Microsoft Word - 2. Alan Paton by Ali Gunes


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Journal of the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences 

International University of Sarajevo 

ISSN 1840-3719 / No. 2 

Spring 2009 

©2009, International University of Sarajevo, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences. All rights reserved. 

 

The Illusion of Freedom in South Africa: 

Post-colonialism, Exploitation and Identity Crisis in Alan 

Paton’s Cry, The Beloved Country 
 

Ali Güneş 
International University of Sarajevo 

 

 

Colonization of Africa began in 1488 when the Portuguese explorer 

Bartolemeu Dias first sailed along the cost of South Africa and eventually arrived 

at the north of South Africa. Then the British sailors stopped briefly in the 

southwest of Africa on their way to India in the 1600s. In 1602, the Dutch East 

India Company was established to expand trade relationship with colonies in Asia 

by entering into a fierce rivalry with Britain, and Jan van Riebeeck brought in 

1652 three Dutch East India Company ships with around 100 people to establish 

a station, and these people, known as Afrikaners, were the first white settlers of 

South Africa. By the end of the seventeenth century, the white population, 

including Dutch, German, and French, increased considerably in South Africa by 

killing, driving out or enslaving the indigenous peoples, and then the slave trade 

started. During the first half of the nineteenth century, Afrikaners set up the 

Orange Free State and Transvaal Republics by displacing the indigenous Basotho 

and Batswana people. Besides, a second colony, Natal, was established by the 

British in 1843, and the first labourers were brought in 1879 from India to 

strengthen the Natal sugar plantation. The discovery of the diamonds, along with 

that of gold in the Transvaal, resulted in a second Anglo-Boer War (1899-1902) 

between Britain and the Afrikaner Republics. Although Britain was victorious, 

both sides never forgot the damage of the war, since more than 20 thousand 

Afrikaner women and children died in the concentration camp, and more than 30 

thousand farmhouses were destroyed by the British troops, bringing about the 

rise of Afrikaner ethnic nationalism in South Africa, yet at the same time the 



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The Illusion of Freedom in South Africa: 

Post-colonialism, Exploitation and Identity Crisis in Alan Paton’s Cry, The Beloved Country 

 

native Africans were deceived and further suppressed by both the two white 

powers, since these powers, in fact, tried to improve their relations for their 

economic interest in the continent. 

In 1910, all four provinces - Cape Colony, Natal, Transvaal and the Orange 

Free State - were given dominion status by the British and called the Union of 

South Africa under the Afrikaner home rule. From that period onward, a 

segregationist legislation was endorsed, defining the indigenous peoples as 

aliens; their land and resources were exploited, and their movements and 

freedom were politically controlled and limited in their in their own country. For 

example, the Mines and Works Act of 1911 restricted many skilled jobs to white 

workers, while the Natives Land Act of 1913 granted African land ownership 

rights to only 7 % of the total land area of South Africa. Besides, the Native Affairs 

Act of 1920 enforced a system of government-appointed tribal councils, which 

barred Africans from getting involved in political representation in government, 

and the Natives (Urban Areas) Act of 1923 initiated the urban residential 

segregation, with a stringent system of pass- laws to control influx of the natives. 

In addition, the Mines and Works Amendment Act of 1926 enabled to implement 

racially differentiated salaries, whereas the Native Administration Act of 1927 

assigned the Governor-General as the “Paramount Chief” of all the Africans, 

allowing him to appoint chiefs, define tribal boundaries and shuffle tribes in 

South Africa. (Beinart and Dubow 1-24; Frederickson 3-14; Ashcroft, Griffiths and 

Tiffin 14-5) This segregation even went further, and it was officially legalized as 

apartheid in 1948 with the election of the Afrikaner National Party and Daniel F. 

Malan as Prime Minister. The Afrikaner National Party institutionalized apartheid 

with the legislation as the Group Areas Act, which not only specified that separate 

areas be reserved for the four main racial groups - whites, blacks, Coloureds, and 

Asians, but it also “moved and restricted the rights of ‘non-whites’ in every 

possible sphere.” (3), or it brought about what George M. Fredrickson calls the 

preparation “to elaborate its grand design for separating the races from the 

cradle to the grave…assuring the dominance of Europeans for all time to come.” 



