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- <text id=92TT0490>
- <title>
- Mar. 09, 1992: S. Africa:Extremes in Black and White
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Mar. 09, 1992 Fighting the Backlash Against Feminism
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 38
- SOUTH AFRICA
- Extremes in Black and White
- </hdr><body>
- <p>While the country moves toward a multiracial society, militants
- on both sides say they will never accept each other--and are
- getting ready to fight
- </p>
- <p>By Scott MacLeod/Johannesburg
- </p>
- <p> Negotiations to write a new constitution for South Africa
- have been under way since December, but sometimes it seems as
- if the extremes--white and black--might first pull the
- country apart. The growing strength of the pro-apartheid
- Conservative Party has forced President F.W. de Klerk to hold
- a whites-only referendum on March 17 to shore up support for
- multiracial democracy. Meanwhile, black ultranationalists are
- demanding nothing less than De Klerk's surrender of power. With
- the old order crumbling and the shape of the new uncertain, the
- country is riper than ever for the destructive influence of
- militants. Here are encounters with two of them.
- </p>
- <p> Ga Rankuwa Township, 8 a.m. Thami Mcerwa, 27, president of
- the Azanian Youth Organization (AZAYO)--Azania is what his
- movement would rename South Africa--is preparing for another
- day's work in "the struggle." He spent the night as he usually
- does: in a four-room matchbox house in Soweto that he shares
- with his mother, brother and two sisters. Then he made the
- 50-mile journey north in his battered green Toyota to this black
- ghetto outside Pretoria.
- </p>
- <p> Today his task is to deliver a eulogy for a fallen
- comrade. Before entering the scruffy cemetery on the edge of the
- township, Mcerwa takes off his T shirt, emblazoned with a
- picture of a guerrilla fighter triumphantly holding up an AK-47
- rifle, and pulls on a dashiki, a loose-fitting African tunic.
- "Power!" he shouts to the 100 assembled mourners. "One Azania!
- One nation!" As a hot morning sun beats down, he angrily accuses
- a white-owned chemical company of murdering his comrade by
- exposing him to dangerous toxins on the job. "They think black
- life is so cheap!" he yells.
- </p>
- <p> Pretoria, 4 p.m. Piet Rudolph, 54, a grim, potbellied
- former policeman wearing a khaki uniform with swastika-like
- emblems, slips into an empty basement restaurant. Run by a
- trusted friend, it is one of the places where he can hide if the
- police are looking for him. He prefers to stay in the shadows
- with the lights off as he settles into a corner table.
- </p>
- <p> Although Rudolph is the press officer for the neo-Nazi
- Afrikaner Resistance Movement, known as the A.W.B., his job
- mainly involves covert preparations for what he sees as the
- coming war to defend the white "fatherland" against blacks.
- Rudolph, in fact, is regarded as the country's most dangerous
- white terrorist. Though many continue to scoff at the A.W.B. as
- a comic-opera fringe group, that will change, Rudolph warns,
- when chaos descends upon South Africa.
- </p>
- <p> Mcerwa's hero is Steve Biko, the black nationalist leader
- whose 1977 death in police custody turned him into the country's
- most celebrated black martyr. At 12 Mcerwa joined the 1976
- Soweto uprising, the landmark outbreak of racial violence in
- which more than 100 blacks were killed. As he ran home after
- being teargassed, an older student who had been his political
- mentor was gunned down by the police.
- </p>
- <p> Haunted by such bitter memories, Mcerwa rejects the
- conciliatory approach of Nelson Mandela's African National
- Congress. "We want total liberation, not cosmetic changes," he
- explains. "It may take some bloodshed. We may go into a
- civil-war struggle. But quick-fix solutions won't work. As Steve
- Biko said, `It is better to die for an idea that will live than
- to live for an idea that will die.' "
- </p>
- <p> Mcerwa has already come close to dying. In a fight with
- A.N.C. members two years ago, his head was slashed open with a
- panga. In another incident, an unknown assailant shot him in the
- chest. But these brushes with death have not softened his
- militancy a bit. He does not accept the A.N.C.'s decision to
- suspend military attacks and ease sanctions. "The highest form
- of negotiation," he says, "is armed struggle."
- </p>
- <p> Whites, he contends, are oppressors with little role to
- play in the new South Africa. Afrikaners would have to accept
- minority status, and are barred from joining the Azanian
- organization. "Whites are part of the problem," he says. "They
- can't be part of the solution."
- </p>
- <p> Although Mcerwa's movement is relatively small and
- ineffective, at times there is more to it than cliches and
- slogans. The young radical grabbed headlines in January when he
- led a campaign against pop star Paul Simon for violating AZAYO's
- cultural boycott; during the singer's tour in South Africa,
- Mcerwa was arrested for the seventh time in 10 years after a
- hand-grenade explosion damaged the Johannesburg offices of a
- music company providing Simon with technical assistance. The
- police released Mcerwa seven days later pending further
- inquiries.
