All Article Properties:
{
"access_control": false,
"status": "publish",
"objectType": "Article",
"id": "471536",
"signature": "Article:471536",
"url": "https://staging.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2019-11-01-plant-matter-how-rooibos-brought-justice-to-sas-indigenous/",
"shorturl": "https://staging.dailymaverick.co.za/article/471536",
"slug": "plant-matter-how-rooibos-brought-justice-to-sas-indigenous",
"contentType": {
"id": "1",
"name": "Article",
"slug": "article"
},
"views": 0,
"comments": 0,
"preview_limit": null,
"excludedFromGoogleSearchEngine": 0,
"title": "Plant matter: How rooibos brought justice to SA’s indigenous",
"firstPublished": "2019-11-01 01:46:42",
"lastUpdate": "2019-11-01 01:46:42",
"categories": [
{
"id": "29",
"name": "South Africa",
"signature": "Category:29",
"slug": "south-africa",
"typeId": {
"typeId": "1",
"name": "Daily Maverick",
"slug": "",
"includeInIssue": "0",
"shortened_domain": "",
"stylesheetClass": "",
"domain": "staging.dailymaverick.co.za",
"articleUrlPrefix": "",
"access_groups": "[]",
"locale": "",
"preview_limit": null
},
"parentId": null,
"parent": [],
"image": "",
"cover": "",
"logo": "",
"paid": "0",
"objectType": "Category",
"url": "https://staging.dailymaverick.co.za/category/south-africa/",
"cssCode": "",
"template": "default",
"tagline": "",
"link_param": null,
"description": "Daily Maverick is an independent online news publication and weekly print newspaper in South Africa.\r\n\r\nIt is known for breaking some of the defining stories of South Africa in the past decade, including the Marikana Massacre, in which the South African Police Service killed 34 miners in August 2012.\r\n\r\nIt also investigated the Gupta Leaks, which won the 2019 Global Shining Light Award.\r\n\r\nThat investigation was credited with exposing the Indian-born Gupta family and former President Jacob Zuma for their role in the systemic political corruption referred to as state capture.\r\n\r\nIn 2018, co-founder and editor-in-chief Branislav ‘Branko’ Brkic was awarded the country’s prestigious Nat Nakasa Award, recognised for initiating the investigative collaboration after receiving the hard drive that included the email tranche.\r\n\r\nIn 2021, co-founder and CEO Styli Charalambous also received the award.\r\n\r\nDaily Maverick covers the latest political and news developments in South Africa with breaking news updates, analysis, opinions and more.",
"metaDescription": "",
"order": "0",
"pageId": null,
"articlesCount": null,
"allowComments": "1",
"accessType": "freecount",
"status": "1",
"children": [],
"cached": true
},
{
"id": "134172",
"name": "Maverick Citizen",
"signature": "Category:134172",
"slug": "maverick-citizen",
"typeId": {
"typeId": "1",
"name": "Daily Maverick",
"slug": "",
"includeInIssue": "0",
"shortened_domain": "",
"stylesheetClass": "",
"domain": "staging.dailymaverick.co.za",
"articleUrlPrefix": "",
"access_groups": "[]",
"locale": "",
"preview_limit": null
},
"parentId": null,
"parent": [],
"image": "",
"cover": "",
"logo": "",
"paid": "0",
"objectType": "Category",
"url": "https://staging.dailymaverick.co.za/category/maverick-citizen/",
"cssCode": "",
"template": "default",
"tagline": "",
"link_param": null,
"description": "",
"metaDescription": "",
"order": "0",
"pageId": null,
"articlesCount": null,
"allowComments": "1",
"accessType": "freecount",
"status": "1",
"children": [],
"cached": true
},
{
"id": "178318",
"name": "Our Burning Planet",
"signature": "Category:178318",
"slug": "our-burning-planet",
"typeId": {
"typeId": "1",
"name": "Daily Maverick",
"slug": "",
"includeInIssue": "0",
"shortened_domain": "",
"stylesheetClass": "",
"domain": "staging.dailymaverick.co.za",
"articleUrlPrefix": "",
"access_groups": "[]",
"locale": "",
"preview_limit": null
},
"parentId": null,
"parent": [],
"image": "",
"cover": "",
"logo": "",
"paid": "0",
"objectType": "Category",
"url": "https://staging.dailymaverick.co.za/category/our-burning-planet/",
"cssCode": "",
"template": "default",
"tagline": "",
"link_param": null,
"description": "",
"metaDescription": "",
"order": "0",
"pageId": null,
"articlesCount": null,
"allowComments": "1",
"accessType": "freecount",
"status": "1",
"children": [],
"cached": true
}
],
"content_length": 12983,
"contents": "<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><b>I.</b></span></span></span></p>\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\">“<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">By recognising our knowledge, they are actually recognising our identity.”</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">For Oom Cecil Le Fleur, chairperson of the </span></span></span><a href=\"https://www.gov.za/speeches/government-will-continue-attend-issues-concern-khoi-and-san-communities-4-dec-2018-0000\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>National Khoi & San Council</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">, this was the crux of the matter. The smile on his face was half wry and half astonished, an expression of the irony that a medicinal plant — a </span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><i>tea</i></span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> — was about to do for his people what no government of South Africa ever had. That is, deliver on the Khoisan’s rightful claim to their heritage and to their land.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">It was not a statement that Oom Cecil made lightly. As the great-grandson of </span></span></span><a href=\"http://nhmsa.co.za/news/the-legacy-of-adam-kok-iii/\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>Adam Kok III</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">, the indigenous chief who had trekked across the Drakensberg to establish the independent state of Griqualand East in the early 1860s, the struggle for recognition was hardwired into his DNA. Seized by the British in 1874, Griqualand East was for him just another in a long litany of losses, a catalogue of dispossession that had rendered the Khoisan of South Africa — comprised of the Griqua, the Cape-Khoi, the Nama, the Korana and the San — the most oppressed indigenous collective in the world. </span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Oom Cecil, it soon became clear, had no time for hyperbole. The eradication of Khoisan tradition was directly connected in his mind to the fact that these five groupings had been hunted for sport, erased from the land like the elephants that once roamed the banks of the Olifants River. He wanted it known that in comparison to the indigenous tribes of the Amazon or central Australia, where there was still