THE GOLD STOLEN FROM SOUTH AFRICA DURING THE BOER WAR OR
GOLD WAR FINANCED WINSTON CHURCHILL'S COUSIN "KAISER BILL!"

The Boer War or the Gold War was the first war of the bloody 20th century. It pitted the might of the British Empire against a small group of Dutch farmers. Boer is simply the Dutch word for FARMER.

Diamonds were discovered in South Africa in 1867 and gold in 1872. By 1897 South Africa was the world's largest exporter of gold.

The golden rule states that "whoever has the gold; makes the rules." The Boer War was all about the Bank of England gaining a complete monopoly on South African gold. In the 16th century, the brutal Spanish Empire committed a similar genocide to gain a monopoly on New World gold....Only Heroic Holland stood in the way of Spanish global hegemony.

Cecil Rhodes was the Bank of England's liaison in South Africa and his De Beers Mining Company already had a complete monopoly on the diamond output of the Kimberley mine. The stolen gold from South Africa was used by the Bank of England to finance World War I and World War II.

Cecil Rhodes (1853 - 1902)
Cecil Rhodes (1853–1902),
at age 37.
 

Cecil Rhodes was a mighty man and a sinister Jesuit who dominated South Africa for over 30 years.

He was prime minister of the Cape Colony from 1890 to 1896.

Rhodes was a graduate of Oriel College, Oxford.

 
Colossus of Rhodes.
Colossus of Rhodes.

Rhodes attended Oriel College, Oxford, in 1873. Oriel College is 7 times more Papal than the Vatican . . . and has produced some of the most bigoted persecutors of true Christians since the time of Emperor Nero.

Oriel College, Oxford.
Oriel College, Oxford.

Oriel College was founded by bigoted persecutor King Edward II in 1324.

He dedicated the college to the "virgin" Minerva!!

Oxford university was founded to teach the Pope's canon law!!

Rhodes House, Oxford.
Rhodes House, Oxford.

Some infamous graduates include Thomas Arundel, Sir Thomas More, Cardinal Allen, Cardinal Newman etc., etc.

In his last will and testament, Rhodes established a scholarship fund with the stolen South African gold. It is called the Rhodes Scholarship and is open to Commonwealth members, Germans, and U.S. citizens. Rhodes was so committed to making the U.S. a part of the British Empire that he dedicated a large part of the stolen gold to that vital objective.

The Russians–the most intelligent people in the world–are definitely not eligible for Rhodes Scholarships.

Some famous Rhodes "scholars" include ex-President Bill Clinton, ex-Arkansas senator J. William Fulbright, and former NATO head Wesley Clark.

The British mobilized 500,000 men to fight the farmers!

The British mobilized a vast army to fight the Dutch farmers. Lord Kitchener was their most experienced soldier. The British wholly underestimated the Boers and they believed that just the sight of the British Army would make them run.

Lord Milner (1854 - 1925).
Lord Milner
(1854–1925).

Lord Milner was governor of the Cape Colony from 1897 to 1901.

Irish born Lord Kitchener was their most experienced soldier and the brutal architect of the concentration camp system.

Lord Kitchener (1850 - 1916).
Lord Kitchener
(1850–1916).

Men came from as far away as Australia and New Zealand to "serve their Queen" who was too old to even know or care what was happening in her Empire.

Troops of the Australian contingent marching through Melbourne.
Troops of the Australian contingent
marching through Melbourne.
 

All over the Empire the battle cry was "God save the Queen" who was too old to know or even care about the genocide of the Boers that was done in her name.

 
Men of the first Canadian contingent leaving for South Africa.
Men of the first Canadian contingent
leaving for South Africa.

Troop strength finally reached a total of 500,000 men from all parts of the British Empire.

Vast British Army deploying for battle.
Vast British Army deploying for battle.

The British believed that just the sight of the army would scare the Boers.

This was the first example of "shock and awe."

The invading host drawn up in dread array.
The invading host drawn up in dread array.

This vast army used state of the art military technology. One such weapon was the newly invented Maxim machine gun.

British troops laying down a deadly fire with their Maxim machine gun.
British troops laying down a deadly fire on the
farmers with their Maxim machine gun.
 
One of the deadliest weapons in the British arsenal was the newly invented Maxim machine gun.
 
4.7 inch British naval gun shelling the farmers.
4.7 inch British naval gun
shelling the farmers.

Despite the overwhelming numbers and the latest killing technology, the Boers fought heroically against the British invaders.

The farmers fought heroically against the British invaders!!

The Boers were never able to field more that 60,000 men but they fought heroically to defend their homeland.

The brave Boers went toe to toe with the British invaders.
The brave Boers went toe to toe
with the British invaders.

 

The Boers were a citizen militia and very familiar with firearms.

They made the British pay a heavy price for invading their country and stealing their gold.

 
Thousands of dead British invaders were left to rot in trenches.
Thousands of dead British invaders
were left to rot in trenches.

The real heroes of the resistance were the individual Boers who displayed remarkable courage and resourcefulness.