22 

Ali Güneş 

(244-5) Several decades later, however, apartheid gradually ended in 1993 when 

the National Party and the African National Congress reached an agreement that 

guaranteed to set up a democratic South Africa. The African National Congress 

won political power in April of 1994 during the first non-racial democratic 

election with 63 percent of the majority-vote under the leadership of Nelson 

Mandela. Mandela annulled all apartheid legislation in South Africa, and finally 

the South African parliament approved a new constitution in 1996. (Beinart and 

Dubow 20-1) 

In fact, the painful period of colonialism gradually started disintegrating in 

the early decades of the twentieth century and accelerated after World War II, 

enabling the colonized countries to achieve their independence one by one across 

the world. For example, Raymond F. Betts indicates how the Second World War 

hastened profoundly the process of decolonization and “forced [the] change” of 

power in an unprecedented way, causing a kind of “disastrous [result] for all of 

the colonial powers” in the Western world. (25-7) Due to the wind of change 

across the world, the national consciousness, whether great powers liked it or 

not, grew politically in Asia and Africa, bringing about the exchange of power and 

relationship and demanding freedom from the shackle of imperialism, and 

colonizing powers were, indeed, made to be lost; they lost not only their prestige 

but also their control over distant territories one by one. As for this new 

condition, for example, Parsenjit Duara argues that “the colonial powers 

transferred institutional and legal control over their territories and dependencies 

to indigenously based, formally sovereign, nation-states”, so that 

“decolonization”, in Duara’s view, “represented not only the transfer of legal 

sovereignty, but a movement for moral justice and political solidarity against 

imperialism.” (2).  

However, some critics disagree with Betts and Duara in the sense that the 

independence has been an illusion for many former colonized countries in Asia 

and Africa. As M. A. R. Habib argues, for example, “nothing has changed in 

strategy” of the former colonizing powers when it comes to the relationship 



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The Illusion of Freedom in South Africa: 

Post-colonialism, Exploitation and Identity Crisis in Alan Paton’s Cry, The Beloved Country 

 

between the colonized counties and colonizing ones (748), since the new 

governments of the post-imperial period in the newly independent countries or 

white minority governments as in South Africa until 1994 strove to continue the 

legacy of former colonizer in different ways. Moreover, Krishnan Srinivasan 

argues that “the transfer of sovereignty during the decolonization process did not 

conclude the ambitions [of former colonizing powers] for a continuing role in 

their former colonies” (25), because the old powers have not been willing to leave 

out entirely their legacy of what George Masselman calls “exploitation” and 

“subjugation” (v) and of what Madan Sarup terms “cultural project” in their 

former colonies. (148) This time there is no physical occupation or subjugation, 

yet the former colonized and newly independent countries have been trapped by 

a new type of colonialism known as post-colonialism. 

This paper will discuss this new post-colonial condition or post-imperial 

legacy of the former white colonizers, along with identity crisis, fragmentation, 

anger, poverty, segregation, silence, and “fear” in the lives of South African black 

people in Alan Paton’s Cry, The Beloved Country (1948). (Paton 72) After its 

independence in the 1930s, the legacy and attitude of the white minority towards 

the indigenous people still continues as in the past through the rule of the white 

minority government in South Africa when it acts in a different way of colonialism 

termed “a Special Type” (CST), in which the indigenous colonised people and 

colonial power keep sharing the same territory in South Africa. In other words, 

the white minority finds another means not only to exploit the native people 

economically but also to segregate and divide them into different groups or tribes 

such Zulu, Tswana, and Sotho; what is more, the white man puts into practice the 

divide-and-rule policy of imperialism as everywhere, creating a lot of artificial 

conflicts and problems among these tribes as in many places across the world, 

including Africa, by which these tribes become weak, vulnerable and unable to 

stand up against the white imperialism and then easy victim of imperialism to be 

oppressed and controlled socially, politically and culturally. As discussed later in 

the paper, the white minority obviously deprives the black majority of their basic 



24 

Ali Güneş 

human rights such as education, decent health facilities, economic welfare, and 

adequate income to feed their families. Hence the independence of South Africa 

from the white British colonial rule visibly appears partial and fallacious, since 

the legacy of the former white imperialism and the sense of superiority of the 

white civilization still continues one way or another, allowing the white man to 

exploit incessantly mines and gold of South Africa, eventually causing indigenous 

