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In this episode of Mr. Hutchings History, we analyze the contrasting legacies of Jan Smuts and D.F. Malan, two influential figures who shaped South Africa’s trajectory during the 20th century. While Smuts was an internationalist who contributed to global institutions like the League of Nations, his domestic policies perpetuated white supremacy through segregation and harsh crackdowns on dissent. In stark contrast, Malan’s rise to power in 1948 marked the formal institutionalization of apartheid, laying the foundation for decades of racial oppression.

We explore Smuts’ controversial actions, including the Rand Revolt, Bulhoek Massacre, and Bondelswarts Rebellion, and juxtapose them with Malan’s legislative milestones like the Population Registration Act and Group Areas Act. By examining their political careers, ideologies, and impact, we uncover how these leaders’ decisions cemented South Africa’s racial divisions and paved the road to apartheid.


#IBHistory #Apartheid #JanSmuts #DFMalan #SouthAfricaHistory #RacialSegregation #CivilRightsHistory #AfrikanerNationalism #WhiteSupremacy #PopulationRegistrationAct #GlobalHistory #ColonialLegacy #ApartheidFoundations


Works Cited

Du Bois, W.E.B. The New Negro. Harlem Renaissance, 1925.

First, Ruth. South West Africa. Penguin, 1963.

Giliomee, Hermann. The Afrikaners: Biography of a People. C. Hurst & Co., 2003.

Worden, Nigel. The Making of Modern South Africa: Conquest, Segregation, and Apartheid. Blackwell, 2000.