For a small moment have I forsaken thee; but with great mercies will I
gather thee. In a little wrath I hid My face from thee for a moment; but
with everlasting kindness will I have mercy on thee, saith the Lord thy
Redeemer.—Isa. liv. 7 and 8.
The hand which holds my pen to-day trembles.
From the beginning it was not my intention to touch upon the Concentration
Camps, but this story of the war would be incomplete without at least a
brief outline of that which played so important a part during the war.
After the occupation of Pretoria, and when it was found that hostilities,
instead of coming to an end, were continued under what the English called a
system of "guerilla" warfare, and that the Boer forces, instead of being
compelled to surrender through starvation or exhaustion, continued to thrive
and increase in numbers, the military authorities found it necessary to
adopt entirely new tactics. But subsequent events showed that no greater
strategical error was ever committed.
Let me explain briefly for the benefit of those of my readers who have
forgotten the details of the great South African war.
The Boer Republics had no organised force. In the event of war against
natives or against some foreign Power, the burghers were called up from
their farms, the husbands, fathers, sons of the nation, to fight for home
and fatherland. This left the women and children unprotected on the farms,
but not unprovided for, for it is an historical fact that the Boer women in
time of war carried on their farming operations with greater vigour than
during times of peace. Fruit trees were tended, fields were ploughed, and
harvests brought in with redoubled energy, with the result that crops
increased and live-stock multiplied.
From the natives they had nothing to fear—in fact, their work was carried on
with the help of native servants only. It soon became evident to the British
military authorities that the Boer forces were being supplied with
necessaries in the way of food and clothing by the women on the farms.
From the Boer point of view this was right and good, but it was perfectly
natural that the English should resent it, and, in isolated cases, where it
was known beyond doubt to have taken place, the houses were destroyed, and
the women and children removed to the towns as prisoners of war.
As
time went on and the women continued to provide their men with the
necessaries of life, the British authorities decided to lay the entire
country waste, with the intention of depriving the Boer commandos of all
means of subsistence and forcing them, through starvation, into a speedy
surrender.
A
systematic devastation of the two Boer Republics then took place. Only the
towns were spared; for the rest, the farms and homesteads and even small
villages, throughout the length and breadth of the country, were laid waste.
Trees were cut down, crops destroyed, homes, pillaged of valuables, burnt
with everything they contained, and the women and children removed to camps
in the districts to which they belonged.
Now, we are well aware that a savage foe would have left these helpless
victims of the unavoidable circumstances of war on the veld to die, but the
English are not only not savages and heathens, but they are one of the most
civilised and humane Christian nations.
Concentration Camps were formed in every part of the country, and the women
and children placed in tents on the open veld, near the railway lines where
possible, or in close proximity to the towns.
The work of devastation, carried out by some British officers with loathing
and distaste, and by others with fiendish exultation, was not completed in a
few weeks or months. It was carried on right through from the time when the
policy was decided on until peace was declared, and in the end nothing was
left but the blackened ruins of once prosperous homes.
If
ever there was a war of surprises, it was the Anglo-Boer war.
Instead of hostilities being brought to a speedy termination by the
demolition of the farms, the Boer forces gathered and increased in strength
and numbers by the addition to their ranks of men who had left the commandos
and were again living on their farms.
Wives and children gone, homes devastated, there was nothing left for the
men to live for.
Instead of being brought to submission by the drastic measures taken to
compel them to surrender, they were transformed into raging lions, with but
one object in view, the expulsion of their enemy from the land of their
birth.
Not alone in the towns did the secret service do its work. As the camps grew
in size and close supervision became more difficult, the spies crept in and
out, bearing with them the information wanted by the Boer leaders,
concerning the condition of the inmates.
In
nine cases out of ten the earnest request of the women to their men was to
fight to the bitter end—not to surrender on their account, but to let them
die in captivity sooner than yield for the sake of them and their children.
Perhaps I may be allowed to say here that when Hansie was in the Irene Camp
as volunteer nurse she knew nothing of the work of the spies.
Love and pity drew her to the scene of suffering.
The British did not count the cost when they began the system of gathering
in the Boer families, any more than they did when they began their "walk
over" to Pretoria.
Not only had they to support women and children for an indefinite period
after the devastation of the farms, but the entire maintenance of the
scattered Boer forces fell to their lot. During nearly two years the Boers
lived on the enemy, took their convoys, wrecked their trains, helped
themselves to horses, clothing, ammunition, provisions—everything, in fact,
that they required for the continuation of the war. To tell the truth, there
was hardly a Mauser rifle to be found in the possession of the Boers at the
end of the war, they having destroyed the rifles with which they began the
war, for want of Mauser ammunition, and using only the Lee Metfords of the
enemy.
