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TIME: Almanac 1995
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TIME Almanac 1995.iso
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<text id=93TT2183>
<title>
Sep. 06, 1993: Bright Life, Dark Death
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Sep. 06, 1993 Boom Time In The Rockies
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
SOUTH AFRICA, Page 45
Bright Life, Dark Death
</hdr>
<body>
<p>A color-blind American scholar eager to hasten democracy loses
her life to racial violence
</p>
<p>By DAVID VAN/BIEMA--With reporting by Peter Hawthorne/Cape Town and Adrian J.W. Maher/Los
Angeles
</p>
<p> Amy Biehl did not give her life to Africa, as she had planned.
Instead Africa took her life--not the democratic continent
she had dreamed of and worked to achieve, but the one she thought
she saw beyond, the Africa of hatred and futility.
</p>
<p> Last week Biehl, 26, a Fulbright scholar dedicated to hastening
South African democracy, became the first American victim of
the pitiless violence that has accompanied the country's slow
transformation. Her nationality was not significant to the teenagers
who knifed her repeatedly in the head: her skin color was reason
enough. But her murder was another indication that the violent,
sometimes anti-white rhetoric adopted by some political groups
is finding expression in action. The death of an idealist is
not the death of idealism, but it sent a chilly message to those
who hope that good intentions are a universal language.
</p>
<p> She was a radiant girl who fell in love with cultural diversity
in high school among Santa Fe's Hispanics and Native Americans
and was drawn in college toward the possibilities of black sovereignty
in Africa. "She wanted to make a difference," says classmate
Katie Bolich. "She was so committed." Biehl wrote her honors
thesis at Stanford University on Chester Crocker, the U.S. Assistant
Secretary of State who helped bring independence to Namibia.
In 1989 she traveled there and developed a close friendship
with Namibian President Sam Nujoma.
</p>
<p> When her Fulbright took her to Cape Town, she immersed herself
in black South African culture. "She wanted to live among the
people," says Bolich. Soon after arriving last fall, she was
speaking Xhosa, dancing to the local jazz and spending nights
with friends in the townships. Says Melanie Jacobs, her roommate,
who is mixed-race: "She was color-blind and completely at home
with us." At the University of the Western Cape, African National
Congress legal expert and executive member Dullah Omar guided
her research on women's issues and voter education. But her
interests pulled her back to the townships, where the real work
of instilling democracy will be done.
</p>
<p> Last Wednesday Biehl was preparing to leave Cape Town. She was
to fly back to Stanford on Friday to begin doctoral studies.
As she had done for months, Biehl offered some fellow students
a lift back to their homes in the black townships. They piled
into Biehl's mustard-colored Mazda, the one with the bumper
sticker reading OUR LAND NEEDS PEACE. Around 5 p.m., as she
drove into the township of Guguletu, a group of teenagers hurled
stones at the car. Trapped behind another vehicle, Biehl was
a sitting target for the brick that shattered her windshield.
She and her friends ran for a nearby gas station, but her assailants
were faster. "We tried to tell them that she was just another
student," says Sindiswa Bevu, who was in the car. "But some
didn't listen." When the murder was done and Bevu asked why,
one of the killers replied, "Because she's a settler."
</p>
<p> That meant because she was white. There was confusion as to
exactly which black political organization her killers were
aligned with. On Wednesday the Cape townships swarmed with members
of the Congress of South African Students, a group affiliated
with Nelson Mandela's African National Congress. In support
of a national black teachers' strike, some of its members had
initiated a campaign of violence and arson. But the "settlers"
remark and a shirt allegedly worn by one of the attackers pointed
toward the Pan-Africanist Students' Organization, a wing of
the Pan-Africanist Congress, which coined the motto "One Settler,
One Bullet," and the police arrested two teenage P.A.S.O. members.
When informed of Biehl's death, P.A.S.O. president Tsietsi Telite
said unrepentantly, "The youths and students are so angry and
frustrated that when they see someone they identify with the
dispossessing classes, anything can happen--and could happen
again."
</p>
<p> A spokesman for the Pan-Africanist Congress in Johannesburg
reacted differently, calling the crime an "abominable terrorist
act." Cape Town's A.N.C. director dissociated his organization
from the murder, and his group's national executive moved to
rein in its own members' use of racist rhetoric and inflammatory
slogans. As if to underscore the emptiness of such pledges,
gunmen firing assault rifles on Friday wounded eight people--whites and mixed-race--traveling by luxury-bus from Cape
Town to Johannesburg.
</p>
<p> In Newport Beach, California, the Biehl family has been deluged
with faxes and telephone calls from friends and advisers in
different schools, from the White House, from Namibia, from
Biehl's South African friends. In these she is repeatedly referred
to as a "sister." The loving condolences are inspiring, says
Amy's mother Linda. "She was part of something. They're a kind
of reconstruction of the world she lived in." A world of forgiving,
compassionate people, a place that has yet to be reconciled
with the world in which she died.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>