grass is greener on the otherside. I have news for you. As a knowledgeable Portugese gentleman once said'' The Rain Does Not Just Fall On My Neighbour's Roof Top''.
Posted by Andre Martinaglia on December 6,2011 | 11:13 AM
I am sorry to inform you that Mare was not a French Hugeneot, but Italian, born in Calabria, in south east Italy, who arrived at the Cape . He was involved with the French Hugeneot's,and had also to flee religious persecution.He settled in the Drakenstein area,in 1707, marrying the daugther of the first Van Vuuren,namely Susanna, who's mother was French. He was a widower on arrival in South Africa. The surname means, someone who lives by the sea.
In early 2010, this was proved correct,when Johan Botha of ''50/50''TV Program was DNA tested by Professor Hilmar Soodyall on his Maternal side, showing the result a week later that his ancestry originated from Italy, because his mother was a Mare. The surname in some cases has through corruption of the family name also spelt Maree.
Posted by Cav. Andre Martinaglia on June 28,2011 | 02:45 AM
To Joe - unfortunately what you say is true but hopefully this will change over time.
Alexis - I am moving there soon too. I think it is a wonderful place.
South Africa is not going to be another Zimbabwe, it will stay stable as with Namibia and Botswana. Botswana is doing well, thank you.
Posted by Joe2 on September 14,2010 | 05:40 AM
I lived in Cape Town for a while and I have to say it was without a doubt the most racist place I've ever been. Not a day went by without several overt racist comments to me, from whites, about blacks. I'm a white American.I never heard any the other way. It's also easily one of the most beautiful places in the world.
Posted by Joe on September 5,2010 | 03:50 PM
hey everything about Cape Town is exciting, most of my family stays there and am in Botswana, i always look for excuses to go to Cape Town. when i think of Water front i go crazy, the only thing that am afraid of is the trip to table mountain.
Posted by should i on April 20,2010 | 06:16 AM
I Love Cape Town! My favorite city on Earth, and the most beautiful city in the world!
I never understand why people say 'All of Africa is doomed' and all that nonsense. The experience I have had of Africa has mainly been Botswana, Namibia and South Africa which are all fantastic and efficient countries! Why do people always bring up Zimbabwe, and forget all the positives from many countries that are increasingly doing well!
To speak frankly I wish more of Europe were as efficient as South Africa is, as I usually want to pull my hair out getting things done in the UK, or Southern Europe generally. Northern Europe tends to be better (with Switzerland amazing) - but frankly I have always found that conducting business and getting things done SA is even more efficient than in Northen Europe.
I find South Africa efficient, clean and productive. And I have now, collectively, spent over 10 years of my life there (yes, including the power problems of 2007, which was a pretty bad time)! My SA friends often out-earn most of my European friends and have an incomparably better quality of life. I am actually emmigrating there permanently in July, and I cannot wait!
Yes there are challenges, but since I started going to SA in the early 1980s I have seen one challenge after another overcome. I know there's much to be done, but I am totally confident that it will be.
Posted by Alexis on May 14,2009 | 09:16 AM
I believe in Philosophy as a mother of all studies & have unpublished theories in Mathematics,History, Politics & Science to back up an explanation of whats happening in present day South Africa. Take History as a sentinel to guide us on what we should do to avoid incidences & regrets in future. Do i sense some insecurity in the analysis of others- i get back to what the Book of God has written in black & white- 'do unto others as you would want them to do to you" It may not happen to you in your lifetime but would you want it to happen to your child or your grandchild. Take the Zimbabwean situation as a lesson to all Africa & even the world then integret the apartheid differential & what do you get- the present entropy of Cape Town of course!
Posted by John Voster on May 14,2009 | 05:24 AM
This is an update to the book "We are the Poors". Thanks
Posted by Rodney M. Burton on November 13,2008 | 02:16 PM
Behind those huge curtains of descimination, racism, and deprivation/oppression of one group by the other is the subtle text of class struggle. Yes, diferences exist among the colours and races but they are borne out of a history of contest between the haves and the haves-not, the rich and the poor, the priviledge and the deprived. It is not so much about colour, it is about economics and social stratifications. Of course, politicians (politrickians) will always play up the colour and racial cards. Just as they have always played up the religious card to further their devilish hold on the wellness of the mass of the people. Underneath our so-called differences in colours, races and tongues, is our common humanity, and hat is what we ought to insist on being respected at all times. As in Cape Town so in every other land occupy by modern man.
