Winnie Mandela
Page 1
WINNIE
MANDELA
a life
Anné Mariè du Preez Bezdrob
I dedicate this book to my children
and to my grandchildren
to my mother
and to the memory of my father
and to the noble and courageous women who have been my inspiration
Preface
IN HER POEM ‘Instead of a Preface’, my favourite poet, the Russian Anna Akhmatova, relates an experience during the years of Stalinist terror. She spent months queuing at prisons in Leningrad, where her friends and family were incarcerated. One day, a woman in a queue recognised her, and whispered into Akhmatova’s ear:
‘Can you describe this?’
Akhmatova said, ‘I can,’ and the shadow of a smile passed over the face of the woman with the tortured expression and blue lips.
The phenomena of political oppression and racism have mystified me all my life; and after encounters with war in Namibia, Zimbabwe and Bosnia, both as a journalist and a political official with the United Nations, the pursuance of war merged with my other prime field of interest. This has led to an ongoing study of the political history of southern Africa, the former Soviet Union and, most recently, the former Yugoslavia – specifically Bosnia, where I spent two years of the war during the 1990s in the country’s besieged capital, Sarajevo. Increasingly, my experiences led to the desire to describe what I have learned.
In my attempts to fathom the psychology of the oppressor, the warmonger and the victim, I have come to understand that there are mere degrees of difference between Stalin, Hitler, Milosevic, Karadzic, Verwoerd and other apartheid leaders. The same applies to the millions of people who blindly follow ideologies and doctrines that range from the immoral to a licence for murder and genocide.
I have also come to know that the human spirit can be temporarily subdued by terror and hardship, but never conquered, irrespective of the duration or form of the oppression. Women, especially, have a unique ability to retain their capacity for nurturing and joy, even during unspeakable horrors and loss.
My life has been marked by extraordinary experiences, and this book is the fusion of various strands, beginning in my childhood, with the invaluable gifts I received from my parents and grandparents. They were living examples of fairness, compassion and moral courage; allowed me the space to develop an individual and enquiring mind; and provided a sterling illustration of the importance of faith.
They laid the groundwork for everything that is meaningful in my life.
My father was bitterly opposed to apartheid, quite extraordinary for an Afrikaner of his generation and class. To him, all people were equal, the only distinction being between good and bad, and this was firmly stamped on the minds of my siblings and me. He defended his principles at considerable cost, but would have agreed with Olive Schreiner: ‘It never pays the Man who speaks the truth, but it pays Humanity that it should be spoken.’
My mother provided the first example of women’s ability to face difficulties and misfortune with grace, tenacity and humour, and still embrace life with delight. I have immense admiration for her strength of spirit and enduring efforts to overcome setbacks – even tragedy.
My grandparents were the salt of the earth, simple people with little formal education but great wisdom, and they weathered every storm and countless hardships with unflinching faith.
Some years ago, I saw photographs of Winnie Mandela in a magazine, and noticed that as a young woman she had lively, laughing eyes – the soulful, striking eyes many observers commented on. However, in later pictures, her eyes were mute, as if the light in them had been extinguished. That set me wondering what hardships had caused such a woeful metamorphosis. As a former political journalist, I knew a little about her, and I had witnessed the adulation that was showered on her in New York in 1990. Having encountered the unwelcome attention of the authorities and security police with my own opposition to apartheid, I had had a taste – albeit just a fraction – of some of Winnie’s experiences. I could relate to her as a woman, as well as identify with the loss of privacy, having your telephone tapped, being watched and followed, not knowing when or where the security police might pounce, worrying what might happen to your small children if some ill fate befell you – and being betrayed by the people you trusted, all the while knowing that you were at the mercy of those who needed no proof of misdeeds and had unbridled power. Add to that two years of full-scale conventional war, comparable on some levels to the situation in South Africa’s townships, and my apprenticeship was complete.
