Please protect my mother tongue
For the first time in its history,
South Africa can be regarded as a united country. The era of apartheid
balkanisation and racial exclusion, and before it of Boer republics,
British colonies, tribal rebellions and all the other conflicts of
white and black settler expansion have passed. As SABC television sings
for us daily, "we are one".
There was probably a point in time when countries such as
post-independence India, Sri Lanka or Yugoslavia had the same sense of
national consolidation, but it proved to be only an uneasy interlude
during which ethnic or regional rivalries festered. In post-civil war
America or Britain after the 1707 Act of Union, on the other hand,
national cohesion survived. Which way will South Africa go?
So far, the more obvious signs point to successful initial
consolidation. The Afrikaner Volkstaat movement, skilfully co-opted
into the government's committee-based patronage network, rapidly
vanished from sight. The former independent ethnic homelands, driven on
by their anxious, bloated bureaucracies, fell over themselves to rejoin
the nation state. The temporary exception to this pattern is one of the
most feared and famous ethnic structures of all - the Zulu traditional
establishment. It has maintained the same mixture of reserve and
resistance that it used in its dealings with the British colonial
government in Natal but, very recently, negotiations over the
conditions for a willing amalgamation seem to have started in
earnest.
Ethnic politics are elusive, however. Regional nationalisms and
communal commitments which have lain dormant for decades or even
centuries have resurfaced all over the world - think of the fringe
Russian republics, Brittany, Northern Italy, the Basque country, the
Kurds in the Middle East, the southern Sudan and many other movements
in Africa itself. Some immortal gambler betting on a united South
Africa in 2097 would be taking a risk. But what about the next five to
fifteen years? A recent survey of the reactions of ethnic groups to the
present policies for nation building and minority rights provides solid
evidence about which one can speculate.
The survey, by MarkData (Pty) Ltd, was commissioned after an informal
gathering of Afrikaans community leaders and intellectuals in
Stellenbosch last November. A random (stratified probability) sample of
2 200 covered all South Africans, rural and urban. Personal interviews
were conducted in the home languages of all respondents during February
and March.
Generally the results show extensive disquiet among white Afrikaans
speakers. No less than 84 per cent feel that the government either does
not respect the rights of their mother tongue as much as they could
reasonably expect or else neglects and even positively undermines it.
Similarly, some 83 per cent declare themselves to be "unhappy" or "very
unhappy" about the official treatment of both their cultural values and
language.
Threatened minorities
As a consequence six out often Afrikaners expect that their language
will be weakened over time and nearly 20 per cent predict that it will
die out if present trends continue. Already, some 21 per cent of the
white Afrikaans respondents have decided that it would be best to have
their children educated in English.
Among all ethnic minorities, white Afrikaners feel the most
threatened. Only 16 per cent of them think that their language is
treated "adequately" or "at least as well as one could reasonably
expect", compared with roughly half of coloured Afrikaans-speakers. The
latter, however, are not exposed to the full effects of new language
policies and practices because the overwhelming majority live in the
Western Cape, which is not under ANC control and has a dominantly
Afrikaans-speaking provincial government.
Black respondents, who comprise nine language minorities, were
generally optimistic or unconcerned about their language interests, as
one might expect so soon after "liberation". Nevertheless, some 23 per
cent of them were unhappy about the way in which their various
languages are treated, and as many as one-third felt that the present
government was insincere or even hostile in respect of their minority
language rights.
Thus there seems to be fairly widespread concern about language, with
white Afrikaners clearly the most worried. The differences between
white Afrikaners and the other minorities are not surprising. Until
1994, Afrikaans was the predominant language of government and had also
emerged as a language of academia, science, technology and the arts.
Today it is surviving in private use, the print media and literature,
but in all other respects has been downgraded to the formal status of
any one of the other nine minority languages, none of which is used in
science or academia.
While the other minority language users may complain justifiably of
lack of progress in the development of their languages, for Afrikaners
the problem is experienced as the actual destruction of progress
already made. In politics, as in other spheres, there is a difference
between sins of omission and sins of commission.
Sympathy for Afrikaners
Surprisingly, however, Afrikaners can console themselves with the fact
that many other South Africans sympathise with them in their
predicament. When asked whether Afrikaans today enjoys more or less
than its rightful recognition, 48 per cent of white English-speakers
and 37 per cent of blacks felt that it was being discriminated against.
The accusation which is occasionally made by some progressive
intellectuals that Afrikaans still enjoys more than its fair share of
privileges is not widely endorsed: only 18 percent of English-speakers
and 31 percent of all blacks felt this way.
