• Rolivers
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    1621 year ago

    It’s Afrikaans, not Dutch. It’s close though. We can understand written Afrikaans.

      • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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        311 year ago

        Also that newspaper is called “The Fatherland”.

        It’s a pretty good hint of where they stand in the whole Left-Right political spectrum.

        • @lugal@sopuli.xyz
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          51 year ago

          Which is super weird in it self. I mean, do South African white people call their colonist nation their “Fatherland”?

          • @Crashumbc@lemmy.world
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            101 year ago

            FYI- South Africa is kind of unique in that it was settled by a ruling class as opposed to the normal dregs like most other places.

            The maintained their close relationship to home and superior status to their slaves/servants much longer than other places.

          • @Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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            21 year ago

            “mother country” or “motherland” is pretty common for descendants of European colonists/emigrees. I know Germans call it “fatherland” instead, probably the Dutch too

      • FreeFacts
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        121 year ago

        Well, the Union of South Africa were participants in the war against Germany, so that’s still a bit weird. Don’t know about the affiliation of the magazine in question, but the support for joining the allies wasn’t clear cut, but only a narrow majority among the ruling white class.

        • @lengau@midwest.social
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          71 year ago

          There was a strong pro-Nazi contingent amongst (mainly) Afrikaans-speaking South Africans. That’s not to say by any stretch that Afrikaners were mostly pro-Nazi, though. Jan Smuts was an Afrikaner and was both a Field Marshal in the South African defence forces and the prime minister during WW2 - he wasn’t exactly pro-British (he fought against them in the second Boer war), but he was very strongly anti-Nazi.

        • Lord Wiggle
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          11 year ago

          Yes, just like Americans they think it’s their country and the original inhabitants have no place in their country.

      • fpc;
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        1 year ago

        Crude translation, trying to keep the word order the same.

        Hitler’s death and Dönitz 's acceptance of rule in Germany led a British paper to write: “Never before in the history has the prospect of peace so suddenly changed to the possibility of a protracted war.”