Showing posts with label shebeen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shebeen. Show all posts

Wednesday, 29 November 2023

Namibia & South Africa: What is Shebeen?

A shebeen (Irish: síbín, "home-made whiskey") was originally an illicit bar or club where accessible alcoholic beverages were sold without a license. The term has spread far from its origins in Ireland, to Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, Zimbabwe, the English-speaking Caribbean, Namibia, Malawi and South Africa. In modern South Africa, many shebeens are now fully legal.

Originally shebeens were operated illegally by women who were called Shebeen Queens and were themselves a revival of the African tradition that assigned the role of alcohol brewing to women. The Shebeen Queens would sell homebrewed and home-distilled alcohol and provided patrons with a place to meet and discuss political and social issues. Often, patrons and owners were arrested by the police, though the shebeens were frequently reopened because of their importance in unifying the community and providing a safe place for discussion.

During the apartheid era, shebeens became a crucial meeting place for activists, some attracting working-class activists and community members, while others attracted lawyers, doctors and musicians.

Shebeens also provided music and dancing, allowing patrons to express themselves culturally, which helped give rise and support the musical genre kwaito. Currently, shebeens are legal in South Africa and have become an integral part of South African urban culture, serving commercial beers as well as umqombothi, a traditional African beer made from maize and sorghum. Shebeens still form an important part of today's social scene. In contemporary South Africa, they serve a function similar to juke joints for African Americans in the rural Deep South of the USA. They represent a sense of community, identity, and belonging.

Today, most alcoholic beverages' target market is the affluent black African class (particularly male), whose persona is perceived to be educated, tied to the high end job market and a step up in the social ladder. As well as appealing to South Africa's youth, most shebeens are owned by black men. Shebeens are bouncing back as South Africans try to aspire to better economic conditions in order to preserve some of their cultural and economic affairs.

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Thursday, 1 October 2020

Namibia: history of beer industry | История пива в Намибии

History of Beer in Namibia

Young women carry pots of traditional beer in northern Namibia around 1930. Photo: Basler Afrika Bibliographien

Namibians love their beer – whether you find yourself at one of the busy bars in Windhoek, a cosy shebeen, or at a festive sundowner, beer is an integral part of daily life. It should be no surprise that Namibia Breweries Limited is one of the largest and best-known private companies in the 'Land of the Brave', and its fame transcends national borders. Namibian beer is enjoyed in almost 20 countries across the globe and is therefore an important symbol of Namibia itself. But what do we know about its history?

Hidden behind your favourite bottle of lager reside many fascinating and sometimes problematic stories. Did you know, for instance, that for decades the indigenous population was not legally permitted to drink beer because of colonial politics? This situation only changed in 1969. During the past century, Namibian beer has made a remarkable transformation from an icon of apartheid to a symbol of an independent nation.

2020 is a special year for the Namibian beer industry when Namibia Breweries celebrates its centennial birthday this year. The earliest written record that reflects the consumption of beer in Namibia dates from 1779, when a European explorer encountered a San family sitting around a pot of beer. 

But Namibians have surely been brewing beer and other alcoholic beverages before this date, probably since time immemorial. While searching through the archives of Namibia a several old recipes for beer was found, such as sugar beer and honey beer. The recipes showcase the inventiveness of humans as they contain all sorts of ingredients: potatoes, the crushed bark of the omuama tree, peas, maize meal and many more. Today, a vibrant culture of home brewing continues to exist.

SETTLER WAYS

When German South West Africa was formally established in 1884, a growing number of Germans and other European settlers found their way to the south-western coast of Africa.

Drinking beer was clearly their main leisure activity, as in the early days of the German Protectorate, one third of all business licenses were concerned with alcohol. In Windhoek alone there was one bar for every 41 settlers. At first the German settlers imported their beer from Germany. This was, however, an expensive and inefficient business. So, fairly quickly after German rule was established, industrial breweries popped up across the protectorate.

The very first brewery was most probably the Swakopmunder Brauerei, established in early 1900. Soon other towns followed with their own. In 1914, South African soldiers invaded German South West Africa as part of the First World War.

This military event caused an economic depression and the departure of many Germans, which resulted in difficult circumstances for the various small breweries in the protectorate. Most did not survive. In 1920, two young German bankers, Hermann Ohlthaver and Carl List, bought four of the largest breweries and merged them into one company: South West Breweries. The main brewery was located on Tal Street in Windhoek, in the building that currently houses Craft Market. Many decades later, South West Breweries changed its name to Namibia Breweries. 

BEER HALLS

Governments always have a special interest in beer. Not only because of the tax revenue that often makes up a significant part of state budgets, but also for political reasons: Almost everyone drinks beer. The South African apartheid state decided to use alcohol as a political instrument and legislated a prohibition of indigenous people drinking. The liquor law was difficult to maintain, as many people turned to home brewing. 

The government responded aggressively. In the 1950s in Windhoek, liquor accounted for nearly 60% of all criminal cases of the black population, and nearly 90% of all the fines! The authorities also conducted raids to demolish home-brewing installations.

As a way of compensation, beer halls were established in every township throughout the country. In a beer hall, the indigenous population was allowed to drink a watered-down version of beer, and the revenues of these establishments were used to fund the state. In 1969 the racist liquor law was repealed, and beer became available for everyone. The large number of shebeens and other drinking establishments throughout Namibia is testament to this.

TRANSFORMATION

A number of factors contributed to the transformation of South West Breweries into the company it is today. Surprisingly, the civil war in Angola is among them. 

Many merchants in the northern part of Namibia used to be dependent on the smuggling of Cuca beer from Angola. When the civil war erupted, the smuggling suddenly stopped, and this was the opportunity for South West Breweries to sell its beer instead, both to indigenous Namibians and white soldiers stationed there. From then onwards, production boomed. 

Another factor was the introduction of the 1516 German Purity Law (Reinheitsgebot) in the 1980s, which strictly regulated ingredients and allowed the brewery to market its beer as a premium product. But the most important was the Namibian Independence in 1990. Namibia Breweries became one of the crown jewels of the newly independent country.

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