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Why Russia is wooing South Africa’s white farmers

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Why Russia is wooing South Africa’s white farmers

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Amie Ferris-Rotman
September 23

KOSYAKOVO, Russia — Leon du Toit slowly inhales the late summer breeze off fields belonging to a dairy farm not far from Moscow. “Smells just like home,” the 72-year-old South African said.

That’s just what one Russian political figure hopes to hear.

He is leading something of a charm offensive in South Africa with a very particular goal: hoping to lure white South Africans to move 8,000 miles away to rural Russia.

The selling points are abundant farmland, relative safety and a country that holds tight to traditional Christian values.

What is not said — but clearly understood — is how this fits neatly into the identity politics of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The West may view Putin largely as a strategic and military adversary. Yet inside Russia, much of his support grows from the idea of Russia as the caretaker for a white, Christian and old-style order — rejecting “so-called tolerance, genderless and infertile,” in Putin’s own words in 2013.

Russia keeps getting hit by sanctions. But do they matter?]

The effort intersects with many issues. There is Russia’s declining population and fresh ambitions to protect fellow Christians. Add to that the unease among some white South African farmers as the country debates possible land redistribution to redress racial imbalances during apartheid.

Poluboyarenko claims he funds the trips for the South Africans with his own savings, but such activity would almost certainly need the Kremlin’s blessing.



Where Trump’s tweet about South African land seizures came from
South Africa's land expropriation debate and the myth of "white genocide" have been a rallying cry for white nationalists around the world for years.(Joyce Lee/The Washington Post)

According to a Pew Research Center report last year, fewer than 10,000 South Africans live in Russia. Last April, Russia scrapped tourist visa requirements for South Africans, meaning all planned visits by South Africans are no longer reviewed in advance.

“I want them to know that Russia can be their mother country, too,” said Poluboyarenko, who assists the human rights ombudsman in the agricultural heartland of Stavropol.

Du Toit, a missionary preacher, is weighing the offer.

He and his 39-year-old son, Johannes du Toit, a former minister, came on a scouting mission.

Whites still own the majority of land in South Africa, despite making up less than 10 percent of the population of 56 million. But du Toit represents the fears among some white farmers that the political trajectory of South Africa, such as the issue of land ownership, is not on their side.

On a hazy afternoon, the du Toit men were led through a meadow thick with alfalfa. Du Toit leaned down to pluck a stem and started chewing its leaves. His Russian hosts looked on, somewhat hesitantly, before clapping in glee at the elder du Toit’s appreciation.

Poluboyarenko took his visitors around a swath of Russian countryside over several days, introducing them to local farmers in Russia’s breadbasket.

“We understand that our government must listen to the majority of the people,” said Johannes du Toit. Landscapes of wheat fields and piles of watermelons became a blur through his car window.

“But we don’t want our children to suffer from the roll of the dice.”

[Opinion: Why European populists idolize Putin and Trump]

The purported plight of white South Africans — long a rallying cry of global far-right movements — caught the attention of President Trump last month. After watching a segment about the issue on Fox News, he asked Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to study the “large-scale killing” of white farmers and the government’s land expropriation issue.

The tweet was the president’s first, at least while in office, to contain the word “Africa.” South Africa’s government denounced Trump’s remarks.

The Kremlin, which enjoys close ties with the South African government after years of Cold War-era support for the ruling African National Congress party (ANC), had yet to officially comment on the land redistribution proposals.

But the white South Africans are given airtime on state television.

“Global media and Twitter and others — of course those with particular motives — have spread a warped representation of the African National Congress’s formal statement of intent with regards to expropriation,” said Wandile Sihlobo, a lead researcher at South Africa’s Agricultural Business Chamber, referring to the proposals for land redistribution.

“But we also lack clear communication from policymakers,” Sihlobo added, “which fuels fear and misinformation.”

There are no figures made public on the number of South Africans who have moved to Russia or are considering it. Poluboyarenko, however, is a prominent voice for the outreach. He gained attention earlier this year after helping an 11-member German family, outraged by sex education in Western schools, to settle in Russia.

Addressing the du Toits at his “Motherland” dairy farm in Kosyakovo, about 60 miles southeast of Moscow, general director Mikhail Baranov told the father and son: “You can be sure of one thing. You won’t find liberalism here, but family values instead.”

[Opinion: The cozy affair between Russia and the far-right]

Such sentiment could hold appeal for the group of white South Africans who call themselves Boers, meaning “farmer” in Dutch. They are descendants of the Dutch settlers who came to southern Africa in the 17th century and have an identity rooted in the Dutch Reformed Church, the Afrikaans language and a shared history of pioneering.

The elder du Toit recalls his first trip to Russia in 2006, when he visited a church in St. Petersburg. “I just looked at all the kindred people, and I cried,” he said.

For South African farmer Adi Schlebusch, Russia’s religious rebirth under Putin was a decisive factor in his family’s decision to emigrate.

“The return of Christian values is a big motivation for us,” Schlebusch said by telephone from his South African cattle farm. “We thought Russian people would be sympathetic.”

In October, the 29-year-old Schlebusch, his wife and two young children plan to pack up and move to Moscow, where Schlebusch will teach English.

After returning home from his first Russian visit in July, Schlebusch spoke to other farming families in his native Free State province. He estimates that about 25 families are now seriously considering moving to Russia.

