New Times,
New Thinking.

  1. Long reads
4 June 2010

The NS Interview: Nadine Gordimer

“The World Cup is a big circus. But the people need bread”

By Samira Shackle

Read a longer version of this interview.

It’s been over 16 years since apartheid ended. How close is the goal of a “rainbow nation”?
I have always called myself a realistic optimist. During the time of the struggle, we were so completely preoccupied with getting rid of apartheid that we didn’t have the time or state of mind to think about the future. When we all voted together for the first time – an absolutely wonderful occasion – we partied and celebrated. Now, the next day, comes the headache.

Why has there been such a rise in violence?
It is mainly because we have this tremendous gap between the poor and the rest of the population, who are at various stages of achieving a liveable life, going right up to the very rich. This huge backlog of poverty is an inheritance that you can’t deal with in 16 years.

What’s the mood ahead of the World Cup?
It’s a strange thing. While there is great excitement about the World Cup, at the same time we’ve got these tremendous difficulties. I’m certainly not a killjoy. People need bread and circuses, and this is a big circus. Let it be enjoyed. But what about the bread?

Will it be a good thing for South Africa?
It’s difficult to gauge what the benefits will be afterwards. Take the stadiums – does one really need them, and what do you do with them? The money that’s being spent could provide housing for so many who are living in shacks.

What do you think about the African National Congress today?
There is a lot of dissent within the party. Capable opposition always wakes up a ruling party. But there is dissent within the opposition parties, too.

Give a gift subscription to the New Statesman this Christmas from just £49

What about Julius Malema, the controversial president of the ANC Youth League?
He has an appeal for the young, poor and jobless. They have nothing offered to them, except to rage against the state of the country. I think he’s a tragedy. It’s all very well to criticise him and, God knows, one must, if you have any care for this country and its future. But one has to see what has led to him coming about. It’s an unfortunate phenomenon.

Are you optimistic about the future?
What some people don’t realise is that there has been a remarkable change between black and white. It’s hidden now because of other pressures, but there has not been even a generation to put everything right. If South Africans could overcome apartheid, surely we can summon the will to deal with the present problems.

How well has the Aids crisis been handled?
Thabo Mbeki was a highly intelligent man and achieved some good things, but nobody can explain (I certainly can’t) his blindness about the HIV/Aids problem and the neglect that he allowed during his time as president. It does seem that it is being tackled now. If only we could find – when I say we, I mean the whole world, but particularly us – a vaccine against it.

Is President Jacob Zuma doing enough?
He is saying the right things about Aids, but one can’t forget that when he was in court, he said in public – he can’t blame the press for this – that he’d had unprotected sex with a woman he knew was HIV-positive. It makes one wonder.

Will you write an autobiography?
Why should I? I’m not interested in myself to that extent. Anything that’s in me that has any worth at all to make public is in what I’ve written. My other life is private.

Can literature make a difference?
Has it not always done this? Most people don’t make the distinction between literature and propaganda. Propaganda has its place. It seeks to persuade people. But literature, poetry, novels, stories – these are an exploration of life.

You’ve said that you regret not learning an African language.
I certainly regret it very much. It’s a great deprivation.

Is there a plan?
You don’t plan. Life pushes in on you and you respond to it or you don’t.

Do you vote?
How could you not, if you’d grown up as I did, knowing that you could only vote because you were white? It is a precious right and, to us, it is all the more precious because so many people didn’t have it for so long.

Is there anything you’d like to forget?
In my private life, of course. Not in my public life. I hope I’ve done what I was capable of. It’s never enough, but there you are.

Are we all doomed?
Doomed to what? To atomic explosion? To making the atmosphere unbreathable? I’m troubled about pollution and by the power of weaponry that exists in the world, but I believe that we are not doomed. We will and must find our way out of it.

Read a longer version of this interview.

Defining moments

1923 Born in South Africa
1945 Enrols at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg
1953 Her first novel, The Lying Days, is published
1960 Her friend Bettie du Toit is arrested. Joins the anti-apartheid movement
1986 Testifies on behalf of 22 anti-apartheid activists at the Delmas treason trial
1991 Becomes the first South African to win the Nobel Prize for Literature

Content from our partners
How to solve the teaching crisis
Pitching in to support grassroots football
Putting citizen experience at the heart of AI-driven public services