NYT
 
Nelson Mandela,  Communist
By _BILL  KELLER_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/k/bill_keller/index.html)
 
Published:  December 7, 2013 
 


     
IN 2011, the British historian _Stephen  Ellis_ 
(http://www.ascleiden.nl/?q=organization/people/stephen-ellis)  published a 
paper concluding that 
Nelson Mandela had been a member of  the South African Communist Party — 
indeed, 
a member of its governing Central  Committee. Although Mandela’s African 
National Congress and the Communist Party  were openly allied against 
apartheid, Mandela and the A.N.C. have always denied  that the hero of South 
Africa’s 
liberation was himself a party member. But  Ellis, drawing on testimony of 
former party members and newly available  archives, made a convincing case 
that Mandela joined the party around 1960,  several years before he was 
sentenced to life in prison for conspiring to  overthrow the government. 
 
Does it matter?  
The news excited some critics and historical  revisionists, who claimed it 
exposed the A.N.C. as a Stalinist front.  (“ ‘Saint’ Mandela? Not So Fast!”
 exulted one right-wing blog.) It probably  stirred a sense of vindication 
among Americans who endorsed their government’s  Cold War support of the 
fiercely anti-Communist apartheid regime. Professor  Ellis is no apologist for 
white rule — he occupies a university chair in  Amsterdam named for another 
hero of the South African resistance, Archbishop  Desmond Tutu — but he 
contends that the affiliation with the Communists shaped  the A.N.C.’s ideology 
in ways that endure, ominously, to this day.  
“Today, the A.N.C. officially claims still to be at  the first stage ... of 
a two-phase revolution,” Ellis told me in an email  exchange. “This is a 
theory obtained directly from Soviet thinking.”  
Indeed, the remnants of Communist protocol and jargon  — “comrades” and “
counterrevolutionaries” — live on in the platform and demeanor  of South 
Africa’s ruling party. My own perspective on this question, shaped by  
covering the Soviet Union from 1986 to 1991 and South Africa from 1992 to 1995, 
 is 
respectful of scholarship, but also wary of its limits. Both in Gorbachev’s 
 Russia and in transitional South Africa, I realized that what people 
profess at  party plenums and codify in party records is not always a reliable 
guide to what  they will do, or even what they actually believe.  
But Mandela’s Communist affiliation is not just a bit  of history’s 
flotsam. It doesn’t justify the gleeful red baiting, and it  certainly does not 
diminish a heroic legacy, but it is significant in a few  respects.  
First, Mandela’s brief membership in the South African  Communist Party, 
and his long-term alliance with more devout Communists, say  less about his 
ideology than about his pragmatism. He was at various times a  black 
nationalist and a nonracialist, an opponent of armed struggle and an  advocate 
of 
violence, a hothead and the calmest man in the room, a consumer of  Marxist 
tracts and an admirer of Western democracy, a close partner of  Communists and, 
in his presidency, a close partner of South Africa’s powerful  capitalists. 
  
 
The early collaboration of the A.N.C. with the  Communists was a marriage 
of convenience for a movement that had few friends.  The South African 
Communist Party and its patrons in Russia and China were a  source of money and 
weapons for the largely feckless armed struggle, and for  many, it meant 
solidarity with a cause larger than South Africa. Communist  ideology 
undoubtedly 
seeped into the A.N.C., where it became part of a uniquely  South African 
cocktail with African nationalism, Black Consciousness, religious  liberalism 
and other, inchoate angers and resentments and yearnings.  
But at important junctures — in negotiations to end  white rule, then in 
the writing of a new constitution, and finally in governing  — the faction of 
nationalizers and vengeance seekers lost out to the  compromisers. In the 
talks that set the stage for democracy, Joe Slovo, the  longtime leader of the 
South African Communists and a man fluent in  revolutionary rhetoric, was 
the most ardent advocate of sharing power with the  white regime. The 
prevailing doctrine was whatever worked to advance the cause  of a South Africa 
governed by South Africans. This was true of Mandela and  equally true of his 
successor, Thabo Mbeki. The current president, Jacob Zuma,  seems to have no 
ideology at all except self-enrichment. 
 
In one of his several trials, Mandela was asked if he  was a Communist. “If 
by Communist you mean a member of the Communist Party and a  person who 
believes in the theory of Marx, Engels, Lenin and Stalin, and who  adheres 
strictly to the discipline of the party, I did not become a Communist,”  he 
replied. The answer was both evasive and perfectly accurate. 
 
Perhaps the most important and lasting personal effect  of the South 
African Communist Party on Mandela was that it made him, or helped  make him, a 
committed nonracialist. The A.N.C. in its formative years admitted  only 
blacks. For a long time, the Communist Party was the only partner in the  
movement that included whites, Indians and mixed-race members. That 
relationship  
is one of the main reasons Mandela cited for his rejection of black 
nationalism  and his insistence that multiracialism remain at the heart of the 
A.N.C. 
ethic.  
A third reason the Communist affiliation matters is  that it helps explain 
why South Africa has not made greater progress toward  improving the lives 
of its large underclass, rooting out corruption and unifying  a fractious 
populace. The many failures of the A.N.C. during its 19 years in  power can be 
explained by the fact that it has never fully made the transition  from 
liberation movement to political party, let alone government. The Communist  
Party is as culpable in that as anyone, but I think what incapacitates the  
A.N.C. is not Stalinist doctrine, or any doctrine for that matter. It is  
something in the nature, the culture, of liberation movements. United by what  
they are against, they tend to be conspiratorial, to discourage dissent, to  
prize ends over means. 
 
In the end, of course, the greatest favor Communism  performed for Mandela 
and the A.N.C. was collapsing. Once the Soviet bloc had  disintegrated and 
China had gone capitalist, the last white rulers of South  Africa could no 
longer pose as necessary allies on the right side of the Cold  War. They knew 
the game was up

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