South African black people to impoverish economically in their own land. In 

South Africa, one of the ways to carry out this post-colonial ambition and 

practices has been enforced in a way that the black people have been obviously 

and incredibly exposed to segregation, apartheid, exclusion, marginalization, and 

eventually systematic inequalities in their own land. The paper, with reference to 

Paton’s novel, thus debates these practices and strategies, in which the black 

African people are frustrated and subjected to an inferior position - a position of 

lower life or inhumane condition by the white elite; they are exploited and 

impoverished, since their mines and gold are taken without their consent and 

control. Besides, the indigenous people are forced to a position in which they 

have to work with a very low salary, have a poverty-stricken life in slum areas, 

while the white minority leads a luxurious life in their high flats as if it were the 

time of colonialism or imperialism, since the unseen but felt impact of former 

colonialism still remains like a shadow over the black people in South Africa. 

Once they become aware of their real situations, therefore, the black native 

people, as the paper argues, either become consent unwillingly and submissively 

with their current positions and identities in a desperate way or react furiously 

against their exploitation, deliberate subordination and segregation in their own 

territory.  

When Paton’s Cry, The Beloved Country was published in 1948, it drew 

much attention and praise at once, particularly from the film and music 

industries. For example, the composer Kurt Weill adapted it into a musical, "Lost 

in the Stars," and Paton himself worked on the screenplay for the 1951 film 

adaptation of the novel, directed by Zoltan Korda. In 1995, Miramax Films again 



25 
The Illusion of Freedom in South Africa: 

Post-colonialism, Exploitation and Identity Crisis in Alan Paton’s Cry, The Beloved Country 

 

filmed the novel with James Earl Jones and Richard Harris in the roles of Stephen 

Kumalo and James Jarvis, two chief characters in the novel. 

As for its literary qualities and messages, however, there are not many 

written critical views about Cry, The Beloved Country. It may be due to the fact 

that the novel, with fashion subject-matters of its time – the conflict between the 

black and the white across the world, liberation movements, struggle for human 

rights and democracy after World War II - might have appealed to the attention of 

the audience in music and cinema halls more than that of reading public, so that 

those few critics who had read the novel, have not gone into details but touched 

slightly upon the well-known subject in South Africa and accounted for their 

views very briefly. For example, Patrick Colm Hogan argues that Paton’s Cry, The 

Beloved Country, is “a novel of South Africa” which deals with “race” as well as 

with “the condition of blacks, the relationship between the white minority and 

black majority…But it is within a largely racist problematic that Paton defines his 

critique of South African racism” (206). In 1998, moreover, Paton’s widow said in 

the Birmingham Post that Cry, The Beloved Country is “seminal work on the 

oppression of blacks in the apartheid era…” (11) These remarks are very short, 

not more than two or three sentences but very illuminating for further debates in 

the novel, so that this paper will not only expand these remarks but also explore 

other views related to South Africa, the conflict between the white minority and 

the indigenous people, identity crisis in the post-colonial metropolitan city of 

Johannesburg in the novel. 

In Cry, The Beloved Country, Paton, as a white writer, obviously represents 

the continuity of the legacy of former colonialism, identity crisis, fragmentation, 

struggles, the sense of inferiority and superiority, fragmented identity of the black 

native people and the internal diasporas within the home country. The novel 

opens with a view that the black nation undergoes a horrible time and experience 

in their lives which results in the dissolution of families, the lost of common 

relationships and social cohesion among family members and relatives; the 

strong family ties are wiped out when individual are sneakily displaced from 



26 

Ali Güneş 

their homes and land both physically and psychologically; the family members go 

away for finding jobs in Johannesburg, yet their families do not know where they 

are and what they do there. What is also paradoxical and crippling is that they, 

though willing, are afraid of getting news from their relatives. In the beginning of 

Cry, The beloved Country, for example, Stephen Kumalo, an elderly black Zulu 

priest in the village of Ndotsheni, Natal, receives an unexpected letter from 

Johannesburg where his brother John, sister Gertrude and his son Absalom live 

together with many others from his village. They left many years ago but did not 

send any news about their lives there. Both Stephen Kumalo and his wife “fear to 

open it”, although they passionately “desire such a letter” from their relatives in 

Johannesburg, since “when people [particularly black people] go to 

Johannesburg”, as Mrs. Kumalo says to her husband, “they do not come 

back…there they are lost, and no one hears of them at all.” (Paton 9-10) It appears 

that the letter is not coming from one of their relatives but from Reverend 

Theophilus Msimangu, a minister in Sophiatown which is a region of 

Johannesburg. In the letter, he asks Stephen Kumalo to come to Johannesburg for 

his sister Gertrude Kumalo, who is heavily sick. At once Stephen Kumalo sets off 

to care for his sister and his son Kumalo. 