From the outset, this book was intended to be more than just the story of a remarkable woman or of South Africa under apartheid. I saw it as a parable for the courage and compassion of women in war, and the effects of ruthless dictatorship: the brutality of unscrupulous leaders struggling for survival, and the enslavement of man, whether in southern Africa or the former Yugoslavia. It makes no difference whether the oppressor is white or black, Cambodian or British, Muslim or atheist – the consequences are the same. What is disputed, stolen and destroyed is not land or mineral rights, but the individual’s right to personal freedom and self-determination.
During the war in Bosnia, I got to know many women who were living symbols of opposition to Serb terror. Their resistance was not chronicled in poetry or embodied in political activism; their resistance was life itself. The entire world thought it impossible for Sarajevans – besieged and virtually unarmed – to weather the Serb onslaught and stay alive for more than a few weeks. But for four years, Sarajevo confounded the Serbs and astounded the world. And it was the women who provided crucial support for the vastly outnumbered and outgunned defenders of Sarajevo. They walked for miles and queued for hours for pitiful handouts of food, and carried buckets of water through heavy shelling and gunfire. They buried their children, their husbands and parents, and continued living. As their homes were bombed and burned, they retreated to a back room, or someone else’s house, and continued living. They wore their best clothes, put on make-up, and laughed. My friend Gertruda Munitic, an opera singer, kept singing for the people of Sarajevo amidst the deafening roar of exploding bombs. My friend Jasna Karaula, a university lecturer, walked miles and miles in defiance of Serb snipers to deliver life-saving medicines to the sick and wounded. My young friend Anja Kerken, teenage daughter of my neighbours Mima and Seo, did numerous things to make my life more bearable, and walked to within metres of the front line to collect precious firewood for their household. My admiration for these women is total, as it is for the women of South Africa, Liberia and Palestine.
Winnie belongs to this unique fraternity of extraordinary women, most of whom will remain forever nameless. They live, or have lived, in Bosnia, Zimbabwe, Israel, Nazi-occupied Europe, Myanmar, the Congo, the Soviet Union. Many of their names are interchangeable with that of Winnie Mandela – or Anna Akhmatova. Like Winnie, Anna, too, was beautiful, courageous and enigmatic. And, as she pointed out in her poem ‘Requiem’, she, like Winnie, suffered not in a foreign country or under a foreign power, but among her countrymen. Winnie Mandela, like Anna Akhmatova, was where her people, unfortunately, were.
What the author Joseph Brodsky said of Akhmatova applies equally to Winnie: she never resembled anyone. Though born half a century and half a world apart, both their lives were governed by the controlled terror of a state that tolerated no opposition. Akhmatova’s first husband was executed for anti-government activities, many of her friends fled into exile, others – including her son – were imprisoned in Stalin’s terrible jails. Her poetry was banned, her dissenting voice silenced. As government changed hands from Stalin to Krushchev, Akhmatova was briefly hailed as a heroine, then again denounced. She
kept writing, keeping alive the memory of the millions of victims – as Winnie helped keep alive the struggle against apartheid. These qualities apply equally to the many courageous women I knew in Bosnia, and no doubt to Aung San Suu Kyi in Myanmar, and the millions of nameless women who choose to confront oppression and injustice when it is safer to turn and look the other way.
Elie Wiesel, who survived Hitler’s holocaust and dedicated his life to exposing Nazi war criminals, wrote these powerful words:
The opposite of love is not hate, but indifference;
The opposite of life is not death – but indifference to life and death.
ANNÉ MARIÈ DU PREEZ BEZDROB
PARKHURST, JOHANNESBURG
SEPTEMBER 2003
‘There are victories whose glory lies only in the fact that they are known to those who win them.’
– Nelson Mandela, Long Walk to Freedom
Prologue
THE WIND CHANGED direction slightly and a sudden gust swirled around the cluster of men on horseback, wrapping them swiftly, unexpectedly, in the sweet, choking odour of death.
