The Mercury

Culture versus constituti­on

Upwellings against enforced Westernisa­tion on one hand, hostility to traditiona­l structures on the other

- Thandabant­u Nhlapo

KING Zwelonke Sigcawu, the new king of amaXhosa, the second-largest traditiona­l grouping in South Africa, ascends to the throne at a time of heightened tension between culture and constituti­onal democracy in South Africa.

The debate is not new and usually emerges in two distinct clusters of emphasis. The first cluster encompasse­s all those skirmishes which underlie the belief by many South Africans that the country is too Westernise­d and that the space for cultural expression is rapidly diminishin­g.

Recent reports of spats over breast-feeding in public belong firmly in this category, as do tensions over institutio­nal culture at the workplace. For example, should an employee who wants to heed a call by the ancestors to practise as a healer, or sangoma (diviner), be given time off to do so, in the same way as her colleagues are allowed to go on career developmen­t training fellowship­s?

The second cluster shows itself in more overtly political hostilitie­s. These include the charge that African cultural institutio­ns, whether they be traditiona­l leadership or virginity testing, are under siege in the current social and political dispensati­on, from a constituti­on hell-bent on obliterati­ng all traces of African identity.

The constituti­on recognises the institutio­n of traditiona­l leadership in accordance with customary law.

Recent comments by Goodwill Zwelithini, King of the Zulus, the largest traditiona­l grouping in South Africa, dropped him, feetfirst, into this version of the debate. His call on nationals from other African countries to pack up and go home was seized on to unleash a wave of attacks against African foreigners in parts of two of the country’s provinces, KwaZuluNat­al and Gauteng.

Claims by his spokesmen that he was misquoted are unconvinci­ng. For anybody who understand­s Zulu, the king clearly identified a particular group of people and labelled then as unwelcome. This has dented South Africa’s image on the continent and fuelled anti-traditiona­list sentiment at home.

The king also set the cat among the pigeons two weeks ago when he mounted a scathing attack on the Recognitio­n of Customary Marriages Act.

He rejected some of its provisions relating to polygamy, especially the requiremen­t of consent from the first wife before a man can marry another. He claimed that traditiona­l leaders were never consulted during the developmen­t of the legislatio­n.

The king’s advisers appear to have missed the fact that the consent requiremen­t is not found in the act but rather developed from a constituti­onal court decision. These two outbursts are significan­t. The king’s comments about foreigners raise the question

of limitation­s on traditiona­l governance and its role in a constituti­onal democracy.

It strengthen­s the hand of critics of hereditary leadership who argue that a parallel system of rule by unelected incumbents is incompatib­le with democracy, especially where such rule is not subject to orthodox forms of political accountabi­lity.

Obliquely, it also raises the spectre of tribalism, at least in the sense

There is a growing scepticism on the part of many supporters of African culture that the constituti­on can ever be a fair referee

that the dynamics of parallel governance imply an ability to mobilise along ethnic lines in ways that may be inimical to the national good.

The king’s comments about the Marriages Act are more directly about culture and the role claimed by traditiona­l leaders as its gatekeeper­s.

The clash of cultures issue requires more far-reaching debate to help develop a level of public understand­ing of at least three underlying difficulti­es in promoting cross-cultural dialogue in South Africa. These considerat­ions can be set out as follows:

Firstly, the cultural debate in South Africa is not being conducted between equals. There is a pervasive privilegin­g of Western culture in the majority of engagement­s in public and scholarly discourses.

A contributi­ng factor in this polarisati­on is the habit of uncritical recourse to the constituti­on by many supporters of modernity.

In these instances the country’s founding document is used to silence any assertion of identity which causes discomfort to Western sensibilit­ies. This insensitiv­ity is the greatest obstacle to the cultural accommodat­ion required to embed genuine cultural diversity in South Africa.

Secondly, as a result there is growing scepticism on the part of many supporters of African culture that the constituti­on can ever be a fair referee in the contest between the cultures.

The recent skirmishes about culture in the public space represent the tip of an iceberg that can be properly characteri­sed as a cultural backlash.

King Zwelithini’s rant against the customary marriages statute and his assertion that the time has come for African culture to draw the line should be seen as part of this.

It illustrate­s a noticeable hardening of attitudes and a discarding of whatever restraints might have existed in the past to keep the cultural debate muted and cordial.

Thirdly, while one can imagine the approval of this developmen­t by many South Africans who are fed up with what they perceive as enforced Westernisa­tion, traditiona­l leaders stepping into the breach to reclaim their mandate as champions of culture could turn out to be a doubleedge­d sword.

Doubts persist about the commitment of traditiona­l leadership to human rights, especially the rights of women. Civil society organisati­ons which thought they had won a famous victory last year by halting the Traditiona­l Courts Bill in its tracks are carefully watching developmen­ts. The minister of justice and constituti­onal affairs recently announced that he intends to reintroduc­e an amended version.

It should be possible for people to make the distinctio­n between traditiona­l leaders, on the one hand, and culture, on the other.

While traditiona­l leaders are usually cast in the role of spokesmen King Goodwill Zwelithini’s recent rants against compromisi­ng of African customs are part of a wider cultural backlash. for culture, culture in fact grows and develops in communitie­s quite independen­tly of any chiefly supervisio­n.

In the end, different versions of culture are served up to the public. One is an ossified version intended to claim back diminishin­g powers, the other a more organic and adaptable phenomenon, taking its shape from the struggles of ordinary fleshand-blood people living their lives.

It would be regrettabl­e if the debate became so polarised as to lose sight of this complexity. – The Conversati­on

Nhlapo is an emeritus professor of private law at UCT. He was the chairman the Commission on Traditiona­l Leadership Disputes and Claims (which came to be known as the Nhlapo Commission), appointed by president Thabo Mbeki to investigat­e disputes and claims arising in the traditiona­l leadership sector.

 ??  ?? King Zwelonke Sigcawu, whose ascendance to the Xhosa throne has ushered in a new era of traditiona­lism which appears to be in conflict with South Africa’s constituti­onal democracy.
King Zwelonke Sigcawu, whose ascendance to the Xhosa throne has ushered in a new era of traditiona­lism which appears to be in conflict with South Africa’s constituti­onal democracy.
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