Gulf News

Charlize under fire

South African actress has faced backlash over comments about Afrikaans

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Oscar-winning actor Charlize Theron has sparked a firestorm in her native South Africa for suggesting that Afrikaans, a language descended from Dutch settlers, was heading for oblivion.

“There’s about 44 people still speaking it — it’s definitely a dying language, it’s not a very helpful language,” the 47-year-old actor said Monday on a US podcast, Smartless.

By Thursday, South Africans took to Twitter to voice outrage or support.

“Wow what a disrespect­ful comment to the millions of South Africans of all ages, races... that speak Afrikaans as their first language,” said @Juleanor.

“Thank you Charlize Theron - that...racist language is dying and shouldn’t even be recognized,” said @SaboSizwe, in contrast.

One of 11 official languages in South Africa,

Afrikaans is commonly used by around 12 per cent of the population of nearly 60 million.

Laws imposing Afrikaans played a role in the oppression of black citizens during the apartheid era, and the language remains controvers­ial in some sectors of society today.

A lawmaker from the opposition radical leftist Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party tweeted in support of Theron’s remarks, but the Freedom Front Plus (FF Plus), a small rightwing and predominan­tly white Afrikaner party, said she was misguided.

“She is not up to date with what is going on in her country of birth,” it said in a statement.

The Hollywood star was born in Benoni, a suburb 40 kilometres east of Johannesbu­rg, and moved to the United States almost 30 years ago.

She said she didn’t speak English until she was 19 because “nobody” in her predominan­tly Afrikaans neighbourh­ood spoke it.

Afrikaans is descended from Dutch spoken by settlers who began to arrive in South Africa in the mid-17th century.

 ?? Photos by Marvel and supplied ??
Photos by Marvel and supplied

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