Sickness broke out in the camps—scarlet fever, measles, whooping-cough,
enteric, pneumonia, and a thousand ills brought by exposure, overcrowding,
underfeeding, and untold hardships.
Expectant mothers, tender babes, the aged and infirm, torn from their homes
and herded together under conditions impossible to describe, exposed to the
bitter inclemency of the South African winters and the scorching,
germ-breeding heat of the summer, succumbed in their thousands, while daily,
fresh people, ruddy, healthy, straight from their wholesome life on the
farms, were brought into the infected camps and left to face sickness and
the imminent risk of death.
Over twenty thousand dead women and children stand recorded in the books of
the Burgher Camps Department to-day, as the victims of this policy of
concentration.
Over twenty thousand women and children within two years! While the total
number of fighting men lost on the Boer side, in battle and in captivity,
amounts to four thousand throughout the entire war.
That this appalling result was wholly unlooked for, we do not doubt, but
nothing could be done to prevent the high mortality until many months after
the worst period was over and only the strongest remained in the camps. It
was indeed a case of the survival of the fittest.
Let me briefly relate a tragic event of the war to show what the people of
the camps went through and what little cause for surprise there is in the
unprecedented death-rate.
During the winter of 1901 a blizzard passed over the High Veld, the site of
so many Concentration Camps, in the Balmoral district, and overtook a young
lieutenant, W. St. Clare McLaren, of the First Argyll and Sutherland
Highlanders (the friend and playmate of Hansie's childhood's years at
Heidelberg) with his men.
They were without shelter, their commissariat waggons being some way ahead,
and crept under a tarpaulin for protection from the fierce and bitterly cold
blast.
During that awful night Mr. McLaren took off his overcoat to cover up the
perishing body of his major, and when morning came he was found dead with
five of his men, while around them, stiffly frozen, lay the bodies of six
hundred mules.
The brave and heroic heart was stilled for ever, a young and noble life was
lost in performing an act of rare self-sacrifice; but far away in "bonnie
Scotland" a widowed mother, smiling bravely through her tears, thanked God
for the privilege of cherishing such a memory.
Small wonder to us then, when tragedies such as this were brought home to
us, that in the camps the thin tents, torn to ribbons by the storm, afforded
no protection to the scantily-clothed, half-famished inmates!
That the death-rate was not higher during the winter months we owe entirely
to the overcrowding of the tents, there being in Hansie's ward at Irene many
bell-tents, destined to accommodate six, holding from sixteen to
twenty-three persons for many months. But what was an advantage during the
winter months became a source of great danger when the heat of summer came.
To
return to our story.
It
was Hansie's privilege—yes, privilege—to act as one of the volunteer nurses
from Pretoria during that very winter of 1901, and though it is not my
intention to record in this book the experience connected with that period,
I do not think it will be out of place here to mention an important result
of that sojourn at Irene.
Mrs. van Warmelo visited her daughter in the camp for the first time on May
21st, and she was so much impressed by the misery she had witnessed that, on
her return to Pretoria that night, she could not sleep, but tossed from side
to side, thinking of some way to save her country-women from suffering and
death.
Suddenly she was inspired by the thought, "Write a petition to the Consuls!"
It
was 3 a.m. when she got out of bed to fetch her writing-materials from the
dining-room, and she then and there wrote a passionate appeal for help to
the Diplomatic Corps in Pretoria.
The Consul-General for the Netherlands, Mr. Domela Nieuwenhuis, to whom she
took the petition the following morning, advised her to lay it before the
Portuguese Consul, Mr. Cinatti, who, as the doyen of the Diplomatic Corps,
would bring the matter before the other Consuls, if he thought it advisable.
Mr. Cinatti, after reading the petition, said the matter could certainly be
taken up if Mrs. van Warmelo would get a few leading women in Pretoria to
sign the petition.
This was done within a few days.
Under injunctions to observe the strictest secrecy, nine prominent Boer
women signed the document, and it was once more laid before the senior
member of the Diplomatic Corps, who immediately called a meeting of the
Consuls, the result of which was that a copy of the petition, translated
into French, was sent by the first mail to each of the ten different Powers
they represented and also to Lord Kitchener.
General Maxwell, soon after these were dispatched, asked Mr. Cinatti to see
him at once in his office at Government Buildings, where, in a long
interview with him, he demanded from Mr. Cinatti the names of the nine
signatories.
