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<text id=91TT0327>
<title>
Feb. 18, 1991: South Africa:The Lost Generation
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Feb. 18, 1991 The War Comes Home
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 48
SOUTH AFRICA
The Lost Generation
</hdr><body>
<p>Apartheid's sad legacy: millions of black youths unequipped for
the future
</p>
<p>By Scott MacLeod/Johannesburg--With reporting by Peter
Hawthorne/Cape Town
</p>
<p> He says to call him "Che Guevara." He lives in Zola, one
of the ghetto districts that make up the vast black township
of Soweto, outside Johannesburg. At 22 he is a hardened veteran
of the struggle against apartheid. He has killed "enemies of
the people" and is prepared to kill again.
</p>
<p> Seven years ago he became a supporter of the then outlawed
African National Congress. With other teenagers he started
stoning police vehicles. When leaders of the liberation
movement sought to make the townships ungovernable, he became
one of the enforcers. If he caught a family paying rent to
municipal authorities in defiance of the rent boycott, he would
serve them with an eviction notice. "If they refused to go,"
he says, "we'd speak to them in the language of the struggle.
We'd kill them and burn their house down."
</p>
<p> There are millions of young men, some like Che, in South
Africa, a country's lost generation. Nelson Mandela hailed
black youth as the "Young Lions," who took over as the shock
troops of the revolution while he and other aging black leaders
were locked away in prison. The "comrades," as they called
themselves, battled the state's security forces for control of
the townships, rooted out informers and sellouts, and
spearheaded worker stay-aways and consumer boycotts. It was
their militancy and surging growth, as much as anything else,
that finally convinced the white government in Pretoria that
apartheid's days were numbered.
</p>
<p> Freedom has come for Mandela, and it may be nearing for all
blacks who long to rule in their own land. But the youth are
emerging as apartheid's saddest and potentially most dangerous
legacy: as many as 5 million young people, from their early 30s
down to perhaps 10, mostly school dropouts who are unable to
get jobs and unprepared to make constructive contributions to
society. They are the deprived, activists, layabouts or
thieves. They live in bleak urban townships, where the standard
four-room house shelters an average of 10 people. They are
often murderous supporters of rival groups like the A.N.C., the
Pan Africanist Congress and the Inkatha Freedom Party. What
unites them is lives that have known little besides political
conflict. When the day of liberation comes, what will they do?
</p>
<p> They have learned all too well how to imitate the violence
of a state that has often used live ammunition on defenseless
protesters and fired tear gas to disperse groups of small
children. They have lived in a world, says the Rev. Frank
Chikane, head of the South African Council of Churches, "of
military operations and night raids, of roadblocks and body
searches, where friends and parents get carried away in the
middle of the night."
</p>
<p> The fiery images of death have become part of their normal
experience. Many of them, in the words of Drum magazine editor
Barney Cohen, are capable of killing at the drop of a match.
They have developed a youth culture of alienation and
intolerance that may be more destructive, in its sheer scale,
than anything seen in Beirut, Belfast or the Gaza Strip.
</p>
<p> Apartheid, by robbing black community and family life of all
authority and cohesion, is to blame. But so, to some extent,
is the type of fight that blacks chose to wage against white
oppression. For years parents have been standing back while
their children moved to the front trenches of the freedom
struggle.
</p>
<p> The youth rebellion began on June 16, 1976, when the
schoolchildren of Soweto, seething over the inferior
instruction known as Bantu education, rose up in protest
against the state's edict that their lessons must be learned
in Afrikaans, the language of the ruling whites. The initial
battles left more than 400 dead, but the uprising was never
completely quelled. In 1984 the comrades of the still simmering
townships rebelled again, setting off a series of violent
protests that killed more than 2,000 over the next two years
and prompted the government to impose a state of emergency. The
turmoil presented Pretoria with grave political probincluding
the imposition of stronger international sanctions, which
President F.W. de Klerk is still trying to solve.
</p>
<p> But the endless conflict also helped transform black
children. As the youth population mushroomed, so did its power
to do violence. Now there are 28.5 million blacks in the
country, half of them under the age of 14, many of them with
no notion of how to live in a peaceful world. Black parents are
frustrated at their inability to get their children to return
to school. "Liberation now; education later" became the slogan
of the 1980s, but it only promises to make the 1990s that much
harder.
</p>
<p> Spending its days in the streets, the lost generation alarms
many black community leaders as much as it does white
government officials. Perhaps half the urban youth eschew
political activism, preferring to loaf, play soccer, drink beer
and shoot dice. Thousands upon thousands of others are tough
political activists. They seem to roam the townships like so
many deputy sheriffs, setting down the law of the street and
enforcing it with harsh punishment.
</p>
<p> Although the practice has died down recently, teenage judges
presided over so-called people's courts that almost casually
handed out death sentences to suspected traitors. A youth
invention that has not disappeared is "necklacing," the method
of mob execution in which a gasoline-doused rubber tire is
thrown around a suspected traitor's body and set ablaze.
</p>
<p> "Chris," 26, has no interest in working and little time for
politics. He is too busy stealing. He started with cars, moved
on to breaking into houses in the affluent white suburbs and
eventually to armed robbery.
</p>
<p> He claims that he would never kill for money. But he admits
that he has killed out of revenge. After burying a friend who
had been murdered, he and a gang of comrades armed with pangas
went after the youth they suspected of the killing. "We chopped
him up," Chris says. "His head was over here. His hands were
over there."
