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Title: South%20Africa


1
South Africas Apartheid
  • Consequences and
  • Cultural Responses

2
Outline
  • History of Apartheid (e.g. Cry, My Beloved
    Country Cry Freedom)
  • Consequences Responses
  • 1 Long Nights Journey into the Day
  • (Literary Responses)
  • 2 the poems about physical sufferings
  • 3 Stories on Race Relations and anti-Apartheid
    movements (The following two weeks)
  • 4 about Gender Relations (The following two
    weeks)
  • 5 more indirect styles --Foe
  • 6 tradition and individual vs. society The
    Prophetess
  • (The Other Cultural Examples)
  • 7 musiccrossover style 8 art works

3
History Triangle formed
  • 1652 --The Dutch East India Company arrived,
    displacing the Bantu-speaking black Africans
  • 1795 -- The British seized Cape Town, and the
    Afrikaaners began the 'Great Trek' to find new
    bases. 
  • 1814 The British displaced the Dutch, who moved
    inland to Natal, the Orange Free State, and the
    Transvaal
  • 1867 -- 1886 Gold and diamond discovered in these
    areas ? Boer War (1899-1902)

The Dutch (Boer, Afrikaans) The Dutch (Boer, Afrikaans) The Dutch (Boer, Afrikaans)
The British Xhosa (the blacks)
4
History domination of Afrikaans
  • 1910 -- the four colonies were joined together
    under the Act of the Union, and the British
    handed the administration of the country over to
    the White locals.
  • 1913/14 -- The Mines and Works Act and the Land
    act a 'color bar' was legalized and blacks were
    prohibited from owning land anywhere but in
    'native reserves'--7 percent of the whole.
  • 1931-- South Africa gained its independence from
    Britain
  • 50,000 white farmers have twelve times as much
    land for cultivation and grazing as 14 million
    rural blacks
  • 1930s the government tried to mechanize
    agricultural practices in rural South Africa. ?
    Fewer black workers were needed. severe droughts
    ? urban migration

5
History The Beginnings of Apartheid
  • the Native Lands and Trust Act of 1936 --denied
    the blacks the right to own land restricting
    them from purchasing land outside the areas
    reserved for the various native peoples.
  • the Native Representation Bill
  • eliminated any form of black African
    representation in the House of Assembly.

6
Apartheid --institutionalized
  • 1948 Apartheid institutionalized since Afrikaner
    Nationalists won the election
  • a method of divide and rule to counteract the
    so-called "black danger" Afrikaner rulers saw
    Africans as threatening to overrun or engulf them
    by their sheer numbers.
  • Brutal racism imprisonment, police killings and
    murder (e.g. confiscation of property and the
    forced removal of millions of blacks )

7
Apartheid
  • Other examples of the laws -- Population
    Registration Act Group Areas Act The Bantu
    Authorities Act (or Homeland Act)
  • Passes Black men and women, or even people who
    appeared to possibly be black, were required by
    law to carry passes at all times stating who they
    were and why they belonged in a certain area.

8
Consequences Shantytown, Lack of Resources and
Tsosti
  • E. g. Sophiatown, Soweto near Johannesburg
  • In crowded, often unsanitary, and potentially
    dehumanizing living conditions
  • Materials used for the houses-- corrugated tin,
    newspaper, cardboard boxes, and whatever else
    could be found to keep out wind and rain.
  • "Most of the yards had a single lavatory and one
    tap which were shared by 150 to 200 residents"
    (Mattera, p. 50).
  • Education 1938 -- fewer than one-third of the
    country's black school-aged children were
    actually enrolled in schools.
  • Tsotsi the many black youths who turned to
    street hustling (theft or murder). E.g. Cry, the
    Beloved Country -- Absalom Kumalo.

9
Examples Cry, the Beloved Country (1995)
  • Setting (written in 1947), post WWII
    Johannesburg
  • An aging Zulu pastor goes there to search for his
    son, as well as his brother and sister, only to
    find the son guilty of murdering a white man who
    was devoted to the cause of racial justice. ?
    the relations between the two fathers.

10
Examples Cry, the Beloved Country
  • Issues Urban migration ? the breaking of African
    tribes poor living conditions of the blacks in
    the city ? Tsotsi, fear and possibilities of
    reconciliation.

11
Examples Cry, the Beloved Country (1995)
  • ""There is fear in the land. And fear in the
    hearts of all who live there. And fear puts an
    end to understanding and the need to understand.
    So how shall we fashion such a land when there is
    fear in the heart? The white man will put more
    locks on his door and get a fine fierce dog, but
    the beauty of the trees and of the stars, these
    things we shall forego.
  • "Cry, the beloved country, for the unborn child
    that is the inheritor of our fear. Let him not
    love the earth too deeply.

