Wednesday, 15 January 2020

Soweto


 People make history. But they require a stage on which to act out their personal drama. What determines the legacy for which any one landscape will be renowned forever? Which people and places become irrevocably joined together? It is this search that drives me to write stories about place. Across the world I have visited sites that bear an unwelcome baggage of history. I have studied history since the age of eight, and learned of some of this unwanted baggage that clings to a place with an odour of terror; a place such as Soweto in 1976. I also remember, in this fire season in Australia, Black Saturday in February 2009 that left the survivors of Kinglake in Australia traumatised; these current fires will be shaking their recovery. An earthquake in Christchurch in 2011; riots in Los Angeles in 1991 and in Chicago in 1968; the dismantling of a wall in Berlin in 1989 – all events of my lifetime, all places where I found only memorials. People quickly cover over the events in their landscapes. A wish to blot out the past and bad things that happened in their backyards is common. For me, they run the risk of both ignoring the wonder of landscape and learning from it. People can repeat history’s tragedies.


I have just visited Soweto and a small part of Africa. I explored just the southern part of a huge and diverse landscape of thirty million square kilometres that receives less international attention today than it deserves (although the Chinese state is quietly working its way into local economies and property). Growing up in the 1960s I watched ‘apartheid’ in action on the news reports. Over twenty years I heard tell of places called Sharpeville, Robben Island and Soweto which were solely that, just places in a foreign and distant land that I would probably never visit. Then my sister set down to live there and I went to see her. The events in these locations came alive to me, thirty-seven years later in Johannesburg.

My sense of what defines the people and the landscape of southern Africa became a little clearer following my latest visit. It bears no comparison to other former British territories. It does not have the noise, clamour and smells of India. Unlike Canada it has herds of exotic animals and abundant bird life. Australia may be closest in nature but its aboriginal people have been all but obliterated. The Xhosa, San and Zulus of Africa still stand proud and are an essential part of the land. The British Empire invaded all this land, took it for its own and violated the indigenous people. When I walked in South Africa I believe these people can have their own future, something quite apart from Britain and The Netherlands.

On 16th June 1976 an event took place in South Africa that had far-reaching consequences, not only for all South Africans but also for black citizens the world over. (Yet on this day most Europeans were looking inward. Then as now Europe was a nervous community. The British were tentatively getting accustomed to a new prime minister and despairing of an inflation rate of more than eighteen per cent. The Germans closed a chapter on urban violence with the death of Ulrike Meinhof. In Oslo, Britain and Iceland agreed to end a third Cod War.) For me in Britain the events in Soweto that day appeared briefly as another representation of a dysfunctional country that appeared to have no apparent positive solution. The human stories of what was really happening on those streets never got through to us. Besides, I was too busy nurturing a young family and running a business to be overly distracted by the politics of South Africa. White, comfortable and middle class; yes I was. Political activist, angry at the world’s unjustness and prepared to do something about it; no I wasn’t. I could plead guilty to apathy.
 
Soweto in 2019

On this fateful day riots started amongst the Africans living in the township of Soweto, the largest of a wholly black complex of townships in South Africa and a suburb of Johannesburg. Those residents of Soweto that worked did so in Johannesburg – a city where rich, White entrepreneurs employed Black Africans (at pitifully low wages and in appalling physical conditions) to extract diamonds and gold from the nearby mines. The riots resulted from a policy directive put out by the National government that only Afrikaans and English must be used for teaching children in the Black secondary schools. The Sowetans saw Afrikaans as the language of oppression. “It is the language of pass laws, permits and police,” said one black social worker. On 16th June in Soweto, some parents took their children out of school. Kids in their uniforms, representing every school in the township, were led by their parents through the streets to a rally in the local football stadium to protest. Some of the protestors looted and burned schools and other civic properties. Two passing white men were dragged from their cars by a few locals who beat them and stoned them to death. The police arrived and shots were fired.


One of the first of a dozen school pupils to die that day was Hector Pieterson. A picture of his body being carried by an anti-Apartheid activist with Hector’s sister running alongside caused an embarrassing sensation for the government and flashed across the world’s TV screens. The mass protests did not stop, however, with Hector dying. Further inflamed by his death the residents of Soweto continued to riot through the night and the next day. Prime Minister John Vorster instructed the police to restore order “at all costs”. The result was more police shooting into the crowds without warning. Over three days “the cost” was one hundred people dead on the streets and over one thousand injured.

Forty-three years after Hector’s death we walked along the street where he lost his life. This area is not a landscape in any conventional sense. It is an ugly mixture of roads, shacks and small businesses attempting to find a place in a new world. Minibus taxis ply their way up and down the streets, the drivers constantly sounding their horns in a fashion that only the local customers understand. On our way into Soweto we saw hillsides of bare baked earth covered in tin shacks crammed together, some with a cardboard lean-to attached to the side. There is no grass; there are few trees here. We came across an occasional larger house, surrounded by high concrete walls with razor wire on top. These, many topped with a TV satellite dish, belong to the newly well-off Black inhabitants. We learned, incredibly, that there are an increasing number of millionaires living in Soweto.

