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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Max du Preez

Interviewed May 20, 2024

There was a separation of races in the media all along, where your first newspapers here were Afrikaner nationalist newspapers, and then sort of a few English—old English newspapers. And the English newspapers always had a small black middle class readership, although not catered for. And then you had a whole series of black newspapers started as a support for the ANC [African National Congress] or, you know, whatever.

[Afrikaners are the descendants of Dutch settlers who came to Africa’s Cape of Good Hope in 1652. During the Anglo-Boer Wars that spanned the 19th and 20th centuries, the Afrikaners were overtaken by the British Empire and agreed to live under British rule. The African National Congress (ANC) is a political party that served as the most prominent resistance movement against South Africa’s apartheid system, at times resorting to violence through its military wing, Umkhonto we Sizwe. It was officially banned by the South African government from 1960 to 1990. As apartheid collapsed, the ANC’s leader, Nelson Mandela, was elected President of South Africa in 1994 and established a democratic government.]

So by the time I got into journalism, you had a left-of-center newspaper in Johannesburg called the Rand Daily Mail, which had some black readership—the black middle class, black intelligentsia. It also had separate editions. We had the situation in South Africa then that the Sunday Times, which was the biggest newspaper, would have the Sunday Times, and then it would have the Sunday Times Extra, which was aimed at a black market, which you’d get a slightly different cover and then slightly different inside.

So yes, there was a big segregation. Afrikaans newspapers were mostly—were only aimed at white Afrikaans speakers, whereas most people who speak Afrikaans in this country are not white. The white speakers are in the minority. And that picture has now changed, that most Afrikaans newspapers are read mostly—well, more than half of it is read by so-called Coloured people, Coloured Afrikaans-speaking people.

[Coloured is the commonly used term to denote mixed-race people in South Africa.]

But we still have now—we have newspapers aimed specifically at the black market. We have the Sowetan, for instance. We have some newspapers in Zulu, in KwaZulu-Natal in the Zulu language. But there’s—your big, national newspapers are being read by everybody in the middle class.

[KwaZulu-Natal is a South African province where Zulu is the predominant language.]