Let him not be too moved when the birds of his
land are singing, nor give too much of his heart
to a mountain or a valley. For fear will rob him
of all if his gives too much. Yes cry, cry, the
beloved country.".
12
Examples Cry, the Beloved Country
  • "For it is the dawn that has come,
  • as it has come for a thousand centuries, never
    failing. But when that dawn will come, of our
    emancipation, from the fear of bondage and the
    bondage of fear, why, that is a secret.

13
Note U.S. vs. South Africa
U.S. S.A.
modern, industrialized Western democracy with an oppressed but culturally assimilated black minority an African, third-world country with a white minority enjoying a first-world living standard
separate schools, transportation, and eating facilities native reserves and locations
50-60s resistance movements 50-60s resistance movements
1964 the Civil Rights Act 1965 the Voting Rights Act. 1960s -- apartheid reached its zenith.
14
Resistance movements (1)
  • 1943 Nelson Mandela ? ANC PAC
  • 1946 Miners strike
  • 1960 -- The Abolition of Passes and Coordination
    of Documents Act (? Sharpville Massacre) a large
    group of blacks in Sharpeville refused to carry
    their passes the government declared a state of
    emergency. The emergency lasted for 156 days,
    leaving 69 people dead and 187 people wounded.
    (source)
  • 1960s -- the banning of African National
    Congress (ANC) and the Pan Africanist Congress
    (PAC) ? International sanctions and sabbotage
  • state of emergency (1960 1989) those who went
    on demonstration can be sentenced to death,
    banished or imprisoned.

15
Resistance movements (1) example
  • Sharpville Massacre on March 21, 1960, in
    Sharpeville. 69 people were killed, including 8
    women and 10 children, and of the 180 people who
    were wounded, 31 were women and 19 were children.
  • Our Sharpville p. B 10
  • I was playing hopscotch on the slate
  • When the miners roared past in lorries,
  • Their arms raised, signals at a crossing,
  • Their chanting foreign and familiar
  • Like the call and answer of road gangs
  • Across the veld, building hot arteries
  • From the heart of the Transvaal

16
Resistance movements (2)
  • 1970 ? Black Consciousness In Steven Biko's own
    words, 'we black people should all the time keep
    in mind that South Africa is our country and that
    all of it belongs to us' ? e.g. Cry Freedom
  • -- insists on Black autonomy
  • Uprisings
  • language education (? Soweto uprising, the
    beginning of the end)

17
Examples Cry Freedom (1987)
  • Plot South African journalist Donald Woods is
    forced to flee the country after attempting to
    investigate the death in custody of his friend
    the black activist Steve Biko.
  • Opening The raid on Crossroads squatters camp
  • Ending Soweto uprising
  • Bikos ideas
  • Black Consciousness
  • his speech
  • his self defense (naked racism)
  • The visit to a black township
  • Afrikaners version
  • Last view of landscape

18
Resistance movements Soweto Student Uprising
  • "It was a picture that got the worlds attention
    A frozen moment in time that showed 13-year-old
    Hector Peterson dying after being struck down by
    a policeman's bullet.  At his side was his
    17-year-old sister.  (source)

19
Apartheid Repeal
  • 1980s International sanctions radicalization
    of resistance movements ?
  • Some minor laws (e.g. interracial marriage) were
    abolished by 1990
  • 1985-1988, the P.W. Botha governments
    elimination of black oppositions
  • 1991 -- President de Klerk obtained the repeal of
    the remaining apartheid laws and called for the
    drafting of a new constitution.
  • 1993 -- a multiracial, multiparty transitional
    government was approved, and fully free elections
    were held in 1994, which gave majority
    representation to the African National Congress.

20
Response 1 Long Nights Journey into the Day
  • South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation
    Commission (TRC)
  • Purpose Restorative Justice, rather than
    retributive justice
  • . . . Restorative justice. And this is the
    option that we have chosen. But there is justice.
    the perpetrators don't get off scot free. They
    have to confess publicly, in the full glare of
    television lights, that they did those ghastly
    things. And that's pretty, pretty tough."--
    Desmond Tutu
  • Since the past cannot be un-lived, we have to
    face it.? To establish as complete as possible
    the causes and the extent of the gross violation
    of human rights.
  • Two commissions TRC HRV (Human Rights
    Violation) to hear stories of the victims and
    survivors of traumas.

