阿爾伯特·赫爾佐格
约翰尼斯·艾伯特·蒙尼克·赫尔佐格(南非語讀音:[ˈalbərt ˈɦærtsɔχ]);1899年7月4日生于布隆方丹,1982年11月5日死于比勒陀利亚;布尔人政治家、内阁部长和改组国民党党的创始人与党魁。他也是前任南非总理巴里·赫爾佐格之子。
法学博士 艾伯特·赫爾佐格 | |
---|---|
改组国民党党魁 | |
任期 1969年10月25日—1977年5月28日 | |
前任 | 职位创立 |
继任 | Jaap Marais |
卫生部长 | |
任期 1954年8月24日—1958年8月24日 | |
总督 | Ernest George Jansen |
总理 | Hendrik Verwoerd |
前任 | Michiel Daniel Christiaan de Wet Nel |
继任 | Carel de Wet |
通信、电信和邮政服务部长 | |
任期 1958年8月24日—1968年2月7日 | |
总统 | Charles Robberts Swart Tom Naudé (acting) |
总督 | Charles Robberts Swart |
总理 | Hendrik Verwoerd B.J. Vorster |
前任 | Serfontein, J. |
继任 | Janse van Rensburg, M.C.C. |
个人资料 | |
出生 | 1899年7月4日 奧蘭治自由邦布隆方丹 |
逝世 | 1982年11月5日 南非德蘭士瓦省普利托利亞 | (83歲)
政党 | 国民党(直至1969年) 改组国民党(1969年-1978年) |
配偶 | Katie (née Whitely)† Martie Viljoen(née Duvenage) |
居住地 | 南非德蘭士瓦省普利托利亞 |
母校 | 斯泰倫博斯大學 文学学士(优等生) 阿姆斯特丹大学 牛津大學 法学士 萊頓大學 法學博士 |
专业 | 大律师 内阁部长 政治家 |
1954年至1958年,艾伯特·赫尔佐格任卫生部长,1958年至1968年任邮政和电信部长。任电信部长期间,赫尔佐格因拒绝将电视引入南非而闻名。
1969年,在他因其反动和排他的布尔民族主义观点而被驱逐出国民党后,赫尔佐格另立改组国民党。改组国民党反对亨德里克·弗倫施·維沃爾德的继任者巴爾薩澤·約翰內斯·沃斯特的领导下的国民党偏离其创始准则之举。
生平
艾伯特·赫尔佐格为著名布尔将军、后来的南非总理巴里·赫尔佐格和他的妻子米妮(生于尼特林)之子,1899年7月4日艾伯特出生在他父母位于布隆方丹戈达德街19号的家中。他于1899年8月31日在Moederkerk接受洗礼。[1]艾伯特有两个弟弟,Charles Dirk Neethling(生于1904年)和James Barry Munnik(生于1905年)。[2]
Hertzog was only three months old when the Second Boer War broke out. Initially he stayed with his mother at their home in Bloemfontein, but after four months moved in with her sister in the hamlet of Jagersfontein.[3] After the town was taken by British troops, and their house blown up by dynamite, the family was hoarded onto cattle trucks and taken to the concentration camp at Port Elizabeth. The Hertzog inmates in the camp included baby Albert, his mother Mynie, his paternal grandmother and a number of Albert's aunts and cousins. They lived in a thin shack of eight square meters.[4] Albert's seven-year-old cousin, Charles, died of measles only twelve days after arrival. Albert himself nearly succumbed to the disease, and was sent to relatives in Stellenbosch for care and treatment. He stayed in Stellenbosch in the house of his paternal grandfather, Charl Neethling, until the end of the war.[5] Mynie Neethling was visited by Lord Kitchener personally in the Port Elizabeth camp, where he offered her dismissal should she try and persuade her husband to lay down his arms. She refused, and was subsequently sent via ship to the Merebank camp at Durban.[6] Merebank was notorious as one of the camps with the highest fatality rates. After her internment, Mynie Hertzog was prone to illness for the rest of her life.