But what is of importance about Stephen Kumalo’s journey is that it 

enables him to consider inwardly on the train the lives of the black people and 

their lost identities in Johannesburg. Like many other metropolitan cities such as 

London, Paris and New York, Johannesburg is also a mass, developed 

metropolitan city as a result of the discovery of mine and gold; now it is a place 

where people are lost, where people become marginalized, where people become 

isolated, alien and unknown to each other, where they commit crime and kill each 

other easily as in the case of Absalom Kumalo, who commits so many crimes and 

kills a white man. On his way to Johannesburg, therefore, a sense of “fear” 

occupies Stephen Kumalo’s mind; he is psychologically disturbed by “the fear of 

unknown, the fear of the great city where boys were killed crossing the street, the 

fear of Gertrude’s sickness. Deep down the fear for his son.” (15) Particularly the 



27 
The Illusion of Freedom in South Africa: 

Post-colonialism, Exploitation and Identity Crisis in Alan Paton’s Cry, The Beloved Country 

 

black people rush into the big city in the hope of finding new employment and a 

new way of life, since the country side no longer feeds them but loses its 

importance, beauty and attraction for young black people; it also disintegrates 

and crumbles when many people desert their countryside and their homeland 

and go to Johannesburg, which, in Stephen Kumalo’s view, is “a world of not made 

for” them, causing their own familiar world to slip away, die away, to be 

“destroyed, beyond any recall.” (15) 

After a long train journey, moreover, Stephen Kumalo arrives in 

Sophiatown and finds Theophilus Msimangu. There are also other priests in 

Msimangu’s house, and they all have dinner together. At the dinner table, Stephen 

talks about Ixopo and tells them “how the grass had disappeared…how it was a 

land of men and women, and mothers and children…how the tribe was broken, 

and the house broken, and the man broken, how they went away, many never 

came back, many never wrote any more.” (21-2) Like William Wordsworth in 

Prelude (1850) and George Orwell in Coming Up for Air (1939), Paton, through his 

representation of Stephen Kumalo, actually expresses his own nostalgia for the 

past and looks back on the past as a lost Eden of peace, stability, and harmony. In 

the past, life was secure; there was hope for the future, yet the expansion of 

manufacturing and eventually market, particularly after the mine and gold are 

found in South Africa, destroys the countryside, the grassland as a result of the 

construction of many factories and high flats. Then starts a social mobility, in 

which many people leave their families and run into big cities to earn money in 

factories and mines and change their lives for better, since young boys and girls 

go away, yet they never come back, forget their customs and sometimes live loose 

and idle lives. Moreover, the rate of the crime, murder, robbery and rape is also 

getting higher and higher in Johannesburg, not only destroying the sense of the 

traditional stability and security but also giving rise to psychological “fear” and 

disturbance in society, and thus many black people are afraid, and they have a 

conviction that “it is fear that rules this land.” (22-5) Through the views and lives 

of Stephen Kumalo, Paton shows that the white man discovers mine and gold, 



28 

Ali Güneş 

builds up factories and introduces a capitalist view of economy and life, yet at the 

same time he paves the way for the devastation of close tribal and social 

relationships, which had kept people together, bound them to life and provided 

them with a sense of security and continuity in their lives. And, what is 

constructed in the subconscious of the black people is the conviction that it is the 

white man who “has broken the tribe” and destroyed their social and cultural 

unity on purpose to squeeze their lives. (25) Now the feeling of “broken” 

relationships and “fear”, along with the lost of the sense of beauty, security and 

continuity, apparently fragments and falls apart human psyche and identity in a 

way that they cannot be mended as in the past. 