21
Response 1 Long Nights Journey into the Day
  • Case 1
  • Amy Biehl-- Amy Biehl, an American student in
    South Africa working with the ANC, was killed by
    four Black youths during political unrest in
    Guguletu township.
  • Why they kill -- "Killing someone like her
    exposed both our anger and the conditions under
    which we lived. If we had been living reasonably,
    we would not have killed her."-- Easy Nofemela
    on the killing of Amy Biehl

22
Long Nights Journey into the Day
  • Case 2. "Cradock 4." Eric Taylor, a white
    person who had worked (and killed) to uphold the
    apartheid government and who now had a change of
    heart and was remorseful for his acts.
  • His way of killing beat the four persons (who
    were supposed to be movement leaders, but one was
    actually unknown to them) to death and then burn
    them.
  • (clips 1his belief, 2 his change )
  • The widows refused to agree with amnesty.

23
Long Nights Journey into the Day
  • Case 3. Robert McBride-- an ANC activist
  • "No one has apologized to me yet for either
    oppressing me directly or indirectly or happily
    benefitting from my oppression"-- Robert McBride
    on apology
  • Is he a terrorist? Clip MaBride vs. a victims
    family

24
Long Nights Journey into the Day
  • Case 4. Guguletu 7--the story of seven young men
    who were killed in what now appears to have been
    a set-up designed to make the apartheid police
    look as if they had killed a group of dangerous
    terrorists.
  • Mbelo as a black policeman/informant
  • the process of reconciliation

25
Questions to ponder (1) What is truth? What is
justice?
  • TRC presents conflicting testimonies
  • Archbishop Tutu refers the past as a jigsaw
    puzzle of which the TRC report is only a piece,
    and alludes to a search for the clues that lead
    . . . To a truth that will . . . never be fully
    revealed. (TRC report 4, qtd in Graham 11).
  • Factual and forensic truths vs. personal and
    narrative truths
  • Desmond Tutu on restorative versus retributive
    justice

26
Questions to ponder (1) What is justice?
  • Cases in Contrast
  • The endless hunting for Nazi regime supporters
  • Absalom in Cry, my Beloved Country.
  • The US The Washington Post June 8, 2000 - "The
    nation's war on drugs unfairly targets African
    Americans, who are far more likely to be
    imprisoned for drug offenses than whites, even
    though far more whites use illegal drugs than
    blacks,.... Overall, black men are sent to
    prisons on drug charges at 13 times the rate of
    white men.... Overall, one in 20(1/20) black men
    over the age of 18 is in a state or federal
    prison compared with one in 180 (1/180) white
    men."

27
Questions (2) How to resolve large-scale
conflicts
  • law enforcement, public policy,
  • non-violent demonstrations,
  • contracts, treaties
  • use of force and imposed peace by the victor over
    the vanquished.
  • TRC dialogue and collaborative problem solving,
    arbitration, mediation,? Truth is the Road to
    Reconciliation?
  • A related question what drive some people to
    brutal killings? How do we avoid making errors
    we are induced to make by historic circumstances?

28
Q (3) How do we face (collective) violence
survive trauma?
  • To REPRESS it, to seek VENGEANCE, RETRIBUTION,
    or to UNDERSTAND and FORGIVE?
  • To face it through a certain ritual and with a
    group of people, or to face it alone. (Example
    the journalist whose father was killed.) Is
    direct confrontation of the perpetrators and
    victims testimonies productive? Should memory be
    the only means of facing the past?

29
Q (4) Justice, Truth, Forgiveness, or merely
Amnesty
  • Who should be empowered to grant forgiveness
    when a person is murdered? Can the family members
    ever forgive on behalf of the lost loved one, or
    can they only forgive with regard to their own
    loss?
  • Is the TRC really engaged in offering forgiveness
    or only amnesty protection against prosecution?
    Do the victims testimonies get ignored when the
    perpetrators are taken as reasons for amnesty?
  • Can we forgive were we in the same boat? Do we
    dare to confess and apologize?
  • 80 of those who applied for amnesty were black

30
One Possible Interpretation of TRC
  • one effect of the TRC has been the restoration
    of narrative. In few countries in the
    contemporary world do we have a living example of
    people reinventing themselves through narrative
    (Ndebele qtd in Graham 12).
  • E.g. The Story I am about to Tell, Ubu and The
    Truth Commission, The Country of my Skull, etc.

31
Responses 2 Poems Related to Physical Suffering
  • Douglas Reid Skinner
  • The Body is a Country of Joy and Pain
  • prison experienced by
  • 1) mother, 2) isolated man, 3) raped woman, 4)
    self-alienated.
  • Mongane Serote Prelude (soul bursts on the
    paper and heart oozes into the ink)
  • Gladys Thomas Reflections of an Old Worker
    You become? were the Power over my body.