As toddler, Albert attended an English Catholic pre-primary school, where he heard and learnt his first English. That move seemed baffling to some, because the Calvinist and Boer patriot General Hertzog was a staunch proponent of Afrikaans language rights, especially in education.[7] In 1910, after the birth of the Union of South Africa, General Hertzog was appointed in a dual portfolio as Minister of Justice and Minister of Native Affairs. The family therefore moved to Pretoria, and occupied a house west of the Union Buildings. His father sent Albert to the Arcadia Skool, but Albert was disappointed that it had a headmistress and, though in the city, was no different to a farm school. Although only eleven years old, he left on the afternoon of his first day, and enrolled at Pretoria Boys High School.[8] After the schism between General Hertzog and Prime Minister Louis Botha, which led to Hertzog's dismissal from the cabinet, the family moved back to Bloemfontein, where Albert attended Grey College. He matriculated in 1916, having studied Dutch, English, Latin, Mathematics, and Physical Science.[9]
政治生涯
早年
1929年赫尔佐格回到南非后,定居比勒陀利亚,在那里他任大律师工作。同时,他也是比勒陀利亚大学的兼职讲师。
任议员(1948年-1958年)
1948年的选举国民党胜选后,由丹尼尔·马兰博士领导的国民党上台执政,赫尔佐格当选为东德兰士瓦省埃尔梅洛的议员。他在丹尼尔·马兰和約翰內斯·格哈杜斯·斯揣敦总理的任期内担任众议院议员。
内阁部长(1958年-1968年)
当亨德里克·維沃爾德博士于1958年当选总理后,赫尔佐格被任命为内阁部长,负责邮政和电信以及卫生的工作;1958年10月23日,就职。
国民党内部斗争
The terms verlig ("enlightened") and verkramp ("cramped") entered the Afrikaans (and later English) vernacular during the late 1960s. They were first used in a speech by prof. Willem de Klerk (son of Jan de Klerk and brother of future State President of South Africa, F.W. de Klerk) on 6 October 1966, exactly a month after the assassination of Dr. Hendrik Verwoerd.[10] In his speech, De Klerk distinguished between verligte, verkrampte, and positiewe ("positive") Afrikaners. That threefold division would soon be simplified in the colloquial language to a simpler dichotomy between simply verlig and verkramp. What De Klerk called "positive Afrikaners" would then refer to what generally became known as verligte Afrikaners.[11] He described positive Afrikaners (verligtes, thus) as "purpose conscious Afrikaners". "And purpose means to recognize the enduring and the changing. The closedness and the openness. The tradition and the progression... The purpose conscious Afrikaner recognizes and appreciates the tradition, and yet he is the man of today and with a vision on tomorrow, until eternity. The Afrikaner heritage is the Afrikaner-Christendom with the Calvinistic bedrock which recognizes the authority of the Bible as revelation and guide. But also he is open to further study of Scripture and he seeks the new roads to expand his religious heritage. At the same time the Afrikaner culture is young and virile, and is still busy to form itself on many levels, without having to cut ties with the past. The Book teaches clearly that exaggerated nationalism (idolatry of the People) as well as cosmopolitism contrast with the stipulations of God. Just as ungodly is the nationalized religion, which is the same as idolatry of the People."[12]
De Klerk labeled the verkrampte Afrikaner as follows: "His fundamental axiom is: adherence to the extant, to the old ideas and customs and content is the test for being Afrikaner. He wants to lead us to rigidity; wants to exclude us from a new world; is a negativist. Also, he is ruled by the need to criticize. He is creative in his ability to sow distrust; hardened in the handling of one-sided slogans to generate witch hunts everywhere; accomplished in the technique of quibbling. He is without consideration and mercy, unwilling to converse, fanatic and extremist to enforce his opinion on a matter. He wants to forcefully push our youth into one-sidedness; haughty, stubborn self-preservation."[13]
The verlig-verkramp-strife came to the fore after the assassination of Hendrik Verwoerd. Differences that had existed for a number of years began to manifest publicly, especially in the early days of new premier John Vorster's term.[14]
改组国民党党魁(1969年-1977年)
选举年 | # 占总票数的 | % 总得票率 | # 赢得的议席 | 排名 |
---|---|---|---|---|
1970年[15] | 53 763 ▲ | 3.57% ▲ | 0 ━ | 3/4 ▲ |
1974年[16] | 39 568▼ | 3.6% ▲ | 0 ━ | 4/5 ▼ |
退休
赫尔佐格决定在1977年退休,并在同年5月27日发表了他的告别演讲。1977年5月28日,他正式退休,并由Jaap Marais接任改组国民党党魁。退休后,赫尔佐格可以将更多精力投入到他的商业经营与他的园艺等爱好中。
In a press interview in 1979 he opined as follows: "In my view our political landscape is developing in the direction of a large, new conservative party which will consist of different people who are still currently trying to tread their own path. It can be a party consisting of the Treurnicht people in the NP, the Connie Mulder people, the HNP and definitely also conservative English speakers".[17] This proved to be prophetic, as in 1982 a massive split occurred within the ruling National Party, and the Conservative Party came into being, with Andries Treurnicht as leader.
