SEPTEMBER 2020
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stories that are life changing
CELEBRATING OUR HERITAGE IN TRUE SOUTH AFRICAN STYLE
BUTCHERY Page 5
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Photo: Edu Hanekom, The Boer and Butcher Founder
South Africa is home to 59 million people in nine provinces who speak eleven official languages, and have various racial and tribal identities: we are literally the ‘rainbow nation’, as Archbishop Desmond Tutu coined it. Heritage Day is a public holiday in South Africa that is always celebrated on 24 September. Its significance rests in recognising aspects of South African culture which are both tangible and difficult to pin down: creative expression, historical inheritance, language, the food we eat, as well as the land in which we live. Jan Braai started the initiative - known as National Braai Day. The idea of togetherness, Ubuntu, fascinated him. Jan realised that a shared heritage is what allows South Africans to live in harmony. A shared heritage included moments of shared historical memory, contemporary social activities and the common ideals of all citizens.
Jan soon realised that there was one thing he knew for a fact about every single person living in South Africa: everybody likes standing around a fire and enjoying a braai. In 2007 Archbishop Desmund Tutu agreed to become the Patron Saint of National Braai Day. The National Heritage council officially endorsed the National Braai Day initiative and the campaign changed the name to Braai4heritage. The day is not only celebrated amongst South Africans, but also growing internationally amongst expatriates in the USA, Canada, the UK, Sweden, Taiwan, Dubai, the Netherlands, Hong Kong, Switzerland, Saudi Arabia, Australia to name a few. On 24 September everyone will be ready with their wood, coals and meat - South Africa will be ablaze with braais! Continue Reading Page 5
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