a measure of attachment to vast ancestral territories, South Africa’s original cultures had been all but wiped out. </span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">The only exceptions, Oom Cecil said, were deep in the Kalahari and high in the Cederberg mountains — where people like Oom Barend Salomo lived. </span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">The day before, </span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><i>Daily Maverick</i></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"> had met Oom Barend in Wupperthal. An impossibly beautiful village bisected by the Trata River and surrounded on all sides by steep sandstone cliffs, the point of focus was the Moravian Church. When the German missionaries arrived in the late 1820s, Oom Barend explained, they found seven Khoi families in the valley. Oom Barend’s great-great-grandfather, who was born in 1823, was a child at the time — and so the story had been passed down through the generations. </span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">First, confronted with a community that had never considered the concept of land ownership before, the Germans registered the territory for themselves. Then, since it reminded them of the Wupper River back home, they gave it a new name. In the late 1830s, with the abolition of slavery, the population of Wupperthal exploded. </span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"> <span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">It was at this point, according to Oom Barend, that the Germans were introduced to the tea. The wife of the resident missionary was the village nurse, and she noticed that a small flowering shrub was being harvested by the Khoi to treat skin rashes, relieve stomach ailments and strengthen teeth and bones.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\">“<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">We built this church ourselves,” said Oom Barend. “Our people would work for four months and then the missionaries would give us two months off to do wild harvesting in the mountains. We would sell the leaves from the plant back to them. And so this was the first trade in rooibos, it started here.” </span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Rooibos: the name that would go on to define a global industry. As late as October 2019, the tea’s purveyors were telling a different story to the one </span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><i>Daily Maverick</i></span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> heard from Oom Barend. For instance, on the </span></span></span><a href=\"https://www.rooibosltd.co.za/rooibos-background.php\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>website</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> of Rooibos Limited (“preferred supplier since 1954”), visitors could </span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">read that “migrants and settlers in the Cederberg area discovered that the fine, needle-like leaves of the </span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><i>Aspalathus linearis </i></span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">plant make a tasty, aromatic tea.”</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"size-full wp-image-471604\" src=\"https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/wp-content/uploads/Rooibos.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"3456\" height=\"2304\" /> Rooibos (image supplied)</p>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Even the South African Rooibos Council, whose members include wholesale giants like Unilever and National Brands, were </span></span></span><a href=\"https://sarooibos.co.za/history/\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>reporting</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> that “a Russian immigrant to South Africa, Benjamin Ginsberg, recognised the potential of this unique ‘mountain tea’ in 1904… becoming the first exporter.”</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">But Oom Barend supplied the name of Willie Strassberger, the missionary whose wife was the nurse. When</span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"> Strassberger moved to Clanwilliam in 1845, he said, he opened a factory that not only used the processing methods of the Wupperthal Khoi but employed the people too.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\">“<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">You know, the Wupperthal area is the epicentre of rooibos,” Oom Barend added, “because the highest population of wild rooibos you will find here.”</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">And yet nowhere in the history of the plant as told by the South African Rooibos Council was there mention of Strassberger or the town. As an indication that Oom Barend may have been telling the truth, the Strassbergers </span></span></span><a href=\"https://www.ancestors.co.za/cemeteries/cape-province-cemeteries/\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>featured</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> on the headstones in the old Wupperthal cemetery.</span></span></span>\r\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><b>II. </b></span></span></span></p>\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">There was, of course, more substantial proof that the oral history passed down to Oom Barend was correct — again, if someone like Oom Cecil from the National Khoi & San Council was excited, a man who had heard it all before, some serious back-up to the Khoisan version must have emerged. </span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">That back-up, it turned out, was contained in the phrase “Nagoya Protocol”. A </span></span></span><a href=\"https://www.cbd.int/abs/about/default.shtml/\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>supplementary agreement</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> to the UN’s Convention on Biological Diversity, the protocol was adopted in Japan in 2010, entering into force </span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">on 12 October 2014. Among its founding purposes was to ensure the “fair and equitable sharing of benefits arising out of the utilisation of genetic resources,” specifically where </span></span></span><a href=\"https://www.cbd.int/traditional/Protocol.shtml\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>traditional knowledge</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> was concerned. As the first global instrument of relevance to indigenous and local communities adopted since the ratification of the </span></span></span><a href=\"https://www.un.org/development/desa/indigenouspeoples/wp-content/uploads/sites/19/2018/11/UNDRIP_E_web.pdf\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">, it was set up to mainstream those rights in international negotiations.