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Mistaking
the country to the north for a mirror
Jonny
Steinberg
May 08, 2011
http://www.timeslive.co.za/opinion/columnists/article1055655.ece/Mistaking-the-country-to-the-north-for-a-mirror
I recently read a clutch of South African newspapers
- the Argus, Die Beeld, Die Burger, Rand Daily Mail - published
in August 1966. Rhodesia hit the front pages twice that month.
The first time, the country's Anglican bishop warned
that Rhodesia technically had no legal government, since Prime Minister
Ian Smith was rewriting the constitution at will. The second story
was occasioned by the head of Rhodesia's air force, who warned the
country's hostile neighbours that "we are ready for anything".
What did white South African readers make of the
news from the north? In 1966, white South Africans had never had
it so good. The economy was growing at 5% a year, soaking up the
last residues of white poverty. People whose parents had lived in
pokey houses were buying suburban homes with swimming pools. Black
opposition had been forced into exile. Life was comfortable and
the state was secure.
I suspect that, for whites, the news from Rhodesia
of threatened invasions, fighter jets and illegal governments seemed
like a clock ticking faintly in the depths of one's being.
Deep down, whites knew that Rhodesia's present was
their future, that one day minority rule would be challenged here
too. But everything around them felt so secure. Could their comfortable
world really come under threat? Most of the time, they convinced
themselves that the ticking was just background noise, something
of no consequence. But, every now and again - like in the middle
of the night, when the mind wanders too freely - the ticking grew
unbearably loud. Rhodesia was the future whites could not afford
to think about.
For all that has changed in the past 45 years, the
country north of the Limpopo still agitates South Africa in much
the same way. But now it is not just white people who wake in the
night having heard the ticking clock. The fears Zimbabwe triggers
are more democratically spread.
A former liberation movement grows stolid and corrupt.
Trade unions break away and form a political party. It begins to
sweep the urban vote. The ruling party is in trouble. What does
it do?
This is not just Zimbabwe's present. It is also
a version of South Africa's future. It cannot be otherwise. Time
does not stand still. Morgan Tsvangirai is the ticking clock. That
is why Thabo Mbeki found himself paralysed over Zimbabwe. To preside
over Zanu-PF's defeat would have been like pushing pins into a voodoo
doll of one's own likeness.
But Zimbabwe infiltrates South African fears in
more subtle and secretive ways. Several years ago, I commuted every
month to a small village on the outskirts of Lusikisiki in the Eastern
Cape. Once, I arrived to discover the entire village talking of
a shortage of long-life milk.
The village had no electricity, so nobody could
keep fresh milk, and the shortage was causing much hardship. Among
the explanations doing the rounds, one stuck. Blacks had taken over
South Africa's dairy farms, it was said, and they did not know how
to run them. And so now there was no more milk.
That people settled on this explanation tells a
complicated tale. Above all, it is an expression of self-doubt.
Our country is liberated, the tellers of the story are saying, but
do our leaders have what it takes? Having waited for generations
to be free, could it be that we will mess things up?
The story speaks, too, of deeper and more difficult
fears. The men of Lusikisiki were once farmers, but white minority
rule took that away. Then they were mine workers, but the gold industry's
decline took that away too.
Embedded in the story of the milk is a raw and painful
worry. We are free now, but are we still useful?
Why did these fears harness the image of black people
ruining dairy farms? I am fairly certain that the story made its
way to Lusikisiki only because of the land invasions that began
in Zimbabwe several years earlier. But the people in Lusikisiki
who told the story did not realise that.
To explain the milk shortage, they dipped into a
fund of stories in which things South African and Zimbabwean had
become mixed up. In the midst of a crisis over milk, the two countries
became confused with one another.
From Transkei villagers to presidents, we are incapable
of imagining our future without thinking of Zimbabwe. For the last
half-century, our sense of who we are has been prisoner to the country
to the north.
* Steinberg
is with Huma at the University of Cape Town
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