At long last, a TV documentary on how South Africans, not PC Western shoppers, ended Apartheid.by David Bowden
Allegedly, when, in 1972,
Richard Nixon asked Zhou Enlai about the impact of the French Revolution, the
then Chinese premier quipped: ‘It’s too early to tell.’ He was referring to the
1968 unrest, rather than the 1789 one. Whether or not the attribution is
accurate, it was a good line and it particularly came to mind this week as
BBC4’s monumental, five-hour documentary The World Against Apartheid: Have You Heard From Johannesburg? Quietly passed its mid-point.
Three hours into its total running time, it’s still
too early to tell just how comprehensive the series will be. And, nearly 20
years after the end of apartheid, it’s still perhaps ‘too early’ to judge how
significant its global impact has been. But it’s certainly good to see the
topic being given the serious and lengthy treatment it deserves. From economic
sanctions to sporting boycotts, so many of the tactics pioneered in the
international campaign against the apartheid regime have become touchstones for
other political movements in the past few years – from Palestinian solidarity
and Chinese human rights campaigning, to environmentalism and the Occupy
protests. It was helpful to return to them in their appropriate context.