</p>
<p> Black crime is soaring. Poverty has removed the stigma from
stealing, and young people are no longer afraid of the police.
Blacks have invented a name for the new youthful criminals:
they are the comtsotsis, gangsters masquerading as political
activists. In Soweto, which has 3 million residents, an
epidemic of car thefts and armed holdups has left many people
cowering in their homes after sunset. The township ranks among
the murder capitals of the world: in 1989 Soweto reported 1,383
killings, compared with 1,900 in New York City and 434 in
Washington.
</p>
<p> Gangs conduct classes for young boys in the fine arts of car
theft and burglary. They use Soviet-made AK-47 assault rifles
to carry out bank robberies and payroll heists. Much of the
crime is vicious. A bunch of street toughs recently murdered
an elderly New Zealand tourist and stole his wristwatch after
he made a wrong turn and wound up in Soweto after dark. "This
is because black people are suffering," a black burglar told
a white Johannesburg man as he robbed his house and raped a
woman friend.
</p>
<p> The most worrisome trend is the readiness of young rival
activists to kill each other. In the province of Natal alone,
more than 4,000 people have died since clashes erupted in 1986
between followers of the A.N.C. and the Zulu-based Inkatha
movement, headed by Chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi. Instead of
inspiring a new era of peace, Mandela's return has seen the
fighting spread to Soweto and other townships encircling
Johannesburg. In 1990 nearly 3,500 were killed in black
communal violence, the worst year's toll in modern South African
history.
</p>
<p> Prince, 34, steered clear of politics to take advantage of
economic opportunities opening up for blacks. He became a bank
teller--until his world collapsed in 1983 when the bank was
robbed by a group of his friends and police accused him of
being the inside man.
</p>
<p> After serving four years in prison, Prince is trying to
build a future for his family. But he is filled with resentment
when he sees the stark contrasts between black Alexandra
township and the nearby white suburb of Sandton. "Even if you
are blindfolded, you know you are in Alex by the smell," he
says. "But get in your car, and in five minutes--look at the
mansions, smell the flowers, see the BMWs and the overflowing
grocery trolleys in the supermarkets. It can make you cry."
</p>
<p> The dormant A.N.C. Youth League is being revived to bring
the comrades under the movement's umbrella. The league's slogan--Fight! Produce! Learn!--echoes the mixed signals that
A.N.C. leaders are sending to the youth. Mandela has been
urging them to go back to school, but the A.N.C. still employs
young students in boycotts that keep them in the streets.
</p>
<p> Worse, the mass-action campaign includes attacks on black
municipal councilors and black policemen--part of apartheid's
crumbling system--that encourage the perpetuation of
black-against-black violence. In 1990 there were more than 400
recorded attacks on black councilors and policemen, resulting
in at least 25 deaths. How will the young react when black
politicians and police are representing a black government?
</p>
<p> These militant strategies may keep youths motivated for the
cause, but they do little to prepare them for a painful reality
ahead. The "new South Africa," as Mandela and De Klerk both
like to call it, may in many ways be as bad or worse than the
old.
</p>
<p> Blacks will have the vote and a right to equal opportunity.
The new political system will presumably be a democracy. The
black middle class of entrepreneurs, lawyers and other
professionals that has sprung up under apartheid will grow.
There is a reasonable chance for racial harmony, since even the
most militant blacks accept the right of whites to be fellow
South Africans.
</p>
<p> But the huge economic disparities between whites and blacks
will continue for years. A majority of South Africa's blacks
are desperately poor: at least 7 million live in destitute
squatter camps. They will see few dramatic improvements anytime
soon. Black unemployment, as high as 41% in some areas, is
unlikely to fall quickly. "The future looks extremely bleak,"
says John Kane-Berman, head of the Johannesburg-based South
African Institute of Race Relations. "There is every possibility
that the average person will be materially worse off than he
is now."
</p>
<p> Such a future would be a profound shock to the lost
generation. The comrades seem to take it for granted that they
have earned the right to the easy life-style enjoyed by whites.
They assume that once the A.N.C. controls the government, the
benefits will start flowing to blacks.
</p>
<p> But blacks lack the education and skills needed to expand
the economy significantly in the short term. "There is
absolutely no way that those expectations will be met," says
Kehla Shubane, 32, a researcher at the University of
Witwatersrand. Under optimal conditions, it could take South
Africa between five and 10 years to begin making tangible
progress. If adopted, the A.N.C.'s socialist-oriented economic
proposals--popular with the lost generation--would only
postpone material improvement.
</p>
<p> Because the black leadership is afraid to alienate them, the
restless youth may exert a baleful influence over the
negotiations for South Africa's future political and economic
system. "The youth support us because we speak their language--housing, education, jobs," says Jackie Selebi, a member of
the A.N.C.'s national executive committee. "As soon as we stop
demanding that, we will run into trouble."
</p>
<p> This is exactly the kind of talk that makes whites insist
on some kind of veto power under a new system. The existence
of so many uneducated and unemployed blacks, says government
negotiator Stoffel van der Merwe, "makes it more important to
have a constitution in which the power of the majority is very
definitely subject to checks and balances."
</p>
<p> One way or another, the next generation of blacks can expect
to win control of their lives. That will be a great day in
South Africa. But no new political system--at least in the
near future--will be able to fulfill the hopes of the
generation that has already been lost.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>