
Our Mission
The South African Assembly facilitates the protocol chain for onboarding, vetting and training of local-, district-, and national assemblies from we the people for we the people of the South African Republic.
Our mission is to foster collaboration, coordination, and excellence within the common law community through effective assembly formation, that operates in service of the four pillars of Common Law. The Four Pillars are:
(1) the General Assembly;
(2) the International Business Assembly;
(3) the State Courts;
(4) the State Assembly Peace Keeping Fiduciary.
We are dedicated to:
- The restoration of a complete and fully operational land and soil jurisdiction system,
- including a righteous court system serving the people.
- The preservation of the National Trust, the enforcement of Public Law.
- The upholding of the Constitution and Bill of Rights owed to our people.
- The re-patriation of our people back to our land and soil jurisdiction, the filling of vacant Public Offices, and the
reclamation of our material, intellectual public and private assets. - We are establishing the process to qualify jurors and others competent to hold National Citizenship and Public Office.
- We do this peacefully, without rancour in the exercise of our unincorporated powers and capacities.
To these ends we, the living people of Terra South Africa are calling the eligible South African Nationals and electors to assemble, to serve as Jurors and Officers.

When the Summoning Authority calls the National State Assembly into Session, the District Assemblies must answer back. They do so in the form of individual people who act as Go-Betweens — liaisons—, between their District Assembly and the National State Assembly.
In the old days in America these people acted as Circuit Riders who went door to door appointing a place and time for The State Assembly to meet. Today, we call these people “Coordinators” and they are more likely to pick up a telephone or send an email. They are in the same position, doing the same things, only a bit updated.
The Coordinators are trained and vetted by the South African National Assembly, and are “hired and fired” by the National Assembly until their respective local assemblies are up and running.
They are all volunteers and they got their positions by being trained and vetted. Anyone can be a Coordinator and each District can have more than one Coordinator; in fact, most Districts will have District Coordinators and Local Town Coordinators in addition to South African State Coordinators. All Coordinators are National State Assembly liaisons.
TSAA operates in a transversal management relationship with the different organisations and associations and even cultural groupings and diverse stake holders. Organisations and stake holders can suggest those that they would like to be Coordinators, but have no direct power over Coordinators in terms of assembly oversight and management..
The Coordinators facilitate meetings of the State Assemblies and may do this by setting up teleconferences or renting meeting halls or arranging a picnic. The Coordinator is there to bring people together in safe and equitable surroundings to conduct business for the State and in this case, to set up the “Four Pillars” of the Assembly itself.

The Pillars are four different functions that each District- and National State Assembly has to eventually provide for the people of their State.
The Coordinator’s role in this process is to make sure that the people understand what the Four Pillars are and get organized to provide these services for the people who live in their District. When questions arise as they often do, it is the Coordinator’s role to seek answers to these questions from the National Assembly and then go back to The District- or Town Assembly with answers.
This is what we mean about being “liaisons” or “go-betweens”. The Coordinators are State Nationals who live in their District like everyone else, but they have access to a network of other knowledgeable Coordinators and National professionals who are competent to answer questions about Law, offices, jurisdictions, processes, procedures, etc., and to provide assistance of various kinds to State Assemblies.
Coordinators should be friendly, kind, and hopefully wise. They should be loyal to their District and our country as a whole, devoted to the purpose of restoring our lawful Government at all levels, and acting as faithful guides overseeing the progress of the Assemblies as they “stand up” the Four Pillars and undertake their functions, one after another.
All the District Assemblies operate as General Assemblies, and can operate their International Business Assemblies; some are well-advanced toward organizing their District Assembly Peace Keeping Fiduciary, and others have their Courts stood up. District by District, we are continuing to move forward to the day when all the District Assemblies are fully seated.
One of the predictable growing pains that both Assemblies and Coordinators must face is the influx of people who are born in South Africa and who think of themselves as South Africans, but who have lived most of their lives as some form of National citizen, either by working for the National Government or by being voluntary dependents of the National Government.
Coordinators will have to be trained in the different types of reconveyance that individuals can perform, what the difference is between a South African State National, a South African State Citizen and to advise people on what is expected from them to repatriate back to the land and soil. They will have to be educated in Common Law and how to “stand up” the Four Pillars.