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">And the rooibos plant, from the Cederberg mountains in the Western Cape, was one of the protocol’s first major triumphs.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Never before, according to </span></span></span><a href=\"https://naturaljustice.org/people/lesle-jansen/\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>Lesle Jansen</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">, an indigenous lawyer with the NGO Natural Justice who had been on the case from the start, had the Nagoya Protocol provided the framework for such a wide-ranging concern.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\">“<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">What makes this unique,” she told </span></span><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><i>Daily Maverick</i>, “is that most of the benefit-sharing agreements across the world have been for what they call ‘material transfers’. Basically, purchasing the resources. There’s not been an agreement with a traditional knowledge levy, or a royalty.”</span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">In other words, Jansen explained, the majority of contracts under the protocol had so far been about the raw materials only — until rooibos came along, the indigenous knowledge that had uncovered the properties of these resources had been contractually ignored.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\">“<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">The other aspect that makes this unique is the fact that it’s an industry-wide agreement,” she added. “At the scale that we’re doing it, as far as we know, it has not been done before.”</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">So maybe Rooibos Limited and the members of the local Rooibos Council hadn’t gotten around to updating their websites; this hadn’t changed the fact that the agreement was signed and concluded on 25 May 2019, entitling the five groups under South Africa’s Khoisan umbrella to a 1.5% royalty on all purchases “at the farm gate”. Neither had it changed the fact that on 1 November 2019, environment, forestry and fisheries minister Barbara Creecy would officially launch the agreement at </span></span></span><a href=\"https://www.khwattu.org/\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>!Khwa ttu</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">, a cultural tourism venue an hour north of Cape Town co-owned by the San.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">How, exactly, had things arrived at this historical juncture? Inevitably perhaps, the genesis was in a dirty commercial secret.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\"wp-image-471470 size-medium\" src=\"https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/wp-content/uploads/0000113008-321x480.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"321\" height=\"480\" /> Honeybush. (Photo: Gallo Images / Landbouweekblad / Lucille van Rooyen)</p>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">In 2010, after Nestl</span><span style=\"color: #000000;\">é’s</span> <span style=\"color: #000000;\">research division had “innovated” a suite of cosmetic products from the properties of rooibos and honeybush, the conglomerate applied to the World Intellectual Property Organisation for a set of patents. The technical term for this was “biopiracy”: Nestl</span><span style=\"color: #000000;\">é</span> <span style=\"color: #000000;\">had asked neither the South African government nor the plants’ knowledge holders for consent. A Swiss NGO got wind of it and brought in Natural Justice; the organisations then ran a campaign to block the applications, which succeeded. </span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Three years later, humbled, Nestl</span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">é</span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> politely asked for consent on a different rooibos product (an idea that would eventually be branded as </span></span></span><a href=\"https://redespresso.co.za/\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>Red Espresso</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">). In 2014, negotiations began on a benefit-sharing agreement between the conglomerate, the South African San Council and the National Khoi & San Council. The government, intending to settle the question once and for all, commissioned a study to establish whether the San and Khoi were indeed the knowledge holders of rooibos — the study confirmed what the oral traditions had long claimed. From there, the next logical step was the industry-wide agreement, under the Nagoya Protocol.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">But there was an apparent problem. By 2019, with the farming communities of Wupperthal, Niewoudtville and Suid Bokkeveld identified as the working custodians of rooibos, there were indigenous groups far removed from the Cederberg that stood to benefit from the deal. Given that royalties in the first year would amount to no more than R15-million, somehow it didn’t seem fair. </span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Jansen’s reaction to this observation suggested that she had thought about it long and hard. For her, relative to the implications, the money was hardly the point.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\">“<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Our indigenous people are fighting the same battle,” she said. “The context of the deal is that the Khoisan are not constitutionally accommodated in South Africa. A delegation from the United Nations came here in 2005, and their recommendation to the government was to include all five groups in the census. That still has not been done. So now rooibos has brought them together to start figuring out how they exist in this country.”</span></span></span>\r\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><b>III.</b></span></span></span></p>\r\n<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Back in Oom Cecil’s hometown of Vredendal, </span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><i>Daily Maverick</i></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"> had asked a question that may have been construed as naïve — why had the Griqua not been herded into a Bantustan by the apartheid state?