Tuesday, December 10, 2013

EULOGIZING A COLOSSUS; NELSON ROLIHLAHLA MANDELA (JULY 18, 1918 ~ DECEMBER 5, 2013) –PART II

Did he sell the blacks out?

Racial discrimination and the domination of the black race in South Africa started with the arrival of Jan Van Ribbeck at the Cape of in 1652. When Apartheid in the form that it existed between 1948 to the early 1990s was introduced, there was already in place systemic subjugation of the blacks by the white imperial forces for close to 3 centuries. What this means is that by the time that Mandela was assuming the Presidency in 1994, this system which structurally and institutionally disadvantaged black people had been religiously enforced for over 3 centuries. It is naïve to expect these historical injustices to have been reversed within the first 5 years of Madiba’s presidency let alone during the negotiation period of the CODESA process. When a task is so ridiculously monumental, one is setting himself up for failure if he decides to do everything at once. Pragmatism dictates that one takes a step at a time. It was President Mandela’s judgment that what South Africa needed after centuries of the injustice of apartheid was a period of reconciliation and a coming together. That he needed to build a nation. This is the task he set apart for himself and one which he executed with amazing grace.

This does not mean, however, that it is illegitimate to inquire whether or not more could have been done to end the economic subjugation of the blacks. This question is particularly imperative when one considers that the Freedom Charter, the ANC’s [and other liberation movements’] statement of core principles committed the organisation to the nationalisation of industry and the redistribution of land.  While most of the charter’s demands found their way into the new Constitution, these 2 core demands were conspicuous by their absence. The ANC has subsequently rejected blanket nationalisation of industry preferring instead to ‘increase state ownership but only in sectors where it deems appropriate.’ See the Party’s 2012 Mangaung Conference resolutions.

There are several things to be said here. First of all, it would appear to me that the Freedom Charter was a statement of aspirations. Goals which those in the struggle movement hoped to see realized. And while this does not in any way lessen the significance of the document, as evidenced by how much it influenced the content of the new Constitution, I doubt if those in the struggle movement thereby irrevocably bound themselves to live by its contents regardless of the exigencies of the moment. It should be obvious, one imagines, that the policy that anchors a struggle movement will often be markedly different from that which informs the hard business of governing a country. Secondly, the ANC took the Charter to a negotiating table through the CODESA process. If all its demands had been forced down the throat of the National Party [as would largely have been the case if the 2 keys demands above had been accepted] then one wonders if the process would still have qualified as a negotiated settlement. We can debate whether the ANC conceded too much ground during the negotiations, considering that the other demands in the Charter were largely basic human rights demands anyway. But what is not debatable is that in any negotiation worth its name, compromise is inevitable. It is worth speculating, however, what would have become of South Africa if there had been a radical departure in economic policy in 1994. Would its people have been better off compared to their current station if the mines and other industries had been nationalised and if the land had been redistributed? How best would this have been carried out? Would the government have been assured of the availability of legitimate force to enforce some aspects of this reform considering that the Police and military formations were still [practically]] largely controlled by the whites? I can only speculate.

This, however, is not to suggest that Madiba’s arm may not have been twisted during the negotiations. Capital in South Africa was largely in the hands of white people and its naïve to think that they would have given it up on a silver platter. They naturally pushed back against the more radical demands encapsulated in the Freedom Charter. This they did with some success. And let nothing detract from the fact that the social and economic condition of the average black man [the overwhelming majority] is nothing less than a scandal. For the majority of blacks, the train has really not left the station. They continue to wallow in abject poverty, stricken by disease and a life of violent crime. This is in sharp contrast to what goes on the other side of South Africa. Where the dizzyingly wealthy, the majority of whom are white but who since 1994 [thanks to the government’s affirmative action and pure corruption] have been joined by a tiny group of blacks, live in opulence behind high-electric-wire-topped- security walls. The situation was starkly captured by South African Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe on December 9, 2013 in his address to the Joint session of South African Parliament commemorating Madiba when he said: Why then do the majority of the world’s people, the great unwashed, live in abject poverty when a fair distribution of the world’s resources would not even minimise the material comfort of those who wallow in luxury at the top of social articulation? We cannot claim to follow in the footsteps of this inspiring leader when we have these shocking levels of poverty sitting cheek by jowl with fabulously dazzling material riches known to human history.”

It should be fair, in the circumstances, to ask what, if at any, was Mandela’s contribution to this shameful condition? Does he bear any responsibility as a result of his omissions during the transition negotiations and his term as President? All these are fair inquires. What is not fair is to omit the context in embarking on the inquiry. When it comes to South Africa, I do not, with respect, think that it should be permissible for anyone to simply wave Malcom X, Sankara and or Mugabe [you can add your favourite ‘revolutionaries to this list!] and think that they have won the argument.