On this issue of discrimination against Afrikaans, white and brown
Afrikaners are more united than they are on the issues already
discussed. Some 88 per cent of white Afrikaners and, despite the
linguistic privilege of being in the Western Cape, as many as 55 per
cent of coloured Afrikaans-speakers feel that Afrikaans enjoys less
than its rightful status in public life.
These perceptions are hardly the stuff of which nation building and
reconciliation are made. One sees this in the fact that only 31 per
cent of white Afrikaners feel that the various ethnic groups in South
Africa have "moved closer together" over the past two years. By trying
to foster national unity through playing down language and cultural
differences, the government, its agencies and other institutions may be
on a high risk course. In general, not only white Afrikaners but all
South Africans appear to favour a pluralist basis for national
unity.
When asked what broad approach to nation building they favoured, only
5 per cent of white Afrikaners (as one would expect) endorsed the view
that "national unity should have priority over specific language
interests", but only 34 per cent of the entire sample of South Africans
did so too. Most South Africans seem to feet that unity and the
maintenance of particular cultural interests are equally important; 53
per cent of all South Africans and 72 per cent among white Afrikaners
felt that unity should actually be based on the protection of cultural
and language interests.
Nevertheless, the view is often expressed in new government circles
that ethnicity is a challenge to national unity. But despite their
cultural fears, only 23 per cent of white Afrikaners feel that their
language and cultural interests should take precedence over national
unity, and only 10 per cent of all South Africans share this
conviction. The majority view is clearly that national reconciliation
can be achieved while simultaneously protecting and promoting the
rights and interests of cultural minorities; for the most part white
Afrikaners agree with this idea.
In the light of these perceptions the decision by government
departments, and some local authorities and private corporations, to
move to the exclusive use of English seems hazardous for national
unity, and not only with respect to Afrikaners. In the survey 72 per
cent of South Africans in all categories (77 per cent for Afrikaners)
said that they value being served or attended to in their own
languages.
Majorities of all South Africans feel that organisations to promote
and protect their language and cultural interests are important. Nor
are more intense expressions of this need limited to white Afrikaners -
41 per cent of black South Africans (49 per cent among Zulu-speakers)
and some 40 per cent of all Afrikaans speakers feel that the role of
such organisations is "very important".
At the Stellenbosch meeting in November, some delegates expressed
fears that launching a new initiative to promote and protect Afrikaans,
albeit on a non-racial basis, might antagonise the majority of South
Africans. But when respondents in the survey were asked specifically
what they thought of such an initiative only 10 per cent (and a mere 13
per cent among blacks) felt that it would be "undesirable" or
"damaging".
This survey shows that despite the symbolism of our "rainbow nation",
South Africa has not yet found the right formula for accommodating
minority languages and cultures. There is clearly a groundswell of
serious concern among white Afrikaners and very considerable sympathy
for them among other groups, not to mention a measure of concern among
black minorities about their own languages.
The government will have another chance, however. The Cultural Council
for which last minute provision was made in the new constitution, is
anticipated with optimism. Some 80 per cent of all South Africans, and
56 per cent of white Afrikaners see the council as capable of providing
either effective or adequate protection of their language and cultural
interests. Whether this optimism is justified remains to be seen: the
Pan South African Language Board (the official watchdog organisation)
has recently accused the government of disregarding its proposals for
minority language development and of favouring English.
Furthermore, many of the Afrikaner representatives to bodies intended
to ensure a balance of cultural expression in areas such as the arts
and broadcasting have failed to take a tough and effective stance for
fear of appearing "old guard" and conservative. Ethnic protectionism is
not a welcome phenomenon in the politically correct ranks of
commissioners and advisors. There is a job still waiting to be
done.
This job is important for the future. Ethnic protest and reaction is
far and away the most common element in conflict within nations in the
world today, and it would be remarkable if South Africa, with its
history and heterogeneous population, were to escape it. The survey
itself provides an early warning.
When asked how far voluntary cultural organisations should go to
protect language and cultural interests, some 22 per cent of white
Afrikaners and 14 per cent of coloured Afrikaans-speakers endorsed
"strong public protest" as opposed to representations to government or
the stimulation of interest in their language; this compared with some
8 to 9 per cent among other groups. The seeds of dissent are already
present.
