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- Q1540703 subject Q18851428.
- Q1540703 subject Q7609980.
- Q1540703 subject Q8118494.
- Q1540703 subject Q8775590.
- Q1540703 subject Q8776043.
- Q1540703 abstract ""Sarie Marais" (also known as "My Sarie Marais" and pronounced "May SAH-ree mah-REH") is a traditional Afrikaans folk song, created during either the First Anglo-Boer War (c. 1880) (less likely) or the Second Anglo-Boer War (ca. 1900). The tune was possibly taken from a song dating from the American Civil War called "Ellie Rhee" (itself perhaps a version of the traditional folk song "Foggy Dew"), with the words translated into Afrikaans.In the English translation, the song begins: "My Sarie Marais is so far from my heart but I hope to see her again. She lived near the Mooi River before this war began..."; and the chorus is: "Oh, take me back to the old Transvaal, where my Sarie lives, down among the maize fields near the green thorn tree, there lives my Sarie Marais." It continues about the fear of being removed far, "over the sea" (as the Boer men in fact were, by the ruling British authorities, who created the world's first concentration camps).The melody was adopted in 1953 as the official march of the United Kingdom's Royal Marines Commandos and is played after the Regimental March on ceremonial occasions. The French École militaire interarmes also sings the song, in its French translation.The song has been sung by Jim Reeves and Kenneth McKellar in Afrikaans.".
- Q1540703 wikiPageExternalLink movie.html?v_id=138696.
- Q1540703 wikiPageExternalLink Sarie%20Marais.mp3.
- Q1540703 wikiPageExternalLink Sarie_marais.mp3.
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- Q1540703 comment ""Sarie Marais" (also known as "My Sarie Marais" and pronounced "May SAH-ree mah-REH") is a traditional Afrikaans folk song, created during either the First Anglo-Boer War (c. 1880) (less likely) or the Second Anglo-Boer War (ca. 1900).".
- Q1540703 label "Sarie Marais".