In addition to the dissolution of tribal ties and lost of human identity in the 

big city, which is, in fact, the result of European capitalism and greediness, what is 

also more disruptive and crippling about individual identity and life is that the 

former colonial legacy of white colonizers, power relationships of superiority and 

inferiority and of exploiter and exploited as in the past still continue in South 

Africa, even though it gains its independence from the British colonial rule in the 

1930s. Generally speaking, the legacy of the former colonialism goes on in three 

ways. First, there is a ruling white minority government, which sustains a system 

of internal colonialism, suppressing and controlling the indigenous black people, 

exploiting their natural resources such as mine and gold and leading them to live 

in poverty, poor health condition and inadequate houses in their own land. Under 

the white minority rule, therefore, segregation and apartheid, as discussed below, 

become means for the white minority to control and suppress the lives of the 

black African people. Secondly, the white man, as in many other places 

throughout the world, enthusiastically endeavours to maintain the desire and 

legacy of the former colonialism by collaborating with the national governments, 

civil right groups, and local tribal chiefs and so on. These governments, groups 

and chiefs prepare appropriate grounds, environment and atmosphere to protect 

the interest of former colonizers and new global powers intact in different ways, 

so that these governments and rulers sometimes act like dictators to suppress the 



29 
The Illusion of Freedom in South Africa: 

Post-colonialism, Exploitation and Identity Crisis in Alan Paton’s Cry, The Beloved Country 

 

mass in their counties. Thirdly, former colonizers and new global powers also 

undertake the pseudo-mission and desire to bring democracy, develop human 

rights, “civilize” and “enlighten” primitive, uneducated and savage indigenous 

people of non-western societies, since the white man psychologically considers 

himself superior, civilized, “an emissary of pity, and science, and progress.” 

(Conrad 11, 102, 36) Unfortunately, it has been observed for decades that these 

imperial powers have exploited natural resources of former colonized countries 

and taken away ivory, mines and gold to build their own capitalist kingdoms back 

in their own countries. 

In Cry, The Beloved Country, it is possible to see these three practices in 

post-colonial South Africa. The black South African people are exposed to 

segregation in their own land. For instance, Johannesburg is virtually divided into 

two areas – the slum area of the black people and European part of the white 

people; even their transportations and beaches are separated. As discussed 

below, the native local people are treated by the tribal chiefs in a way that they 

are not free but controlled and crippled in their psyche and feeling; they do not 

feel themselves important in their lives but inferior. In order to cover up what he 

does in South Africa, the white man also builds dams to water the dried grass and 

distribute milk to those children who die of starvation. During his visit to 

Johannesburg, for example, Stephen Kumalo also visits his brother, John, a former 

carpenter, who has become a great political leader in Johannesburg mainly due 

not only to his charisma and speaking abilities but also to his anger in view of 

injustice and exploitation inflicted by the white minority upon the indigenous 

people. John Kumalo favours freedom and his independent identity, so that he 

rejects those chieftains controlled by the white man. In fact, it is John Kumalo who 

enables Stephen Kumalo to see gradually reality behind certain applications of 

the white man. Once Stephen Kumalo asks him why he did not come back to 

Ndotsheni, therefore, John Kumalo says: 

 



30 

Ali Güneş 

Down in Ndotsheni I am nobody, even as you are 

nobody, my brother. I am subject to the chief, who is an 

ignorant man. I must salute him and bow to him, but he 

is an uneducated man. Here in Johannesburg I am a man 

of some importance…I do not say we are free here. I do 

not say we are free as men should be. But at least I am 

free of the chief. At least I am free of an old and ignorant 

man, who is nothing but a white man’s dog. He is a trick, 

a trick to hold together something that the white man 

desires to hold together. (Paton 34, emphasis added) 

 

As the quotation indicates clearly, here the white man, as in Graham Greene’s The 

Quiet American (1955), indirectly strives to keep his legacy of superiority as well 

as his economic and political interests through close relationships with opinion 

leaders, local black chieftains and religious leaders: simply, he feeds couple of 

people to control mass. In John Kumalo’s view, the black chiefs are controlled by 

the white man in a way to silence and suppress the black people, so that he feels 

that their lives are limited and subjugated, and their identities are destroyed 

without having no meaning at all. Eventually the whole idea is to conceal what the 

white man is doing, to save from harm his interest and then to have the 

indigenous people serve the white man in a submissive way. As long as the black 

people are submissive and obedient, they are good and nice in the eyes of the 

white man. John Kumalo is aware of this trick, and thus strives to awaken his 

people to this reality. 