Even more worrying, however, is that 16 per cent of white Afrikaners,
32 per cent of coloured Afrikaans-speakers and 28 per cent of blacks
preferred not to answer this question - yet the refusal rates for all
other questions were around 5 per cent or less. Their silence is
eloquent. Behind it may lurk a willingness to consider even more
hostile action than strong public protest.
Let provinces decide
But prescriptions are not easy. With 11 official languages, and the
possible future inclusion of Portuguese if a high rate of immigration
from neighbouring countries continues and of Indian languages if they
should be revived, the trade-offs are mind-boggling in their
implications for public policy. Under these conditions central
government would be well advised to duck below the parapet and leave
the thankless task of balancing cultural interests to the provinces,
local authorities and civil society.
In some areas such as KwaZulu-Natal, the provinces of the Cape, the
Free State or the North West where there are concentrations of one
language this will be much easier than in the more linguistically
complex regions of Gauteng, Northern province or Mpumalanga. But if
problems deepen in the latter let these disputes be fought there, and
let them not spread to the rest of South Africa. Experience so far
suggests that attempts at language imposition from the centre are
exactly the fertiliser that will grow the seeds of ethnic
conflict.
An Afrikaner's
perspective:
Hermann Giliomee, professor of
political studies, UCT, comments on the language survey
The position of Afrikaans in the new South Africa presents a stark
paradox. Collectively Afrikaans speakers form the language group with
the biggest income in the country. In the survey, on which Lawrence
Schlemmer reports above, more than three-quarters indicated that it
makes "a great or considerable difference" to them if government and
businesses communicate with them in Afrikaans. Yet since 1994 both have
steadily reduced their use of the language in their dealings with
citizens and customers alike. Less than one fifth of the white
Afrikaans speakers feel that the government has a proper respect for
their language.
The government shows an increasing reluctance to reassure Afrikaners
through positive deeds that it does not desire the phasing out of
Afrikaans as a public language over the next 20 years.
The survey is the first evidence we have of how Afrikaans speakers are
responding to one of the greatest challenges that their language has
ever confronted.
At the heart of the issue lies the clash between Afrikaners and
Africans over language and national unity. At independence nearly all
the governments and civil services of African countries chose to
conduct their business in their colonial language, with legal services
and private sectors following suit. Augustine Catera, a Rwandan who
heads Unesco's language desk, recently said: "Africans fear the
promotion of indigenous languages will handicap national unity and
promote ethnic conflicts." To avert this danger, the post-colonial
African elite have enthusiastically embraced the colonial language, and
kept indigenous languages for "home consumption".
The Afrikaner experience could not have been more different. At the
beginning of this century the Afrikaner nationalist movement
deliberately abandoned the colonial languages, Dutch and English, in
order to build up Afrikaans as a language of high culture that could
take its place in science, technology, higher education and the market
place. Successive generations of Afrikaners have been taught that
Afrikaans is the expression of their social identity, and that the
treatment their language receives at the hands of government and
society is the best indicator of the respect accorded to them as a
group.
Today's misunderstanding between Afrikaners and Africans flows from
this cultural history. As I heard one black South African express it
recently: "Blacks cannot understand why Afrikaners do not leave their
language at home when they go to work and the market place every day.
After all, this is what blacks are expected to do." By contrast,
Afrikaners cannot fathom why blacks have embraced English with such
enthusiasm or why they do not insist on a much wider use of their
respective tongues in university education and other public
spheres.
National Party blunder
Much of the present turmoil within Afrikaner ranks can be traced to
the constitutional negotiations, where the National Party made the
greatest hash of things. The decision then to recognise 11 official
languages was in reality a thinly disguised ANC move
to introduce one de facto official language. Even before the interim
constitution was signed cabinet ministers realised that the future of
Afrikaans medium schools was in jeopardy and if they expected to put
matters right in the final constitution this soon appeared hopelessly
misguided. Yet President de Klerk must have considered safeguarding the
Afrikaans language and schools as one of the greatest prizes - after
all he donated his Nobel peace prize money to the promotion of
Afrikaans.
In government, the ANC has seemed puzzled and uncomprehending about
the issue of Afrikaans and the growing alienation of Afrikaners from
the new order. On the positive side, President Mandela has taken
trouble to make some speeches in Afrikaans and quickly overruled Tony
Yengeni when, as head of the portfolio committee on defence, he wished
to impose English as the sole language in the defence forces.
