- Originally published in the Columbia Journalism Review, September 2004
Copyright 2004 Graduate School of Journalism, Columbia University
South
African democracy is just ten years old, and the shift from apartheid
has been wrenching, both in the streets and in the newsrooms
By: DOUGLAS FOSTER;
Douglas Foster is an associate professor at the
Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University. He supervises
internships of journalism students at newspapers and broadcast networks
in South Africa, including several of those mentioned in this article.
It's
shortly after 9 a.m. on a cool April morning in Cape Town, the cusp of
winter here, just one day before South Africa's third national
democratic election. I'm here for a few days before heading on to
Johannesburg. From the steps of the L-shaped building that serves as
headquarters for Cape Town's two English-language daily newspapers, you
can look south over your shoulder toward the craggy slopes of Table
Mountain.
Ride the ancient elevator up to the cavernous newsroom that serves both the morning
Cape Times and the afternoon
Cape Argus.
Through lead-framed windows, snatches of matte gray sky and the
blue-green waters of Duncan Dock are visible. Farther out to sea lies
Robben Island, where Nelson Mandela was imprisoned from 1964 to 1990.
It
used to be illegal for newspapers like these to print Mandela's name or
publish his photograph. Older reporters and editors in the room
remember when "Whites Only" signs were posted at the entrance to the
toilets. It's a brand new country, they'll tell you. These days it is
opponents of the African National Congress, Mandela's party, who
complain -- not about the threat of arrest, but rather about being
treated as nonentities by the media (especially the
government-controlled South African Broadcasting Corporation).
Reporters
for the afternoon paper, dressed casually, jam into a conference room
around a massive oval oak table. They're a thoroughly multiracial
bunch, a sign of how much has changed since Mandela was elected
president ten years ago.
A closer look
tells a more nuanced story, however. At the news editor's end of the
table mostly white staff members cluster. In the middle section are the
mixed-race reporters ("coloured" in apartheid-era parlance, still
widely used). At the far end of the table near the door, as if to
signal their more recent arrival, are the black reporters.
The
news editor, Vivien Horler, gets right to the big story. South Africa's
first democratic election brought in Mandela as president in 1994,
followed by transition to his successor, Thabo Mbeki, in 1999. Will
tomorrow's vote lead to a third straight rout of opposition parties by
the African National Congress? The strongest challengers -- Tony Leon's
Democratic Alliance and Mangosuthu Buthelezi's Inkatha Freedom Party --
have been hammering on the government for failing to deliver a better
life for the country's black majority. Unemployment is high, and the
gap between rich and poor is growing. President Mbeki has been storming
the country in shirtsleeves, promising to do better. The alleviation of
poverty is at the center of the ANC's campaign.
A
few reporters have been assigned to track down politicians at their
voting stations for comment, but they protest that this is such a tired
convention. Murray Williams, a white reporter, suggests finding
especially interesting people who are not politicians to interview. A
number of his colleagues chime in, mentioning neighborhoods in the city
where well-known writers, architects, and theater people live.
A
huff of disbelief blows down from the far end of the table. Zenzile
Khoisan, a stick-thin investigative reporter in a black baseball cap,
says: "That's all very nice for us to spend time in the wealthy
districts, eh? Aren't they having an election in Khayelitsha, too?" He
ticks off the names of other townships where blacks and mixed-race
people had been forced to live under apartheid.
Williams
stiffens in his chair. He's having none of his colleague's guff.
"That's a very good question, Zenzile," he says with an air of
condescension. "So maybe you can tell us what important nonpolitician
lives out there in Khayelitsha."
An edgy
silence descends. Reporters sitting at the predominantly white end of
the table turn toward Horler, the news editor. At the other end, black
journalists offer one another pinched glances. (Here's one more
implication: The posh neighborhoods tend toward the opposition while
the townships are heavily pro-ANC.) Nobody intervenes, or suggests the
names of athletes, musicians, activists, or small business-women living
in the townships who actually might be worth interviewing. An
opportunity is missed.
