
A White Governor for White South Africa
South Africa needs another Simon Van Der Stel.
By Mila Fourie
5 March 2025
The Right to Self-determination of White People in South Africa is beyond dispute. It is protected and guaranteed under Section 235 of our Constitution:
"Recognition of the notion of the right of self-determination of any community sharing a common cultural and language heritage"
Certain sectors of South African Society, most notably the Economic Sector, will always remain largely unchanged, regardless of social change or political upheaval. The reason for this is practical: Businesses need workers, and in South Africa these workers come from diverse backgrounds; making it hard or even impossible for commercial enterprises to drastically adapt their workforce to suit new political philosophies. Therefore, many whites, given the free choice, would elect to continue with business as usual, even if seismic political change ever were to take place in South Africa. However, there is a very significant faction of White Society in South Africa that has had enough of the failed policy of forced integration. They can no longer be denied their Constitutional Right to govern themselves and to determine their own future, and for this purpose they require their own Independent Land.
Of course, the question of the Governance of any such Independent Land for Whites immediately arises. To have a reliable election, representative of all Whites in South Africa, is logistically impossible under the current South African regime. The only workable solution is an Executive Governor with interim authority, appointed until such time as a reliable election for a fully representative White Government of the new independent White Land can be held. To identify the right person for the position, we have a helpful historic reference and precedent in the person of Simon van Der Stel, who was appointed as the first Governor of the Cape Dutch Colony in 1691, after Louis XIV revoked the Edict of Nantes and therewith the religious freedom of the French Huguenots. Van Der Stel convinced his employer, the VOC (Vereenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie) to arrange safe passage to South Africa for French refugees skilled in wine farming, so they could help settle a quality wine industry right here in the miracle-heart of this breathtaking, sun drenched African country. Apart from providing a valuable lesson in the kind of immigration needed to build a country (rather than burn it to the ground), Van Der Stel’s method also illustrates an essential skill required of an Executive Governor; the ability to engineer a brand new society from various critical components and diverse human skills.
An Interim Executive Governor, presiding over independent White Land in South Africa, is the only workable transitional vehicle for White South Africans to realize our indisputable Claim to Independence. We might simply have to accept that such a temporary Governor will probably be appointed by the United Nations, or some similar international body, and not by way of a local election.



