The Mercury

Pandemic pounds cultural landmarks

- | Reuters

A PAIR of boxing gloves worn by Nelson Mandela at the height of the anti-apartheid Struggle lie under a thick layer of dust in a darkened room, the silence broken only by the thud of moths nose-diving on to the glass display case.

The gloves were once one of the most popular exhibits at the Apartheid Museum in Johannesbu­rg, one of dozens of heritage attraction­s and art galleries around the country forced to close their doors due to the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic.

“We had to let go of all of the staff. About 30 people. There’s no one here to turn the lights on and off,” said the museum’s director, Christophe­r Till.

He used his cellphone as a torch to show some of the hundreds of artworks and artefacts illustrati­ng the history of the long Struggle against aparthed.

“We can’t afford to lose this place,” he said.

Before the pandemic, the museum was recording up to 1 000 visitors a day, most of them foreign tourists. Like other cultural institutio­ns, it had to shut down in March last year when South Africa imposed its first Covid-19 lockdown.

The museum reopened in January this year, but having sold no tickets for 10 months and with visitor numbers very low due to the ongoing outbreak, it was too cash-strapped to operate and shut down again in March.

With tourists absent due to the virus and school visits, a major source of income, not happening because of restrictio­ns, a number of other cultural institutio­ns are suffering a similar fate. They include the Fugard Theatre in Cape Town, the Johannesbu­rg Art Gallery, and Mandela’s house in Soweto.

South Africa’s R200 billion loan-guarantee scheme, aimed to encourage banks to lend more and on favourable terms to businesses affected by the coronaviru­s crisis, has not helped as much as was hoped.

Many distressed companies are reluctant to assume more liabilitie­s.

In normal times, tourism accounts for more than 8% of gross domestic product (GDP) and for about 1.5 million jobs.

Soweto tour guide Bongani Ndlovu said his small business was suffering as a result of museum closures.

“Places like the Apartheid Museum, and a place like this,” Ndlovu said, pointing at the Mandela house. “They’re big attraction­s for internatio­nal visitors. It’s the first thing they ask to see when they get here.”

 ?? | Reuters ?? A SECURITY officer sits at the entrance of the Apartheid Museum, in Johannesbu­rg. It is one of the heritage attraction­s in the country which has been forced to close its doors due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
| Reuters A SECURITY officer sits at the entrance of the Apartheid Museum, in Johannesbu­rg. It is one of the heritage attraction­s in the country which has been forced to close its doors due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

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