South African White Wolf
South Africa
SOUTH AFRICAN WHITE WOLF![]() |
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At time of the crime, only 23 years of age, Strydom claimed he was the leader of the "Wit Wolwe". Police later found that this was only a figment of Strydom's imagination. Strydom, who claimed to be a Christian, meditated and prayed for a number of days before committing the crime; he later claimed that God gave him no sign that he must not carry on with his plans. |
Strydom was sentenced to death, but the South African government declared a moratorium on capital punishment in 1990. He was released in 1992 by President F W de Klerk as one of 150 political prisoners, including Robert McBride from the opposite end of the political spectrum. Strydom was granted amnesty by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission after the first democratic elections in 1994. |
BAREND HENDRIK STRYDOM: 1988 THE STORY ![]() |
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“I ran and looked around searching for blacks. I did not look at their faces...”. After walking three blocks, shooting a number of innocent pedestrians as he went, Strydom turned down Struben Street and entered Sato Engineering. He went over to a counter and began to reload a magazine. At this point, Mr Simon Mukondoleli (32), who had bravely followed Strydom into the shop pretending to be a customer, walked up and tapped him on the shoulder. “Excuse me baas, but that baas is calling you,” he said. When Strydom looked round, Mr Mukondoleli snatched the gun from the counter and pointed it at him. Strydom raised his hands. “You've got me,” he said. The two men then walked out into the street together where several policemen arrested Strydom. “I am king of the Wit Wolwe,” Strydom said, just before being taken away in a police car. That afternoon, Pretoria saw a smiling Strydom murder eight people and wound a further sixteen - many of them seriously. “The shootings were to show the world that there are boere (farmers) in the southern part of Africa who will fight to protect what is theirs,” Strydom said. At the police station, after being told that he had killed five or six people, he replied: “I shot badly”. |
By the time Hendrik Strydom was sixteen he was already a member of a number of extremist right-wing organisations and had visions of an all-white nation being established in South Africa. He claimed to have attended a veldschool in Standard 8, where he had been warned against the communist system as well as drug and alchohol abuse. “We were taught to be proud of our country,”he said. “I began to read many books on politics in South Africa and also attended right-wing meetings. They were the only true political movements - unlike the Nationalist government which lies to the people.” He saw some of the reform movements introduced by the government as a ,sell-out. His views were encouraged by his father, Mr Nic Strydom, an ex policeman, an elder in the Nederduits Hervormde Kerk, and a former regional leader of the Heidelberg Afrikaaner Weerstands beweging (AWB). Mr Nic Strydom would later claim proudly in court that he had 'planted the seeds of religion and right-wing political views' in his son's heart. He also maintained that his son was a dedicated churchgoer and a person who strongly believed in God. “I explained to him that, according to the Bible, each nation should have its own church and religion, which Hendrik accepted whole heartedly.” It was also Mr Strydom's belief that 'blacks were animals'. “Blacks are not human beings according to the Bible, and many books I have read, and in my eyes they are animals. Many books Hendrik and I have read state, among other things, that Jews of today are not whites, blacks are animals and all whites stem from the Israelites,” Mr Strydom added. |
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A week before the Strjdom Square massacre, Strydom visited the Voortrekker Monument to pray and re-enact the Blood River vow. “I prayed and asked the lord to show his will and to see I was not hindered in carrying out the deeds...” |
The so-called Wit Wolf trial began on Monday, 15 May 1989, at the Pretoria Supreme Court. The courtroom was packed to capacity on every day of the nine-day hearing and large crowds, marshalled by a contingent of riot police, gathered outside the courthouse. Strydom was charged with eight counts of murder, 16 charges of attempted murder, and one of pointing a firearm. He pleaded not guilty. On the first two days, the State called a number of witnesses to the stand but no one appeared for the defence. (By the end of the trial 33 people had appeared for the State and 4 for the defence). |
On Wednesday, 17 May, Mr Justice Louis Harms found Strydom guilty on all counts and called for arguments in mitigation of sentence. “I see what I did as totally correct,” Strydom declared the following day. “If I had to do it again I would do the same thing”. When questioned about the Wit Wolwe movement, Strydom maintained that it had been established in February 1986, but would give no further details. The police claimed that investigations indicated that the Wit Wolwe was merely a figment of Strydoms imagination. When it was put to the accused that he was bragging in an attempt to make himself important, Strydom denied this. |
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His stepmother, Mrs Daphne Strydom, after embracing him, kissed him on the cheek and said proudly: “Jy's 'n boer.” (You're a farmer). Strydom, the self-styled leader of the Wit Wolwe, was sentenced to death eight times. A short gasp was the only sound heard in the courtroom when sentence was passed. Minutes later, Strydom was whisked away to the Pretoria Central Prison. Outside the courthouse, a smiling Mrs Strydom told waiting pressmen that she 'felt good' and was proud of being a boer. “Die Vierkieur hooq,” (The Vierkieur is high) she cried. (The Vierkieur was the name of the flag of the independent Boer republic called for in the Transvaal in the late nineteenth century.) |
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In a press interview given a few days after the sentencing, Mr Nic Strydom told reporters: “I'm proud of Hendrik because he sacrificed himself for his beliefs. He is an honest man and I respect him for that. He killed for love the love of a nation.” On 2 February 1990, the South African government declared a moratorium on capital punishment. No executions have been carried out since that date. Hendrik Strydom remained on death row until he was granted amnesty following the 1994 democratic elections. On 27 May 1989, Mr Simon Mukondoleli was presented with a R3 000 reward by the police for his heroic action in disarming Strydom and preventing further loss of life. Mr Mkondeleli received a number of death threats for his effort. |
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We must accept that black revolutionaries will seek revenge like in most former colonies. When that happens I do not want my children to fall prey to them. Without complete freedom and self-government for white people of this country there is no future for the next generation.” Mrs Trudy Rautenbach, the bride's mother, was proud of her daughter. Her son-in-law, she said, “Was, a fine boer boy full of character”, she said. After an internal investigation at Pretoria Teachers' Training College into Karin's activities, no action was taken against her. |
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Many people saw paralles between the Strydom trial and that of another famous patriot Sydney Robert Liebbrandt. In 1943 Sydney Robert Liebbrandt, a boer rebel, was sentanced to death for treason. Although Sydney refused to give evidence at any stage in the trial, he claimed that he had acted for Volk and Fuhrer and gave the Nazi salute when he first entered the court, to which several spectators responded. After being sentanced to death Liebbrandt shouted loudly and clearly "I greet death". (Strydom aknowledged Liebbrandt as one of his heroes) |
Strydom and his wife are presently living in Gauteng. |
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