Rustenburg
Rustenburg is a city at the foot of the Magaliesberg mountain range. Rustenburg is the most populous city in North West province, South Africa. In 2017, the city's Gross Domestic Product reached ZAR 63.8 billion, accounting for 21.1% of the GDP of the North West Province, and 1.28% of the GDP of South Africa. Rustenburg was one of the official host cities of the 2010 FIFA World Cup, being in close proximity to Phokeng, the capital of the Royal Bafokeng Nation, where the Royal Bafokeng Stadium is located. The England national football team also used this as their base camp for the tournament.
History
Mfecane
Before European settlers arrived, the area had been settled by agrarian Setswana-speaking tribes.Rustenburg's population is primarily Tswana people. Partially belonging to the Royal Bafokeng Nation, extensive landowners earning royalties from mining operations. The Royal Bafokeng are descendants of Sotho settlers who displaced the local tribes from the region, which they came to call 'place of dew'. In the early 1800s, the Bafokeng and other Tswana communities were conquered in a series of devastating wars launched by an offshoot of the Zulu kingdom, called the Matebele. The Boers had also fought the Zulu and Matebele, and so the Boers and Tswana found in the Matebele a common enemy. The Tswana and Boers planned together and worked toward defeating the Matebele from a Sotho-Tswana kingdom to the south, and together, they defeated the Matebele. As the Boers settled in the area, called their settlement Rustenburg because they had relatively friendly relations with their Bafokeng allies in the area, and after the many violent military conflicts with other African chiefdoms, such as the Matebele, they believed they could rest in this settlement, whose name literally means "Resting Town." Although had already long lived in the area when the Boers arrived, the Bafokeng bought land rights from the Boers, and they purchased their first tracts of land in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century from the colonial rulers, some in exchange for serving in the Boer Wars. Although these land purchases were technically illegal, Paul Kruger, who would become a president of the Transvaal Boer Republic, but was then a veld kornet, was friendly to the Bafokeng and helped arrange many of these purchases. A public hospital has been named after Paul Kruger.
Establishment
Rustenburg was established in 1851 as an administrative centre for an Afrikaner farming area that produced citrus fruit, tobacco, peanuts, sunflower seeds, maize, wheat and cattle. On 10 February 1859, the Reformed Churches in South Africa was founded under a Syringa tree, now commemorated with a memorial. Rustenburg was the home of Paul Kruger, president of the South African Republic, who bought a 5 square kilometer farm to the north-west of the town in 1863. The homestead on his farm, Boekenhoutfontein, is now the Paul Kruger Country Museum. When the Boer and the British came to blows in the Second Boer War, the territory around Rustenburg became a battlefield. The two sides clashed at nearby Mafikeng, where the British garrison found itself under siege for months.Among the early residents of Rustenburg were settlers of Indian origin. One of the first families of Indian origin was the Bhyat family, whose contribution to the city's history was marked by the renaming of a major street name to Fatima Bhayat Street in honour of Fatima Bhyat who arrived in Rustenburg with her husband in 1877.
Platinum mining in Rustenburg began in 1929, shortly after the discovery of the Platinum Reef by Hans Merensky, later named the Merensky Reef. The mine is located about 3 km from the town centre and owned and managed by the Anglo American plc. According to legend, the farmer that owned the land sold the mineral rights to Anglo American for R10 000.
Apartheid
The city was known for its conservative character during the apartheid era, and attracted large campaign rallies by the National Party.Post-Apartheid
The township of Boitekong on the northeast side of Rustenburg has one of the highest incidences of AIDS orphans in South Africa Rustenburg was the venue for World AIDS Day commemoration in December 2010. The township is in a geographical area which bears the brunt of the catchment area of the toxic effects of the mining industry coupled with a very poor quality of water supply from the local Bospoort Dam, the water from which was for decades considered too toxic for human consumption until water shortages in the nineties compelled the purification and supply to Boitekong. Life for the majority under the rule of the 'Royal Bafokeng' has parallels to the apartheid era. In the Apartheid era, forced removals of old settlements were on the basis of racial divide whereas now it is done for installation of massive mining operations sometimes engulfing entire villages.The Royal Bafokeng company own the stadium selected as a World Cup 2010 venue, the only 'private' stadium that hosted games in the 2010 World cup. The Royal Bafokeng regard themselves as a 'separate nation' which is in contradiction to the Rainbow nation espoused by Desmond Tutu and Nelson Mandela. This 'nationhood' is regarded by many today as a divide and rule tactic orchestrated by the mining conglomerates which has subsequently led to the calls for nationalization of the mining industry by the ANC Youth League. The majority of people in the region 20 years after the fall of apartheid still live in abject poverty despite the massive profits yielded by the platinum royalties. This has led in recent years to claims of kleptocracy against the 'royal' family and land claim disputes.