Mr. Cinatti said he was not at liberty to disclose them—that, in fact, they
were not known (with the exception of the writer of the petition) to the
other Consuls. General Maxwell then pressed him to give him that name only,
as he particularly wished to know who had drawn up the petition.
This was refused, fortunately for Mrs. van Warmelo, for the penalty would
have been great.
The military authorities left no stone unturned afterwards to find out who
the women petitioners were, but without success, thanks to the great
precautions taken by the Portuguese Consul.
A
full month passed and no reply came from Lord Kitchener.
A
second petition, more strongly worded than the first, was then drawn up,
imploring the Consuls to intercede on behalf of the victims of the
Concentration Camps and to inform the Powers represented by them, of the
death-rate which threatened the Boer nation with extinction.
Again a meeting of the Consuls was called, at which three of them were
appointed to form a committee of investigation:
Consul Cinatti, Consul-General for Portugal.
Baron Pitner, Consul-General for Austria.
Baron Ostmann, Consul-General for Germany.
Some of the other members at the meeting were:
M.
Domela Nieuwenhuis, Consul-General for the Netherlands.
M. Aubert, Consul-General for France.
Mr. Gordon, Consul-General for United States.
The latter lived in Johannesburg, but attended all the meetings held in
Pretoria in connection with the Concentration Camps.
From General Maxwell the committee of investigation got permission to
inspect the Camp at Irene, called the "Model Camp," and with the statistics
obtained there, as well as the official statistics of all the camps in the
Transvaal, the Diplomatic Corps drew up a report, which went to prove that
unless immediate steps were taken to arrest the appalling death-rate, the
Boer population in the camps would be extinct within a period of three
years.
Copies of this report were sent to the Military Governor and Lord Kitchener,
and to ten foreign Powers, with copies of the second petition.
What diplomatic correspondence then passed between England and the foreign
Powers we shall never know, for the utmost secrecy was observed throughout;
but what we do know is, that the famous commission of inquiry, the
"Whitewash Committee," so-called by the Pro-Boers in England, was very soon
afterwards sent out. It consisted of six English ladies, and as a result of
their investigations some of the inland camps were removed to the coast, the
rations increased, additional medical and other comforts provided, and the
general condition of the camps improved to such an extent that after some
months the death-rate decreased considerably, continuing to do so until it
became nearly normal. But, as I have said before, not until over 20,000
women and children had been sacrificed as a direct result of being torn from
their homes, exposed to the elements, and herded together under conditions
which only the strongest could survive. It would take too much space to
insert copies of the petitions here, but they are to be found in Hansie's
Dutch book on the Irene Concentration Camp, published in Holland from her
diary a year after the war.
The following statistics of what is known as "Black October 1901" are taken
from the Blue Books of England and will give the reader an idea of the
number of camps in the Transvaal alone, the number of their inhabitants, and
the full death-rate within the period of thirty-one days:—
Total Census of
Deaths, etc. etc., occurring in the Concentration Camps, Transvaal only,
during the Month Of October 1901.
|
Camps. |
Census. |
Deaths. |
|
1. Barberton |
1,907 |
12 |
|
2. Balmoral |
2,580 |
70 |
|
3. Belfast |
1,397 |
33 |
|
4. Heidelberg |
2,173 |
41 |
|
5. Irene |
3,972 |
101 |
|
6. Johannesburg |
2,937 |
29 |
|
7. Klerksdorp |
3,822 |
176 |
|
8. Krugersdorp |
5,500 |
90 |
|
9. Middelburg |
5,602 |
127 |
|
10. Mafeking |
4,783 |
410 |
|
11. Nylstroom |
1,819 |
52 |
|
12. Pietersburg |
3,598 |
41 |
|
13. Potchefstroom |
7,467 |
90 |
|
14. Standerton |
3,005 |
215 |
|
15. Vereeniging |
920 |
9 |
|
16. Volksrust |
5,280 |
47 |
|
17. Vryburg |
1,256 |
53 |
|
|
58,018 |
1,596 |
During this terrible month there was a population of 112,619 in all the
Concentration Camps in South Africa. There were 3,156 deaths, i.e. a
death-rate of 28 per 1,000 per month. After "Black October" the mortality
decreased steadily, as will be seen from the following figures:
|
|
Population. |
Deaths. |
|
November 1901 |
117,974 |
2,807 |
|
December 1901 |
117,017 |
2,380 |
|
January 1902 |
114,376 |
1,805 |
|
February 1902 |
113,905 |
638 |
|
March 1902 |
111,508 |
402 |
|
April 1902 |
112,733 |
298 |
|
May 1902 |
116,572 |
196 |
Consular Report on the Concentration Camps
The following is the Report on the Concentration Camps by the Committee
appointed by the Consular Corps of the Transvaal in response to a renewed
appeal addressed to them by the Committee of Boer Women of Pretoria. The
appeal was supported by three of the Consuls.