</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Like Jansen’s response to the royalty question, Oom Cecil had an answer that upended the notion of South African statehood itself. In 1735, he said, when his ancestor </span></span></span><a href=\"http://www.archivalplatform.org/registry/entry/the_griqua_royal_house_khoisan_history/\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>Adam Kok I</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> sensed that the Griqua people were about to be dispossessed, he persuaded them to set out on a trek. By vacating their settlements on the banks of the Berg River, the people could stay ahead of the Dutch. So they left, and the trek took them to Namaqualand, and then to the region that became the southern Free State town of Phillippolis, and eventually over the Drakensberg to what became the Eastern Cape town of Kokstad.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\">“<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">My grandfather,” said Oom Cecil, “brought a final trek from Kokstad back to Cape Town, because he wanted to close the circle. ‘Why not a homeland?’ you ask. If the apartheid government tried to do that, they would have needed to give us the whole of South Africa.”</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Which was funny in a </span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><i>bitteregelechte</i></span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> sort of way, meaning it was also deadly serious — especially in light of what the latest government was proposing under the </span></span></span><a href=\"https://www.gov.za/speeches/national-assembly-passes-traditional-and-khoi-san-leadership-bill-26-feb-2019-0000\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>Traditional and Khoi-San Leadership Bill</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">. Mooted as the first-ever statutory recognition of the rights of South Africa’s indigenous, the bill had been passed by the National Assembly and sent to President Cyril Ramaphosa in February 2019. </span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\">“<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Since then,” said Oom Cecil, “the president has signed a lot of other bills into law, but not this one. I have heard that there are people high up in the ANC who are blocking its enactment, because they fear t</span></span><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\">he Khoisan’s ability to claim land.”</span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">So therein lay the rub. Without land as an anchor, the last embers of South Africa’s indigenous traditions would be smothered forever. But if the president enacted the bill, how would the land get parcelled out? On top of which, the government now had the Nagoya Protocol to consider; an agreement that had set an international precedent, an agreement it was </span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><i>celebrating</i></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\">.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">That a plant had brought things to this point was doubly ironic, because the Nagoya Protocol, as a supplement to the UN’s Convention on Biological Diversity, had been set up to save the land from a ghastly and ultimate destruction. Even in 2010, the framers of the protocol had intuited that one of the surest hedges against climate and ecosystem collapse were the people who knew how to live in balance with the natural elements. Nine years later, in </span></span></span><a href=\"https://www.ipbes.net/news/ipbes-global-assessment-summary-policymakers-pdf\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>report</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> after </span></span></span><a href=\"http://www.fao.org/fileadmin/user_upload/faoweb/2018-New/Our_Pillars/2018_Annual_Report_FAO_Indigenous_Peoples_Team.pdf\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>report</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">, the world’s leading ecologists and biologists and entomologists (to name just a few) would be screaming this truth with a ferocity unknown to science.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">In Wupperthal, Oom Barend had spoken to </span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><i>Daily Maverick</i></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"> about healthy soil, which he saw as the essential ingredient in the battle against climate change. “We learnt this from our fathers,” he said, outlining the methods for keeping the soil moist, “today they give it other names.”</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">The story was repeated in Niewoudtville when </span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><i>Daily Maverick</i></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"> visited a group of start-up rooibos farmers, who were using the old ways to steel themselves against the drought.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">The land, it appeared, was buckling — and what it wanted was justice, a return to equilibrium, a group of people who could steward it through. </span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><u><b>DM</b></u></span></span></span>",
"teaser": "Plant matter: How rooibos brought justice to SA’s indigenous",
"externalUrl": "",
"sponsor": null,
"authors": [
{
"id": "25",
"name": "Kevin Bloom",
"image": "https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/wp-content/uploads/kevin-bloom-1.jpg",
"url": "https://staging.dailymaverick.co.za/author/kevinbloom/",
"editorialName": "kevinbloom",
"department": "",
"name_latin": ""
}
],
"description": "",
"keywords": [
{
"type": "Keyword",
"data": {
"keywordId": "2745",
"name": "Cyril Ramaphosa",
"url": "https://staging.dailymaverick.co.za/keyword/cyril-ramaphosa/",
"slug": "cyril-ramaphosa",