The flare-up is
short-lived. Some in the room are bound to think I've made too much of
it. Most of the older editors in the room, and across the way at the
Cape Times,
boast anti-apartheid credentials, after all. And many of the younger
white reporters, like Williams, are liberals who have spent most of
their working lives in a supposedly new, nonracial South Africa.
Williams argues that reporters in this newsroom have successfully moved
beyond historical racial divisions. He and Zenzile just enjoy stirring things up, he says. "Things are generally cool."
Take others aside to chat one by one, though, and you'll find that tension is rife along racial
lines. Nonwhite journalists point out that the complexion of the
newsroom is still far paler than the population at large. Wouldn't real
transformation -- the opening of professions long dominated by white
men to nonwhites and women -- mean that only 10 percent of the
reporters and editors should be white? Joseph Aranes, the gruff
political editor of the
Cape Argus, says pointedly: "Lots of
white people in the newsroom don't know what the hell is going on in
Cape Town!" Dozens more whites will have to move on, he adds, so that
the papers can be "transformed to reflect our new reality."
Add
another wrinkle: Mixed-race journalists report being lost between their
white and black colleagues. They're 11.5 percent of the population in
the country but make up 54 percent of the population in the Western
Cape. Anti-apartheid activists made it a point to promote solidarity
and subvert the government's categories by calling all nonwhites black,
but shades of difference still matter. Older "coloured" reporters tell
me, for example, that under apartheid they weren't considered "white
enough" for equal treatment, but now they don't feel "black enough."
Some
whites, on the other hand, complain privately of being sidelined,
denied promotions on the basis of skin color, and inhibited from
raising questions about falling editorial standards by the fear of
being labeled racist. They worry about the inclination of most
newspapers to hew so closely to the ANC line and wonder if black
journalists have the appetite to be tough watchdogs over this
government.
Newsrooms here are microcosms
of the larger political atmosphere. President Mbeki has berated the
newspapers for behaving like the opposition, and his ministers put
particularly intense pressure on nonwhite editors. Opposition leaders,
in turn, accuse reporters and editors of pro-government bias. Those
criticisms carry a racial charge. Tony Leon, the white leader
of the Democratic Alliance, the largest opposition party, argues that
the transformation of newsrooms "has been used to basically cleanse the
newsroom of the old order and bring in the new. That's why it's driven
with such fervor in the government. The assumption is that if you're
black and you're young you're likely to be an ANC supporter."
Bring
up any number of charged subjects these reporters are likely to cover
in any given week -- poverty, AIDS, economic development, corruption,
crime, and even sports -- and you get an inkling of the challenge they
face. Race still runs through everything. No issue seems more salient
for the multiracial group sitting around the table in Cape Town, or
more complicated, or potentially more volatile. Perhaps that's why race
is so seldom discussed directly across racial lines.
The
legacy of legal separation is partially to blame. Much of daily life
for South Africans remains a deeply segregated experience. In spite of
the emergence of a politically connected black elite, middle- and
upper-income whites still may choose to live in a bubble, where nearly
all the blacks they come across bag groceries, or serve food, or guard
cars. That's the constraining backdrop for even the best-intentioned
journalist.
While some elements of this situation may seem familiar, it's nothing like affirmative action
in the U.S. Publishers here face stringent government fines if they
fail to achieve "employment equity." Commercial pressures are probably
even more influential. To grow, the country's largest newspapers, which
traditionally served a white minority, must reflect the aspirations of
a 79 percent black majority.
Before dawn
on election day, reporters, including Zenzile Khoisan and Murray
Williams, fan out across the Western Cape. In the city, they find
respectable turnout. In the townships, where I'm shadowing reporters,
lines of voters snake along dirt paths and meander up the street. The
scene may not be quite as impressive as those iconic images of
first-time voters that flashed around the world in 1994, but it's a
robust demonstration of interest in the franchise all the same.