Posted by Jahman Anikulapo on May 1,2008 | 05:40 AM
Although the basic facts are correct the true fact is that everyone in South Africa faces daily problems. This is true of most countries in the world. I am an American citizen but I have lived in Cape Town since 1972. I've seen the swing from white rule to black rule. The wonderful and most interesting part of the change in the good will that exists between the races. Like any other place, there is conflict when races and cultures collide. Indeed, it is expected. Unfortunately, every group has their own needs, wants and dreams and they these very basic human emotions and desires exclude the consideration of anyone 'outside' of the group. Yes, we have problems but at least this country is trying to resolve the issues. Crime is high, inflation if getting out of hand, much of the education system is in chaos but we still live here. I love living Cape Town. Watchingthe social integration has been something to witness. It has been a rollor coaster ride and will continue to be one for the foreseaable future.
Posted by Bill Holland on April 28,2008 | 09:51 AM
I have just returned from Cape Town after a 2 week holiday. I believe that racism exists everywhere. It is diffuclt to find a Black CEO in the UK where we are still focused on class issues. In India we have the caste system. france, Italy and Spain still have issues on their football grounds. The thing that really shocked me about my visit to Cape Town - the continued use of black, white, coloureds to describe people. If I told you I was brown - what would you think of me? I'm a British born Indian. My grandparents were farmers in India. My father emigrated and worked his way through a system before becomming a leading scientist. My older sister is at Harvard and my younger sister works at a top advertising agency in London. We have friends from all over the world - of ALL races. My "black" friends are as well-educated and also doing very good jobs. The point is we are not from privileged backgrounds but we have achieved. The opportunity was made available to us. South Africa needs to allow this to happen. IT CAN HAPPEN...MAKE IT HAPPEN...Stop telling us its going to become like Zimbabwe. I can't believe it when I hear that Do people really think there are no qualified black people. Both Gandhi and Mandela trained as Lawyers didn't they? And in times of oppression. They aren't one off examples..hundreds of millions of people are like that. I met a young girl in that fashionable part of Cape Town where all the stars hang-out.She massaged me on the beach. We spoke about many things. She told me about this heirarchy - "unlike the blacks, the coloureds will mug you but they won't pull the trigger. The blacks will kill you." Apparently, we Indians/brown people are at the top with the whites. Puh-lease. Is that how it's going to work? You'll change your mind about us when we can afford to pay you for the service/business you offer? Cape Town is beautiful. It really is. And I met some amazing people there (of all colours!!!!)
Posted by Shaleen Meelu on April 18,2008 | 06:45 AM
As I and anyone who looks and reads this article can see that Cape Town is a beautiful place indeed, and this no one cannot deny. As I read, people seemed to speak of apartheid and how it still remained as of this day in the "flats". In so many words, certain individuals seemed to feel that a certain person was not genuine in their remarks, and only making statements to relieve the tention of the people of Cape Town. Some people moved away to different countries, while others stayed in South Africa. I noticed that even through the hardships, the people still remember the good times; instead of "harping on the bad times.
Posted by Tomika C. Walker on April 17,2008 | 01:20 PM
I find Mr. Hammer's comment about the persistence of Apartheid be be rather too nice fingered to convince m,e that his heart was really on the side of black folks in menial employment. He says, on p 60, "Yet there were regular reminders of the legacy of apartheid. When I drove my son down the mountain to the American International School each morning, I passed a parade of black workers from the townships in the Cape Flats trudging uphill to manicure the gardens and clean the houses of my white neighbors." Apparently is was other people, and not Mr. Hammer, that gave these people employment, yet he lived there, he tells us, for nearly 2 years. Which does more for oppressed people? Sympathizing with their plight? Or sympathizing with their plight _and_ giving some of them the honest employment they seek, so they could perhaps raise their families to, perhaps, greater qualifications for economic advancement than they themselves possessed? Personally, I favor the latter, particularly after recoiling from Mr. Hammer's tone of smug satisfaction from _not_ having ground the faces of these poor.
Posted by Don Martin on April 11,2008 | 06:37 PM
+ View All Comments