The Committee, which you have appointed to examine the situation in the
prisoners' camps, where Boer women are concentrated, though they could not
always obtain the required accurate information, have gained sufficient
results to arrive at the conclusions as laid down in short in the following
report:—
I.—In order to formulate a clear idea of the situation the Committee has
laid down the following tables:
(a) Showing the population and deaths in the Camps during April 1901,
compiled from the official reports of the Inspector-General of the Camps.
(b) The death-rate in the Camps of the Transvaal calculated from Table A,
as well as from reports published in the Official Gazette, and according to
other trustworthy information.
(c) The death-rate in the Camps at Bloemfontein and Kroonstad, compiled
from the notices in the Official Gazette of the Orange Free State.
(d) Diseases and deaths according to Official Gazette.
II.—Although the returns are not complete through absence of returns for
whole weeks in the official publications, we may arrive at the following
conclusions:
1. That the death-percentage in the Camps surpasses all hitherto-known
proportions.
2. That the death-rate amounts to 14 times that of Pretoria, which has,
according to Dr. Stroud, an average of 25 per thousand per year.
3. That the death-rate among the children confined to the Camps has
increased to an alarming extent.
The Committee, basing their verdict partly on the repeated assertions of
public opinion, on the communications of eye-witnesses, on the evidence
given by certain witnesses in a case before the Military Court at Pretoria,
and finally on the personal observations of four members of the Consular
Corps, to whom permission was granted to visit the Camp at Irene, feel
compelled to believe the principal causes of diseases, carrying in their
train such an abnormal death-rate, to be:
1. The difficulties and misery and privations to which the Boer families
are subject after having been driven from their farms (their journeys often
lasting about 20 days).
2. The insufficient quantity and frequently even bad quality of articles
of food distributed among them. Often the food given to the children is in
every respect inadequate to their wants.
3. The great fall in temperature during the night.
4. The insufficient protection against cold experienced in the tents by
the healthy population, and all the more by the invalids.
5. The absence of clothing and blankets.
6. The insufficient providing for invalids and the inadequate state of
medical stores.
7. The want of employees for the sanitary service in the Camps.
In
view of the importance of the problem put before the Committee, they have
drawn up the above report and have sent copies of same to all the members of
the Consular Corps.
(Signed) S.S. PITNER.
P. CINATTI.
BN. OSTMANN.
TABLE A
DIRECT CAUSES OF THE DEATHS IN THE CAMPS OF THE IMPRISONED BOERS, COMPOSED
ACCORDING TO THE OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER ARTICLES TILL JULY 10TH, 1901.
|
Diseases. |
|
Number of Deaths. |
|
Measles |
123 |
|
Inflammation of the lungs |
50 |
|
Dysentery |
45 |
|
Inflammation of the bowels |
35 |
|
Consumption |
33 |
|
Diarrhśa |
29 |
|
Bronchitis |
27 |
|
Old age |
21 |
|
Inflammation of the stomach |
15 |
|
Malaria |
18 |
|
Cramps |
15 |
|
Measles and bronchitis |
14 |
|
Typhoid fever |
14 |
|
Weakness (Debility) |
13 |
|
Heart disease |
12 |
|
Croup |
11 |
|
Old age |
11 |
|
Cramps and inflammation of the stomach |
10 |
|
Measles and weakness |
11 |
|
Lying-in fever and child-birth illness |
5 |
|
Measles and inflammation of the lungs |
4 |
|
Inflammation of the brain |
4 |
|
Diphtheria |
4 |
|
Consumption and measles |
4 |
|
Disease of the kidneys |
6 |
|
Measles and diarrhśa |
3 |
|
Measles and dysentery |
3 |
|
Exhaustion |
3 |
|
Inflammation of the bowels |
3 |
|
Debility |
2 |
|
Heart disease |
4 |
|
Inflammation of the kidneys and debility, diseases through
teething, asthma, influenza |
6 |
|
Various |
26 |
|
Not classified |
57 |
|
|
641 |
|
Summary and Percentage |
|
|
Cases. |
Percentage. |
|
Simple and complicated measles |
149 |
23 |
|
Diseases of the respiratory organs |
106 |
17 |
|
Diseases of the bowels |
105 |
17 |
|
Fever |
67 |
10 |
|
Debility, old age, consumption |
75 |
12 |
|
Convulsions |
15 |
2 |
|
Debility through old age |
13 |
2 |
|
Heart disease |
12 |
2 |
|
Not classified |
57 |
9 |
|
Various |
42 |
6 |
|
|
641 cases. |
TABLE B
DEATH-RATE OF THE IMPRISONED BOERS IN THE CAMPS OF THE TRANSVAAL ACCORDING
TO OFFICIAL REPORTS AND TRUSTWORTHY INFORMATION.