At
the end of the day, the electorate, for the first time, delivers
control of all nine provinces to the African National Congress. The
party racks up nearly 70 percent of the nationwide balloting, its
highest percentage of votes ever (though not the greatest number). The
vote has, once again, fractured along racial lines: few whites
voted for the ANC, and few blacks bolted to the DA -- a sign, some
commentators worry, of a trend toward "re-racialization."
The morning after the election, the
Cape Times
devotes nearly all its space above the fold to a beautiful photograph
of a long line of voters, in silhouette at sunset, in the midst of one
of the townships. The headline reads: A NATION FINDS ITS FEET. This
frankly celebratory treatment serves to underscore the fact that,
although the paper has been around for generations, it now serves a
changing readership in a multiracial democracy just ten years old.
In
May I head northeast, some 900 miles, to Johannesburg, once the heart
of gold mining country. Johannesburg is the buzzing ying to Cape Town's
mellower yang. A crackdown on criminal syndicates in the past few years
has made it safer than it was, though anyone you meet will rattle off a
few hair-raising tales of carjackings and robberies.
The
city and its outskirts make up a 220-square-mile colossus, much of it
surprisingly wooded. It's the center of political and economic power in
South Africa, and its racial makeup is a close proxy for the
rest of the country. In Cape Town, where blacks were once forbidden to
settle, less than a third of the population inside the city limits is
black. Johannesburg is 73 percent black.
This
city is a news junkie's dream. There are seven major dailies (one in
Afrikaans) and nine weeklies, as well as zoned community papers with a
combined circulation of over a million.
The
city is the staging ground, in fact, for a fierce competition for new
readers. Two years ago Naspers, a traditionally Afrikaans-language
media conglomerate, launched a daily newspaper aimed at working-class
blacks. In an environment where the circulation of most other papers
held steady or declined, the
Daily Sun proved an instant
sensation with its menu of noir crime reporting, sex scandals, and
witchcraft tales, leavened by plenty of how-to and self-help articles.
The paper rocketed to more than 300,000 circulation by late June,
making it the country's largest daily.
On an unseasonably hot morning in mid-May I've arrived with a few of my students in a community where circulation of the
Daily Sun
is booming. Soweto, the black township just a twenty-minute drive
southwest of Johannesburg proper, is known around the world for a mass
uprising that took place in 1976. Today the town is all fired up again,
this time for a far more prosaic reason.
At
Mofolo Cultural Bowl, with its large stage and lush lawn, we're about
to learn, from a live broadcast projected on a huge screen, whether
Morocco or South Africa will host the 2010 Soccer World Cup. It is
impossible to overstate the significance of this decision. It seems as
though every Walkman in the township is tuned to minute-by-minute
reports about the progress of the lobbying effort by President Mbeki,
Mandela, and Desmond Tutu. (Radio still has the greatest geographic
reach in South Africa, far ahead of television and totally swamping
print.) Crowds of children in shorts and faded shirts sit quietly on
the grass as if waiting for the results of a big exam.
A
hunky hip-hop star named Wendy pleads with two great powers -- the Lord
and Mandela -- to exert their influence on the world soccer federation.
"South Africa is calling on the Madiba magic," he sings, using
Mandela's nickname, which means "grandfather."
The
massive screen behind Wendy flickers with the image of a luxury sedan
pulling up outside the soccer federation headquarters in Zurich. The
crowd stirs. Mandela has arrived. His hair is a brilliant white and
he's dressed in an ornate yellow silk shirt.
Children
in the park leap to their feet, clapping as if he might hear them. Our
emcee asks everyone to remain standing. He instructs us to hold hands.
The announcer from SABC suggests that it's not too late to send instant
messages of prayer from our cell phones. We join in one looping chain
across the grass, my pale hands firmly grasped on each side by grown black men, both of whom are unashamedly trembling.
Finally,
the federation president is handed an envelope: It's South Africa. I
have been at scores of sports events and political rallies in my life,
but have never experienced anything like this social explosion. People
of all ages levitate, issuing hosannas. A cacophonous roar rolls on and
on. Then the hugging begins, not pro forma handclasps but close,
sustained embraces.
