On my 94th birthday recently, there was one wish that had been on my list for 43 years. After all this time, I had almost given up on it ever being granted.
My wish was that, when I finally close my eyes in death, I will know that the wound between the Party I founded and the Party I grew up in had finally been healed.
I have been having this conversation with leaders of the ANC for decades. I remember even at height of the propaganda campaign against me, Madiba never once vilified me. We maintained correspondence throughout his incarceration, and he even urged me to visit Mr. Oliver Tambo in Lusaka so that we could resolve the differences between us.
Unfortunately, there was already an assassination plot against me, and I could not go.
Madiba and I continued to speak of reconciliation when he was released from prison, and he and I made a firm commitment to address joint rallies to indicate to our supporters that the time for enmity was over. Neither of us wanted violence. It was important that we deliver that message together.
Tragically, the ANC’s KwaZulu-Natal leader, Mr. Harry Gwala, forced Madiba’s hand to renege on that commitment.
Yet we continued to speak about reconciliation during our years in the Government of National Unity, when I served in President Mandela’s Cabinet. And President Mbeki and I continued the conversation when I served in his Cabinet. There were constantly three-a-side and five-a-side committees talking reconciliation between the IFP and the ANC. And even at one stage, a fifteen-a-side.
Yet the normalization of relations between our two parties has never taken place. The wound that has been festering between us, opened by the black-on-black violence of the past, has never been fully healed.
The ANC’s leadership at national level has shown willingness. Yet their colleagues in KwaZulu-Natal have always stopped it. They have gone so far as to portray Mzala Nxumalo’s propaganda tract as the measure of my contribution to our country.
It has been incredibly painful.
I was therefore amazed to see the press statement issued by the “new leadership of the ANC” in KwaZulu-Natal on the occasion of my 94th birthday. Far from the kind of vitriol that had come my way under former Premier Zikalala, their message was one of high praise for my leadership, my integrity and my commitment to serving South Africa.
I almost had to read it twice!
Having digested what they have said about me, and the fact that they said it, I felt it important to publicly thank the new leadership of the ANC in KwaZulu-Natal for what can only be described as a prospect of hope. I feel that perhaps the time has come where our parties will sit down and heal the old wound between us.
I welcome that with open arms. It is deeply encouraging.
As the late President Kenneth Kaunda openly admitted, I founded Inkatha on his advice when, speaking on behalf of the Frontline States, he urged me to found a membership-based organization to reignite political mobilization upon South African soil. I sought Mr. Tambo’s approval first, which he gave without hesitation.
What subsequently happened between Inkatha and the African National Congress is a tragedy that we need to put behind us. The only way to do that, however, is to accept the need for healing and to embrace the path of reconciliation.
With the hope that has been sparked by the KZN ANC’s press statement, I hope that that time has finally come. God alone knows how much time we have left to close this wound, but it is obvious that time is against us.
I therefore welcome this note of conciliatory hope. May it signal the time for healing.
~ written by Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi MP, Founder and President Emeritus of the Inkatha Freedom Party.
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