"description": "Matamela Cyril Ramaphosa is the fifth and current president of South Africa, in office since 2018. He is also the president of the African National Congress (ANC), the ruling party in South Africa. Ramaphosa is a former trade union leader, businessman, and anti-apartheid activist.\r\n\r\nCyril Ramaphosa was born in Soweto, South Africa, in 1952. He studied law at the University of the Witwatersrand and worked as a trade union lawyer in the 1970s and 1980s. He was one of the founders of the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM), and served as its general secretary from 1982 to 1991.\r\n\r\nRamaphosa was a leading figure in the negotiations that led to the end of apartheid in South Africa. He was a member of the ANC's negotiating team, and played a key role in drafting the country's new constitution. After the first democratic elections in 1994, Ramaphosa was appointed as the country's first trade and industry minister.\r\n\r\nIn 1996, Ramaphosa left government to pursue a career in business. He founded the Shanduka Group, a diversified investment company, and served as its chairman until 2012. Ramaphosa was also a non-executive director of several major South African companies, including Standard Bank and MTN.\r\n\r\nIn 2012, Ramaphosa returned to politics and was elected as deputy president of the ANC. He was elected president of the ANC in 2017, and became president of South Africa in 2018.\r\n\r\nCyril Ramaphosa is a popular figure in South Africa. He is seen as a moderate and pragmatic leader who is committed to improving the lives of all South Africans. He has pledged to address the country's high levels of poverty, unemployment, and inequality. He has also promised to fight corruption and to restore trust in the government.\r\n\r\nRamaphosa faces a number of challenges as president of South Africa. The country is still recovering from the legacy of apartheid, and there are deep divisions along racial, economic, and political lines. The economy is also struggling, and unemployment is high. Ramaphosa will need to find a way to unite the country and to address its economic challenges if he is to be successful as president.",
"articlesCount": 0,
"replacedWith": null,
"display_name": "Cyril Ramaphosa",
"translations": null
}
},
{
"type": "Keyword",
"data": {
"keywordId": "7302",
"name": "Khoisan",
"url": "https://staging.dailymaverick.co.za/keyword/khoisan/",
"slug": "khoisan",
"description": "",
"articlesCount": 0,
"replacedWith": null,
"display_name": "Khoisan",
"translations": null
}
},
{
"type": "Keyword",
"data": {
"keywordId": "58726",
"name": "Rooibos",
"url": "https://staging.dailymaverick.co.za/keyword/rooibos/",
"slug": "rooibos",
"description": "",
"articlesCount": 0,
"replacedWith": null,
"display_name": "Rooibos",
"translations": null
}
}
],
"short_summary": null,
"source": null,
"related": [],
"options": [],
"attachments": [
{
"id": "106331",
"name": "Honeybush. (Photo: Gallo Images / Landbouweekblad / Lucille van Rooyen)",
"description": "<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><b>I.</b></span></span></span></p>\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\">“<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">By recognising our knowledge, they are actually recognising our identity.”</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">For Oom Cecil Le Fleur, chairperson of the </span></span></span><a href=\"https://www.gov.za/speeches/government-will-continue-attend-issues-concern-khoi-and-san-communities-4-dec-2018-0000\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>National Khoi & San Council</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">, this was the crux of the matter. The smile on his face was half wry and half astonished, an expression of the irony that a medicinal plant — a </span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><i>tea</i></span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> — was about to do for his people what no government of South Africa ever had. That is, deliver on the Khoisan’s rightful claim to their heritage and to their land.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">It was not a statement that Oom Cecil made lightly. As the great-grandson of </span></span></span><a href=\"http://nhmsa.co.za/news/the-legacy-of-adam-kok-iii/\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>Adam Kok III</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">, the indigenous chief who had trekked across the Drakensberg to establish the independent state of Griqualand East in the early 1860s, the struggle for recognition was hardwired into his DNA. Seized by the British in 1874, Griqualand East was for him just another in a long litany of losses, a catalogue of dispossession that had rendered the Khoisan of South Africa — comprised of the Griqua, the Cape-Khoi, the Nama, the Korana and the San — the most oppressed indigenous collective in the world. </span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Oom Cecil, it soon became clear, had no time for hyperbole. The eradication of Khoisan tradition was directly connected in his mind to the fact that these five groupings had been hunted for sport, erased from the land like the elephants that once roamed the banks of the Olifants River. He wanted it known that in comparison to the indigenous tribes of the Amazon or central Australia, where there was still a measure of attachment to vast ancestral territories, South Africa’s original cultures had been all but wiped out. </span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">The only exceptions, Oom Cecil said, were deep in the Kalahari and high in the Cederberg mountains — where people like Oom Barend Salomo lived. </span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">The day before, </span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><i>Daily Maverick</i></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"> had met Oom Barend in Wupperthal. An impossibly beautiful village bisected by the Trata River and surrounded on all sides by steep sandstone cliffs, the point of focus was the Moravian Church. When the German missionaries arrived in the late 1820s, Oom Barend explained, they found seven Khoi families in the valley. Oom Barend’s great-great-grandfather, who was born in 1823, was a child at the time — and so the story had been passed down through the generations. </span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">First, confronted with a community that had never considered the concept of land ownership before, the Germans registered the territory for themselves. Then, since it reminded them of the Wupper River back home, they gave it a new name. In the late 1830s, with the abolition of slavery, the population of Wupperthal exploded. </span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"> <span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">It was at this point, according to Oom Barend, that the Germans were introduced to the tea. The wife of the resident missionary was the village nurse, and she noticed that a small flowering shrub was being harvested by the Khoi to treat skin rashes, relieve stomach ailments and strengthen teeth and bones.