When the noise
subsides, I fall into conversation with the young man on my left. As it
turns out, he's a budding journalist. Bongani Mdagane, twenty-four, was
raised in a rural province, and he quickly reveals himself to be the
sort of bright, eager, and informed young person who ought to be drawn
into the profession. He tells me that he's dying to become a
full-fledged reporter. "I've got the will and the spirit to do it. It's
the only thing I want to do," he says. He taps his chest. "It's the
thing that moves me -- in here."
There are
plenty of obstacles. A few years ago, Mdagane put himself through part
of his first year of college-level journalism training at an expensive
private academy. (These academies are notoriously inadequate at
preparing students for a journalism career.) But he lost his job,
couldn't pay the fees, and had to drop out.
Mdagane
describes his conundrum without a stitch of self-pity. Looking around
at the boisterous crowd, he adds: "I'm living in Soweto and I'd like to
report the truth about what's happening here. But if I can't finish my
studies because I can't get a job, how do I get started?"
He's
placed his finger on the nub of the biggest problem -- the dearth of
opportunities for bright and ambitious but undereducated blacks. How
can editors here ever turn newsrooms into proxies for the population if
neither the universities nor the newspaper companies have invested in
the talents and aspirations of young people like him?
In
downtown Johannesburg, a few blocks from the majestic Supreme Court
building and not far from the world-famous Market Theater, two
block-long buildings face off across Sauer Street -- the national
headquarters of the African National Congress and of the Independent
Group, the country's largest chain of dailies (of which the Cape Town
papers are a part).
The Star, 117
years old, is the flagship of the Independent Group. The paper, which
for much of its history represented the perspective of English-speaking
whites, also played a significant role in the struggle against
apartheid. The newspaper served, too, as a kind of training ground for
many of the best journalists in the country, including influential
black editors like Mathatha Tsedu at
City Press, Mondli Makhanya of the
Sunday Times (the largest Sunday paper), and Justice Malala at
This Day.The
paper lost a chunk of its circulation, along with its luster, after its
halcyon days in the early 1990s. The building now is a dreary, stained,
run-down box. When Sir Anthony O'Reilly, an Irishman who runs
Independent News & Media Ltd., bought
The Star in 1995,
many thought it would herald a new era of prosperity. The dilapidated
facilities and overstretched editorial staff prove how illusory this
prediction was.
"There's a doctoral
dissertation still to be written about how this one man, Tony O'Reilly,
destroyed South African journalism," says Ryland Fisher, who edited the
Cape Times for several years and now runs a key journalism training program at Peninsula Technikon.
On a morning in early June, I catch up with Moegsien Williams,
The Star's
current top editor. He doesn't agree with Fisher, his friend and former
colleague. At the moment he's running an editorial meeting. It's been a
hell of a month for news: the seating of Parliament after the election;
the president's appointment of ministers; the deepening split within
the ANC over a crooked arms deal in which the deputy president, Jacob
Zuma, has been implicated; the on-again, off-again rollout of AIDS
medication in public health clinics; a series of horrific multiple
murders; a raft of vicious sexual assaults; the death of the pop icon
Brenda Fassie after a drug overdose; a vigorous debate within the ANC
over affirmative action, with both the defense
minister and the minister of sport raising doubts about the
government's policy; and the announcement of the World Cup selection.
It's
a bit disorienting to find Williams running a mainstream newspaper. He
was once a union activist and cofounder of radical publications
inspired by Steven Biko. His closest friends, including his current
boss, Nazeem Howa, executive director of operations for the group,
worked with him at
South, a movement publication whose primary
goal was to publicize the activities of banned organizations and to
overthrow the apartheid state. After 1994 Williams rocketed to the top,
serving in swift succession as the first nonwhite editor at
Pretoria News, then
Cape Argus, then
Cape Times, and now
The Star.At
the meeting, he finds himself enmeshed in a discussion of complaints
about the paper's political coverage. "Tony Leon doesn't like us," one
of the editors volunteers, speaking of the leader of the opposition.
