Winemaking was a profession most South African parents could never have envisioned for their children. But black South Africans are today managing to break through multiple barriers into the renowned industry, transforming a landscape that is historically white.
Paul Siguqa, 41, bought Klein Goederust farm (Afrikaans for “a little good rest”) after saving up for 15 years.
His mother had, for 37 years, worked at a farm in South Africa’s Cape winelands under the white minority apartheid regime.
“If you grow up on a farm as children of farm labourers – black farm labourers – you are raised to be the next crop of labour for that farmer,” said Siguqa.
He finally purchased the “rundown” farm in 2019, renovated it and opened last year.
“If we want to see change in an industry, we need to be the change,” he said, after inspecting his flowering grape crop at the farm in Franschhoek, a region dotted with centuries-old vineyards.
The rise of entrepreneurs of colour has been slow and still faces serious obstacles, including lack of access to land and capital.
As a result, an industry push is underway to try to accelerate the pace of change.
“Nobody’s getting nowhere slowly,” said Wendy Petersen, manager at SA Wine Industry Transformation Unit, which organises grants and internships for startups.
Often, the resources are not enough and have to be spread thinly among the candidates.
To help them grow, the organisation has launched the Wine Arc tasting room in South Africa’s wine-producing hub, Stellenbosch, to promote budding producers.
Among the brands featured there is Carmen Stevens Wines, which became South Africa’s first fully black-owned winery when it launched in 2011 and released its first vintage in 2014.
“The difficult part of winemaking is selling this product, getting [it] to somebody’s table and somebody coming back and saying ‘I want more’,” Stevens said.
The 51 year old is an unlikely winemaker, having grown up in the Cape Flats, an area marred by poverty and gangsters.
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Her mother, a factory worker, would buy her Mills & Boon fiction novels, many set in vineyards and involving wine.
South Africa was still under the apartheid regime when Stevens made her first attempt to study winemaking in 1991. After being repeatedly refused, she was accepted at a college in 1993.
Her perseverance has paid off. This year she took home three gold medals at a South African wine and spirits award event for her sauvignon blanc and newly released rose, named after her mother Julie.
But like many black-owned brands, she procures her grapes from farmers, not yet having her own land to cultivate.
Land access is “the biggest barrier for black people participating in the wine industry”, Siguqa says.
“That’s very political”, because historically most black people – about 80% of the population – don’t have access to land.
Black people “are competing, with old intergenerational, white rands”, as well as with foreign buyers who are purchasing prime land with US dollars, pounds and euros, said Siguqa.
The first vineyards were established in the 1600s by French Huguenots.
Since then, land has passed down through generations and when sales do occur, it has often been to neighbours, leaving little opportunity for newcomers to enter the market, said Maryna Calow, of the Wines of South Africa industry group.
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But for those non-white operators who have broken the barriers into the industry, it’s been a bitter-sweet journey so far, having taken so long to achieve and, once in, the pressure to not fail.
“We’ve been free for 28 years and one would have wanted to see a lot more black people participating in the industry,” said Siguqa, wine bottles lined up on a table next to him.
Originally established in 1905, his farm scooped an award in Cape Town for offering an authentic South African experience.
Out of the hundreds of winemakers in the country, only just over 80 brands are black-owned, according to Petersen.
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