Brave Boer commando prepare to defend their country.
Brave Boer commando prepare
to defend their country.

 

With a Bible in one hand and a rifle in the other, the brave farmers confronted the overwhelming might of the British Empire, and made them pay a heavy price for their gold lust!!

 
Boer father and son prepare to expel the invaders.
Boer father and son prepare
to expel the invaders.

With the cream of the British Army turned into whipped cream, Lord Kitchener resorted to a diabolical scorched earth policy.

The British erected concentration camps for women and children!!

Despite signing the Hague Convention, the British resorted to a scorched earth policy in order to subdue the Boers. Homes were burned to the ground, cattle were slaughtered, and the women and children carted off to concentration camps.

British soldiers looting and burning a Boer farm.
British soldiers looting and
burning a Boer farm.
 

The British army behaved like BEASTS as this was the fruit of Darwinian evolution!!

After looting and burning their homes, Boer women and children were herded off to concentration camps.

 

 

 
Boer women entering a concentration camp.
Boer women entering a
concentration camp.

In the unkindest cut of all, the women were asked to sign a piece of paper pleading with their husbands to surrender. Despite terrible suffering, not one woman relented and signed the paper.

Women and children were forced to live in flimsy tents with snow on the ground.
Women and children were forced to live in
flimsy tents with snow on the ground.
 

South Africa can be very cold in the winter, and the winter of 1901 was unusually cold and rainy.

The women and children were forced to live in flimsy tents.

 
Sanitary facilities were horrendous, leading to death from typhoid and dysentery.
Sanitary facilities were horrendous, leading to
death from typhoid and dysentery.

Boer children died by the thousands from dysentery, typhoid, and malnutrition.

Young girl victim of malnutrition.
Young girl victim of malnutrition.
 

A total of 45 genocide concentration camps were set up with the largest containing 5,000 women and children.

The Holohoax in Germany would later be used as a smokescreen to hide these war crimes!!

 

 
Camp inmate Lizzie Van Zyl dying from malnutrition.
Camp inmate Lizzie Van Zyl
dying from malnutrition.

By 1900, true Christianity was not completely extinct in Britain. In December 1899, an angel of mercy named Emily Hobhouse arrived in South Africa on a mission of mercy.

Emily Hobhouse (1860 - 1926).
Emily Hobhouse
(1860 - 1926).

 

By 1900, true Christianity was not completely extinct in Britain.

Emily Hobhouse was an angel of mercy who tried to bring relief to the starving concentration camp inmates.

 
Emily comforting a young dying girl.
Emily comforting a young dying girl.

After Emily arrived in South Africa, she sought permission from Lord Kitchener to visit the camps. Kitchener rebuked her sternly so she turned to the governor, Lord Milner.

Milner was more cooperative and the first camp she visited was named Bloemfontein. Here is her eyewitness report of conditions in the camp:

My first visit to the camp at Bloemfontein after the lapse of a few weeks was a great shock. The population had doubled, and had swamped the effect of improvements which could not keep pace with the numbers to be accommodated. Sickness was increasing, and the aspect of the people was forlorn in the extreme. Disease and death were stamped upon their faces. Many whom I had left hale and hearty, full in figure and face, had undergone such a change that I could not recognise them. I realised how camp life under these imperfect conditions was telling upon them, and no impartial observer could have failed to see what must ensue, unless nurses, doctors, workers, and above all extra food, clothing, and bedding, could be poured out in abundance and without delay. I sought the Deputy Administrator, and represented to him the death-rate already worked out in the adjoining camp at 20 per cent., and asked if nothing could be done to stop the influx of people. He replied that he believed that all the people in the entire country, with the exception of towns on the line, were to be brought in. His kindness and courtesy often encouraged me to put before him not only the bodily needs of the women, but other troubles or punishments which weighed upon them, which seemed unnecessarily severe, and appeared to be creating sores which even time would not have power to heal. His policy was no doubt dictated from higher sources, his humanity too evidently crippled by lack of means. My fund was but a drop in the ocean of such a need. (Hobhouse, The Brunt of the War and Where it Fell, pp. 122-123).

Emily discovered that a total of 45 concentration camps existed throughout South Africa; most of them with the same appalling conditions as Bloemfontein.

This war was a public relations nightmare for the British, so to deflect criticism of their brutal behavior, they invented a "Jewish" holocaust with "Jewish" concentration camp inmates.

The farmers received no help from any nation!

Apart from a small group of volunteers from the U.S., France, and Holland, no nation offered any military help to the Boers. Boer president Paul Kruger traveled to Europe in 1900 but all he received from the Europeans was sympathy.

Paul Kruger appealed to the German Kaiser for help but the Kaiser could render them no assistance because he had no navy.

Paul Kruger (1825 - 1904).
Paul Kruger
(1825–1904).
 

Paul Kruger was president of the South African Republic from 1883 to 1900.

According to his biographers, Kruger believed that the earth was flat, and he got that belief from reading the Bible!!

Is that no less stupid than believing that the earth rotates on its axis every 24 hours??

 
Paul Kruger's grave in Pretoria,
Paul Kruger's grave in Pretoria,
South Africa.