John Kumalo, as he tells his brother, is also angry with the white man who 

exploits the mines and gold of the black people, buys big cars, and builds his 

hospitals, high houses, and beautiful parks, while the black people suffer 

profoundly in slum areas. The black people also work in terrible conditions with 

low salaries as John Kumalo says: 

 

Go to our hospital, he said, and see our people lying on the 

floors. They lie so close you cannot step over them. But it 

is they who dig the gold. For three shillings a day. We 

come from the Transkei, and from Basutoland, and from 



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The Illusion of Freedom in South Africa: 

Post-colonialism, Exploitation and Identity Crisis in Alan Paton’s Cry, The Beloved Country 

 

Bechuanaland, and from Swaziland, and from Zululand. 

And from Ndotsheni also. We live in the compounds; we 

must leave our wives and families behind. And when the 

new gold is found, it is not we who gill get more for our 

labour. It is the white man’s shares that will rise…They 

go mad when new gold is found. They bring more of us to 

live in the compounds, to dig under the ground for three 

shillings a day. They do not think, here is a chance to 

pay more for our labour. They think only, here is a 

chance to build a big house and buy a bigger car. It is 

important to find gold, they say, for all South Africa is 

built on the mines. (34-5, emphasis added) 

 

This quotation illuminates the exploitation of labour of the black people, their 

gold, and their lives. John Kumalo voices out his anger and reaction. Unlike his 

brother and local chieftains, John Kumalo is not obedient and submissive to 

accept whatever life is offered to his people. In his views, the white man hides 

behind his furtive words that “it is important to find gold” for the improvement of 

South Africa, yet there is a disproportionate and unjust distribution of the income, 

in which the white man gets higher share to satisfy his greediness with big house 

and big car, where the black are doomed to poverty, despair and discrimination. 

The black people also face discrimination in Johannesburg. The city is 

virtually divided into two parts – the slum area where the mass black people live 

in misery and the European part where the white minority lives in their high 

luxurious houses. In the slum areas, the streets are dirty, neglected, and full of 

thieves and prostitutes; there are no lights and liveliness in the streets, giving an 

impression that the black people are predestined to live in such conditions. What 

is more horrible is that they are banned from buying land and owing houses in 

Johannesburg (41), since the Land Acts which paradoxically “restricts the amount 

of the land available to black farmers to 13 percent” leading to the intensification 

of the white-black segregation in South Africa. (Ashcroft, Griffiths and Tiffin 14) 

Bill Ashcroft, Gareth Griffiths and Helen Tiffin argue that “the white minority 

retained for themselves the bulk of the land, and virtually all of the economically 

viable territory, including the agriculturally rich areas and the areas with mining 



32 

Ali Güneş 

potential”, and this act and approach enabled the white minority obviously to 

“institutionaliz[e] and preserve[e] white supremacy.” (14). For Ashcroft, Griffiths 

and Tiffin, the idea behind this act was that the economy developed by the white 

men “required a large body of non-white workers to live in close proximity to 

white areas, for they provided cheap labour”, and the Group Areas Act “led 

[further] to the development of specific racially segregated townships, using low-

lost housing” in the outskirts of Johannesburg, along with the separation of 

“public transport, public seats, beaches, and many other facilities.” (14) as for this 

segregationist policy as the product of the white man’s perspective, moreover, 

Raman Selden, Peter Widdowson and Peter Brooker also argue that “models of 

Western thought (derived, for example, from Aristotle, Descartes, Kant, Marx, 

Nietzsche and Freud) or of literature (Homer, Dante, Flaubert, T. S. Eliot) have 

dominated world culture, marginalizing or excluding non-Western traditions and 

forms of cultural life and expression.” (222) 

In Cry, The Beloved Country, Paton represents the black as being 

intentionally categorized and excluded from the main stream of life by the white 

man, who, as in the past, yearns for keeping his colonial and imperial desire in a 

different way. They are visibly deprived of their basic human rights in their own 

land in a way that they are like slaves and controlled, being destined to the idea of 

inferiority, backwardness, and primitivism; they are not only unable to represent 

themselves and have their voices heard, but they are also unable to decide their 

future in the way they wish and feel free when the white minority still acts as if 

they were the owner of the land; nothing can move them from the previously 

achieved privileged position. This lack of privilege, along with the official 

deprivation of certain fundamental rights, obviously makes the black people 

angry, fragments their identity and makes them feel a sense of foreignness and 

outcast in their own country; they are silent and timid without being secure in 

life; “sadness and fear and hate” build up “in the heart and mind” of the native 

people against the white minority, and the native people think that it is the white 

man who has demolished the strong ties of tribes and resulted in lawlessness and 



33 
The Illusion of Freedom in South Africa: 

Post-colonialism, Exploitation and Identity Crisis in Alan Paton’s Cry, The Beloved Country 

