Poging GOUD - Vrij
Tragic chapter in Cape Town's history that reshaped politics
The Mercury
|November 13, 2025
Murders that laid bare the cruelty of the apartheid regime
FEW people might know this, but Cape Town has her own 9/11 tragedy.
On September 11, 2025, 40 years had passed since one of the heartbreaking events of the turbulent eighties in the Mother City.
We ironically commemorated it in the same year we celebrated 100 years of the official status of Afrikaans (the unofficial version was spoken at the Cape as a "market" tongue as early as 1595 through interactions between Dutch sailors and the indigenous Khoi people).
On this day, three Afrikaans-speaking Cape Town guys from the coloured community tragically lost their lives during the widespread unrest of this era.
The incident changed my political views as a white Afrikaans-speaking person to the extent that I joined a UDF march in the City two weeks later, where I also had to run from police batons and water cannons.
The story, as I experienced it through the Cape Argus and Cape Times, as well as through the eyes of some of my patients at Woodstock Hospital, unfolded like this.
Ebrahim Carelse, a clerk at a firm of attorneys in Cape Town, had been killed by the police earlier that week after visiting a friend in Salt River.
Involvement in the throwing of petrol bombs was mentioned as the reason, but many people felt he was mistaken for the wrong person. Either way, he was shot in the back of his head whilst running from the police and subsequently died of his injuries.
Ebrahim Carelse's funeral took place on September 11, 1985, with more than 5 000 mourners in the procession from Burns Road, Salt River, to the Muslim cemetery in Observatory. The crowd was obviously emotional and carried Ebrahim's coffin on their shoulders, swinging protest banners.
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