"He sees us as the lapdog of the ANC." Williams, fifty-two, is a
poker-faced man with a deceptively laid-back style. But the allegation
of bias clearly stings. "That criticism is just ridiculous," he says.
He jabs his thumb in the direction of Sauer Street. "They think it's
convenient that ANC headquarters is right there, as if we go over all
the time taking orders."
Actually there
have been steady complaints about bias from the other direction as well
-- from Mandela to the current ANC leadership -- accusing editors of
behaving too much like the opposition. The critics, both from the
government and the opposition, don't understand the delicate balance
that a "new cadre of reporters and editors" must now pull off, Williams
says.
When you consider how poorly trained
many in this new cadre are, you get a sense of the magnitude of the
challenge editors like Williams face. In a country of eleven official
languages, many of his reporters (including the whites raised speaking
Afrikaans) struggle to write well in English. For some of his
reporters, English is a third language.
University
programs and craft schools simply aren't turning out graduates ready to
enter the newsroom, Williams says. This isn't just the predictable
complaint of someone from a pioneering generation. An industrywide
survey several years ago by the South African National Editors' Forum
revealed that many reporters who had been on the job from two to five
years had a limited mastery of basic journalistic skills. A majority
could not answer the following question correctly: "If 4,000,000
Zimbabwean citizens indicated that they were going to vote, and
2,000,000 indicated that they were not going to vote, what percentage
of Zimbabwean citizens will vote?"
The
survey spawned a terrible new word: juniorization. It covers a
multitude of sins. When more experienced reporters left the profession
because they were traumatized by covering the political violence that
swept the country in the 1980s, or crime or AIDS in the 1990s; when
talented reporters get snatched up at double their salaries by
government or corporations as spinmeisters; when someone gets promoted
beyond his abilities, and even when a reporter gets a story wrong,
"juniorization" is the one-size-fits-all label used to shame newsroom
denizens without mentioning explicitly that most of the "juniors" are
black.
The reporters in
The Star
newsroom are a congenial, multiracial bunch. They treat their boss like
a venerated eccentric uncle. Take a few of them aside for lunch or a
beer, though, and you'll get a glimpse of how anguished they feel about
conditions in the newsroom. They, like many of their editors, wish
Williams would stand up to the bean counters in the company and fight
for more resources. On some days, they point out, there are just a
dozen reporters on call to cover a metropolis of more than 3.2 million
people, and that's not counting Soweto and the other townships.
In the past decade,
The Star's
editorial staff has been slashed roughly in half, to about 120. The
paper's lauded in-house Cadet School was shut down just as several
executives were arguing that both entry-level and advanced training was
needed to ease the historic transition about to occur in its newsroom.
Thin
staffing means less of an opportunity for editors to mentor young
talent, the reporters point out. It translates into a harsher
environment for newcomers trying to find their footing. It also means
less of a chance for reporters to specialize and deepen their
expertise. It means fewer enterprise stories. It means more "what" and
"when" stories, less analysis and explication of the "why."
Back
in his office, Williams acknowledges that the Independent Group was far
too slow in recruiting, training, promoting, and retaining nonwhite
talent. "Many other institutions in South Africa saw the writing on the
wall in the 1980s," he says. "We woke up in 1994."
But
Williams objects to the suggestion that editorial values have been
erased by business-side objectives. The way he sees it, he helped his
boss face down formidable threats to the paper's survival. Circulation
had fallen from a high of about 230,000 in 1994 to a low of 152,000
four years ago, he says. Under his direction, earnings trebled and
The Star's circulation ticked back up to 172,000.
"The reality is that I've helped grow
The Star
and make the paper play the role that it has to play in the society,"
he says. "You won't have the opportunity if you let the business fall
apart."
The paper "is in the marrow of
Johannesburg," Williams argues, a city that, like South Africa, has
been in a state of flux for the past decade. Perhaps it reflects its
place and time. Even though the paper has a majority of black readers
now,
The Star is still widely seen as "white controlled."
