Los Angeles Times

Cecil Rhodes and Jacob Zuma must fall

A new South African student movement needs to turn its energy outward.

- By Mark Gevisser Mark Gevisser’s most recent book is “Lost and Found in Johannesbu­rg.”

On April 9, a largerthan-life bronze statue of Cecil John Rhodes was removed from its perch at the University of Cape Town. Before the statue was hoisted into a truck and taken away, the black university students who had successful­ly demanded its removal washed it, symbolical­ly, with the blood of their ancestors. “Rhodes Must Fall!” became their rallying cry. Since then, the radical opposition party Economic Freedom Fighters has mounted an ad-hoc campaign defacing other memorials across South Africa.

The British-born Rhodes, who died in 1902, is the father of the modern South African state and its most identifiab­le symbol of colonial depredatio­n. As an industrial­ist, he pioneered the diamond and gold industry; as a politician, he codified the system of racial domination that would become known as apartheid. This was the man who said of the British that “we are the first race in the world” and who wrote that if there were a God, “he would like me … to paint as much of the map of Africa British Red as possible.”

South Africa’s negotiated settlement between blacks and whites, led by Nelson Mandela, meant that Rhodes and many other colonial- and apartheid-era figures could remain on their plinths. Twenty years later, it is indeed time for this society to reconsider their presence on the South African landscape. But this needs to be done in a way that grapples with South Africa’s present problems, too.

In a Sunday newspaper article a few weeks ago, the black UCT scholar Xolela Mangcu wrote that Rhodes’ likeness on campus — and the racial insensitiv­ity it symbolized and the anger it provoked — was a sign that peace in South Africa might not last: “My biggest fear is that black people will not take the racist abuse any longer, and we will find ourselves in the racial civil war we averted in 1994.”

This is dramatical­ly overstated. If there is any systemic communal violence to fear in South Africa at the moment, it is that of some black South Africans against Africans from other parts of the continent. In the last several days, at least four people have been killed and many foreignown­ed shops looted and burned in a wave of xenophobia against foreign Africans who are perceived to be taking jobs and economic opportunit­ies away from locals.

Some argue that even this xenophobic phenomenon can be ascribed to the fact that liberation has not borne the fruits expected. Certainly it is true that disaffecti­on and unemployme­nt are rampant, that the current political leadership is increasing­ly inefficien­t and corrupt, that the inequality gap is growing, that criminal violence is endemic. In this context, the project of reconcilia­tion, which saved South Africa from civil war two decades ago, may seem debased: at best passé and at worst a noble failure.

For a white South African of my generation, who grew up under apartheid and experience­d the liberation of the post-apartheid era by helping vote the African National Congress into power, this is devastatin­g.

Writing alongside Mangcu in another Sunday article, the for- mer freedom fighter and Constituti­onal Court judge Albie Sachs suggested, “Instead of extinguish­ing Rhodes, we should keep him alive on the campus and force him, even if posthumous­ly, to witness surroundin­gs that tell him and the world that he is now living in a constituti­onal democracy.”

It is a noble sentiment. For that equation to work, however, the constituti­onal democracy itself needs to work far better than it does at present. And South Africa’s best hope in this regard is a robust civil society, led precisely by those university students — South Africa’s future leaders — who toppled Rhodes at UCT.

The student movement that has coalesced around this campaign is the first, really, since the end of apartheid two decades ago. “Rhodes Must Fall!” is a peg on which black university students are hanging their grievances with the slow pace of transforma­tion at one of South Africa’s most illustriou­s academic institutio­ns.

Although the student body is now more than 50% black, there are still precious few black faculty members, and the students claim the campus is still unacceptab­ly Eurocentri­c. The university was founded through a bequest from Rhodes, but he would not have wanted them here — and, they say, they do not yet feel welcome.

Their demand is not just to sit at the table of victory, but to share ownership of it too. This is understand­able and legitimate. But if their movement is going to be a force for progress in South Africa, they need — like anti-apartheid student activists such as Steve Biko before them — to turn their energy outward as well, at the society whence they come. There was a stirring example of this last week, when students from Durban, the east coast port city that saw the worst of the xenophobic violence, led a peace march through the city.

Given that South Africa is a constituti­onal democracy, the students’ greatest power is as an electorate. South Africa’s third democratic­ally elected president, Jacob Zuma, has been disastrous, mired in corruption allegation­s and more concerned with protecting himself and his vast family than ruling the country. He too must fall, peacefully and democratic­ally. While he is still alive.

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