The horses, eyes wide with panic, snorted in alarm, tossing their heads urgently from side to side. Two of the stallions staggered onto their hind legs, arching their necks to escape the pungent smell. The other horses started milling around, straining at the reins. With some effort the riders steered them downwind, out of range of the nauseating stench, and rode onto a small outcrop from where they had a view in the direction from which the wind had come.
They stared at the ghastly picture below in shock and disbelief. Shrouded in a dense, tangible silence lay a scene of utter devastation. As far as the eye could see, the ground was littered with the carelessly scattered bodies of hundreds of dead men, women and children, cattle and dogs. Vultures squatted nearby. Thousands of burned elephant tusks added to the putrid smell. The earth seemed to float on a flat cloud of dirty smoke. For miles around them the black, burned countryside was desolate; everything annihilated, laid waste as if devoured by a giant fire-breathing predator.
Nobody uttered a sound as the small group of horsemen under command of Major General Dundas gradually moved closer, glancing in horror at what had been the Pondo Great Place, now nothing but scorched earth and decomposing bodies.
This, then, thought the young Holden Bowker, was the aftermath of that overture of death he had heard for the first time the night before: the Zulu ‘war cry’, a never-to-be forgotten sound. It made his flesh crawl: ‘a shrill, inhuman, whistling roar that passed with lightning speed’,1 suggesting the pace of death as it descended swiftly, mercilessly. It was midnight and they could see nothing, but knew it came from the charging army of Shaka, the Zulu king, as his warriors swept through the cold, coal-black African night.
The small group of white men had gone to the aid of the Xhosa after months of attacks by Shaka’s Zulu impi, culminating in the attack on the Pondo Great Place. At the dawn of a new day they found themselves marching alongside several thousand Pondo and Tembu fighters toward 1 500 of Shaka’s warriors. The two hostile forces converged on the flaxen winter veld in the pale sun of late winter. It was an ominous sight. Assegais and shields waved like branches in a giant breath of air. Across an open stretch of 150 metres, the Zulu warriors were resplendent in full battledress, their strong ebony bodies still and taut in anticipation of the fight.
The Zulu were outnumbered and there was a brief, bloody battle. The white horsemen formed a flank of the attacking force, but Shaka had been advised not to engage the whites, and the Zulu fighters avoided them, retreating to a hill further away where they regrouped and awaited the pursuing allied Xhosa force. Another bloody clash followed. Brief, brutal. Again the Zulu impi retreated, leaving behind a large number of the cattle they had looted in their raids on the Xhosa. On the battlefield lay three dozen dead fighters, half of them Zulu. The Xhosa decided to let the retreating Zulus go, rounded up the cattle and went off in their own direction.
The small group of white horsemen feared that the Zulus might return, and knew they could not stand against them without the help of the Xhosa army. They turned back to the colony, relieved to be heading for the safety of their homes, trying to forget the images of death and devastation: the dreadful mutilation of small children, limbless women, slaughtered animals, the giant fingerprint of unmitigated and merciless destruction.
After riding for the rest of the day they offsaddled and started a fire, grateful to be on solid ground. They took some meat from their saddlebags, and stood around the fire recounting the journey and the battle while the delicious odour of grilling meat intertwined with wood smoke and curled into the gathering darkness. They were hungry, and waiting for the meal was bittersweet.
Suddenly Holden heard the thin, pathetic cry of a child. He shook his head, convinced that his mind was playing tricks on him after the recurring images of small mangled bodies on the blood-soaked grass. Then he heard it again. He stepped back, out of the circle of conversation and muted laughter, slowly following the sound. It became louder, leading him to a large, flat slab of stone. He started pushing at it and heard the crying again, unmistakably coming from underneath the stone. He squatted, lifted the heavy stone and saw in the half-light that it covered a hole in the ground where, to his astonishment, he saw a small child.
He lifted the child out as gently as he could. It was a small boy of about two, whimpering weakly, limp with fear, barely alive from hunger and exposure. The young Englishman quickly carried him back to the camp. Clearly, the child’s mother had hidden him there from the marauding Zulus who swept across the area, praying that he wouldn’t be found by wild animals or warriors, and that she might be spared to return and fetch him – or that by some miracle, someone with a kind heart would find him and save his life.
