Afrikaans Language Day invites greater university community to celebrate the language
 
On 14  August 2015, the Vuur en Vlam Committee hosted an event which provided the university  community the opportunity to celebrate Afrikaans Language Day. The occasion celebrated  the establishment of the language in South Africa. With the unexpected arrival  of the Dutch in 1652, the language transition proved a struggle for the indigenous  peoples domiciled on African soil. 
The committee’s  primary objective was to change existing cultural connotations associated with  the Afrikaans language.  The use of  diversity can help undermine the African stereotype held about the Afrikaans  language, and thus bring about a mindset shift. It is important to remember that  not all Afrikaans speakers are white, and emphasis is rarely directed to the  diversity of Afrikaans speakers. 
Approaching  the celebration, a sensitive discussion around the Afrikaans language was hosted,  in which various panel members discussed the state and current outlook of the  language. Prof André Keet, Director of the Institute for Reconciliation and  Social Justice, who was part of the panel said, “No language gets to be misused  to maintain the privilege of the past.” Director of the Free State Arts  Festival, Ricardo Peach, shared the notion that “We must build on what we have,  and not break it down,” while he describes himself as a “polluted language  boer”. While there is a strongly-expressed hatred for the Afrikaans language, Peach  maintained further that there is much work to be done in order to “Break down  the link between the language and the Holocaust which took place in the homes  of Afrikaans people.”
Lindiwe  Kumalo, chairperson of the Vuur en Vlam Committee, said: “We are creating an awareness  around campus that Afrikaans is not dead. Once you know the language, you can  interact with other people, and there is no longer that language barrier.”  Amongst other things, the event encouraged dialogue by creating fun and  interactive activities which exposed visitors to the language.
The  Vuur en Vlam Committee is committed to creating an awareness of, and vibrancy  around, the Afrikaans language, and to engaging the broader university  community.