[net.nlang.africa] South Africa - moderates vs. militants

gdvsmit@watrose.UUCP (Riel Smit) (08/30/85)

While there is some truth in some of the statments made by Bill Swan
(bills@persci), I'd like to make a few comments.

>                                              About 2/3 of South Africa's
>white are blue-collar, and many of them are what would be termed "po' white
>trash" in the American South, poorly educated, semi-literate, with few skills.
>These are the people that have the most to lose from apartheid,

Yes, they might have the most to loose, but they do not form 2/3 of the white
South African population, at least not any more.  In the first half of this
century maybe, but the vast majority of white SA is quite well off and well
educated.  There was a time when whites could drop out of school in grade 10
or even grade 8 and still be assured of a job, just because they were white.
Those days are long gone and most whites realise it and accept it.

That is also why I think many young blacks in SA are now cutting their own
throats (horrible figure of speech).  They boycott schools (partly because
of complaints about quality of education), don't get any education and 
therefore just get further behind.  Even if they "take over the country"
they are still going to need that education and it would by no means be
easier to get then than now.

The way I see it (and yes, I am an Afrikaner, although that says about as 
much as saying you are a Canadian of Irish extraction), there are two big
hurdles in getting apartheid dismantled: a political one and a social one.
There is not really an economical one (in fact economics are more likely to
be the driving force behind the dismantling process).

Political: If you are part of a minority in a country, and your minority
have just about all the political say in that country, would you be
willing to relinquish that power to a majority that you perceive as being
hostile to you, especially if you have seen what happened to other groups
in similar situations in the rest of your continent?  I doubt it.  Yet
that is exactly what is being asked from the government of South Africa
- not an easy request to satisfy; no wonder they are dragging their feet.
(If only they would realize that by dragging their feet they are only making
matters worse.)

That is why perceptions have to be changed. But since all is not just a
matter of perception, a fairly unique political solution is also required.
One in which minorities (because it is to a large extent true that, as the
government likes to point out, SA is a country of minorities) will not be
"lost" amongst the majority.  As the SA ambassador to Canada has recently
said: "Africa has not been kind to its minorities" (and that, believe me,
is an understatement).

Social: For many white South Africans (and they are not only Afrikaners),
the black people and their culture are foreign, "different", and for some
even menacing. This despite the fact that they have lived beside them/it
for all of their lives, but that is the result of apartheid which literally
means separation).  They are afraid that somehow they will lose their
identity (whatever that is) and culture if they "mix" with the blacks
socially and culturally.

That is why constructive engagement has a better chance of (peaceful)
success than sanctions and disinvestment.  Those people/companies that
operate in SA and go about their daily business the way any decent human
being should expect, create microcosms of non-racial environments inside
SA.  People working there and dealing with them see "Hey, what is so bad
about this non-racial stuff - I share the office, lunch room, even toilet
with a black person and nothing happens!  This black person is even an
interesting, educated and intelligent human being.  He has basically the
same feelings, desires, fears and dreams that I have despite the fact
that we are from completely different cultural backgrounds."  And barriers
go down and attitudes change and people start to trust each other.

The Afrikaners is generally a proud and obstinate tribe - keep shouting and
yelling at them and beat them and tell them what to do and the less they will
listen, even if they know what you say is right.  They want to do things
because THEY decided to do it, not because someone else told them to do it.
(A very common human trait I am afraid; Afrikaners just got an extra measure
of it.)  One can influence them, but not (or at least only with great
difficulty) through confrontation.  That the British (and to a lesser extent
the Dutch) learned the hard way in the past.

>Understanding the problem is the first step towards fixing it. Demonstrations,
>no matter how much fun they are to hold, are not going to change the attitudes
>of the Afrikaaner "po' white trash". Neither will disinvestment.
>
>Disinvestment in fact reinforces the "laager" (round up the wagons!) mentality
>of these people, 

Except for the "po' white trash" I could not agree more.

Well, I can say lots more, but have probably said too much already.  If you
have read till here, thanks for the perseverence!
Regards

Riel Smit                                              +1 519 888 4004
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