Agriculture in the region has been in constant decline since the decimation of the vast citrus estates of Rustenburg in the 1970s and 1980s due to pollution from increased smelting and beneficiating processes by mines. There are only a fraction of the original citrus farms remaining.
In 1990, the first post-Apartheid conference between the Nederduits Gereformeerde Kerk and the South African churches was held in Rustenburg. During this conference, professor Willie Jonker of the University of Stellenbosch made this confession on behalf of the entire DRC:
" confess before you and before the Lord, not only my own sin and guilt,
and my personal responsibility for the political, social, economic and structural wrongs that have been done to many of you and the results which you and our whole country are still suffering, but vicariously I dare also to do that in the name of the NGK , of which I am a member, and for the Afrikaans people as a whole."
The conference finally resulted in the signing of the Rustenburg Declaration, which moved strongly toward complete confession, forgiveness, and restitution.
Geography
Topography
Rustenburg is at the foot of the Magaliesberg Range in South Africa, positioned on the Highveld Plateau, at an elevation of 1,217 meters above sea level with a minimum of 1,028 m and a maximum of 1,756 m. The terrain includes a mix of urban, mining and natural areas such as the Magaliesberg Biosphere Reserve.Rustenburg has a drainage flowing in a northward direction. it includes 3 rivers and other water bodies.
- Hex River serves as an arterial drainage for Rustenburg, it flows northward and the catchment covers the area, water in Hex river is conveyed to Bospoort Dam which supplies water to the platinum mines and residential and commercial areas in the central region of Rustenburg.
- Elands River flows into the Crocodile River making it a larger catchment system.
Nature reserves
Key attractions in this area include the nature reserves around Rustenburg. This includes:- Kgaswane Nature Reserve is situated above the town of Rustenburg, In Waterfall Park, Cashan across a varied habitat of quartzite mountain peaks, it is open to hikers as well as vehicle visitors. It is a 4,257 ha reserve.
- Madikwe Game Reserve and Groot Marico Park are large reserves north of the Pilanesberg, almost half the size of Belgium. They are conservation and transition zone between the Kalahari sandveld and the thornveld. Madikwe hosts all the major plains species, including the Big Five and has the second largest concentration of elephants in South Africa.
- Pilanesberg National Park is one of the most accessible South African game reserves. It is located a 1.5-hour drive from Johannesburg and Pretoria, outside Rustenburg. It is the fourth largest National Park in South Africa and is set in the Pilanesberg range, traversing the floor of a long-extinct volcano. Pilanesberg conserves all the major mammal species including lion, leopard, elephant, rhino and buffalo.
Climate
Demographics
In accordance to the 2011 South African National Census, the population of Rustenburg is According to the 2022 South African National Census, the population of Rustenburg is 562 031, making it the fastest growing city in North West. From the 2001 census, The people live in 322 355 formal households, of which 72,8% have a flush or chemical toilet, and 76,4% have refuse removed by the municipality at least once a week. 91,1% of households have access to running water, and 94,5% use electricity as the main source of energy. 13,3% of Rustenburg residents stay in informal dwellings. 99% of households are headed by one person.Blacks account for 94% of the population, followed by whites at 4,9%, coloureds at 0,8% and Asians at 0,1%. 96% of the population is under the age of 65, while 4% of the population is over 65 years of age. 26.4% of city residents are unemployed. 34.7% of the unemployed are youths. 72,5% of people are working. 8% of economically active adults work in wholesale and retail sectors, 9% in financial and only 50% work in mining.
| Gender | Population | % |
| Female | 247,779 | 45.09 |
| Male | 301,796 | 54.91 |
| Race | Population | % |
| Black | 486,411 | 52.8 |
| White | 222,028 | 40.4 |
| Coloured | 4,862 | 1 |
| Asian | 4,215 | 1 |
| First language | Population | % |
| IsiZulu | 15,000 | 3 |
| IsiXhosa | 51,000 | 10 |
| Afrikaans | 53,000 | 10 |
| Setswana | 296,000 | 54 |
| English | 29,000 | 5 |
| Other |