Jan Marais statue
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The Jan Marais statue is situated in Stellenbosch, South Africa, and is located on the Rooiplein within the Stellenbosch University’s campus.[1]
History
The Jan Marais statue was sculpted by Coert Steynberg and erected in 1950.[2]
Background
Jan Marais
The Jan Marais statue | |
---|---|
Artist | Coert Steynberg |
Year | 1950 |
Subject | Johannes Henoch Marais |
Location | Stellenbosch |
Philanthropist Johannes Henoch Marais, also known as Jan Marais, was born in Stellenbosch on the 8th of September 1851. In 1870, he set out with three of his brothers to pursue his fortune on the diamond fields near the Vaal and Orange Rivers.[3] This led to them becoming major shareholders in the company De Beers Consolidated Diamond Mines.[3] Jan Marais came back to Stellenbosch as a rich man and later went on to buy the Coetzenburg farm from his mother.[3] He soon established himself in a forefront position as a leading figure in Stellenbosch. He became the first representative of Stellenbosch to serve in the House of Assembly and remained a parliamentary member till his death.[3] In 1915, Jan Marais passed away and bequeathed £100 000 (R100 million) towards the establishment of Stellenbosch University.[3][4] His testament also influenced the founding of the Jan Marais National Fund (HJMNF), which still continuously awards about R20 million every year towards a number of different developmental projects in South Africa in support of the Afrikaans language.[3] In addition, he also funded a considerable sum of money for the start-up of Nasionale Pers (Naspers).[3][4]
Statue
Stellenbosch university recognizes the sustainable financial contribution that philanthropist Jan Marais made towards the establishment of the university in 1915, which is the reason for the erection of the statue in 1950.[5] The statue is placed in the centre of the main campus, where a multitude of students from different social and cultural backgrounds continuously walk past it every day.
Aim for removing the statue
Decolonisation of universities in South Africa
It has been reported that non-white university students still encounter the social structures of colonialism and white privilege on a daily basis.[6][7][8] This idea led to the #FeesMustFall campaign that erupted on university campuses throughout South Africa in 2015. The student uprisings were primarily focused on decolonizing higher education institutional structures, granting formally underrepresented populations equal access to higher education, and decolonizing university curricula.[9]
University institutional hierarchies are dominated by white academics.[9] White people only make up 7.8% of the South African population overall, however, 74% of the permanent academic staff at the top South African universities are white.[9] These statistics reveal the cause of the protests in 2015, as research evidence supports that the opportunities for employment are still believed to be only available to those who benefited from colonialism.[9]
Protests for removing the statue
Statues and other visual symbols can evoke a variety of emotions and feelings in people, especially in a nation with a history of apartheid-related division and difficult circumstances. During the #FeesMustFall movement in 2015, statues at universities such as the Jan Marias statue situated on the Rooiplein in Stellenbosch came under increasing scrutiny.[9] Student groups expressed their displeasure with the Jan Marais statue during the height of the #FeesMustFall movement.[10] This was done by setting fire and throwing clay and sand at the pedestal of the statue.[10][11][12] The protest aimed to raise awareness and reflect on the presence of the statues from a colonial past within South African university campuses. The statue of Marais was the target figure as he is regarded as a symbol of white supremacy that looms over the campus and upholds an ongoing legacy of segregation and colonization.[2] The protests never lead to the removal of the statue in 2015 and the statue still remains intact on the Stellenbosch campus.
References
- ^ "Campus Map". www0.sun.ac.za. Retrieved 2022-10-19.
- ^ a b Breyne, Marieke (2018). "Sharing the Past with Our Present/ce. Performing Living Sculptures in the Traumascape of Stellenbosch, South Africa". Liminalities: A Journal of Performance Studies. 14 (3).
- ^ a b c d e f g Nieuwoudt, Stephanie (2015). "Jannie Marais' 100-year legacy celebrated". www.sun.ac.za. Retrieved 2022-10-19.
- ^ a b CapeTimes. "The statue of the Afrikaner". www.pressreader.com. Retrieved 2022-10-19.
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(help) - ^ "News - Statues and symbols: creating a welcoming culture". www.sun.ac.za. 2016. Retrieved 2022-10-19.
- ^ Healy-Clancy, Meghan (2017). "The everyday politics of being a student in South Africa: A history". History Compass. 15 (3). doi:10.1111/hic3.12375. ISSN 1478-0542.
- ^ Heleta, Savo (2016). "Decolonisation of higher education: Dismantling epistemic violence and Eurocentrism in South Africa". Transformation in Higher Education. 1 (1). doi:10.4102/the.v1i1.9. ISSN 2519-5638.
- ^ Mudavanhu, Selina Linda (2017). "Comrades, Students, Baboons and Criminals: An Analysis of "Othering" on Facebook in Relation to the #Rhodesmustfall/#Feesmustfall Movement at the University of Cape Town". African Journalism Studies. 38 (2): 21–48. doi:10.1080/23743670.2017.1332662. ISSN 2374-3670.
- ^ a b c d e Albertus, Rene W (2019). Tong, Kar-wai (ed.). "Decolonisation of institutional structures in South African universities: A critical perspective". Cogent Social Sciences. 5 (1): 1620403. doi:10.1080/23311886.2019.1620403. ISSN 2331-1886.
- ^ a b van Rooi, Leslie (2021), Fataar, Aslam; Costandius, Elmarie (eds.), "Transforming the Stellenbosch University landscape(s): The journey of visual redress at Stellenbosch University" (PDF), Evoking Transformation (1 ed.), African Sun Media, pp. 47–68, doi:10.52779/9781991201096/03, ISBN 978-1-991201-09-6, retrieved 2022-10-19
- ^ News24 (2016). "Stellenbosch students to protest against colonial statues". News24. Retrieved 2022-10-19.
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Noij, Mathijs (2016). "Studying in a former white stronghold". Vox magazine (in Dutch). Retrieved 2022-10-19.