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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>
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