President Kruger travelled to Europe in 1900 seeking military help for his farmers. No nation offered him any assistance and the German Kaiser refused to even meet with him:

But Leyds was not really surprised. Britain had largely ignored the French demonstrations, but a similar sort of thing in Germany would be a different matter. Instead of helping the Boers, and to make up for past indiscretions, the Kaiser in fact sent suggestions to England as to how the Boers could be vanquished by a scorched earth policy, concentration camps, drives, and so on, measures actually adopted by Lord Kitchener who succeeded Lord Roberts. To his critics the Kaiser explained that he was in no position to go to war with England because he did not have a proper fleet, so it was best to befriend her. Leyds did not know all this, but he had hoped that Kruger's actual arrival would clarify the situation. Now it had been clarified, and he called off a German tour. (Meintjes, President Paul Kruger, p. 254).

Where did the Kaiser get the money to build a vast fleet and challenge the British Empire in 1914? Obviously, it was a gift of some of the stolen South African gold courtesy of the Bank of England!!

The Rhodes blueprint for British global hegemony!

Rhodes died and went to meet his Maker just as the war was ending. A British colony in Africa was named after him called Rhodesia but the name was changed to Zimbabwe in 1965.

Cecil Rhodes circa 1900
Cecil Rhodes circa 1900.
 

Due to the intense brainwashing by the English Jesuits at Oxford, Rhodes believed that the English race had a "divine right" to rule the world and that all other races were inferior.

The Jesuits forget to tell him that if it wasn't for the Dutch Empire there would be no British Empire!!

He published his views in a "Confession of Faith" and in his last will and testament.

 
Cecil Rhodes' funeral in Cape Town South Africa.
Cecil Rhodes' funeral in
Cape Town, South Africa.

Rhodes was extremely xenophobic and he believed that all of Africa should be part of the British Empire. He believed that all other races (especially blacks) were inferior.

He was very, very anxious to see the U.S. Republic destroyed and annexed to the British Crown:

The idea gleaming and dancing before ones eyes like a will-of the-wisp at last frames itself into a plan. Why should we not form a secret society with but one object the furtherance of the British Empire and the bringing of the whole uncivilised world under British rule for the recovery of the United States for the making the Anglo-Saxon race but one Empire. What a dream, but yet it is probable, it is possible. I once heard it argued by a fellow in my own college, I am sorry to own it by an Englishman, that it was a good thing for us that we have lost the United States. There are some subjects on which there can be no arguments, and to an Englishman this is one of them, but even from an American's point of view just picture what they have lost, look at their government, are not the frauds that yearly come before the public view a disgrace to any country and especially their's which is the finest in the world. Would they have occurred had they remained under English rule great as they have become how infinitely greater they would have been with the softening and elevating influences of English rule, think of those countless 000's of Englishmen that during the last 100 years would have crossed the Atlantic and settled and populated the United States. Would they have not made without any prejudice a finer country of it than the low class Irish and German emigrants? All this we have lost and that country loses owing to whom? Owing to two or three ignorant pig-headed statesmen of the last century, at their door lies the blame. (Rhodes, "Confession of Faith").

What his Jesuit "educators" failed to tell him was that the British tried to destroy the United States twice: The first time during the War of 1812, and the second time during the U.S. Civil War.

Most sane people would dismiss Rhodes and his demoted raving if it wasn't for the vast amount of stolen gold that ended up in the Bank of England.

As there is a counterfeit "Christianity" with headquarters at Vatican City, the City of London, and Oriel College, Oxford, that just proves that real Christianity exists because nobody can counterfeit something that has no existence.

The Holy Bible, correctly translated, is the Christians' sharp sword....That divine Word promises complete victory over Gog and Magog . . . and over ALL the power of the enemy. The Messiah gave his followers 2 precious promises:

When the enemy shall come in like a flood, the Spirit of JEHOVAH shall lift up a standard against him. (Isaiah 59:19).

No weapon that is formed against thee shall prosper; and every tongue that shall rise against thee in judgment thou shalt condemn. This is the heritage of the servants of JEHOVAH, and their righteousness is of me, saith JEHOVAH. (Isaiah 54:17).


Vital Links



References

Flint, John. Cecil Rhodes. Little, Brown and Company, Boston, 1974.

Hobhouse, Emily. The Brunt of the War and Where it Fell. Methuen & Co., London, 1902.

Lee, Emanoel, To the Bitter End. Penguin Books, London, England, 1985.

Meredith, Martin, Diamonds, Gold, and War. The British, the Boers, And the Making of South Africa. Public Affairs, New York, 2007.

Meintjes, Johannes, President Paul Kruger. A biography. Cassel, London, 1974.

Pakenham, Thomas, The Boer War. Random House, New York, 1979.

Rothberg, Robert I. The Founder: Cecil Rhodes and the Pursuit ofs Power. Oxford University Press, Oxford and New York, 1988.

Stead, W.T. The Last Will and Testament of Cecil John Rhodes. "Review of Reviews" Office, London, 1902.