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Hearts of Darkness
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18363 |
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BOOK WORLD
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| Issue
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9 / 1990 |
2,486 Words |
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Chris Woltermann Chris Woltermann is an independent securities trader living in
Springfield, Ohio. He has a doctorate in political science
from Purdue University and has studied at the University of
Cape Town, South Africa. |
MY TRAITOR'S HEART
Rian Malan
349 pp., Boston: Atlantic Monthly Press, 1990.
$19.95
There are no hard-and-fast rules as to whether apostasy will bring happiness or anguish in its wake. Either result may obtain. Happy is the apostate who, upon rejecting the falsehoods of his past, discovers new truths upon which to structure his life. People will rightly call him fortunate. Although his beliefs may cause him to suffer persecution, they will bolster his courage and grace him with tranquility. Another man will apostatize without felicity. He, too, will abjure his falsehoods, but only to find himself in a moral quagmire where neither truth nor a path of righteousness is discernible. Sorely afflicted, he will know the spiritual darkness of a personal Gethsemane.
Though bereft of comfort, the anguished apostate may yet act honorably by bearing respectful witness to his grief. That is the achievement of young Afrikaner writer, Rian Malan, in My Traitor's heart, his first book and remorselessly probing examination of contemporary South Africa. Even as the South African morality play appeals to a universal yearning for clear choices between good and evil, Malan describes a maddening situation where simple rectitude, let alone heroism, is impossible because there are no certainties, moral or otherwise. He excoriates apartheid but strongly suspects that a post apartheid South Africa will be no less repugnant. Cogently, eschewing any false optimism, he offers an admonition to all who harbor bright expectations of the beneficence of majority
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