Abstract:
Customary law has undeniably experienced a tumultuous journey within the South African
legal landscape. Its historical trajectory includes a dark chapter marked by legislative injustice,
exemplified by the enactment of the Black Administration Act 38 of 1927. However, there has
also been a glimmer of hope on this path, symbolised by the insignificant acknowledgment
and acceptance of customary law in the Law of Evidence Amendment Act 45 of 1988. Every
endeavour was made to belittle customary law, pervert it and erode it of its true fabric as an
amalgamation of customs, religion and the lived realities of the indigenous people. The
conscious failure by the morally reprehensible colonialists and the segregationalist Apartheid
state to appreciate the correct paradigm of customary law has resulted in an intentioned nonlaw that has been rather prolific in both literature and jurisprudence.
It is the view of this study that it has long been overdue to cleanse customary law off the
stains of bad faith draftsmanship and rid it off the perversion caused to it by its colonial past.
To achieve this, the study is intentional about de-linking customary law from the other system
in order to properly understand, define, establish, advance and promote traditional justice. In
doing this, the study proceeded from the premise that customary law, as a system, is an
inseparable matrix of customs, religion and the lived realities of the people living according to
that system. This lived reality as innate in the system itself necessitated the type of
methodology adopted for study and encouraged extra care in dealing with the pervasion
achieved through official documents on this system.
Ethnography was intentionally opted for as the correct methodology because its definition and
scope is based on magnifying the reality of the subject studied. This view corresponds directly
with the need to ground indigenous reality in traditional dispute resolution. As a methodology
that embraces pluralism, it allows for adaptation to the methods as the study develops. This
study invites researchers to undertake customary law inquiry within the correct location that
enhances Natives’ cultural capital. At the end, this study aims to contribute meaningfully to
transformative action by properly aligning the customary law paradigm to the realities of the
people as envisioned in the definition of customary law. The theoretical and conceptual framework of study accepts that the knowledge paradigm in
general and legal training in particular was not constructed for the benefit of Natives. As a
result of the foreign ideology of knowledge, customary law was penetrated and perverted
through the lenses of a law foreign to it. This meant that a foreign reality was endorsed in the
shared South African worldview and education is the vehicle through which reality of Natives
vii
was perverted or oppressed. Notwithstanding this, it is contended in this study that the
Constitution in the Republic of South Africa validates this colonial conquest by failing to
expressly locate the cultural capital of Natives in its text. This need for promotion of indigenous
reality through constitutional text is based on colonial and apartheid bad faith in the erosion
of Native worldview. Foreign language(s), as a cultural artefact, in particular English, was
given a privileged position in South Africa through legislation. This privileging, it is argued,
was not nor does it fully embrace the epistemological edges of customary law. To properly
locate these edges, the study invites us to engage in new pursuits of traditional epistemology.
For current purporses, this pursuit entails the adoption of community cultural wealth as the
lenses through which traditional justice must be considered. Within this lense, the study
denotes that Natives have legal capital that has always and continue to enable them to resolve
legal issues in their communities. Properly understood, however, it is argued in this study that
traditional courts are a socially embedded fora that is both fluid, flexible and comprehensive.