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- <text id=90TT3286>
- <title>
- Dec. 10, 1990: South Africa:Angst In Afrikanerdom
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Dec. 10, 1990 What War Would Be Like
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 66
- SOUTH AFRICA
- Angst in Afrikanerdom
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The descendants of the founders of South Africa's apartheid
- state debate their role in a black-ruled society
- </p>
- <p>By SCOTT MACLEOD/JOHANNESBURG
- </p>
- <p> When Hendrik Verwoerd Jr. was a young man, his father served
- as South Africa's Prime Minister. During his years in office--1958 to 1966--Hendrik Sr. sought to implement "grand
- apartheid," a system intended to preserve a mighty white nation
- occupying 87% of the land, with blacks living in small
- "homelands" in the rest of the territory.
- </p>
- <p> Today Hendrik Jr., 50, sits in a modest storefront in the
- dusty Transvaal farming village of Morgenzon, trying to
- persuade fellow whites, in essence, to cut their losses and
- establish their own small homeland. As a leader of an Afrikaner
- nationalist group called the Orange Workers, he advocates
- setting up a separate state, provisionally named Afrikanerland,
- on roughly 13% of South Africa's territory. Of his father's
- failed dream, Verwoerd shrugs and says, "People lost faith."
- </p>
- <p> Afrikaners--the 3 million descendants of 17th century
- Dutch, French and German settlers--have seen their grip
- gradually weakening since 1976, when an uprising in the
- township of Soweto heralded a surge in black demands for
- political rights. But this year, by freeing Nelson Mandela,
- legalizing the African National Congress and pursuing
- negotiations with black leaders on a new constitution, President
- F.W. de Klerk has sent a profound shock through Afrikanerdom.
- Appearing finally to accept that they cannot maintain their
- near exclusive hold on state power for much longer, Afrikaners
- across the political spectrum are asking what role they should
- play if South Africa is ruled by the black majority.
- </p>
- <p> For Afrikaners who do not share De Klerk's vision of a
- multiracial society living in harmony, the idea of an all-white
- ministate is gaining in appeal. The Orange Workers published
- a detailed map proposing a territory roughly covering the
- former Boer republics of the Transvaal and Orange Free State.
- Earlier, Carel Boshoff, Verwoerd's brother-in-law, proposed
- setting up a homeland called Orandee in the desolate northern
- Cape Province.
- </p>
- <p> The right-wing Conservative Party, which is supported by
- about 40% of Afrikaners, is demanding that De Klerk and his
- National Party call new elections. Though the National Party
- has ruled since 1948, the Conservatives believe they stand an
- excellent chance of gaining power because De Klerk's
- initiatives have been so unpopular among the country's 5
- million whites. Conservative leader Andries Treurnicht last
- month rejected De Klerk's offer to join in negotiations and
- issued a veiled threat to take up arms against a white sellout.
- Privately, however, many Conservatives realize the days of
- white domination are over, and are considering adopting the
- idea of a separate homeland as well.
- </p>
- <p> In religious and intellectual circles, debates about the
- past are as vigorous as discussions about the future. At a
- conference last month, Dutch Reformed Church theologian Willie
- Jonker declared apartheid a sin and confessed his guilt as well
- as that of the church and "the Afrikaner people as a whole."
- Although his declaration caused an uproar, his statements
- echoed a historic resolution adopted two weeks earlier at a
- church synod. Former President P.W. Botha briefly emerged from
- seclusion to express his anger. "The Afrikaners, my people,
- were not oppressors," he insisted. But progressive Afrikaners
- are advocating that the government take the matter further by
- actually apologizing to blacks and providing restitution for
- the damage done by apartheid.
- </p>
- <p> Thus far, De Klerk has steered clear of confessions,
- apologies and reparations. Some of his advisers believe,
- however, that some sort of official apology might be
- forthcoming in the final stages of negotiations. The most
- outspoken comment from De Klerk's circle has come from Deputy
- Foreign Minister Leon Wessels. Last August he described
- apartheid as "a dreadful mistake" that did not take "human
- factors" into account. "An apology is on the minds of many
- Afrikaners," Wessels says, "but not on the mind of the
- government yet."
- </p>
- <p> The antiapartheid movement has taken note of Afrikaner
- angst, but is not necessarily impressed. "No one in a high
- position has actually said they are sorry for all the hurt they
- have caused to victims of apartheid," says Anglican Archbishop
- Desmond Tutu. "We blacks, for our part, are ready to forgive.
- But the other party must be contrite and ready to do
- reparation. Your contrition will be demonstrated by your
- willingness to make amends. We cannot just say, `Let bygones be
- bygones.'"
- </p>
- <p> Afrikaner soul searching even extends to such a holy of
- holies as the Day of the Covenant, the annual Dec. 16
- commemoration that marks the Afrikaner victory over the Zulus
- in the 1838 Battle of Blood River. Now that De Klerk is calling
- for the races to live together in one nation, some Afrikaners
- feel a national holiday glorifying the white man's victory over
- the black man is more inappropriate than ever.
- </p>
- <p> Many Afrikaners are rethinking the very meaning of Blood
- River. "It has been seen as the victory of Christianity over
- savage Africans," says Max du Preez, editor of the influential
- Afrikaans weekly Vrye Weekblad. "Now it is seen rather as the
- point where Afrikaners became accepted as an African tribe and
- determined that they had a right to the soil." The survival of
- the nation will depend on whether Afrikaners fully accept that
- their black fellow countrymen share an equal right to the land
- of South Africa.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-