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\">“<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">We built this church ourselves,” said Oom Barend. “Our people would work for four months and then the missionaries would give us two months off to do wild harvesting in the mountains. We would sell the leaves from the plant back to them. And so this was the first trade in rooibos, it started here.” </span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Rooibos: the name that would go on to define a global industry. As late as October 2019, the tea’s purveyors were telling a different story to the one </span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><i>Daily Maverick</i></span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> heard from Oom Barend. For instance, on the </span></span></span><a href=\"https://www.rooibosltd.co.za/rooibos-background.php\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>website</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> of Rooibos Limited (“preferred supplier since 1954”), visitors could </span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">read that “migrants and settlers in the Cederberg area discovered that the fine, needle-like leaves of the </span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><i>Aspalathus linearis </i></span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">plant make a tasty, aromatic tea.”</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_471604\" align=\"alignleft\" width=\"3456\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-471604\" src=\"https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/wp-content/uploads/Rooibos.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"3456\" height=\"2304\" /> Rooibos (image supplied)[/caption]\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Even the South African Rooibos Council, whose members include wholesale giants like Unilever and National Brands, were </span></span></span><a href=\"https://sarooibos.co.za/history/\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>reporting</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> that “a Russian immigrant to South Africa, Benjamin Ginsberg, recognised the potential of this unique ‘mountain tea’ in 1904… becoming the first exporter.”</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">But Oom Barend supplied the name of Willie Strassberger, the missionary whose wife was the nurse. When</span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"> Strassberger moved to Clanwilliam in 1845, he said, he opened a factory that not only used the processing methods of the Wupperthal Khoi but employed the people too.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\">“<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">You know, the Wupperthal area is the epicentre of rooibos,” Oom Barend added, “because the highest population of wild rooibos you will find here.”</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">And yet nowhere in the history of the plant as told by the South African Rooibos Council was there mention of Strassberger or the town. As an indication that Oom Barend may have been telling the truth, the Strassbergers </span></span></span><a href=\"https://www.ancestors.co.za/cemeteries/cape-province-cemeteries/\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>featured</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> on the headstones in the old Wupperthal cemetery.</span></span></span>\r\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><b>II. </b></span></span></span></p>\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">There was, of course, more substantial proof that the oral history passed down to Oom Barend was correct — again, if someone like Oom Cecil from the National Khoi & San Council was excited, a man who had heard it all before, some serious back-up to the Khoisan version must have emerged. </span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">That back-up, it turned out, was contained in the phrase “Nagoya Protocol”. A </span></span></span><a href=\"https://www.cbd.int/abs/about/default.shtml/\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>supplementary agreement</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> to the UN’s Convention on Biological Diversity, the protocol was adopted in Japan in 2010, entering into force </span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">on 12 October 2014. Among its founding purposes was to ensure the “fair and equitable sharing of benefits arising out of the utilisation of genetic resources,” specifically where </span></span></span><a href=\"https://www.cbd.int/traditional/Protocol.shtml\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>traditional knowledge</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> was concerned. As the first global instrument of relevance to indigenous and local communities adopted since the ratification of the </span></span></span><a href=\"https://www.un.org/development/desa/indigenouspeoples/wp-content/uploads/sites/19/2018/11/UNDRIP_E_web.pdf\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">, it was set up to mainstream those rights in international negotiations.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">And the rooibos plant, from the Cederberg mountains in the Western Cape, was one of the protocol’s first major triumphs.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Never before, according to </span></span></span><a href=\"https://naturaljustice.org/people/lesle-jansen/\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>Lesle Jansen</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">, an indigenous lawyer with the NGO Natural Justice who had been on the case from the start, had the Nagoya Protocol provided the framework for such a wide-ranging concern.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\">“<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">What makes this unique,” she told </span></span><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><i>Daily Maverick</i>, “is that most of the benefit-sharing agreements across the world have been for what they call ‘material transfers’. Basically, purchasing the resources. There’s not been an agreement with a traditional knowledge levy, or a royalty.”</span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">In other words, Jansen explained, the majority of contracts under the protocol had so far been about the raw materials only — until rooibos came along, the indigenous knowledge that had uncovered the properties of these resources had been contractually ignored.