Williams wants to reinvent the paper for its multiracial future --
something his chief competitors, who aim at either white or black,
don't have to do.
He takes a deep breath.
The success or failure of his effort to produce a paper through which
the city of Johannesburg "talks to itself" will turn, to a large
degree, on transforming the newsroom into a reflection of the world
outside this building. "If we don't succeed in transforming this
country and affirming the majority -- and if the majority of the people
don't have a stake in its survival -- everything will be lost," he says
softly. He points over his shoulder at the newsroom. "The young black
reporters out there," he adds, "are the future custodians of a free
press in this country."
At the edge of
Auckland Park -- one of Johannesburg's most vibrant neighborhoods,
where lofts, handicraft shops, cafes, and clubs signify the next hip
thing -- you'll find the brick-and-glass headquarters of the
Mail & Guardian,
circulation 39,000. This newspaper is South Africa's intellectual
leader, with a venerable history of anti-apartheid exposes and a strong
reputation, post-1994, for breaking stories about corruption within the
new government.
On a cold, gray morning in
late June, Ferial Haffajee, hired as the editor in January, greets me
in her office with a frank challenge: "The state of our media is
healthier than the state of your media," she says, launching into a
critique of flag-waving American press coverage of the war in Iraq.
It's been a bad few months for the U.S. reputation among South
Africans, and the worst of it, such as photos of prisoners tortured at
Abu Ghraib prison, has gotten splashy page-one play.
Haffajee,
a thirty-seven-year-old classified as Indian-Malay under the old
apartheid distinctions, grew up in Bosmont, a mixed-race township
outside Johannesburg. "I grew up thinking of myself as black because my
brothers taught me about black consciousness," she says.
She started working at the paper as a business writer in the late 1990s, went off to the
Financial Mail,
and returned to the staff two years ago. She was named its first female
black editor when Mondli Makhanya, a black man, moved on to edit the
Sunday Times.
(Makhanya heralds his successor's appointment as a historic moment in
South African media. "After ten years of democracy, and fifteen years
after Mandela was released," he told me, "it's astonishing that we have
only one female editor of a mainstream newspaper in the whole country.")
Haffajee
cocks her head toward the doorway, listening to the buzz of a newsroom
coming to life. Her chief reporters and editors file into her office
for their 10 a.m. editorial meeting. Ten years ago the
Mail & Guardian had a mostly white staff. The reporters in the room today are a mix of black and white, men and women.
There's
a looser, more congenial atmosphere in this newsroom than in others
I've visited. Wisani Wa ka Ngobeni, an investigative reporter at the
paper, addresses a colleague's story about a small-town mayor accused
of steering contracts to his numerous wives. The mayor is an ANC
stalwart. Throw in the fact that one of the mayor's wives is white, and
you might expect some awkwardness.
"One of the wives divorced him," Ngobeni reports.
"They all divorced him?" a reporter asks.
"No, just the white one." Everyone laughs -- perhaps not for precisely the same reason, but more or less at the same time.
Fikile-Ntsikelelo
Moya reads his planned lead for a takeout on the country's proposed
hate-speech law, which would criminalize public advocacy of hatred
based on race, ethnicity, gender, or religion: "If patriotism is the
last refuge of scoundrels, then freedom of expression must be the
bigot's favorite hideout." There's a hush in the room, and the audible
sound of grinding teeth from an editor sitting near me.
Haffajee leans back in her chair. There's a colloquy, partly along racial
lines, about the importance of protecting people from verbal assault on
the one hand, and protecting freedom of speech on the other. It's a
bracing exchange. "We have to go for absolute freedom of expression,"
Haffajee says, ending the debate.
The
meeting moves on, but Moya's article morphs over the next few days into
the lead essay for the "Comment and Analysis" section. The cover story
is on the nepotistic mayor with the complicated home life.
