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Mangosuthu Buthelezi's Weekly Newsletter to
the Nation
January 4th, 2008
My dear friends and fellow South
Africans,
As a
practising Christian and a career politician, I am often asked
how these two vocations complement each other in my daily work
and everyday life. Let me admit candidly from the outset that
the two are frequently in conflict with one another. On the
surface, religion lays the claim to being squeaky clean whereas
politics has the unfortunate and not entirely undeserved
reputation of being sleazy. For me personally, marrying the two
has been something of a balancing act.
Let me
explain. I am not a theologian but this is how I read the Bible.
The Old
Testament lays down the Ten Commandments: the injunction to love
our neighbour as ourselves and generally the importance of
observing a strict code of Mosaic Law. The New Testament is a
record of the incarnation of Christ, His teachings and the
establishment of the Kingdom of God. Again the emphasis is on
loving our neighbour as ourselves. I believe that by accepting
these key elements from the two Testaments, we extract a broad
view of the universe, an attitude to work and general principles
to shape economic and social life. None of this, of course,
tells us exactly what kind of political and social institutions
we should have.
The tension
between church and politics was particularly crystallised for me
in the early ninety-eighties when I sent the spiritual head of
Anglican Communion, Archbishop Robert Runcie a short memorandum
ahead of an audience with him.
In it I
raised the issue of a 'Just War'. There were theologians in my
own Church who were supporting the so-called "armed struggle",
such as, for example, the Kairos Document. In my memorandum I
wrestled with the vexed question of when it is right for
theologians to accept a 'Just War'. I was being vilified at home
and abroad for not supporting the "armed struggle", which the
ANC leader, Mr Oliver Tambo and I had discussed and could not
reach agreement on at our two-and-a-half day meeting in London
in 1979.
To my
surprise, as I arrived at Lambeth Palace, the Archbishop's
Official Residence, Archbishop Runcie was holding my memorandum
in his hand which had been faxed to him by the then British
Ambassador. Before we even sat down, the Archbishop told me that
he had read my memorandum and asked if other leaders agreed with
me. I responded: "Your Grace, you are also a leader, do all
other leaders agree with you?" And before he could reply, I
added: "Did everyone agree with Christ?" The Archbishop then
just looked at me without saying a word. It was obvious to me
that he had already been briefed by clergy in SA who were
sympathetic to and supported the armed struggle.
For
historians amongst you, this is the same Archbishop who famously
came into conflict with then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
with the Church's report 'Faith in the City' which criticised
the Conservative Government's handling of social problems in
British inner-city areas.
As a result
of this, some leading Conservatives in Britain became strong
supporters of the disestablishment of the Church of England,
claiming that institutions affiliated to the British state
should not express what they saw as overtly partisan political
views. Mirroring this divide, the perceived close association
between the Dutch Reformed Churches and the apartheid state in
South Africa created difficulties for Christians in this country
whose loyalties were equally split between their politics and
their faith. Throughout the apartheid years, many evangelical
denominations notably kept their heads below the parapet.
In addition
to international sanctions against apartheid, in recent years
the challenges of divorce, women priests and gay rights have
threatened to divide my Church. Yet many of the claims of both
sides of the respective arguments are strictly ecclesiastical
matters without much or any foundation in scripture or
tradition. Take the Gospels.
Jesus Christ
never once mentions women priests or homosexuality, yet the
Church today appears to be paralysed by these issues and the
controversies which arise from them. In a country like ours
which is struggling to deal with 350 years of oppression, one
might have thought that greater focus would be placed on the
twelve key texts in the Gospels alone that speak of poverty.
The most
famous text Christ evokes is from the Prophet Isaiah (61:1).
Even after
translation from the Hebrew, the passage still maintains its
lyrical spell which simply enthrals me:
"The Spirit
of the Lord is on me,
because he
has anointed me
to preach
good news to the poor.
He has sent
me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight
for the blind, to release the oppressed, to proclaim the year of
the Lord's favour."
Poverty, of
course, is a perennial theme of both the South African churches
and politicians. The recent ANC conference in Polokwane, which
saw the elevation of Jacob Zuma to the leadership of the ruling
party, focused unashamedly on the plight of the poor with an
implication that the issue had been neglected by the previous
top management of the party and the country. With the advent of
2008, the challenges posed by poverty naturally take the
driver's seat across the whole political spectrum.
The
political organisation I lead, the Inkatha Freedom Party, will
take this opportunity to start introducing new measures to
counter poverty regularly for testing at local government level.
We also must respond to the clear message that came out of
Polokwane. After all, some of the municipalities which my party
controls in KwaZulu Natal are inhabited by some of the poorest
individuals and communities in the land, and it is these people
who are the obvious targets for pro-poor policies.
My urgent
call for fresh pro-poor policies coincides not only with the
blatant poverty in our rural areas but also with the despicable
sight of mayors and municipal managers of many rural
municipalities with low revenue basis, driving expensive SUVs
that could feed scores of impoverished children who head entire
families. Incidentally, last year I briefly met the British
Conservative Party's only directly elected executive Mayor, Mr
Nick Bye of Torbay in South West England. My office told me
subsequently that Mr Bye proudly drives himself around his
constituency in his little Citroen. If Christ were amongst us
today, I am sure He would rally against this obvious parallel to
the moneylenders in the temple.
The IFP
subscribes to the current definition used by the Civil Society
Partnership Programme that 'the aim of pro-poor policies is to
improve the assets and capabilities of the poor'. This is in
stark contrast to the once-off, top-down solutions of the
central government. We believe that pro-poor policy processes
are those that allow poor people to be directly involved in the
policy process, or that by their nature and structure lead to
pro-poor outcomes. Likewise, we accept that there can be no
'blueprint' for poverty reduction and that South Africa, like
every other country, is required to 'mix and match' its own set
of policies and processes which are appropriate to the context
in order to achieve the goal of increased and sustainable
poverty reduction.
We in the
IFP have never had much faith in grand government-sponsored
schemes that seek to spend the peoples' tax money to control
them and bind them in gratitude to the political party which
controls the government machine. On the contrary, we want to set
free the entrepreneurial spirit of the individual which is
rooted in strong and aspiring communities. This ambition broadly
taps into the Judeo-Christian belief in self-help and
self-reliance where the individual, God's unique creation, is
the maker of his or her own fortune.
During my
rounds in our constituencies, countless individuals - in Vryheid,
Richards Bay and Cape Town - have whispered to me and recently
even shouted from the roof tops one of the biggest government
policy disappointments since 1994, namely the provision of
housing to the previously disadvantaged. In the context of free
enterprise democracies, home ownership is the ultimate
aspiration of the hard-working individual. Latin American
economist Hernando de Soto was not the first to focus on
creating theoretical legal frameworks that empower the poor of
the developing world by providing them with a new, comprehensive
legal property system allowing them to turn their assets into
capital.
If we are
serious about reducing poverty - and we in the IFP certainly
are, we must stop monopolising the pro-poor policies in the
hands of government - whether national, provincial or local.
Historically, South Africans have too much faith (the pun is
intended) in the power of the government. Let us break free. Let
us open the opportunity to contribute to our prosperity wide
enough for anyone willing to participate. Let us invite the
civil society and the Churches in particular to play a leading
role in fighting poverty. If ever there was a ready example of
the Churches' evangelical and ministerial role, this must be
it.
Yours
sincerely,
Prince
Mangosuthu Buthelezi MP
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