- </p>
- <p> As Rudolph sees it, the 3 million-strong Afrikaner volk
- inherited a glorious national legacy. "I received it as I
- received my mother's milk," he says. "I am a son of Africa. The
- graves of my people are here, and this is where my cradle
- stood."
- </p>
- <p> Together with leader Eugene Terre Blanche, Rudolph founded
- the A.W.B. in 1973. The most important of its objectives, he
- maintains, is the re-establishment of an Afrikaner nation in the
- Transvaal and Orange Free State provinces. Either large
- townships like Soweto would be partitioned out of the white
- state, or else blacks would simply have to accept white
- domination without complaint.
- </p>
- <p> The A.W.B.'s pursuit of that goal has earned it a deserved
- reputation for being not only the most aggressively racist of
- all the right-wing groups but also the most violent. At the root
- of its militancy is what it terms the swart gevaar, or black
- threat, combined with a conviction that reforms during the past
- decade have amounted to a gradual capitulation to
- communist-inspired black domination.
- </p>
- <p> Rudolph considers De Klerk a traitor for freeing and
- negotiating with Mandela. Last August A.W.B. storm troopers
- confronted police outside a hall where the President was
- speaking; in the ensuing clash, two A.W.B. men and a black
- bystander were killed. Rudolph and other leaders were arrested
- and will stand trial this month.
- </p>
- <p> The "Battle of Ventersdorp," as Rudolph proudly calls it,
- was not his first run-in with the white authorities. In 1990 he
- broke into air-force headquarters in Pretoria and stole a large
- cache of weapons. With the police on his tail, he disappeared
- underground for six months and tried to organize commando
- cells. To spark a Boer revolt, he went on a bombing spree,
- targeting the offices of two senior De Klerk aides and Melrose
- House, the historic site of the 1902 Afrikaner surrender in the
- Anglo-Boer War.
- </p>
- <p> It is no coincidence that Rudolph's exploits parallel
- those of his defiant forebears. Piet was named for a relative
- who commanded the cannons in the 1838 battle of Blood River,
- when the Boers defeated the Zulus and won control of
- considerable territory. As a boy, Rudolph spent hours listening
- to tales told by an old soldier who had been blinded by wounds
- received in the turn-of-the-century Anglo-Boer conflict.
- </p>
- <p> In Rudolph's mind, though, the proud memories are
- overwhelmed by enduring resentments. He vividly remembers how
- Afrikaners were persecuted by the richer, more powerful British.
- He felt the sting growing up on the gold reef east of
- Johannesburg, the son of a poor white miner who believed he was
- exploited by English capitalists. Even after Afrikaners won
- absolute power in 1948, Rudolph continued to feel inferior. Upon
- being taunted for his poor grammar as a young policeman, he
- recalls, "I decided it was the last time I would be treated this
- way by an English-speaker."
- </p>
- <p> After several years in the security branch, Rudolph left
- the police in 1967 to pursue political office. As a candidate
- for the ultra-right Reconstituted National Party, he lost four
- parliamentary elections. "It was impossible to get the support
- of South Africa for the Boer republic," he says. "The only way
- was an unconstitutional struggle."
- </p>
- <p> Mcerwa ponders the question, What will he do if the
- current negotiations lead to the formation of an interim
- government that includes Mandela? The A.N.C., he replies, has
- been co-opted by De Klerk. It has betrayed the people. "If the
- masses believe this government is undemocratic, we will resist,"
- he says.
- </p>
- <p> By now, Mcerwa has arrived back in Soweto for another
- organizational meeting. At a small dwelling that doubles as a
- comrade's home and an AZAYO branch office, he runs into Khosto
- Seathlolo, a leader of the 1970s' student protests who was
- sidelined by a long prison sentence. "He is one of our famous
- activists," Mcerwa explains. "No, Thami," Seathlolo replies.
- "You young guys are going to be the heroes."
- </p>
- <p> As Afrikaner civil servants stream out of Pretoria heading
- for their middle-class suburbs, Rudolph is eager to make a
- move. It may not be much longer, he speculates, before South
- Africa descends into civil war. If De Klerk hands over power to
- the A.N.C., he predicts, the volk will fight. If the
- pro-apartheid Conservative Party defeats De Klerk in his reform
- referendum, then it will be the blacks who rise up. Either way,
- the Boers stand to lose whatever powers and privileges they
- enjoyed during the apartheid years. "Time has run out in our
- land," Rudolph says. "Now this cannot be resolved without a
- fight." With that, he slips out the back exit, off to another
- meeting to plan the African-Boer war.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-