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TOM EATON | Mangosuthu Buthelezi: how to get away with the whole damned thing

The legacy of someone like the late IFP leader is a slippery thing

Mangosuthu Buthelezi was a 'political maverick and an ideological fraudster', according to the author.
Mangosuthu Buthelezi was a 'political maverick and an ideological fraudster', according to the author. (SANDILE NDLOVU)

They say one shouldn’t speak ill of the dead. Which, I suppose, is one of the reasons the living get away with so much.  

The original version of that popular little finger wag was even more restrictive. De mortuis nil nisi bonum, the Romans told us, echoing the ancient Greeks who’d given them the idea, of the dead nothing but good is to be said. In other words, if you can’t say something nice, don’t say anything at all. 

Part of this tradition comes from the admirable convention to show compassion to those who have lost a loved one. But at its heart, the restriction on speaking ill is based on basic fairness. The dead, the thinking goes, can’t defend themselves from accusations or refute the allegations made, so it is fundamentally unjust to point the finger at them. 

What this requires, plainly, is the belief that the dead aren’t really dead.  

After all, if their reputations need to be protected by the living, it must follow that they not only still exist as themselves, but are also able to get news of the accusations against them. This is the nature of the injustice: they are still them and know they are being denounced, and yet, because of famously ropy lines of communication between their world and ours, they can’t send their rebuttal.  

For the ancient Greeks and Romans, who knew exactly where they were going after death, this approach would have made a lot of sense. I suspect it also comforts many modern South Africans, the overwhelming majority of whom are religious and therefore probably believe they will continue to exist in some form after death.  

To be fair, there are good things about the ancient tradition of nil nisi bonum. It prevents funerals from turning into fistfights. It offers a relatively safe period of mourning to the bereaved and confers a quiet veneer of dignity on the rupturing experience of death.

It goes without saying the legacy of someone like Mangosuthu Buthelezi is a slippery thing, not least because legacy, for all its pompous claims to represent history and posterity, always comes down to relationships in the here and now; and there is no accounting for relationships

 The trouble, however, is where nil nisi bonum sinks so deeply into the consciousness of a society that it becomes a form of self-censorship.  

It goes without saying the legacy of someone like Mangosuthu Buthelezi is a slippery thing, not least because legacy, for all its pompous claims to represent history and posterity, always comes down to relationships in the here and now; and there is no accounting for relationships. Humans love the worst people. We hate the best people. Today, there are South Africans who are sure they have lost the finest, noblest, kindest man they have ever known. There are also South Africans who know, deep in their scarred bodies, that an apartheid collaborator and warlord has left the country he bled in the 1980s.  

Inevitably, the weekend’s accounting has been scrambled. I have read softball eulogies and vitriolic denunciations. But what has struck me is how the former dominate the latter and how the indictments were seen as some kind of minority report by a famously grumpy dissenting judge.

Mondli Makhanya’s front page shredding of Buthelezi in City Press at the weekend was extraordinary in its ferocity and honesty. And yet, across social media, a remarkable number of people wrote comments about it suggesting they weren’t so much being schooled as entertainment by a familiar schtick, as if funny old Mondli was at it again.  

There are pragmatic reasons for some of the sanitised tributes offered by politicians over the past few days. It’s one thing for journalists — or the survivors of Boipatong or Vosloorus — to remind us that Desmond Tutu ejected Buthelezi from Robert Sobukwe’s funeral in 1978, or that Buthelezi and his puppet Bantustan ministers had their salaries paid by Pretoria, or Magnus Malan’s SADF trained IFP death squads in the correct method for killing all the inhabitants of a house, or how ready Buthelezi was to implode the 1994 elections if he didn’t get his way. But there’s another election coming.  

The last thing the ANC wants is to drive more voters towards the IFP by stirring up old animosities in KwaZulu-Natal. And on the other side of the aisle, the marriage of convenience between the DA and IFP — the so-called moonshot pact — would end in rapid divorce should John Steenhuisen start calling spades spades.  

The rest of us, however, are not running for office and I think we could all do with a little less nil nisi bonum and a little more complexity and honesty.  

I would suggest Buthelezi doesn’t need the protection of pious or euphemistic remembrance. If there is an afterlife, he is beyond our help and judgment now. If there isn’t, and he is simply gone, his reputation is irrelevant to him now, and all that mattered was the life he lived. And here, too, there is no cause for his fans to worry.  

After all, if you die at 95, four years after your spouse to whom you were married for 67 years, surrounded by family and acolytes, never having had to account for your role in a civil war or the atrocities stemming from it, rewarded for trying to undermine and destroy democratic elections by being made a cabinet minister for a decade and an MP for three, brother, you did more than OK.  

You got away with the whole damned thing.  


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