I first visited South Africa in 1982 during the time of apartheid. I was out of work and flew to Durban to visit my sister, her husband and two young children. I also spent four days on my own in Cape Town. I did the things that tourists do. I went up Table Mountain, but only on the cable car. I took a bus to Cape Point to see the tip of Africa and sat next to a German international land yachtsman who had competed on the sands of Namibia. On our return to the city the bus passed Cape Flats, a shantytown squatter camp. This was a huge township of the same tin shacks I saw this year in Soweto. In 1982, this was a dismal and hopeless township where Black and Coloured Africans were confined and forgotten by a ruthless national government, still determined to suppress non-white African people.

The sighting of Cape Flats from our bus was my first real confrontation with the tyranny and oppression of apartheid. The view did make me think of the inhumanity of this government. This was accentuated further when our bus climbed away from the flats into wooded and green Kenilworth, a southern suburb of the city. We were shown the rich people’s (White Africans) houses; magnificent brick and mock-Tudor mansions set in gloriously colourful gardens – all, of course, surrounded by high concrete walls and electric fences. Our driver pointed out the staggeringly large house of Wilbur Smith, a successful writer of adventure novels. (I met Wilbur on several occasions in England in later years. Once, at the theatre in London when he introduced me to his stunningly beautiful wife, and later at book trade events in Nottingham. He told me he could not understand why my bookshops sold so few of his books. I told him I couldn’t either.)


What I did not appreciate, and nobody on the bus reminded me of the fact, that our journey took us past Tokai where Pollsmoor Prison held a very important inmate whose eventual release in 1990 was the catalyst for momentous upheavals in modern South African history. I doubt that any on that bus that day spared a thought for Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela, incarcerated a few kilometres from our ride.

After my stay in Cape Town I returned to Durban and enjoyed some family time. I was bemused to see the first beach in South Africa where white, black and coloured people could mix in the same place and swim together. The visible dismantling of apartheid started in Durban. Walking those same beach promenades thirty-seven years later I see almost total integration of the peoples of South Africa. Almost, but not quite. In Durban city centre today, as in Soweto, Blacks and Whites are still separate peoples.

In 2019, before our visit, we reminded ourselves about Mandela, apartheid and the hope placed in the current president, Cyril Ramaphosa. We did some homework so we could demonstrate some knowledge of this wondrous country. Nonetheless, our visit in Soweto reminded me that, in reality, we know little about the struggle the black people of southern Africa had to endure to just get the vote! Our main purpose in Soweto was not to sightsee with a tour operator. (To go alone and unaccompanied is considered, for Whites, foolhardy and dangerous. This place has one of the highest rates for murder and rape in the world). I felt to drive around and gawp at the locals was disrespectful. (I know, I once climbed Uluru in Australia, against the wishes of both the aboriginal people and my wife, but, hey, we should all be allowed the occasional inconsistency in our lives). Our purpose was to visit the Mandela House at 8115 Orlando West.

It was the opposite of grand, but it was my first true home of my own and I was mightily proud. A man is not a man until he has a house of his own.

These are the words of Nelson Mandela who moved in to this tiny redbrick, single storey house in 1946. We had come, after a morning spent at the symbolic Apartheid Museum in Johannesburg, to learn a little bit more about this incredible man. Now at this point I must state that millions of words have been written, hundreds of books published and Nobel Prizes awarded that attest to the life and work of Mandela. I am not going to attempt to add much more. But we had come, nevertheless, to see for ourselves how one figure bestrode an unfortunate landscape. I also said a small prayer of thanks that this man ever lived, for without him South Africa, prior to 2009, could never have reached so far.

8115 Orlando West, despite being Mandela’s first house, saw little of him as he was mostly away around the country, campaigning against the apartheid regime. After his divorce from his first wife in 1957 he lived here with his second wife, Winnie, until his imprisonment. For twenty years Winnie lived in the house, when not herself in detention, yet she was persecuted continually by the police. Often she was under house arrest, banned from moving outside the property. In 1972 security police smashed through the front door, hurled rocks through the windows and fired shots at the house with Winnie, her family and friends inside. The bullet holes in the bricks are visible today.

I came to Soweto expecting to be emotionally tormented at what we saw, yet left with something missing from my search. Our Uber taxi driver largely drove in silence. He is a new South African. He prefers the music of Phil Collins and Dolly Parton to Johnny Clegg, Ladysmith Black Mambaso, Lemmy Special or Mohatella Queens. I did not push him too much to learn about how far life and prospects have advanced for Sowetans in forty-seven years. They have the vote, but there are few jobs. There are plenty of schools, literacy rates are improving but there remains little incentive to attend university. A corrupt government of nine years halted an expanding economy, and above all, removed hope and aspiration in this meagre urban landscape. Hassling the tourists – Sam outside the Pieterson memorial did it with an engaging smile and a style that will turn him eventually into an excellent guide - is about as good as it gets.

Three landscapes that engulfed me with a sense of horror are Thiepval, Kinglake and Auschwitz. Whether Soweto deserves to be bracketed with those others is questionable, but as with Auschwitz, it has become a shrine for a government that used violence against its people to maintain it’s ends. But it is inescapable that these four landscapes in which I have stood share a common thread of a violent past. Man was responsible at all four. The place-names resonate with terror. Today, in each of the four locations, resides a memorial to the people who came to this landscape and perpetrated their violence on others. I have stood and contemplated these histories and, despite the stories involved, remain confident that some of us do learn from events and most of us make the landscape a better place for our kids.
African skies for everyone