死亡、葬礼和遗产
Hertzog died on 5 November 1982 during an emergency operation for a burst aorta.[18] His funeral was held on 11 November 1982, in the NG Kerk in Waterkloof, and the service led by prof. Adriaan Pont. He was then laid to rest in the family cemetery on the farm Waterval, in the district of Witbank, next to his wife Katie, and close to his parents.[19]
私生活
出版著作
参考资料
- ^ Pretorius, Estelle. Dr. Albert Hertzog: 'n lewensbeskrywing. Pretoria: Bienedell Uitgewers. 2001: 11. ISBN 0-9584118-5-9.
- ^ Heese, J.A. Lombard, R.T.J. , 编. Suid-Afrikaanse Geslagsregisters, Volume 3: H-I. Stellenbosch: Genealogiese Instituut van Suid-Afrika. 2001: 527. ISBN 0-7969-1425-7.
- ^ Pretorius, Estelle. Dr. Albert Hertzog: 'n lewensbeskrywing. Pretoria: Bienedell Uitgewers. 2001: 11. ISBN 0-9584118-5-9.
- ^ Pretorius, Estelle. Dr. Albert Hertzog: 'n lewensbeskrywing. Pretoria: Bienedell Uitgewers. 2001: 12–13. ISBN 0-9584118-5-9.
- ^ Pretorius, Estelle. Dr. Albert Hertzog: 'n lewensbeskrywing. Pretoria: Bienedell Uitgewers. 2001: 13. ISBN 0-9584118-5-9.
- ^ Pretorius, Estelle. Dr. Albert Hertzog: 'n lewensbeskrywing. Pretoria: Bienedell Uitgewers. 2001: 13–14. ISBN 0-9584118-5-9.
- ^ Pretorius, Estelle. Dr. Albert Hertzog: 'n lewensbeskrywing. Pretoria: Bienedell Uitgewers. 2001: 18–19. ISBN 0-9584118-5-9.
- ^ Pretorius, Estelle. Dr. Albert Hertzog: 'n lewensbeskrywing. Pretoria: Bienedell Uitgewers. 2001: 23. ISBN 0-9584118-5-9.
- ^ Pretorius, Estelle. Dr. Albert Hertzog: 'n lewensbeskrywing. Pretoria: Bienedell Uitgewers. 2001: 25. ISBN 0-9584118-5-9.
- ^ Serfontein, J.H.P. Die Verkrampte Aanslag. Cape Town & Pretoria: Human & Rousseau. 1970: 15. ISBN 9781868422456.
- ^ Serfontein, J.H.P. Die Verkrampte Aanslag. Cape Town & Pretoria: Human & Rousseau. 1970: 15. ISBN 9781868422456.
- ^ Serfontein, J.H.P. Die Verkrampte Aanslag. Cape Town & Pretoria: Human & Rousseau. 1970: 15–16. ISBN 9781868422456.
- ^ Serfontein, J.H.P. Die Verkrampte Aanslag. Cape Town & Pretoria: Human & Rousseau. 1970: 16. ISBN 9781868422456.
- ^ Wilkins, Ivor; Strydom, Hans. The Super-Afrikaners. Johannesburg & Cape Town: Jonathan Ball. 2012: 182. ISBN 978-1-86842-535-8.
- ^ Bryn Morgan. General Election results, 1 May 1997 (PDF). House of Commons Library: 6. [15 December 2016].
- ^ Bryn Morgan. General Election results, 7 June 2001 (PDF). House of Commons Library: 11. [15 December 2016].
- ^ Snyman, J. Hertzog HNP se geestelike vader. Hoofstad. 8 November 1982.
- ^ Afrikanervolk verloor 'n groot kampvegter. Die Patriot. 12 November 1982.
- ^ Pretorius, Estelle. Dr. Albert Hertzog: 'n lewensbeskrywing. Pretoria: Bienedell Uitgewers. 2001: 151–152. ISBN 0-9584118-5-9.