|
Camps and Months |
Number of prisoners under 8 years. |
Death Rate for the Period Indicated. |
| Under 8 years. |
Per 1,000 per ann. Under 8 years. |
| Male. |
Female. |
Total. |
Male. |
Female. |
Total. |
Male. |
Female. |
pr. 1,000. |
|
Middelburg |
April |
666 |
626 |
1,292 |
5 |
4 |
9 |
86 |
77 |
83 |
| Potchefstroom |
April |
1,577 |
4,147 |
5,724 |
7* |
17* |
24 |
53 |
39 |
54 |
| |
May 1-17th |
1,605§ |
4,207§ |
5,812¶ |
8 |
17 |
25 |
106 |
86 |
94 |
| Standerton |
April |
584 |
553 |
1,137 |
5† |
20† |
25 |
104 |
372 |
255 |
| Volksrust |
April |
1,911 |
1,667 |
3,578 |
5 |
21 |
26 |
32 |
153 |
87 |
| Irene |
April |
2,134 |
1,589 |
3,703 |
14* |
35* |
49 |
79 |
270 |
161 |
| " |
May |
2,364§ |
1,738§ |
4,102¶ |
19 |
49 |
68 |
58 |
331 |
200 |
| " |
June |
2,593§ |
2,007§ |
4,600¶ |
38* |
97¶ |
135‡ |
177 |
588 |
366 |
| Johannesburg |
April |
1,705 |
1,465 |
3,170 |
9 |
82 |
91 |
62 |
681 |
349 |
| |
May 1-27th |
1,770§ |
1,515§ |
3,285¶ |
12 |
67 |
79 |
94 |
598 |
325 |
|
All Camps in Transvaal |
April |
11,098 |
12,714 |
23,612 |
69 |
171 |
240 |
75 |
161 |
122 |
*:
According to the proportion for the month of May.
§: According to the proportion for the month of April.
¶: Average number from April till July 9th.
†: According to the proportion for Volksrust.
‡: Statement by a nurse in service at Irene.
Without further comment the figures are borrowed from the official reports
of the month of April or published in the Official Gazette.
TABLE C
RETURN OF DEATHS OF THE IMPRISONED BOERS IN THE CAMPS OF BLOEMFONTEIN AND
KROONSTAD (ORANGE FREE STATE) ACCORDING TO THE "OFFICIAL GAZETTE."
|
Camps. |
Number of Deaths. |
Causes of Death. |
|
Men. |
Women. |
Children under 8 yrs. |
Total. |
Infectious Disease. |
Lung and Heart Disease. |
Typhoid, Dysentery, Diarrhśa. |
Debility, Old Age. |
per 1,000. |
|
Bloemfontein from April 2nd till July 2nd, 1901 |
33 |
80 |
198 |
311 |
101 |
99 |
107 |
4 |
309 |
|
Kroonstad from April 1st till May 16th, 1901 |
8 |
8 |
41 |
57 |
15 |
16 |
24 |
2 |
195 |
|
Kroonstad from May 26th till June 23rd, 1901 |
9 |
12 |
26 |
47 |
18 |
14 |
15 |
6 |
213 |
Number of prisoners
till June 1st: Bloemfontein, 4,339; Kroonstad, 2,638.
TABLE D
RETURNS OF DEATHS AND DISEASE OF THE IMPRISONED BOERS IN THE ENGLISH CAMPS
OF THE TRANSVAAL DURING APRIL 1901.
|
Camps. |
Number of Prisoners. |
Number of Cases during April 1901. |
|
Men. |
Women. |
Children. |
Total. |
Men. |
Women. |
Children. |
Total. |
Deaths during the Month. |
|
Barberton |
38 |
151 |
236 |
425 |
6 |
26 |
27 |
59 |
4 |
|
Middelburg |
191 |
475 |
626 |
1,292 |
29 |
46 |
55 |
130 |
9 |
|
Irene |
892 |
1,242 |
1,569 |
3,703 |
51 |
85 |
|