Dear friends and fellow South
Africans,
Twenty one years after the
courageous speech by former President FW de Klerk
that ended the era of Apartheid, South Africa must
face some difficult truths.
On 2 February 1990, as the
President announced the unbanning of political
parties and the release of political prisoners, we
embraced the future with great optimism, and equally
great trepidation. There is no doubt that that
moment in history set in motion an ineluctable
course of events, which led us to where we are and
turned us into who we are.
President de Klerk broke the
impasse of a country lying hopelessly in a rut of
indecision and took us forward into unknown and
unchartered territory. We can take pride in the fact
that much of what was feared 21 years ago did not come to pass,
and is not likely to come to pass.
We have not had a civil war and we
have avoided bloodshed. The transition was peaceful
and successful.
Many of the fears felt that day,
whether expressed or unexpressed, proved to be
unfounded and unwarranted. But not all of them.
I still harbour the optimism that
united us on that fateful day. For me, it is not a
blind optimism, but a platform from which our
country can take blunt, candid and merciless
cognisance of our shortcomings, in the full
optimistic conviction that we can solve our problems
if we are big and courageous enough to admit to the
full measure of their existence.
The fact is that many of those who
feared that a black government could not match the
efficiency and competence of a white government have
thus far been proven right. Corruption,
inefficiency, ineptitude and ineffectiveness are
rampant and widespread. Two of our nine provinces
have all but collapsed. We must not shy away from
these facts.
Yet President de Klerk has been
thoroughly vindicated in prompting the country to
take the leap of faith into an unknown future.
The liberalisation process that
began on 2 February 1990 has radically changed our
society. Progress has begun an incessant march,
which is far from being completed, but has achieved
beyond expectation.
Progress has changed for the
better both the previously divided black and white
segments of our society.
It is significant that most white
people I know would never want to go back to where
they were 21 years ago, in a white society closed
within its cocoon to the progress and ideas of the
world, and with practices and customs which now
appear abhorrent to our present laws and mores.
Progress has blessed us all, not
only black people who had the opportunity to climb
the difficult ladder of self-respect and dignity
which took us from being second rate citizens, often
regarded as sub-human, to being citizens with equal
rights and status, not only within South Africa, but
within a broader world to which we now feel we fully
and rightly belong.
Twenty one years ago, white
married women were legally regarded as minors and
were deprived of contractual capacity and dignity.
There was no legislation to protect them from sexual
harassment in the workplace, domestic violence or
even marital rape. Children had no special
protection in law and policy.
In so many respects the society of
that time was depriving all its citizens of so much
that they were entitled to have or expect. This is
not unusual, for history shows us that wherever and
whenever a society is constructed on the oppression
of one group of people by another, everyone suffers
from lack of freedom, lack of dignity and lack of
progress.
After 21 years, I believe we must
rekindle the optimism we all nurtured and address
head-on all that was feared then and has now come to
pass. Our society is healthy, has progressed and is
moving forward.
We must commit ourselves not to
fear additional progress and to continue to roll
forward the frontiers of freedom.
Unfortunately, our Government is
lagging behind and is not doing as well as the rest
of society. Systems are deteriorating, corruption is
increasing and the future looks bleak. This must be
corrected, not merely by means of words, but through
committed deeds within the political realm and under
our Constitution.
In this respect, the work
commenced by State President FW de Klerk 21 years
ago is far from complete, and we all share the
responsibility of moving it forward, not only for
our own benefit, but to prove the correctness of the
courageous actions taken 21 years ago on behalf of
all South Africans and, in the final analysis, on
behalf of history.
Yours in the service of the
nation,
Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi MP