Daily Dispatch

What does SA’S struggle heritage mean 30 years later?

Pupil recalls miracle recovery after being shot at point-blank range through the chest — for a cellphone

- DUANE JETHRO

One of my favourite statues is the one of Nelson Mandela at the Sandton City shopping centre in Johannesbu­rg.

Larger than life, its oversized bronze shoes shimmer in the evening light, polished by the hands of many passersby who crowd around to take their pictures with it.

At the entrance of a square in the mall, it’s a jovial image of the former SA president in a lively jive: a decidedly odd juxtaposit­ion of a liberation fighter at a site of luxury retail.

One message it seems to convey is the celebratio­n of the commercial riches brought about by post-apartheid freedom.

The statue invites us to consider the uncomforta­ble ambiguity of an armed political struggle for freedom with luxury consumptio­n.

And to consider what exactly South Africans are buying into with struggle heritage commemorat­ion after 30 years of democracy.

It especially challenges the country to think about what freedom really means today.

Freedom Day on April 27 recognises the full political agency of all South Africans, commemorat­ing not only the first democratic elections in 1994, but also the freedom to vote.

Apartheid was a racist system of political and spatial exclusion and dehumanisa­tion that was resisted by political and popular social movements.

It is referred to as the struggle for freedom, or simply “the struggle”.

It ushered in political freedom but also associated liberties such as freedom of expression, informatio­n and property ownership.

On paper these are to be celebrated. But in practice they can clash in awkward ways, especially when it comes to thinking about what appropriat­e ways of commemorat­ing struggle history are relative to what it means to be free.

It seems that, after 30 years of democracy, struggle heritage in South Africa has ever more been recruited to conceal the gap between the reality of an economical­ly unequal and unjust present rather than serve as an critical reminder about the freedoms and equality aspired for during the apartheid past.

An auction

One example we can look at is the ongoing debacle of a proposed auction of Mandela’s personal effects.

It reveals a clash of the values of the struggle for democracy, the authority of the state and the freedom to express individual agency.

Mandela’s daughter Makaziwe Mandela has argued successful­ly in court that the objects belong to the family, who are free to dispose of the collection as they wish.

The state has, at great cost, consistent­ly failed to persuade judges that items such as Mandela’s identity document, shoes and hearing aid are of national heritage significan­ce.

The state’s persistenc­e shows a narrow, conservati­ve concept of heritage value and its assumed authority over all of it.

The irony of struggle heritage, in this case, as the dancing Mandela statue may well signify, is that heritage is negotiated and not fixed.

In a democratic dispensati­on heritage is that which is negotiated in disputes between individual­s who enjoy the freedom of property rights, the state and often the market.

Shopping malls

But this is just one example of how commerce, culture and heritage mix in rather strange and sometimes unsettling ways in post-apartheid South Africa.

These examples can sometimes challenge assumption­s about the meaning of “the struggle” and what it means to be free.

For example, shopping malls are increasing­ly the place where many valued cultural expression­s of the struggle for freedom and democracy come to rest.

Take the Long March to Freedom exhibition.

Conceived and initiated by Dali Tambo, a former talk show host and the son of liberation leader Oliver Tambo, it features a procession of life-sized sculptures of leading figures in South Africa’s centuries-long journey to democracy.

Built at enormous cost, the project toured the nation and came home to the Canal Walk shopping centre 20km outside Cape Town.

At a cost of R20 per adult (excluding parking), families can now immerse themselves in history, take pictures with anti-colonial and antiaparth­eid heroes and learn about the past as they wander among the lifelike statues marching in static unison outside the mall.

A line of jewellery

“Struggle history” and its material culture is ever more available for sale. And its consumptio­n is increasing­ly portrayed as patriotic.

Take the Legacy Collection, a line of innovative fashion accessorie­s.

The prison on Robben Island was where Mandela and other activists were incarcerat­ed during apartheid.

Designer Charmaine Taylor uses original pieces of the Robben Island fence — the very barricade used to imprison political prisoners — to create gold and silver jewellery.

The high-end pieces, which celebrate “South Africa’s peaceful road to democracy”, retail for hundreds of dollars.

As the website puts it, “individual­s wearing this collection physically carry the story of the triumph of the human spirit”.

There is something absurd, even abhorrent, about wearing jewellery made from the Robben Island fence, or visiting a statue procession at a mall.

It suggests a fundamenta­l break in the relationsh­ip between the past that is represente­d by such objects – one of struggle, sacrifice for justice and equality – and the racialised, deeply unequal material conditions South Africans finds themselves in today.

Strange entangleme­nts

Recognisin­g these strange entangleme­nts – which exist the world over – takes us beyond the false opposition between commerce and commemorat­ion.

It flags a set of deeper contradict­ions that I think the Mandela statue in Sandton Square gestures at.

That is: struggle heritage has increasing­ly been recruited to mask the discrepanc­y between the unsettling material inequaliti­es and contradict­ions in our society that it is meant to call attention to.

Political freedom was not a harbinger of economic justice and restitutio­n for the majority.

That said, commerce and consumptio­n are increasing­ly important spaces for making sense of the past.

That is not a bad thing in itself. The public has the freedom and right to spend as it likes.

But it is an indictment on the state’s steering of the postaparth­eid political project and heritage management that the sale of the Robben Island fence is possible, for example.

Thirty years after democracy South Africans should not be bickering about culture and consumptio­n.

We should be considerin­g what political conditions we have so easily bought into at the expense of our past.

This article was first published by The Conversati­on

Duane Jethro is a lecturer at the University of Cape Town’s Department of African Studies and Linguistic­s.

 ?? Picture: GALLO IMAGES/ STUART FOX ?? CONTRASTS: Shoppers gather near a large statue of former president Nelson Mandela, installed on Nelson Mandela Square at Sandton City mall in Johannesbu­rg.
Picture: GALLO IMAGES/ STUART FOX CONTRASTS: Shoppers gather near a large statue of former president Nelson Mandela, installed on Nelson Mandela Square at Sandton City mall in Johannesbu­rg.

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