"Most of the trauma they might have experienced remains unspoken or
manifests in aggression, particularly when dealing with people, groups and
situations they perceive to be a threat in some way."
The scars of conscription
September 3 2015 at 03:00pm
By Theresa Edlmann Comment on this story
<http://www.iol.co.za/mercury/the-scars-of-conscription-1.1910292#comments_start>
[image: IOL NM_SADF20]SADFSouth African soldiers during raids in the
14-year Angolan war, which began in 1975.

Theresa Edlmann examines the lingering, unspoken pain of white youth who
fought for apartheid.

The legacies of apartheid in South Africa can only be understood by making
sense of the complexities of the past. This includes recognising what those
who were young during the apartheid era – and who are now the elders and
leaders of our society – experienced during that time.

In the approximately 30 years between the Sharpeville massacre and the 1994
democratic elections that ended apartheid, a generation of southern
Africans faced challenging and often conflicting choices about ideological
allegiances.

For young white boys, the end of their school careers came with a choice
about responding to the “call-up” to the South African Defence Force. This
system of military conscription was instituted in 1957 by the apartheid
government and became compulsory from 1968 onwards.

Military conscription was key in the apartheid state’s “total response” to
what was construed as a “total onslaught” by the perceived threats of
communism and African nationalism.

The state tried to draw white society into supporting this campaign by
invoking a generations-long tradition of men doing military service to
protect their country, values and families.

The end of apartheid meant that this was the last generation of white South
African and South West African (now Namibian) families to send off their
young men to war in such large numbers.

The very different dynamics of contemporary South Africa make it hard to
understand the scale of pressure these young men experienced at home, in
many churches and in most social and political domains.

White South African society was politically conservative and deeply
invested in protecting its interests. Democratic notions such as freedom of
choice were almost unheard of. Calls of duty and service were paramount.

The impact that the system of conscription had on the approximately 600 000
white men, or 7.1% of the roughly 4.2 million white people in South Africa
in 1992, who became both pawns and agents of the apartheid state, has
seldom been publicly acknowledged in post-apartheid South Africa.

*Duty and conscience*

Those who accepted the call-up received rigorous military training,
followed by deployment in South Africa, Namibia or Angola for the rest of
their period of service. After that came several years of annual short-term
“camps”. Over the 25 years that conscription was in place, service
increased from nine months to a total of 720 days, including camps.

Military combat was rare until 1975, when the SADF invaded Angola after its
Portuguese colonial government collapsed. This initiated 14 years of what
became known as the Border War, consisting of intense military and
guerrilla warfare in northern Namibia and southern Angola.

There were harsh consequences for those who disobeyed the call-up. Their
choices? A court martial and up to six years in prison, exile in another
country or going into hiding in South Africa.

University studies could delay military service, and some men exploited
this for as long as possible. Conscientious objection (on religious rather
than moral, ethical or political grounds) became a legal option in the
mid-1980s – around the time the End Conscription Campaign was established
and began public campaigns in support of conscientious objectors as well as
calling for an end to conscription.

*The war comes home*

White South African society lived in almost complete ignorance about the
scale of the war and the SADF’s strategies. Most conscripts said little
about what they experienced. This was partly because they had to sign the
Official Secrets Act upon joining. It was also the result of the “willed
ignorance” of most white South Africans and the draconian censorship laws
of the time.

In the mid-1980s, anti-apartheid resistance within South Africa intensified
and SADF soldiers were deployed domestically.

Suddenly, young white men were being called on to police fellow citizens by
patrolling the racially defined borders between segregated communities. The
Border War had come home.

The unsustainable nature of the morally and economically bankrupt apartheid
system became increasingly evident even to apartheid’s leaders, who
initiated discussions with the then banned ANC during this time.

The ramifications were widespread. The war in Namibia and Angola ended with
the 1989 withdrawal of the SADF from Namibia.

Namibia gained independence a year later. The ANC and other organisations
were unbanned, political prisoners were released and the negotiations that
led to the 1994 elections got under way.

*1994: A new era*

Conscription was officially disbanded in 1995, as was the SADF. A new
integrated army was established – and conscription slipped into the realms
of silence and memory for most people. For conscripts themselves, the
memories of their time in the military haven’t faded.

Some have embraced the possibilities of new freedoms, while others have
fought to maintain and celebrate historical identities in a changed context.

There have been some efforts by the public and civil society to recognise
the complexities of conscripts’ experiences, being both victims of a system
and perpetrators in its name.

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission held a special hearing on
conscription. Increasing numbers of books about and by conscripts have been
published.

And several groups such as veterans, some NGOs and the Legacy of Apartheid
Wars Project at Rhodes University have done some work around the issue,
mostly in the form of research, public dialogues and workshops to address
issues of woundedness and trauma – for conscripts and those who fought
against apartheid.

However, for the majority of conscripts, the discursive laagers that have
shaped their social positioning remain intact.

Most of the trauma they might have experienced remains unspoken or
manifests in aggression, particularly when dealing with people, groups and
situations they perceive to be a threat in some way.

As the more complex dimensions of our apartheid history begin to emerge,
the healing and transformative possibilities of stories about conscription
surfacing in the public domain should not be underestimated – especially as
a way of making sense of our deeply racially divided society.

* Theresa Edlmann is a post-doctoral fellow in history at Unisa. Her
research interests revolve around the storied nature of personal and social
identities, histories and change. The focus of her doctoral research was
the psychosocial legacies of apartheid-era violence, and the system of
compulsory conscription of white men into the South African Defence Force
in particular.

** The ciews expressed here are not necessarily those of Independent Media.

*The Conversation*

-- 
-- 
You are subscribed. This footer can help you.
Please POST your comments to [email protected] or reply to this 
message.
You can visit the group WEB SITE at 
http://groups.google.com/group/yclsa-eom-forum for different delivery options, 
pages, files and membership.
To UNSUBSCRIBE, please email [email protected] . You 
don't have to put anything in the "Subject:" field. You don't have to put 
anything in the message part. All you have to do is to send an e-mail to this 
address (repeat): [email protected] .

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"YCLSA Discussion Forum" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to