INTRODUCTION
Our heritage celebrates our achievements and contributes to redressing past inequities. It educates,
it deepens our understanding of society and encourages us to empathise with the experience of
others. It facilitates healing and material and symbolic restitution and it promotes new and
previously neglected research into our rich oral traditions and customs.
This quotation from the new National Heritage Resources Act (NHRA) encapsulates the spirit of the
South African Heritage Resources Agency, SAHRA, which has replaced the National Monuments
Council (NMC). One of the most important elements of the new legislation is the opportunity it will
provide for communities to participate in the identification, conservation and management of our
cultural resources.
SAHRA is a statutory organisation established under the National Heritage Resources Act, No 25 of
1999, as the national administrative body responsible for the protection of South Africa’s cultural
heritage.
The new Act follows the principle that heritage resources should be managed by the levels of
government closest to the community. These local and provincial authorities will manage heritage
resources as part of their planning process.
In order to develop the skills and capacities of communities, heritage resource agencies will hold
training sessions to promote public involvement in the identification of heritage resources, with the
recording of living heritage associated with heritage and oral history a crucial element, because
much of the past is undocumented.
We present this information about SAHRA in order to create an awareness among the people of our
country of their right to conserve what they consider to be valuable heritage resources, the
mechanisms for doing this, and to recognise the exciting new possibilities that the new Act creates
for them.
The object of SAHRA is to coordinate the identification and management of the national estate. The
aims are to introduce an integrated system for the identification, assessment and management of
the heritage resources and to enable provincial and local authorities to adopt powers to protect and
manage them.
A South African Heritage Resources Survey (SAHRS) will be established to coordinate a national
strategy for the identification of heritage resources.
Issues relating to heritage resources and their value will be increasingly introduced into school
curricula, with universities and technikons encouraged to increase heritage management
programmes.
The national estate encompasses heritage resources of cultural significance for the present
community and for future generations. It may include places to which oral traditions are attached or
which are associated with living heritage; historical settlements; landscapes and natural features of
cultural significance; archaeological and palaeontological sites; graves and burial grounds, including
ancestral and royal graves and graves of traditional leaders; graves of victims of conflict; and sites
relating to the history of slavery in South Africa.
The national estate includes movable objects such as those recovered from the soil or waters of
South Africa; objects associated with living heritage; ethnographic and decorative art; objects of
scientific interest; and books, documents, photographs, film material or sound recordings.
A place or object is considered part of the national estate if it has cultural significance because of its
importance in the community, or pattern of South Africa's history, its possession of rare aspects of
South Africa's natural or cultural heritage, its strong or special association with a particular cultural
group for social, cultural or spiritual reasons.
TYPES OF PROTECTION
The well-known �national monument� has disappeared and other formal categories of protection
under the old National Monuments Council (NMC) have been modified. A new category of
�national heritage site� exists for sites of outstanding national importance.
In terms of general protections, the scope of the NHRA is wider with more safeguards against
arbitrary decision-making. The linking of aspects of the national estate to the two main
environmental impact assessment systems operating in the country makes the conservation system
friendlier to development. This does not mean that developers may now disturb heritage resources,
but that they are able to identify and deal with areas of risk more efficiently.
The system creates a situation whereby heritage resources authorities no longer operate in a
vacuum, but from a position where it is informed by the feelings of a community regarding their
heritage resources.
FORMAL PROTECTIONS UNDER THE NEW ACT
SAHRA and members of the public must identify places with qualities so exceptional that they are of
special national significance to be declared national heritage sites. These will be marked with a new
badge, which is being designed with the participation of schools.
Provincial heritage resources authorities must identify places, which make them significant in the
context of the province, to be declared provincial heritage sites.
Heritage Registers�
At the time of the compilation or revision of a town or regional planning scheme or a spatial
development plan, a planning authority must compile an inventory of the heritage resources. As an
interim measure, a permit will be required to alter or demolish any structure older than 60 years
until the survey has been carried out.
Heritage Areas
A planning authority must, at the time of revision of a town or regional planning scheme, or the
compilation or revision of a spatial plan, investigate the designation of heritage areas to protect
places of environmental or cultural interest.
Specific moveable objects or collections may be formally declared as heritage objects if SAHRA
considers it necessary to control their export. It does not restrict their sale or their ownership. A
provisional list of objects has been gazetted and includes antiquities that have been in South Africa
for more than 100 years; items of importance in South African history or to significant people;
paintings and items of artistic interest that have been in the country for over 50 years.
Archaeological and palaeontological material and meteorites are exceptions, as they may not be
owned, bought or sold. SAHRA will register dealers in heritage objects and regulate trade in heritage
objects.
GENERAL PROTECTIONS
In areas where there has not yet been a systematic survey to identify conservation-worthy places, a
permit is required to alter or demolish any structure older than 60 years. This will apply until a
survey has been done and identified heritage resources are formally protected.
Archaeological and palaeontological sites and materials and meteorites are the source of our
understanding of the evolution of the earth, life on earth and the history of people. In the new
legislation permits are required to damage, destroy, alter or disturb them. People who already
possess material are required to register it. The management of heritage resources are integrated
with environmental resources and this means that before developments take place heritage
resources are assessed and, if necessary, rescued.
Wrecks in South Africa’s maritime cultural zone are a national competence and therefore protected
by SAHRA.
Burial grounds and graves
In addition to the formal protection of culturally significant graves, all graves which are older than 60
years and not in a cemetery (such as ancestral graves in rural areas) are protected. The legislation
protects the interests of communities which have an interest in the graves: they must be consulted
before any disturbance can take place.
The graves of victims of conflict and those associated with the liberation struggle will be identified,
cared for, protected and memorials erected in their honour.
Heritage resources management
Anyone who intends to undertake a development must notify the heritage resources authority and if
there is reason to believe that heritage resources will be affected, an impact assessment report must
be compiled at the developer�s cost. Thus developers will be able to proceed without uncertainty
about whether work will have to be stopped if a heritage resource is discovered.
MANAGEMENT TOOLS
The incentives provided to those interested in the conservation of the national estate are more
flexible.
Fines for unlawful destruction or other damage to heritage resources are more extensive, and other
disincentives include community service, reconstruction of a heritage resource, or payment
equivalent to the costs of disturbing or damaging a heritage resource and the forfeiture of
equipment being used when committing the offence.
National heritage resources assistance programme - SAHRA will provide financial assistance in the
form of a grant or a loan to community organisations or individuals for any project which will
promote heritage resource conservation.