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\">“<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">The other aspect that makes this unique is the fact that it’s an industry-wide agreement,” she added. “At the scale that we’re doing it, as far as we know, it has not been done before.”</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">So maybe Rooibos Limited and the members of the local Rooibos Council hadn’t gotten around to updating their websites; this hadn’t changed the fact that the agreement was signed and concluded on 25 May 2019, entitling the five groups under South Africa’s Khoisan umbrella to a 1.5% royalty on all purchases “at the farm gate”. Neither had it changed the fact that on 1 November 2019, environment, forestry and fisheries minister Barbara Creecy would officially launch the agreement at </span></span></span><a href=\"https://www.khwattu.org/\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>!Khwa ttu</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">, a cultural tourism venue an hour north of Cape Town co-owned by the San.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">How, exactly, had things arrived at this historical juncture? Inevitably perhaps, the genesis was in a dirty commercial secret.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_471470\" align=\"alignright\" width=\"321\"]<img class=\"wp-image-471470 size-medium\" src=\"https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/wp-content/uploads/0000113008-321x480.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"321\" height=\"480\" /> Honeybush. (Photo: Gallo Images / Landbouweekblad / Lucille van Rooyen)[/caption]\r\n\r\n<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">In 2010, after Nestl</span><span style=\"color: #000000;\">é’s</span> <span style=\"color: #000000;\">research division had “innovated” a suite of cosmetic products from the properties of rooibos and honeybush, the conglomerate applied to the World Intellectual Property Organisation for a set of patents. The technical term for this was “biopiracy”: Nestl</span><span style=\"color: #000000;\">é</span> <span style=\"color: #000000;\">had asked neither the South African government nor the plants’ knowledge holders for consent. A Swiss NGO got wind of it and brought in Natural Justice; the organisations then ran a campaign to block the applications, which succeeded. </span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Three years later, humbled, Nestl</span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">é</span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> politely asked for consent on a different rooibos product (an idea that would eventually be branded as </span></span></span><a href=\"https://redespresso.co.za/\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>Red Espresso</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">). In 2014, negotiations began on a benefit-sharing agreement between the conglomerate, the South African San Council and the National Khoi & San Council. The government, intending to settle the question once and for all, commissioned a study to establish whether the San and Khoi were indeed the knowledge holders of rooibos — the study confirmed what the oral traditions had long claimed. From there, the next logical step was the industry-wide agreement, under the Nagoya Protocol.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">But there was an apparent problem. By 2019, with the farming communities of Wupperthal, Niewoudtville and Suid Bokkeveld identified as the working custodians of rooibos, there were indigenous groups far removed from the Cederberg that stood to benefit from the deal. Given that royalties in the first year would amount to no more than R15-million, somehow it didn’t seem fair. </span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Jansen’s reaction to this observation suggested that she had thought about it long and hard. For her, relative to the implications, the money was hardly the point.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\">“<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Our indigenous people are fighting the same battle,” she said. “The context of the deal is that the Khoisan are not constitutionally accommodated in South Africa. A delegation from the United Nations came here in 2005, and their recommendation to the government was to include all five groups in the census. That still has not been done. So now rooibos has brought them together to start figuring out how they exist in this country.”</span></span></span>\r\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><b>III.</b></span></span></span></p>\r\n<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Back in Oom Cecil’s hometown of Vredendal, </span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><i>Daily Maverick</i></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"> had asked a question that may have been construed as naïve — why had the Griqua not been herded into a Bantustan by the apartheid state?</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Like Jansen’s response to the royalty question, Oom Cecil had an answer that upended the notion of South African statehood itself. In 1735, he said, when his ancestor </span></span></span><a href=\"http://www.archivalplatform.org/registry/entry/the_griqua_royal_house_khoisan_history/\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>Adam Kok I</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> sensed that the Griqua people were about to be dispossessed, he persuaded them to set out on a trek. By vacating their settlements on the banks of the Berg River, the people could stay ahead of the Dutch. So they left, and the trek took them to Namaqualand, and then to the region that became the southern Free State town of Phillippolis, and eventually over the Drakensberg to what became the Eastern Cape town of Kokstad.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\">“<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">My grandfather,” said Oom Cecil, “brought a final trek from Kokstad back to Cape Town, because he wanted to close the circle. ‘Why not a homeland?’ you ask. If the apartheid government tried to do that, they would have needed to give us the whole of South Africa.”