The TRC and accountability for apartheid atrocities

Lastly, we look at the criticism that Madiba failed to punish the perpetrators of apartheid era atrocities. The argument here is that the TRC with its emphasis on restorative justice failed to accommodate the retributive elements of the penal system. That folks who were responsible for horrible crimes during apartheid should have been hauled before the Courts, tried for their evil deeds and accordingly punished. This argument deserves some sympathy, one must say, seeing as it is that retribution and vengeance remain the legitimate aims of any criminal justice system. Rather simplistically, let me rehash how the TRC worked. Perpetrators of human rights violations were encouraged to come forward and essentially render a full account of their evil deeds. A full and frank account rendered one eligible for a pardon of sorts and immunity from criminal prosecution. The victims would fully participate during the process and were at liberty to either support or oppose the application for amnesty. It’s quite accurate, therefore, that healing and restoration was at the centre of this process as opposed to retribution and vengeance.

Again context matters here. Apartheid was a system that had survived for over 4 decades. It was fully entrenched in the country and literally pervaded every aspect of life. And what more; it had the backing of the law in South Africa. Accordingly some if not a lot of what happened under the system, especially on the government’s side, had the colour of law. Perhaps there would have been a danger of retrospective criminalisation if acts which were lawful at the time were punished at a later date. Secondly, rules of criminal responsibility are such that the criminal justice net would have hauled quite a ludicrously huge number of people into its process. This is so because accomplices [aiders, enablers, procurers, abettors, counsellors] would all have been fixed with criminal responsibility. Considering how pervasive apartheid was one would surmise that there would have been droves and droves of white people being hauled before the courts to answer criminal justice. These were going to be criminal trials on an industrial scale. [Though the struggle movement was also responsible for some atrocities, this pales in comparison to the scale of the government inflicted atrocities on the African people.] Inevitably, this was going to take a racial tinge [of victors’ justice] which was going to affect social cohesion in the long run. But above all, what must be emphasised is that the TRC system was a form of justice. The fact that it sought to restore and heal as opposed to exact vengeance does not make it any lesser form of justice. At the end of the day, retribution and forgiveness are all moral choices and they can be no rational basis for saying that one is superior to the other. Sight must not be lost of the fact that there was full victim participation in the process and that some of the perpetrators were in fact denied amnesty and were eventually prosecuted. In some cases, however, the victims themselves supported the amnesty application. I personally would have loved to see more prosecutions of the perpetrators of the especially heinous crimes. And the fact of the matter is that this is what the majority of the black people would have wanted. Given such kind of pressures, it is amazing that a decision to go against the populist tide can be seen as a sign of weakness in a leader. I should think it takes a particular kind of moral courage for a politician to stand for a position which is unpopular.

The fallible giant…

Let me finish by quoting from Barack Obama’s eulogy delivered on December 10, 2013 at Madiba’s memorial service:-

“Given the sweep of his life, and the adoration that he so rightly earned, it is tempting then to remember Nelson Mandela as an icon, smiling and serene, detached from the tawdry affairs of lesser men.  But Madiba himself strongly resisted such a lifeless portrait. Instead, he insisted on sharing with us his doubts and fears; his miscalculations along with his victories.  "I'm not a saint," he said, "unless you think of a saint as a sinner who keeps on trying."
It was precisely because he could admit to imperfection – because he could be so full of good humor, even mischief, despite the heavy burdens he carried - that we loved him so.  He was not a bust made of marble; he was a man of flesh and blood – a son and husband, a father and a friend.  That is why we learned so much from him; that is why we can learn from him still.  For nothing he achieved was inevitable.  In the arc of his life, we see a man who earned his place in history through struggle and shrewdness; persistence and faith.  He tells us what’s possible not just in the pages of dusty history books, but in our own lives as well.”

Madiba was a fallible human being. Human greatness is never measured by how infallible one is. If that was the case, it would no longer be human greatness but something else. It is the human triumph over monumental adversity that defines human greatness. That unwavering commitment to principle. That simplicity, purity and rawness of righteous desire. To simply be a man. With equal opportunities. Where one’s skin colour is of no more significance in the quest for realisation of one’s potential than one’s sex, tribe, gender or sexual orientation. And the colossal personal sacrifice made to live that principle. 27 years away from what most of us take for granted. “A son denied the opportunity to bury his mother and a grieving father a chance to bury his son.” Shattered family lives… So let there be no mistake. Madiba, the fallible giant, lived his life with remarkable nobility. He did his duty. The world was a better place because of the sacrifices he made in it. And the son of Qunu has rightly earned his place in the ‘pantheons of history.’


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