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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>
-
-