32
Response 3 Stories re. Anti-Apartheid movements
Race Relations

Bessie Head
Mbulelo Mzamane
Nadine Gordimer
33
Responses 4 Poems Related to Gender Relations
  • Love Song. . .

Antjie Krog
34
Response 5 Indirect Treatments
  • J. M. Coetzee Foe Historical revision or
    metafiction.

35
Responses 6 Confirmation of traditional culture
--
  • Njabulo S. Ndebele Pay more attention to
    individual psychology and the influences of
    tradition.
  • e.g. Prophetess

Mazisi Kunene The Final Supplication --
Cultural Displacement (back to Africa, but cannot
find his village.)
36
Responses 6 Confirmation of traditional culture
-- Prophetess
  • On what is the boys attention focused when he
    visits the prophetess? Are they signs of her
    spirituality?
  • dog darkness, vine, his own sensations, memory,
    doek (African headscarf, 11) camphor (12) her
    coughing
  • 2. The people on the bus How do they relate to
    each other? And to the prophetess? How are they
    different from each other?

the other women the big woman
the man with a balaclava (Woollen hat) the young man at the back the young man with immaculate dress
37
Prophetess
  • 3. Compared with the peoples discussion, how
    does the boy relate to the prophetess? What
    breaks the spell the prophetess has on him? What
    does the ending mean?
  • Re A story of initiation. The boy gains
    self-confidence.
  • The other issues Sangoma Christianity home
    vs. danger on the street.

38
Response 7 Paul Simons Graceland (1986)
  • an exquisite, multifaceted fusion of his own
    sophisticated
  • stream-of-consciousness poetry with black South
    Africa's
  • doo-wop-influenced township jive and Zulu
    choral music (Britanica.com).
  • Township Jive(????? ) this very up, very happy
    music
  • acapella (????? ) group Ladysmith Black Mambazo
  • General M.D. Shirinda and The Gaza Sisters
    Miriam Mekeba

39
Response 7 Music --"crossover style"
  • Enoch Sontonga's beautiful African hymn "Nkosi
    Sikilel'i Africa" (God Bless Africa 1897) an
    anthem and symbol of struggle to generations of
    Africans
  • -- the influence of the missionary school music
    training
  • -- the innovative a cappella vocal harmonies of
    mbube music
  • Ladysmith Black Mambazo
  • Mbube mellowed into iscathamiya ("to walk on
    one's toes lightly").

40
Ladysmith Black Mambazo
  • ISICATHAMIYA (Is-Cot-A-Me-Ya) born in the mines
    of South Africa. Black workers were taken by rail
    to work far away from their homes and their
    families. Poorly housed and paid worse, they
    would entertain themselves after a six-day week
    by singing songs into the wee hours every Sunday
    morning. Cothoza Mfana they called themselves,
    "tip toe guys", referring to the dance steps
    choreographed so as to not disturb the camp
    security guards. When miners returned to the
    homelands, the tradition returned with them.
    (source http//www.mambazo.com/bio.html )
  • Example 1

41
HOMELESS (Paul Simon and Joseph Shabalala)
  • Emaweni webaba Silale maweni . . . Homeless,
    homeless Moonlight sleeping on a midnight lake
    Homeless, homeless Moonlight sleeping on a
    midnight lake . . .
  • Strong wind destroy our home Many dead, tonight
    it could be you Strong wind, strong wind Many
    dead, tonight it could be you

42
Response 8 Artwork re. Anti-Apartheid
movements, Black Identity Race Relations
  • Dumile Feni (1939-1991)

43
Responses 8 Artwork re. Anti-Apartheid movements
Race Relations
  • Ironic ad.guerilla style, torn down soon

44
Response 6 Artwork re. Anti-Apartheid movements
Race Relations
  • I have never tried to make illustrations of
    apartheid, but the drawings and films are
    certainly spawned by and feed off the brutalized
    society left in its wake. I am interested in a
    political art, that is to say an art of
    ambiguity, contradiction, uncompleted gestures,
    and certain endings an art (and a politics) in
    which optimism is kept in check and nihilism at
    bay.(source)

William Kentridge 
45
Response 6 Artwork re. Anti-Apartheid movements
Race Relations
  • The Conservationists' BallCulling,
    Game-Watching, Taming, 1985

William Kentridge 
46
References
  • LONG NIGHT'S JOURNEY INTO DAY STUDY GUIDE
    http//www.newsreel.org/guides/longnight.htm
  • LADYSMITH BLACK MAMBAZO
  • Homeless lyrics
  • South African Music http//wus.africaonline.com/Af
    ricaOnline/music/Safrica.html
  • Graham, Shane. The Truth Commission and
    Post-Apartheid Literature in South Africa.
    Research in African Literature 34.1 (2003)
    11-30.
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