The South African
nation is made up of people whose ancestors have lived
here for thousands of years as well as of people whose
ancestors travelled from the other side of the world
to create a new future for themselves. Our society is
a dynamic blend of age-old customs and modern ways and
our identity is the result of a mix of cultures, the
crosspollination of ideas, words, customs, art forms
as well as of culinary and religious practices.
To incorporate the spirit of reconciliation and mutual
respect which characterizes the South African society,
the country recognizes eleven official languages. They
are, in alphabetical order: Afrikaans, English, Ndebele,
Northern Sotho, Southern Sotho, Swati, Tsonga, Tswana,
Venda, Xhosa and Zulu.
South Africa is home to the most diverse groups imaginable.
City dwellers live their fastpaced Western lifestyle
in a world that modern technology has created, and some
rural tribe members choose to live very much as their
ancestors did hundreds of years ago. A large number
of the approximately 10 million urban Africans are second
and third generation town and city dwellers and hundreds
of thousands are migrant workers. As a result, the different
cultures have fused together in the cities and a distinctive
subculture has developed that includes the traditional
and the new. |