Yet nothing was done when the SABC scaled down Afrikaans to 5 per cent
of television prime time, when SA Airways banned Afrikaans in public
announcements or when the Free State provincial government dropped the
Sesotho and Afrikaans versions of its name. Again there was no word
when the ANC-controlled town council of Germiston decided to conduct
all its business in English or when the Supreme Court upheld the
decision. In an open letter to the president, the Pan South African
Language Board (the statutory watchdog) pointed out that this decision
violates the municipalities' constitutional obligation to take the
language preferences of its residents into account.
It concluded: 'If we allow one aspect of the constitution to be eroded
aren't we opening a floodgate for the disregard of other aspects of our
constitution?" Strong words from a body on which only two
Afrikaans-speakers sit and whose vice-chairman, Dr Neville Alexander,
is a well-known leftwing critic of the ANC. The president's office
appeared unconcerned, merely informing the board that it had referred
its letter to the ministry of arts, culture, science and technology "to
advise government on the most appropriate course of action, if any is
required".
The government seems worried not so much about the fate of Afrikaans
but about the fallout of its language policy. In phrases which have
echoes of NP leaders of old, Mandela recently referred to "certain
intellectuals and commentators" creating a mood of "Afrikaner
pessimism" which in turn was having "a corrosive effect on the building
material of the new society and nation". The vice president, Thabo
Mbeki, has warned against "the temptation to trek back into the laager
as recent developments indicated" - which may be a reference to the
meeting held in Stellenbosch last year to explore the possibility of
establishing a non-racial umbrella group for all Afrikaans
organisations.
Government assurances are probably well-meant but often come across
awkwardly. Thus Mbeki responded to a speech by a Freedom Front delegate
to the youth parliament recently by stating that the cabinet had made
no decision to ban Afrikaans in higher education. He went on to say:
"Even if it looks as if we are hostile to Afrikaans, the fact is that
most Afrikaans-speakers are black. For this reason we cannot adopt a
stand which results in withdrawing Afrikaans from the country's
personality." The clear implication is that the government's attitude
towards language rights is dependent not on constitutional principle
but on the colour of those who speak a particular language.
University battleground
The next round will probably be fought over the Afrikaans
universities. The new bill on higher education removes the right of
individual institutions to determine the language of instruction.
Afrikaans universities are vulnerable both because there are too many
of them and because the proportion of Afrikaans-speaking students has
dropped dramatically since 1993. At the Rand Afrikaans University it is
down from 73 per cent to 27 per cent; at the University of the Free
State from 87 per cent to 61 per cent; at Potchefstroom from 90 per
cent to 70 per cent; at Pretoria from 80 per cent to 61 per cent; and
at Stellenbosch from 77 per cent to 68 per cent.
This situation is the result of the English flight from the old
liberal universities on the one hand, and of the influx of blacks on
the other. There are straws in the wind suggesting that these two
student groups might team up to force the more rapid Anglicisation of
the Afrikaans universities. In a recent speech at Stellenbosch,
Sibusiso Bengu, the minister of education, strongly criticised the
university's language and identity policy, warning that the survival of
Afrikaans did not lie in "language domination or the creation of
language enclaves but in interaction" and in making Afrikaans
universities "accessible in equal measure for all South Africans". The
conclusion of virtually everyone present was that the minister was
insisting on a fully fledged system of dual medium instruction at
undergraduate level.
The one hopeful aspect of the new higher education bill is its strong
emphasis on regionalisation. With Afrikaans spoken by 60 per cent of
the Western Cape population, Stellenbosch must stand some chance of
remaining a predominantly Afrikaans institution; the chances for the
northern universities are anybody's guess.
Dialogue is possible
Jakes Cerwel, Mandela's cabinet secretary, who once taught Afrikaans
at the University of the Western Cape, believes that retaining
Afrikaans as a medium for scientific and other instruction must be part
of nation building. Another leading ANC thinker, Joel Netshitenze,
expresses a similar view: "With regard to the national question: race,
ethnic origins, language and sometimes religion have important roles to
play in defining a person's identity. These identities do not fade away
in the melting pot of a broad South Africanism."
If this is the prevailing view within the ANC then there is more than
enough ground for dialogue. But one never knows for certain which
tendency has the upper hand in the ANC when it comes to nation
building. There is a hardliner faction for whom the eradication of
Afrikaans as a public language is a symbolic substitute for its lack of
a military victory over the apartheid state.
For Afrikaners and all other Afrikaans speakers the best course of
action may well be to establish an umbrella organisation and agree on
what realistically can be demanded before entering into a dialogue with
the state. The ANC understandably would prefer to deal with a
fragmented group, playing one faction off against another. The danger
of such a policy is that the language issue could fester and spread its
infection throughout the body politic.