Daily Dispatch

Radical reconcilia­tion vital to heal SA

- JONATHAN JANSEN

ON July 8 this year Nelson Mandela (born 1918) would have been 100 years old. No South African over the centuries has inspired more of his people at home and built the prestige of the nation abroad. A taxi driver in Delhi or a ferry operator in San Francisco or a fisherman in Dakar are together more likely to know Mandela than any other foreign leader on the planet.

And yet in recent times his Mandela name has taken a hit. He sold us out, say the more militant youth. His recently deceased former wife claimed Mandela’s party “over-negotiated” leading to loss such as on the land issue. Do not mention the word “rainbow” to the growing chorus of the disenchant­ed; there’s no black in the rainbow, said one. And only a brave soul would raise that other “R” word – Madiba’s brand – in an angry crowd: reconcilia­tion.

Was Mandela wrong? It’s easy to sit this side of history and make harsh judgments about Mandela’s negotiatio­ns in the early 1990s. Those who were there, alive at the time, will remember the stakes. The apartheid state had at its disposal the most powerful military on the continent. Yes it was under political pressure from abroad to abandon its racist policies and was reeling from economic pressures that threatened the survival of the state. But the white government was also under pressure from its base to retain as much of the status quo as possible – from white schools and the Afrikaans language to land ownership and minority protection­s. Negotiate, as the white referendum asked, but don’t give away privilege.

The country had reached a stalemate. The apartheid state could not maintain power indefinite­ly nor could the liberation movements overthrow the government. Both sides seemed clear on that equation. The only way out was negotiatio­ns.

In the meantime, the hills of KwaZulu-Natal and streets of the East Rand were awash with blood as a mix of army, police, rival political organisati­ons, rogue forces and third-force elements mowed down ordinary South Africans almost daily.

Books about “bloodbaths” started to surface. We were on the edge of the precipice. The main protagonis­ts had to negotiate and watching over that process were some powerful supranatio­nal organisati­ons that advised and threatened that any radical moves (land expropriat­ion, nationalis­ation) would be punished.

In negotiatio­ns, you give and take. You seek solutions. You make judgments on what is possible under specified conditions. Unreasonab­le demands could easily return the parties to war with unthinkabl­e consequenc­es for black and white together. There was enough bloodshed. Let’s make a deal.

It was the brilliance of Mandela who recognised that the way out of the apartheid mess was together.

That meant bringing whites and blacks together via a programme of reconcilia­tion. He recognised the fears and hopes on both sides.

Mandela and his party would not impose Nuremberg-type trials on white leaders and extract revenge on their people. That would have been disastrous for all concerned.

Reconcilia­tion was the best path. What has happened since Madiba is the problem. With good polices and goodwill we could have changed this country. But the collapse of the government under state capture, corrupt and ineffectiv­e leadership of state-owned enterprise­s and the failures to fix education, meant we squandered that proverbial window of opportunit­y. Mandela was not the problem; we are.

The resurfacin­g of race as a dangerous faultline in SA discourse – from racist acts by individual­s to racial antagonism­s stirred by land redistribu­tion talk – reminds us again of the relevance of Nelson Mandela. First, we need to reclaim his legacy of reconcilia­tion but of a different kind. I’d like to call it radical reconcilia­tion. It is reconcilia­tion with a purpose.

There needs to be extraordin­ary political leadership to bring black and white together in an acknowledg­ement of the past that leads to considered action for the future. Take education as one example. Competent teachers from privileged schools need to be placed in struggling schools without being coerced. A once-off wealth tax must be levied and directed strictly to giving high quality, well-organised pre-school education to the children of the poor.

Privileged primary schools must dedicate 10% of their enrolments to poor talented children from outside of their catchment areas – and pay for it through the fee income from the well-off. The private sector should be required to build libraries and computer labs with optimum security in the bottom 20% of schools with training and support.

None of these actions will be taken up by the privileged without moral leadership from the centre. A government that again becomes known for corruption within state enterprise­s and the failure to act on unions routinely disrupting education will quickly lose the faith of the privileged classes to want to share their wealth beyond the routine payment of taxes.

In return, political leadership needs to recognise and reassure white citizens. Here the Mandelian gesture is so important. For example, the current president’s state of the nation only referenced black Africans; nobody else mattered. That’s the wrong message in a society whose racial nerves have been rattled by political noises from government. A radical reconcilia­tion could help heal our country.

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