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- <text id=94TT1777>
- <title>
- Dec. 19, 1994: South Africa:Making Own Miracles
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Dec. 19, 1994 Uncle Scrooge
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SOUTH AFRICA, Page 52
- Making Their Own Miracles
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Though the government moves slowly to erase the ravages of
- apartheid, a quiet revolution is under way
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Peter Hawthorne/Cape Town
- </p>
- <p> A year ago this time, Nelson Mandela was standing amid a
- roar of adulation in Oslo as he received the Nobel Peace Prize,
- symbolizing the triumph of black African rights in his native
- land. Last week he had only words of hard truth for 2,000
- blacks, many of them barefoot and clad in tatters, gathered at
- a soccer field among the shacks of Orange Farm, a township in
- the southern Transvaal. Seven months into his term as President
- of South Africa, the good times he promised have barely begun.
- "Don't expect us to do miracles," he told the crowd. "Before the
- election I went around telling all our people that we wanted to
- ensure a better life for everybody. I bring you no good news."
- </p>
- <p> Even so, a revolution is quietly under way in this vast
- land. Here and there, in inventive and encouraging ways,
- individuals and groups of South Africans, white and black, are
- profoundly altering the way things were.
- </p>
- <p> Beside a dusty, rural road in the eastern Transvaal, six
- families of black farmers gathered two weeks ago under a thorn
- tree to celebrate their return to their ancestral lands. A
- hand-lettered cardboard sign hanging on a frayed tent nearby
- read Ra Boile Gae in Pedi, a language spoken in the north of the
- country, and Home Sweet Home in English. Pedis are the largest
- of the northern Sotho groups, and these jubilant returnees were
- members of a community that had lived and farmed there in
- Doornkop for more than 70 years. They tilled the fertile soil
- and earned renown for the juicy peaches they sold. In 1974 their
- homes, schools and churches were bulldozed by the National Party
- government, and they were driven into the wilderness, victims
- of the country's apartheid laws, which reserved 87% of the land
- for whites. Today the Pedis are among the first black South
- Africans to regain legal title to land so callously seized. It
- is a path thousands of others will soon follow.
- </p>
- <p> Nine hundred miles away in the Western Cape, white farmer
- Henry Hall, who was uprooted by a quirk of the same apartheid
- regime, is helping his black workers become shareholders in his
- thriving $10 million fruit-exporting business. The 170 laborers
- on his farm, some descended from slaves of the original Dutch
- settlers, have for the first time in their lives a financial
- asset to pass on to their children.
- </p>
- <p> Although Hall was ousted from his farm in Ciskei 13 years
- ago, when the so-called black homeland became "independent," he
- is now solidly re-established on rich terrain 60 miles from
- Cape Town. He looks back on apartheid as "a dreadful fiasco"
- for everyone concerned. "We're doing well again," he says. "I
- reckoned it was time I started giving something back." He is one
- of an increasing number of whites who are trying to help
- penniless black workers become property owners.
- </p>
- <p> Of all the transformations Mandela's government of
- national unity has tried so far, the return of blacks to the
- land, and of land to the blacks, is potentially the most
- volatile. Between 1960 and 1990 the government forced 3.5
- million people from their homes, in most cases clearing the way
- for whites to move in.
- </p>
- <p> Now the grossly unbalanced partitioning of the country is
- being reversed. Last month Mandela signed the Restitution of
- Land Rights Bill, which invites displaced blacks to file for
- the return of their former holdings. It also establishes a Land
- Claims Court to sort out the disputes that will inevitably
- arise. The bill, predicted Minister of Land Affairs Derek
- Hanekom, will help heal some of the country's wounds. More than
- that, he says, "it answers the cry for justice." Mandela and his
- ministers have tentatively set a goal of redistributing up to
- 30% of the nation's agricultural land over the next five years.
- </p>
- <p> Though many of the uprooted are firmly resettled in new
- homes around the country, the government estimates that 1
- million South Africans could be involved in the planned
- redistribution, including blacks who would like to own land but
- have never been able to do so. If a program of such magnitude
- is to succeed, the government will have to find ways to advance
- the rights of the disinherited blacks without touching off the
- latent anger of die-hard whites. Officials say they hope to
- avoid giving the impression that they are doing to the whites
- what whites did to blacks under apartheid: Mandela has pledged
- publicly that the new law will "do nothing of the sort." While
- many claims for land taken by the government, and then leased
- or sold to whites, will be easy to settle, the government
- insists that in no case will there be expropriations of land
- without proper compensation.
- </p>
- <p> Afrikaners have traditionally defined themselves with the
- word boer, meaning farmer; many are wealthy and accustomed to
- wielding political power. They might be expected to fight any
- claim to the land they have been farming for decades, no matter
- how they obtained it. In fact officials say they have been
- surprised at how ready some whites are to cooperate. Farmers are
- becoming receptive to negotiations on restitution claims.
- </p>
- <p> Hall is one of the early innovators. In the years since he
- was expelled from Ciskei, he has built his new farm, Whitehall,
- into one of the leading export operations in the Western Cape's
- fruit belt. This year he put a third of his holdings into a
- trust for his 170 permanent employees.
- </p>
- <p> The workers set up a representative committee that, with
- loans from two government-backed development banks, is buying
- a 33% share of Whitehall. The bank loans will be paid off with
- profits from farm sales, and the workers calculate that in 10
- years each of their shares should be worth about $28,000. For
- any South African worker, that is a sizable nest egg--and a
- rarity in the traditional master-servant world of South African
- farming.
- </p>
- <p> While the scheme does not actually transfer land, it gives
- workers part ownership of a very profitable venture. Wilhelmina
- Visser, whose three sisters and husband also work on the farm,
- says, "The past gave us nothing. Now we have something to put
- into our future." Farmer Hall calls it a "win-win situation.
- The workers have a sense of security, and the farm benefits by
- loyalty, job satisfaction and greater productivity." In the
- orchards, women pickers affectionately call him
- oupa--grandfather--behind his back.
- </p>
- <p> Hopeful as such experiments are, the struggle of the Pedi
- people of Doornkop is more typical. As early as 1964, the white
- government was pressing them to move to their designated
- homeland of Lebowa. When the last holdouts were forcibly ejected
- by police 20 years ago, the government took over the orchards
- of Doornkop as a training ground for riot squads. The Pedi
- owners received compensation of about $10 each.
- </p>
- <p> Aided by human-rights organizations, in 1989 the Pedis
- began legal action to reclaim their land. Mandela's government
- broke through years of wrangling, and early this month the first
- Doornkop families returned to their traditional home. More are
- going back every day, and Kalushi Kalushi, who is in charge of
- homecoming arrangements, predicts they will number 20,000 by
- early next year. He also expects the settlement to have
- electricity by then. "You can't believe what it was like to come
- home," says Kalushi, a librarian at the University of the
- Witwatersrand in Johannesburg. "When we stood under the thorn
- trees we could hear the bush singing. What a Christmas Day we
- are going to have."
- </p>
- <p> The dispossession of the country's black farmers and the
- near elimination of black agriculture began long before the
- National Party turned apartheid into a legal code. Mandela's
- government will almost certainly need more than its planned five
- years to make significant progress in reversing this historic
- injustice, much less bring all blacks the jobs, houses, schools
- and hospitals he vowed to provide a year ago. Yet the early
- indications of goodwill toward men are providing a glimmer of
- cheer for many South Africans this year.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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