Anatomy of a Miracle: The End of Apartheid and the Birth of the New South AfricaThe peaceful birth of black majority rule in South Africa was a transcendent moment. Many South Africans believe this negotiated revolution to be a miracle: at the very least it was a feat of political magic. One false step along the way could have ignited the race war that had been widely predicted as South Africa's destiny. Patti Waldmeir's colorful and incisive narrative begins with the birth of apartheid itself, and traces the very human drama that brought about its demise. It is the story of a grand seduction, a study in the psychology of capitulation, which ends with the inauguration of the world's most famous prisoner as president of a new country, and the creation of a new, rainbow nation. The author was present at nearly every critical moment during the endgame of apartheid, and we see all the principal actors - Nelson Mandela, F. W. de Klerk, Chief Buthelezi, and the militants of the extreme right - through the eyes of a journalist who knows them personally. She captures the good sense and the violence of these times, and illuminates the forces of history, economics, demographics, and morality that shaped the human drama. Few journalists have known South Africa so long or so well as Patti Waldmeir. This book draws on her conversations with presidents past and present and on her eyewitness accounts of township violence, guerrilla actions, and brutal "necklaces." She reports from inside a political process without precedent, in which both blacks and whites have achieved their liberation. |
Contents
Prologue | 1 |
PART ONE APARTHEID AGONISTES | 5 |
The Myth of the Monolith | 9 |
The Age of Contradictions | 22 |
To the Rubicon and Beyond | 39 |
PART TWO NEGOTIATED REVOLUTION | 59 |
The Great Seduction | 63 |
Secret Mission | 86 |
Siamese Twins | 156 |
The Third Man and the Third Force | 168 |
Rollercoaster Revolution | 191 |
The Darkest Hour | 206 |
The End of History | 221 |
Battling for the Right | 237 |
Bake Bread Not Slogans | 252 |
LIFE AFTER APARTHEID | 263 |
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Common terms and phrases
Afri African National Congress Afrikaner ANC leaders ANC's Anglo apartheid armed struggle asked Barnard battle became began believed black South Africans Boer cabinet campaign Cape Town Chief Buthelezi Codesa Coetsee colleagues coloured Communist constitution Cyril Ramaphosa deal decade democracy economic election enemy Esterhuyse ethnic exiled F. W. de Klerk fear fighting homeland hostel Inkatha insisted Joe Slovo Johannesburg knew Koppies KwaZulu liberation live Louw Lusaka Mac Maharaj majority rule meeting Merwe minister moral Natal National Party needed Nelson Mandela never officials P. W. Botha peace percent Pieter de Lange police political power sharing president Pretoria prison prove racial recalls reconciliation release right-wing Robben Island Roelf Meyer says sides Sisulu South Africa Soweto speech talks Thabo Mbeki third force thought tion told took township unbanning Verwoerd Viljoen violence volkstaat Vorster vote wanted white right white South Wimpie World Trade Centre Zulu