Kleinfontein | |
Pushpin Map: | South Africa Gauteng#South Africa#Africa |
Coordinates: | -25.832°N 28.501°W |
Subdivision Name: | South Africa |
Subdivision Name1: | Gauteng |
Subdivision Type2: | District |
Subdivision Name3: | City of Tshwane |
Subdivision Type4: | Main Place |
Established Title: | Established |
Established Date: | 1992 |
Leader Title: | Mayor |
Area Total Km2: | 8.6 |
Population Footnotes: | [1] |
Population Total: | 650 |
Population Density Km2: | auto |
Demographics1 Title1: | Black African |
Demographics1 Title2: | Coloured |
Demographics1 Title3: | Indian/Asian |
Demographics1 Title4: | White |
Demographics1 Title5: | Other |
Timezone1: | SAST |
Utc Offset1: | +2 |
Postal Code Type: | Postal code (street) |
Postal2 Code Type: | PO box |
Area Code Type: | Area code |
Website: | http://www.kleinfontein.net/ |
Kleinfontein is a culturally segregated, Afrikaner-only settlement near Pretoria, South Africa that was founded in 1992. Members of the African National Congress and Democratic Alliance youth have denounced the settlement and the continued existence of Afrikaner-only settlements in post-Apartheid South Africa.[2] [3]
The entrance to the town displays a bust of Paul Kruger, a monument that commemarates the Battle of Blood River, the day Jan van Riebeeck landed in South-Africa, Paardekraal and a bust of Hendrik Verwoerd,[4] considered[5] by some as the "father of Apartheid"; the community obtained the bust from a cultural group.[6]
, the population of Kleinfontein was about 900 Afrikaners during the day, of which about 650 were residents and about 400 were shareholders. Kleinfontein's area has grown from the original 500 hectares to the current 860 hectares, and stretches just off the N4 highway beyond the Boschkop road.[1] As of November 2013, the Gauteng legislature recognised Kleinfontein as a cultural community.[7] [8] The City of Pretoria still refused to declare it a separate development or a formal township. Efforts to be recognized as a separate legal entity have not been successful. Following the legislature's investigation into Kleinfontein, there were 450 shareholders and 1,000 residents, living in around 300 homes.[7] Article 185 of the South African Constitution allows citizens of a similar cultural, linguistic, or religious group to associate with each other.
The settlement consists of a single, undivided property. The ownership of individual residents is by a shareblock scheme[9] similar to its sister town Orania.[10] Van Wyk (2014) reports that two categories of inhabitants can be distinguished: older, retired people and younger middle-class professionals.[10]
Kleinfontein has been criticised for its policy of barring all non-Afrikaners from settling in the community. Protests were held in May 2013 when the Democratic Alliance and the ANC competed in local elections.[11] The community has also been criticised by the South African government for engaging in practices that once led to a "divided South Africa."[12] Residents of the community defend their practice by saying that they are defending their own separate cultural identity.[13] [14]
Some residents of the community have also objected to the "restricted" nature of the community which prevents them from selling their home to the buyer of their choice.[15]
The town is located roughly halfway between Pretoria and Bronkhorstspruit. It lies just south of the N4, just west of the R515, a few kilometers south of Rayton, on the Magaliesberg mountain range at the historical terrain where the Battle of Diamond Hill (Afrikaans: die slag van Donkerhoek) took place during the Second Boer War.