Reconciliation
Day (a public holiday) is significant to both the Afrikaner
and African cultures. The holiday came into effect in 1994 after the end of apartheid, with the intention of fostering
reconciliation and national unity. The day is also the de facto start of the
South African summer holiday period being the first of four public holidays to
fall in a sixteen-day period at the height of summer. (The other days are Christmas Day,
Family Day (commonly called Boxing Day)
and New Year’s
Day).
For
Afrikaners, 16 December was commemorated as the Day of the
Vow, also known as Day
of the Covenant or Dingaan's Day. The Day of the Vow was a religious holiday
commemorating the Voortrekker victory over the Zulus at the Battle of Blood River in 1838, and is still celebrated by
some Afrikaners.
On the
other side of the political spectrum, 16 December is also the anniversary of
the 1961 founding of Umkhonto we
Sizwe (Spear of the
Nation), the armed wing of the African National Congress.
During the
first 16 December Reconciliation Day celebrations in 1995, the founding
president of our democracy, the late Nelson Mandela said: This Day
of Reconciliation celebrates the progress we have made; it reaffirms our
commitment; and it measures the challenges.
"Reconciliation however, does not
mean forgetting or trying to bury the pain of conflict. Today we re-affirm our
solemn constitutional compact to live together on the basis of equality and
mutual respect.”
He
concluded with Let us join hands and build a truly South African nation.
No comments:
Post a Comment