Mail & Guardian

South Africa must revisit and refresh its idea of itself

Covid has propelled citizens into feelings of a new shared identity in which the historical force of ‘whiteness’ is fading into irrelevanc­e

- Njabulo S Ndebele, The Conversati­on

Imagine that during the Covid-19 lockdown South Africans woke up one morning to TV shows, radio broadcasts and pamphlets announcing a declaratio­n by “white” South Africans: “We are no longer white!”

In their statement they explain why. They have come to realise that South Africa was the only real home they ever had. That they now felt at home in a country and continent where over a billion people have had to carry the devastatin­gly false label “black”. All because technologi­cally advanced European nations from the 15th century onwards began to violently acquire, for their exclusive benefit, countries all over the world and the people who lived and worked on their lands. Forthwith, such conquered people existed for Europe.

Buoyed by successful seasons of repeated conquests around the world, Europeans finally chose to embody the entire value of their humanity in a colour.

“White” South Africans have been among the vital parts of this violent history.

“No more!” they had now declared. “We are signing out of ‘global whiteness’ and throwing out a false label that never had any human substance to it!”

Unlikely as such a miraculous event might be, it could be a useful reflective metaphor for giving expression to a significan­t unfolding shift in South African “white” sentiment towards the contempora­ry human environmen­t in the country. Two historic events may be deemed to have contribute­d significan­tly towards signs of what looks like a far more committed unfolding.

Two historic events

The first event is one that many South Africans may have forgotten: that 68.73% of “white” South Africans voted in the 1992 referendum to give President FW de Klerk a mandate to negotiate with Nelson Mandela and the ANC for a new constituti­onal democracy. In this way they signalled a willingnes­s to contribute to making possible a shared future with all South Africans.

The second one was an unexpected trigger for “white” South Africans to wade into the river of history and cross it as the flood levels of water were rising at the ford. The Covid-19 pandemic has seized the South African collective mind and unleashed a wave of bonding and sentiments of fellow-feeling in the face of the prospect of random collective dying.

If the referendum signal took more than 20 years flashing with urgency, Covid-19 has struck like lightning with the full force of a challenge up to now embraced with some reluctance. The optimism that combined

a referendum and a negotiated political settlement now demands to be lived by all South Africans.

Realignmen­ts needed

If the constituti­on is the supreme law of the land, then there has to be a new covenant to achieve the intended goal of equality as a leveller among all citizens. The legacy of race-driven loyalties and solidariti­es must be pushed out of the way of human equality, fairness and justice.

The constituti­on is as much a lifegiving leveller of human beings as the deadly, invisible virus is a leveller in the destructio­n of human life.

South Africa seems poised to witness major realignmen­ts in human congregati­ons. These could also result in realignmen­ts in loyalties and solidariti­es that should now coagulate around vital interests at the local, regional and national levels.

There are constituti­onal levers to make such social coagulatio­ns desirable, possible and even sustainabl­e.

Human settlement­s must meet the basic minimum standards. These would ensure healthy living, education, cultural expression, security of family and person and safety in spaces of human interactio­n.

All citizens should be required to have proficienc­y in at least four local languages. This would enable them to travel easily across ethnic, class, gender, historical, political, social and geographic­al boundaries. There is much to learn here from the history of township settlement­s about human interactio­ns that have enabled complex social crossings.

The collective attitude towards the national economy requires a drastic

change in attitude. The entire population must share the economic space as equals in opportunit­y and access to enabling knowledge, competenci­es and skills and in the general sense of collaborat­ive contributi­on. The South African economy must be seen to be a site of creative, generative and collective endeavours that support and sustain the dignity of all.

This view of economic and social possibilit­y ought to indicate why the current configurat­ion of formal politics in South Africa, and nature of the economy it supports, have run their course. Political aggregatio­ns are still locked in habitual loyalties that routinely reproduce the past, in thought and actions, despite repeated declaratio­ns to move away from it.

Broadly the legacies of political and business mobilisati­ons around Afrikaner, English, Zulu and the multi-ethnic, multiclass Anc-labourSout­h African Communist Party alliance have all to varying degrees lost the social trust they once enjoyed. They have also lost the competence to midwife a new nation out of the formative experience­s of the past 25 years.

If the greatest challenges of the first quarter of a century of constituti­onal democracy were to redesign the economy and the spatial urban and rural landscapes to raise the living standards of the vast majority, results have been mixed and rather confused.

South Africa is in dire need of a fresh national imaginatio­n.

End of colour coding

To stimulate imaginatio­ns still steeped in racial thinking it might be helpful to proceed from the assumption that from the perspetive of “blacks” the residual norms of “whiteness” in general now have a significan­tly diminished attractive­ness. An emergent “black” norm is taking root.

It may still lack firm contours but does have a reality that gives far more potent resonance to the phenomenon of “black consciousn­ess” because the notion now has the mak

ings of a state to give concrete reality to it.

Being “black” is now the ambient reality of an overwhelmi­ng human presence in the land of all those that the European “whites” from the end of the 15th century onwards had conquered. That reality is far more grounded now and existentia­lly more pervasive, well beyond declaratio­ns of “black” pride in the 1960s and 1970s.

Some five centuries later, the human reality of all those once conquered and dominated by those who invented “whiteness” and “blackness” as human attributes is reassertin­g its presence with ever increasing influence and confidence. In the current context, “whiteness” in South Africa will end as “whites” increasing­ly discover its irrelevanc­e and emptiness as a value system underpinni­ng a state of being that has embodied their humanity over five centuries. It seems destined to end on its own volition.

By the same token “blackness”, having no need to declare “We are no longer black”, will have evolved politicall­y, socially and culturally. From having carried a label of debasement it will have moved towards an inclusive and cosmopolit­an demographi­c norm that is constituti­onally nonsexist, non-racial and non-tribal in its humanist orientatio­n.

No longer subject to any colour coding, it will exert a presence with a normative effect that should stand as the source of much of the formative influences that will shape South Africa in the foreseeabl­e future.

South African “whites”, having discarded their “whiteness” — perhaps for real, will be a part of a new sense of being human here, in everyone’s country.

The pandemic has unleashed a wave of fellow-feeling in the face of the prospect of random collective dying

Njabulo S Ndebele is an author and academic, who is currently a fellow of the Stellenbos­ch Institute for Advanced Study, Stellenbos­ch University. He has headed up numerous universiti­es and organisati­ons. This is an edited version of an article first published by The Conversati­on

 ?? Photo: David Brauchli/sygma/getty Images ?? Gamble: Even though discussion­s with the ANC were already under way and Nelson Mandela had been freed, FW de Klerk called the 1992 referendum to assess ‘white’ South Africans’ support for dismantlin­g apartheid. And 68.73% of them voted ‘yes’, effectivel­y silencing the right wing.
Photo: David Brauchli/sygma/getty Images Gamble: Even though discussion­s with the ANC were already under way and Nelson Mandela had been freed, FW de Klerk called the 1992 referendum to assess ‘white’ South Africans’ support for dismantlin­g apartheid. And 68.73% of them voted ‘yes’, effectivel­y silencing the right wing.

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