Bloed en Sweet soos vertel deur Manie Maritz.

  • R300.00
    Unit price per 
Shipping calculated at checkout.


Signed by Manie Maritz on the title page.

Bloed en Sweet soos vertel deur Manie Maritz. (Afrikaans)

Hardcover
Publisher: Promedia, Pretoria

Condition: Very Good. The original boards without a DJ and pictorial laminated boards are a little shelf rubbed and page edges are slightly age toned.

Soos vertel deur Manie Maritz met heelwat swart en wit fotos deur sy lewe.

Manie Maritz was a true Legend. He was an undeniable pioneer in the history of Brahman breeding in S.A. His passion for Brahman cattle, the complete breed was renowned.
His wrestling accomplishments already started at school and in 1946 he became the Amateur Heavyweight Champion for Western Province. In 1947 he became a professional wrestler and left for England, where he participated in 61 tournaments of which he won 51 and tied 10. In 1953 he won the Commonwealth Junior Heavyweight Championship.
 

Description
Boek in uitstekende toestand - Manie Maritz se handtekening op titelblad

Manie Maritz was born as Manie Gerrit Maritz. He is an actor, known for Broer Matie(1984) and The Boer War (1999) - Former champion Springbok wrestler - Political colleague of Eugene Terre'blanche (1941-2010), leader of Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging (AWB) a right-wing Afrikaner nationalist political organization - Active in the Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging (AWB), a right-wing, white-supremacist and white-separatist political party in South Africa - Son of South African (Boer) General Salmon Gerhardus ''Manie'' Maritz who served against the British Army in the Boer Wars (1899-1902)

"Kathy Berman (Joernalis) skryf  Maritz was fascinating. He strongly adhered to his commitment to the Jewish nation with whom he adhered that he held kindred beliefs. He believed that black people were born from the mud, and were akin to apes: Boere from the ribs of Adam, like the Jews. And this paternalistic world-view allowed him to be compassionate to his workers, who, like his prized animals, he fed and housed and tendered. Maritz was a man of pride: In nationhood and action. In that, he was a fierce critic of Terreblanche,who, he believed, had rendered his people to laughing-stock status. I never kept touch with him. I wonder what he would say about South Africa today."


We Also Recommend

Shipping Address

Shipping Address

X