A
few days later, I have lunch at a cafe called the Color Bar, with
Ngobeni. He's just twenty-seven and he came to the paper through its
renowned training program. Ngobeni tells me that although there's been
tremendous progress under Haffajee's leadership, the paper is not yet
the Promised Land. A few weeks ago, for example, a picture of an
unidentified black man was splashed on the cover
under the headline: IS THIS THE FACE OF CORRUPTION? Since there was no
caption identifying the man as a corrupt official accused of a
particular crime, a black face was used in a generic way to symbolize a
problem. "That was bad! That was bad, bad, bad!" Ngobeni says, getting
worked up all over again.
He acknowledges
that his reaction to the photo connects to a deeper discomfort. Many of
his contemporaries consider ANC figures now in government to be heroic.
He finds himself worrying about the effects of a steady diet of stories
about corruption in the public sector -- as opposed, say, to a focus on
white-collar fraud in business. The careless pursuit of such stories
could even undercut confidence in black majority rule. "I don't think
many white journalists see this dimension," he says.
After
work, I head back to the Color Bar for a beer with Ngobeni's white
colleague, Stefaans Brummer. (Brummer eschews apartheid-era race
classifications, preferring to call himself "African.") He joined the
staff right before the 1994 election, when it was "a lot whiter," he
says, after getting his start in journalism as a reporter at the
Cape Argus.
He saw the struggle against apartheid up close; his biggest story from
those days was an expose about a massacre of ANC supporters in one of
the homelands.
Integration of the newsroom
was overdue on the merits, in Brummer's view. But he says
transformation was necessary for journalistic reasons, too. For a time
after the 1994 election there was a fair amount of "sunshine
journalism," in which the transition to ANC rule was mostly lauded,
uncritically. In the mid-1990s, when the paper began breaking stories
of government corruption, "We were increasingly attacked by officials
accusing us and others of racism," Brummer says.
So
he looks at the changing demography of his own newsroom from a slightly
different angle: "The newsroom was under pressure to transform. But
transformation did not mean a change in mindset about our journalistic
responsibilities," he says. "Sure, the newsroom has become more
representative. And that has given us more of an opportunity to be
tough."
In many ways, Brummer and Ngobeni
exemplify how transformation is supposed to work. They've recently been
at loggerheads a few times about "a certain investigation," Brummer
acknowledges. One of the chief antagonists in this investigation is
white, the other black. Brummer has a more solid line into the whites
while Ngobeni is tighter with the blacks. They've gone back and forth
on how to interpret the information they've gleaned. But they haven't
spoken much, at least not yet, about how race might be influencing
their own relationship or their treatment of the story. Why not?
Brummer turns up his palms. "Race is often the final barrier."
Back
at the office, Haffajee is proofing final pages. Highlighted streaks at
her crown set off jet-black hair pulled tightly back. She checks the
stories that have been taped to the windows of her office -- one about
a nanny fired by her employer when she tested HIV-positive, the other
about threats from the government of Zimbabwe to stop the
Mail & Guardian from circulating there.
There
are other, more serious threats. A collection of lawsuits filed by ANC
officials has cost both time and money. Competitive commercial
pressures are intense. "Democracy came to South Africa just as
globalization hit," she points out. Pressure to do more with less
collides with the obligation to train the next generation of crusading
journalists. "The changes we need to make will never come as a result
of what politicians tell us to do. In the end, it will come only from
us," she says.
At the end of our
conversation, Haffajee says something that startles me, perhaps more
than anything else I've heard in newsrooms around South Africa. She
tosses off casually that she expects to clear out of the editor's
office within a few years. She plans voluntarily to give up the
influence she acquired only six months ago as the first young woman to
edit the
Mail & Guardian."Why
in the world would you do that?" I ask. She considers me coolly, an
eyebrow lifted as if I should have that figured out by now. There's a
"stage we need to go through" before reaching the nonracial goal of the
South African liberation struggle, she says. She ticks off, one by one,
the names of even younger reporters on staff. "Because within a few
years any one of them will be ready to take my place," Haffajee says
softly. She pauses. "And because I'm not black."