</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Which was funny in a </span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><i>bitteregelechte</i></span></span></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> sort of way, meaning it was also deadly serious — especially in light of what the latest government was proposing under the </span></span></span><a href=\"https://www.gov.za/speeches/national-assembly-passes-traditional-and-khoi-san-leadership-bill-26-feb-2019-0000\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>Traditional and Khoi-San Leadership Bill</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">. Mooted as the first-ever statutory recognition of the rights of South Africa’s indigenous, the bill had been passed by the National Assembly and sent to President Cyril Ramaphosa in February 2019. </span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\">“<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">Since then,” said Oom Cecil, “the president has signed a lot of other bills into law, but not this one. I have heard that there are people high up in the ANC who are blocking its enactment, because they fear t</span></span><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\">he Khoisan’s ability to claim land.”</span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">So therein lay the rub. Without land as an anchor, the last embers of South Africa’s indigenous traditions would be smothered forever. But if the president enacted the bill, how would the land get parcelled out? On top of which, the government now had the Nagoya Protocol to consider; an agreement that had set an international precedent, an agreement it was </span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><i>celebrating</i></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\">.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">That a plant had brought things to this point was doubly ironic, because the Nagoya Protocol, as a supplement to the UN’s Convention on Biological Diversity, had been set up to save the land from a ghastly and ultimate destruction. Even in 2010, the framers of the protocol had intuited that one of the surest hedges against climate and ecosystem collapse were the people who knew how to live in balance with the natural elements. Nine years later, in </span></span></span><a href=\"https://www.ipbes.net/news/ipbes-global-assessment-summary-policymakers-pdf\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>report</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"> after </span></span></span><a href=\"http://www.fao.org/fileadmin/user_upload/faoweb/2018-New/Our_Pillars/2018_Annual_Report_FAO_Indigenous_Peoples_Team.pdf\"><span style=\"color: #0b4cb4;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><u>report</u></span></span></span></a><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\">, the world’s leading ecologists and biologists and entomologists (to name just a few) would be screaming this truth with a ferocity unknown to science.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">In Wupperthal, Oom Barend had spoken to </span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><i>Daily Maverick</i></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"> about healthy soil, which he saw as the essential ingredient in the battle against climate change. “We learnt this from our fathers,” he said, outlining the methods for keeping the soil moist, “today they give it other names.”</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">The story was repeated in Niewoudtville when </span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><i>Daily Maverick</i></span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"> visited a group of start-up rooibos farmers, who were using the old ways to steel themselves against the drought.</span></span></span>\r\n\r\n<span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">The land, it appeared, was buckling — and what it wanted was justice, a return to equilibrium, a group of people who could steward it through. </span><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><u><b>DM</b></u></span></span></span>",
"focal": "50% 50%",
"width": 0,
"height": 0,
"url": "https://dmcdn.whitebeard.net/dailymaverick/wp-content/uploads/IMG_8076.jpg",
"transforms": [
{
"x": "200",
"y": "100",
"url": "https://dmcdn.whitebeard.net/i/eeWQVAkXBs47QO6wocULRvEMdes=/200x100/smart/filters:strip_exif()/file/dailymaverick/wp-content/uploads/IMG_8076.jpg"
},
{
"x": "450",
"y": "0",
"url": "https://dmcdn.whitebeard.net/i/nJOavfN-X6MM_4IwMV3_HAiejv0=/450x0/smart/file/dailymaverick/wp-content/uploads/IMG_8076.jpg"
},
{
"x": "800",
"y": "0",
"url": "https://dmcdn.whitebeard.net/i/tk3PfaR3TaprfsKOMfxt1c7GfLc=/800x0/smart/filters:strip_exif()/file/dailymaverick/wp-content/uploads/IMG_8076.jpg"
},
{
"x": "1200",
"y": "0",
"url": "https://dmcdn.whitebeard.net/i/EWomGn-wwsMkiryH4ZhVMPdUUZ8=/1200x0/smart/filters:strip_exif()/file/dailymaverick/wp-content/uploads/IMG_8076.jpg"
},
{
"x": "1600",
"y": "0",
"url": "https://dmcdn.whitebeard.net/i/V6K_bm2xuexebeMniVc-jaPiY-M=/1600x0/smart/filters:strip_exif()/file/dailymaverick/wp-content/uploads/IMG_8076.jpg"
}
],
"url_thumbnail": "https://dmcdn.whitebeard.net/i/eeWQVAkXBs47QO6wocULRvEMdes=/200x100/smart/filters:strip_exif()/file/dailymaverick/wp-content/uploads/IMG_8076.jpg",
"url_medium": "https://dmcdn.whitebeard.net/i/nJOavfN-X6MM_4IwMV3_HAiejv0=/450x0/smart/file/dailymaverick/wp-content/uploads/IMG_8076.jpg",
"url_large": "https://dmcdn.whitebeard.net/i/tk3PfaR3TaprfsKOMfxt1c7GfLc=/800x0/smart/filters:strip_exif()/file/dailymaverick/wp-content/uploads/IMG_8076.jpg",
"url_xl": "https://dmcdn.whitebeard.net/i/EWomGn-wwsMkiryH4ZhVMPdUUZ8=/1200x0/smart/filters:strip_exif()/file/dailymaverick/wp-content/uploads/IMG_8076.jpg",
"url_xxl": "https://dmcdn.whitebeard.net/i/V6K_bm2xuexebeMniVc-jaPiY-M=/1600x0/smart/filters:strip_exif()/file/dailymaverick/wp-content/uploads/IMG_8076.jpg",
"type": "image"
}
],
"summary": "An industry-wide agreement under the UN’s Nagoya Protocol has just recognised the claim of five Khoisan groups to their heritage. This is more than any South African government has ever done. The agreement poses a set of tough questions not just to President Cyril Ramaphosa and the legislation that’s languishing on his desk, but to the government and its strategy for climate adaptation. And it’s all because of rooibos.",
"template_type": null,
"dm_custom_section_label": null,
"elements": [],
"seo": {
"search_title": "Plant matter: How rooibos brought justice to SA’s indigenous",
"search_description": "<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><b>I.</b></span></span></span></p>\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;",
"social_title": "Plant matter: How rooibos brought justice to SA’s indigenous",
"social_description": "<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><span style=\"font-family: Georgia, serif;\"><span style=\"font-size: large;\"><b>I.</b></span></span></span></p>\r\n<span style=\"color: #000000;",
"social_image": ""
},
"cached": true,
"access_allowed": true
}