Malay Camp, Kimberley

The Malay Camp in Kimberley, South Africa, was a cosmopolitan suburb which was subject to forced removals prior to the Group Areas Act.

History
Malay Camp had a history similar to Cape Town's District Six, Johannesburg's Sophiatown and Port Elizabeth's South End. It was a cosmopolitan suburb originating in the early days of Kimberley's existence but subject to forced slum clearance after the owner of the land (De Beers Consolidated Mines Ltd) donated the area to the Kimberley Municipality in 1939. Most of the houses, churches, mosques, shops and other buildings were demolished, making way for Kimberley's Civic Centre. This occurred from the 1940s, prior to the better known Apartheid forced removals consequent on the Group Areas Act, making Kimberley's Malay Camp clearance unique.

Prominent residents
Solomon T. Plaatje, noted author, journalist and first General Secretary of the African Native National Congress, was a resident of Malay Camp. His later dwelling at 32 Angel Street is preserved as the Sol Plaatje Museum.

Malay Camp History Projects

 * Moosa Aysen's booklets on Islam on the Diamond Fields.
 * Historical Society of Kimberley and the Northern Cape, 1998 - to collect social and living history.
 * McGregor Museum Malay Camp Exhibition, 2002
 * Louis Mallett Malay Camp Social History Project, 2003
 * Liz Crossley Project The Past is not Dead, 2004
 * Permanent display at the McGregor Museum, 2006,