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The Ossewabrandwag "Oxwagon Sentinel"

Discussion in 'North Africa: Western Desert Campaigns 1940 to Ope' started by Kaboom, Nov 17, 2009.

  1. Kaboom

    Kaboom Member

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    HI there,

    I will update this thread with more info regarding this as I go along, but for the moment this little snippet is the best description of the OB and what they did during WWII.

    I am still trying to track down some more information regarding my grandfather but he served the OB on it's military wing side, the Storm Chasers. He was detained in prison for a while as well but I do not have any information at all as to how long or where he was held, I will however try and get more info and I will be sure to update this thread with the relevant information when I obtain it.

    These men did acts of sabotage, ranging from kidnapping women, blowing up rail way lines, cutting power lines, assassinations etc...

    In short, these were South-African men sabotaging the South-African army to prevent them from participating in any WWII actions. They were "PRO" Nazi basically, and their leader Robey Leibbrandt was even sent to Germany to undergo sabotage training etc....

    Here is the short snippet:

    The Ossewabrandwag ("Oxwagon Sentinel") (OB) was a nationalist Afrikaner organisation in South Africa, founded in Bloemfontein on February 4, 1939. It opposed South African entry into World War II on the British side, because of South Africa's fight for independence from British rule (Second Boer War) and created a paramilitary group called Stormjaers ('storm chasers'), modelled on the Nazi SA ("Storm division"), which carried out sabotage against Jan Smuts's government.[1] The militaristic stance of the OB was clear from the oath that cadets had to take before they became fully fledged storm troopers: 'If I retreat, kill me. If I die, avenge me. If I advance, follow me.'
    Many members of the OB were incarcerated during World War II after committing acts of sabotage in protest against South Africa's alignment with Britain and in support of Adolf Hitler and the Nazis. John Vorster, who would become Prime Minister of South Africa after Hendrik Verwoerd's death, was detained at Koffiefontein for the duration of the war.
    After the war the Ossewabrandwag went underground. There is nothing on the public record to indicate that it was ever formally disbanded but at some time before 1960 it simply ceased to exist as a coherent organisation. However, many of its erstwhile members, including future South African State President P.W. Botha, went on to rise in the ranks of the Apartheid government.


    Source - Ossewabrandwag - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Regards
     

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