The tiny boy was as terrified as a small animal, and the men tried to comfort and reassure him as best they could. They wrapped him in jackets and a blanket, fed him and put him to sleep close to the fire.
The next morning, Holden tied the small Pondo boy onto his back as he had seen the Xhosa women do. He swung into the saddle wondering whether the child’s father was one of the slain warriors lying under the rising sun on the battlefield. Or had he gathered his cattle and set out to start a new life, grieving for a lost wife and a small son, presuming they were dead? With the tiny body snuggling against his back, he galloped off towards the safety of the colony, and his farm.
Behind the disappearing backs of the white man and the black boy* lay the ashes of the Pondo people’s hopes and dreams; a black, smouldering scar in the soft green of the countryside.
* * *
* Bowker entrusted the boy to the care of a black woman on their farm, Tharfield, and promised her a cow to nurture him back to health. He was named Resurrection Jack, and remained part of the Bowker family’s weal and woes for seventy years.
Introduction
FROM THE COLOURFUL QUILT of intertwined clans and tribes that make up the Xhosa people, two have become household names due to their links with Nelson Mandela: the Tembu, from which he stems, and the Pondo, which gave the world his former wife, Winnie.
Just as familiar as the Mandela name is that of the mighty Zulu king, Shaka, and the nineteenth-century history of the Pondo and the Tembu is closely interwoven with that of Shaka and his successor, Dingane.
At the end of the 1700s, the area encompassing Natal and southern Mozambique became an extended battlefield as a power struggle raged between the tribal kings of the period. Among the consequences was a phenomenal amalgamation of military force, and Shaka’s rise to dominance. His bloody conquests caused major upheaval in all of southern Africa north of the Cape Colony: the Highveld region north of Natal, the Orange Free State and Transvaal, and even as far as present-day Botswana and Zimbabwe. Those who fell victim to Shaka took flight in all directions, causing the greatest chain reaction of catastrophes in African history – known as mfecane, ‘the crushing’.
In mid-1820, dur
ing the winter months in South Africa, Shaka – having consolidated his position as king of the Zulu in a trail of terrifying destruction and bloody atrocities – sent envoys to Ngoza, paramount chief of the Tembu, with an offer to unite their forces. Ngoza contemptuously responded with an insult that could only be interpreted as a declaration of war.
Ngoza and his ally Macingwane, chief of the Qunu, readied themselves for battle against the mighty Zulu. Shaka was confident, and had no reason to doubt that his superb fighting force would be victorious. But midway through the battle, a terrified messenger brought word that the Xhosa were driving back Shaka’s invincible army. The threat, however, was short-lived, and Shaka’s warriors forced Ngoza’s people from their land on the Mzinyathi River. Subsequently, Ngoza was murdered, and many of his people were incorporated into the Pondo tribe under King Faku.
In 1827, Shaka decided to attack Faku’s people along the banks of the St John’s River, as well as the Tembu who had settled inland. He began preparing for the campaign in September by sending spies – members of Ngoza’s Tembu who had retreated to Zululand, and were familiar with Pondoland – to assess the enemy’s position.
In October, Shaka’s mother, Nandi, died. Shaka worshipped her, and he was devastated. In the months immediately after Nandi’s death, thousands of Zulus died in Shaka’s mourning rituals, which brought his nation to the brink of famine and destruction.
By the autumn of 1828, Shaka felt the time was ripe for the Pondoland campaign, and decided that what was originally planned as a purely military expedition would serve as the iHlambo, or mourning hunt, for his adored mother. The iHlambo required the warriors to spill the blood of their enemy, and Shaka relished the thought of a great ‘washing of the spears’ in Pondo blood, as befitted Nandi’s eminent status. The battered Zulu nation fervently hoped that the campaign would be the last convulsion of their king’s savage anguish.