“In Russia I enjoyed the freedom of just driving about, anywhere you want to go, between fields and into forests,” said 60-year-old Jan Geldenhuys, who until recently lived in Russia, farming wheat, sunflowers and soy.

Drawn back to South Africa to see his family, he is now of two minds about returning.

If the land reform plans go ahead, Geldenhuys will soon be back in his Russian fields.

Max Bearak in Nairobi contributed to this report.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...noredirect=on&utm_term=.93d3c1738749#comments
 
Instead, Putin should encourage Russian immigrants in Germany to buy these Russian lands, and move back to Russia. They are also White and Christians.
 
Instead, Putin should encourage Russian immigrants in Germany to buy these Russian lands, and move back to Russia. They are also White and Christians.
Good idea! Germany do not need those White Christians of German origin. More migrants from Africa and Asia - that is the bright future of Germany!
 
Good idea! Germany do not need those White Christians of German origin. More migrants from Africa and Asia - that is the bright future of Germany!
Why you became hyper?
German origin could be bought in few Rubles. Russia is equally part of US dirt causing Aisan immigration. Syrians were pretty happy in their homes, mostly prosperous than general Russians.
 
Why you became hyper?
German origin could be bought in few Rubles. Russia is equally part of US dirt causing Aisan immigration. Syrians were pretty happy in their homes, mostly prosperous than general Russians.
Actually there were millions of Germans (true Germans - German blood, German language and religion) in Russia and Kazakstan. They moved to Germany under the law on repatriation. I am will be the first to welcome Germans moving to Russia (especially - Russian-speaking Germans). And they alredy began to move here.
 
Actually there were millions of Germans (true Germans - German blood, German language and religion) in Russia and Kazakstan. They moved to Germany under the law on repatriation. I am will be the first to welcome Germans moving to Russia (especially - Russian-speaking Germans). And they alredy began to move here.
I know that there were Germans who fled Reich. Everybody knows that.
But despite that, German origin remained on sale in Russia. No Russian in Germany denies that. My neighbor bought that origin, like many others.
Transparency in Russian institutions is well known. Some Pakistanis became Russians of German origin, and moved to Germany. I don't deny that. You also should not deny your part. Truth is a truth.
 
I know that there were Germans who fled Reich. Everybody knows that.
But despite that, German origin remained on sale in Russia. No Russian in Germany denies that. My neighbor bought that origin, like many others.
Transparency in Russian institutions is well known. Some Pakistanis became Russians of German origin, and moved to Germany. I don't deny that. You also should not deny your part. Truth is a truth.
The Reich has nothing to do with it. The Germans were allowed to settle in Russia since the 18th century. I know few Germans who moved to Germany in 90's. And they were called Germans even if their ancestors lived here for 300 years. There were Volga German Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic here.
Volga_German[1].png

800px-Volga_German_area[1].gif

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volga_German_Autonomous_Soviet_Socialist_Republic
Some of them returns now because of the so called "leberalism" and "tolerance".
 
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The Reich has nothing to do with it.
Reich has to do with it. Reich started the war, causing fled of Germans out of Germany.

Nonetheless, my point was something else, which you are intentionally avoiding.
 
Reich has to do with it. Reich started the war, causing fled of Germans out of Germany.

Nonetheless, my point was something else, which you are intentionally avoiding.
May be couple of communists flew to USSR during Reich, but millions of Germans lived here for centuries. Any way - Russia welcomes all them back, when they want to.
 
May be couple of communists flew to USSR during Reich
Apart from what you said and people of East Prussia, also when the German forces were on back foot, normal German citizens fled to USSR, just to escape from Red army. What they were hearing about Red army, was not very pleasant.

Indeed their children and grandchildren came back to Germany, but there are many others who bought German origin.

I don't think any of them, Russian-Germans or Russians would want to settle in Russia again, it's not easy to start from zero, but yes if Putin offers them what he is offering to South Africans. They have more right on Russian land than South Africans.
 
Apart from what you said and people of East Prussia, also when the German forces were on back foot, normal German citizens fled to USSR, just to escape from Red army. What they were hearing about Red army, was not very pleasant.

Indeed their children and grandchildren came back to Germany, but there are many others who bought German origin.

I don't think any of them, Russian-Germans or Russians would want to settle in Russia again, it's not easy to start from zero, but yes if Putin offers them what he is offering to South Africans. They have more right on Russian land than South Africans.
There was no massive migration from Germany to USSR during Reich. Massive migration was during Russian Empire - hundreds of thousands settled in Russia because in that times Russia was richer and easier to earn money.
Putin did not offer South Africans free land - they will have to buy it here.
Many countries are interested in farmers from South Africa, because they are rich and educated people, usually millionaires.
 
Keeping the migration/immigration aside

Putin did not offer South Africans free land - they will have to buy it here.
German-Russians and Russians in Germany can also buy it
 
Keeping the migration/immigration aside


German-Russians and Russians in Germany can also buy it
Everyone can. But it is another matter when some people from another country want to make compact settlement (small colony).
 
Because Putin is the leader of the neo-nazis (kill Muslim) movement.

Jewish RT is a hotbed of neo-nazis that want to burn mosques and shoot Muslims.

Simply a play to Putin's base of Putinbots.
 

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