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<text id=90TT0856>
<title>
Apr. 09, 1990: South Africa:From God To Mortal Man
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Apr. 09, 1990 America's Changing Colors
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 55
SOUTH AFRICA
From God to Mortal Man
</hdr>
<body>
<p>As black-on-black violence surges across the land, Nelson
Mandela's stature as a peacemaker diminishes
</p>
<p> Smoke billows from burning houses in the Valley of a
Thousand Hills in Natal province, where at least 39 die in
clashes among feuding Zulus. In the town of Welkom in the
Orange Free State, a black mob surrounds a minibus, hacks to
death the six black occupants and sets fire to the vehicle. In
the southern Transvaal township of Sebokeng, police open fire
on a crowd of 50,000 people protesting high rents, killing
perhaps eleven. In Katlehong, east of Johannesburg, war erupts
among black taxi drivers, leaving at least 25 dead and scores
injured.
</p>
<p> Is this the new South Africa promised by the unbanning of
the African National Congress and the release of Nelson
Mandela? As the A.N.C. prepared for its first meeting with the
government of President F.W. de Klerk--an April 11 session
has already been called off by the A.N.C. in protest at the
Sebokeng shootings--the spiral of violence was forcing
Mandela to face a sober reality: that he may have wielded more
moral authority as the world's most famous prisoner than he
does as a political leader in his second month of freedom.
</p>
<p> Locked away in jail, where he could not speak publicly or
even have his picture published, Mandela was an ethereal
inspiration to continued resistance against apartheid. To some
South African blacks, however, Mandela out of prison has become
an irrelevant figurehead, a dignified gentleman with utopian
socialist ideas that have little to do with their daily lives.
</p>
<p> Mandela's calls for discipline in the urban black townships
have been met by continuing terror from the young warlords who
exert life-and-death power in those hopeless precincts. His
appeal for children to return to school after a sporadic
six-year boycott has been widely ignored. And his plea for the
combatants in Natal to "take your guns, your knives and your
pangas and throw them into the sea" was answered by even
bloodier fighting in the rolling Zululand valleys.
</p>
<p> Before the government legalized the A.N.C. in February, the
group had argued that its underground network of agents could
quickly organize control in the black townships. As it turned
out, the A.N.C. enjoys less allegiance than it claimed.
Moreover, Mandela has been sending out a mixed message, calling
at once for peace and for a continuation of the "armed
struggle" against apartheid.
</p>
<p> Mandela's reduction in rank from antiapartheid god to mortal
man was predictable. "When he was still in jail, there was
nothing that he could do wrong," says Willie Breytenbach, head
of African studies at the University of Stellenbosch. "It is
almost as if there has been a decultification of Mandela."
Veteran liberal Helen Suzman says Mandela has been hurt by his
inability to stop black-on-black violence. "People who were
unreservedly delighted at his release have become a little
uneasy," she says.
</p>
<p> Mandela's damaged stature has achieved an important aim of
De Klerk's white government: to demystify the A.N.C. and make
clear that Mandela is only one of many black players. Before
his next session with the A.N.C., De Klerk plans to meet with
the leaders of the country's six self-governing black homelands
and with the chairmen of the ministers' councils of the
"colored" (mixed race) and Indian chambers to discuss "the
structuring of the process of negotiation." The talks with the
A.N.C. will set the ground rules for future bargaining on
majority rule that will presumably include other nonwhite
groups.
</p>
<p> But there is no single black agenda for postapartheid South
Africa, and nowhere is that more apparent than in Natal, where
for the past three years the inhabitants of the KwaZulu
homeland have been killing one another. On one side is the
A.N.C., the United Democratic Front and the Congress of South
African Trade Unions, whose vision is of a unified black
majority taking over the reins of power. On the other is Zulu
chief Mangosuthu Buthelezi, president of the 1.5 million-strong
Inkatha Movement and an old antagonist of the A.N.C., who has
a strong investment in the traditional tribal and economic
structure.
</p>
<p> The violence last week was triggered when vans and taxis
returning Inkatha members from a rally in Durban were attacked
near Pietermaritzburg by stone-throwing youths loyal to the
A.N.C. In three days of clashes, hundreds were injured,
villages were burned, and thousands fled.
</p>
<p> Buthelezi will meet with Mandela, perhaps as soon as this
week, to try to restore peace to Natal. But a rally to be
addressed by the two black leaders was called off, and few hold
out much hope for the talks. Last week Buthelezi dismissed the
power of the A.N.C. as a set of "myths that have now been
exploded." Obviously miffed that he was not to be included in
De Klerk's session with the A.N.C., the Zulu chief predicted
that at the first sign of trouble the A.N.C. would "pack its
bags and go home." The comment does not bode well for black
cooperation as South Africa tries to negotiate its way to a
more enlightened future.
</p>
<p>By Michael S. Serrill. Reported by Peter Hawthorne/Cape Town.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>