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South African's Silent Pain
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17536 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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Date : |
7 / 1990 |
3,735 Words |
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Nora Beloff Nora Beloff is a noted British journalist who recently made
her first visit to South Africa. |
One dominant impression from a first and extensive exposure to South Africa is of multitudes of people crushed between the brutalities of apartheid, on the one side, and the wretchedness caused by strife and disinvestment, promoted by the antiapartheid African National Congress (ANC), on the other.
The wild welcome accorded to ANC leader Nelson Mandela during his international tours reflects rightful rage against institutionalized racism. Yet pro-Mandela banners, slogans, and T-shirts make no contribution to the real problem facing South African society: How can the country's wealth expand fast enough - and fairly enough - to provide a decent existence for a black population that has tripled since World War II and is now mostly under 24 years old?
The authorities have abolished some of apartheid's worst features, including pass laws, segregated transport, and the ban on interracial marriages. They have not rescinded the iniquitous laws that force blacks to live where whites want them to. In practice, this is either in "townships" outside white towns (where the number of people squeezed in is generally larger than in the original town) or on slabs of land that had been tribal territories and are now misleadingly named "homelands." The oddly shaped boundaries were traced by whites to reserve for themselves the best townships and the richest resources.
Only about half of black workers are regularly employed. Those from the townships spend large parts of their working life commuting to and from their workplaces in white towns. Those from the homelands are expected to desert their families and spend most of the year in single-sex
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