In
the coverage of the passing of Mandela, inevitably there has been some comment,
informed and otherwise on the nature of his and Thatcher's role in the
transition of South Africa from an Apartheid State with rigorous segregation
and rule to a form of democratic state.
As
ever, there are deficiencies in the historical and personal perspective to
this. Using an idea from the last blog,
they were both born into the last cohort of The Old World, Mandela in 1918 and
Thatcher in 1925.
Who
did they know as young people and what did they talk about? Mandela in his community could hardly avoid
it and Thatcher as a grocer's daughter in the shop would have met all sorts of
people.
They
would have both grown up in communities where there were older people around
with recollections and personal experience of The Boer War of 1899 to 1902 and
the consequences.
I
recall being with people born in the 1860's and after, so it is possible that
both of them might have had some sort of personal contact with the few
survivors of those born just before then and in a different and violent world.
Mandela
was of tribal origin, the Xhosa, a person of high standing born of descent to
Kings, Chiefs and heroes within his community.
Thatcher's father was prominent only in the provincial community of
Grantham. The generations before had
numbered shoemakers, whose leadership was within the working classes of the
Midlands.
But
both were well outside the ruling elites of their youth in South Africa and
Britain, yet each became geographically and
educationally near to them, Mandela in his schooling and university in South
Africa and Thatcher in her ascent to Oxford University. More to the point, Thatcher's home had Belton
House along the road, favoured by the Prince of Wales, later King Edward VIII
and his friends as a centre of royal fashion and fun. It is likely that some hot gossip crossed shop
counters.
Mandela
was wholly unable to trust the then ruling Afrikaner class and their attitudes
in South Africa despite his rise to prominence and as a leader. Thatcher, in turn, had a great deal of
trouble with the Tory Grandees in her own party, some with a vengeful and
spiteful disposition.
In
how they saw violence it might not have been the same but their knowledge was
enough to know the destructive and long term damage that could result in armed
conflicts. Wikipedia has an article on
The Xhosa Wars that says that between the last part of the 18th Century and the
end of The Boer War there was virtually a Hundred Years War of persistent
conflict among the many groups in South Africa.
Mandela must have been fully aware of this history.
Thatcher
on the other hand would have been dealing with many families who had lost men
in World War One, with widows and spinsters who had lost their men as well as
the many crippled, blinded and injured men who had served. Quite what her own families losses were I do
not know.
In
the Second World War, the area around Grantham was a huge armed camp with
troops of all nations waiting and training for the 1944 Normandy Landings. I knew men of the US 82nd Airborne and the
Polish Airborne divisions. Also, there
were the many airfields with daily and nightly large scale movements of bombers
and fighters.
Before
then she would have heard the German Luftwaffe heading for Coventry and the
Midlands as well as other targets, at times almost on a nightly basis, as in
late 1940. After then she would have seen the news reels depicting the full
horrors of the time and been aware of the collapse of economies and communities
across Europe.
Neither
Mandela nor Thatcher therefore would have needed much briefing or advice on the
subject of war, violence and the potential results. They were both intelligent people attempting
to deal with high risk politics in a Cold War world with all its uncertainties.
It
is my view that critically, both had some idea of complex situations from their
education and backgrounds. Also, and of
crucial importance that they both realised that the pre-conditions existed in
South Africa for a dangerous and damaging collapse of society with serious
violence.
It
was their mutual recognition that it was not a simple matter of White v Non
White as too many saw it. Among all
the groups were many sub-groups with differing ideas and ambitions any of whom
might provide the trigger for far greater problems.
Mandela
recognised that because of the pariah status of Apartheid South Africa it was
dangerous and difficult to find a broker to deal with the Afrikaners and
associated Whites. Thatcher, the shopkeeper's
daughter, had left the door open to South Africa, Britain then could not afford
the losses of trading income or assets..
By
the chances of events and international politics she was only person able to do
the job of establishing mutual ground with the White elite and to bring them
round to a new understanding of their situation. It is called Realpolitik and it takes an able
and perceptive person to understand this and make use of it as Mandela did.
Thatcher
for her part, whatever she might have or have not thought, recognised that as
far as the Non-Whites were concerned, Mandela and the ANC were the only entity
able to manage a relatively peaceful transition that might provide the basis
for a state with a rule of law and functioning representative government. Above
all she did not want a communist regime.
The
world has moved on and those from The Old World are now all gone from power
replaced by people with very different attitudes and ambitions. Also, there are other problems arising. Rapid population growth, pressure on
agriculture and the land, the question of who owns the primary mineral
resources, energy supply, water supply and another generation wanting to remove
that which followed Mandela and Thatcher.
It
is going to take more than a Mandela or a Thatcher to deal with these and the
chances are that their realisation of what violence involved and the collapse
of societies and intergroup warfare is not shared by some of those claiming to
be among their followers.
It
is not that Mandela or Thatcher were either saints or giants. It is that their successors seem to be
intellectual dwarfs whose knowledge and thinking is dominated by media
releases, photo opportunities, personal gain and spinning the story away from
truth or reality.
"It is not that Mandela or Thatcher were either saints or giants. It is that their successors seem to be intellectual dwarfs whose knowledge and thinking is dominated by media releases, photo opportunities, personal gain and spinning the story away from truth or reality."
ReplyDeleteSpot on. We aren't asking for saints or giants either - merely some decency and common sense gained from a few decades of worthwhile experience beyond the committee room.