 

“fear” in South Africa. (Paton 66) “Fear, fear, fear”, along with the insecurity of the 

future, occupies their heart and mind; the native black people are perplexed in 

their views and endeavour to find the ways to get rid of their vicious circles 

physically and psychologically in a desperate situation (67-8): 

 

Cry for the broken tribe, for the law and the custom that 

is gone. Aye, and cry aloud for the man who is dead, for 

the woman and child bereaved. Cry, the beloved 

country, for these things are not yet at an end. The sun 

pours down on the earth, on the lovely land that man 

cannot enjoy. He knows only the fear of his heart… Cry, 

the beloved country, for the unborn child that is the 

inheritor of our fear…For fear will rob him of all if he 

gives too much. (66-67, 72) 

 

The “broken” and disturbed feeling as well as the reality of “fear”, insecurity and 

suppression eventually leads to the construction of a culture of resistance culture 

by which the black people strive to represent themselves and have their voice 

heard in public space. This culture of resistance, anger and hatred comes out in 

various ways, either through the political struggle of the black native people or 

through breaking in and robbing the houses of the white people, assaulting, 

teasing and killing them. Simply, what the black people want is not only to get 

their identities approved and validated but also to “have a place of [their] own, 

and a house to bring up their children in, and a place to have a voice in, so that a 

man is something in the land where he was born.” (42-3) 

 As for place and home, indeed, there is a huge mass of land which had been 

owned by the black natives for hundred of years, yet the white men control it in 

the way he wishes. As a result, he also controls the mines and gold and forces the 

native people to work hard with low salary but gets the highest share of them. 

John Kumalo thus strives to make the native people and miners aware of this 

reality and injustice, tries to wake them from their sleep when he tells the crowd: 

“…we ask only for our share of what is produced by our labour. New gold has 

been found, and South Africa is rich again. We ask only for our share of it…to keep 



34 

Ali Güneş 

our wives and our families from starvation.” (158) In John Kumalo’s view, the 

native black people are deliberately kept poor; their labour has been exploited, 

and the white men “forced us into the mines as though we were slaves” with 

cheap labour as John Kumalo tells his brother Stephen Kumalo. (181) They are 

subjected to inequity and “injustice”, upon which the white men strive to base 

their industry, since the native people, in the view of the white minority, are 

“simple people, illiterate, tribal people, an easy tool in the hand.” (162) John 

Kumalo strongly indicates that as long as they keep silent and submit to their 

destiny, the white man will constantly continue his exploitation at a larger scale 

everyday, so that there is an urgent need to take action and make the indigenous 

people aware of the reality they face in their lives. 

It may be through these attempts of John Kumalo that the black people, 

men and women, gradually come to notice how they are exploited, how they are 

used as tools by the white man, so that there occurs a sense of identity, in which 

the black people strive to resist and rebel against what they are determined and 

given. (162) They attempt to establish “the African Mine Workers’ Union” which 

may enable the African miners to defend their rights and “to negotiate with 

[their] employers about the conditions of work and pay”, yet a spokesman points 

out that “the African Miners are simple souls, hardly qualified in the art of 

negotiation, and an easy tool for unscrupulous agitators.” (183) As seen in these 

views, the native African Miners are humiliated in two ways. On the on hand, they 

are looked down on as being “illiterate” and thus “easy tools” to be cheated as for 

their land and labour; on the other hand, it is assumed that the African Miners, 

though they struggle to set up their Trade Union, are not taken seriously into 

consideration, since they are not skilled and good at tricks which the white man 

has conducted for ages. In both cases, the African Miners are physically and 

psychologically trapped in their lives and unable to find the way out of this 

deadlock, so that they, towards the end of Cry, The Beloved Country, seem locked 

in their psyche and feeling and unable to find a reasonable way out, and thus the 

only way which remains for them is to pray to do away with their feeling of fear 



35 
The Illusion of Freedom in South Africa: 

Post-colonialism, Exploitation and Identity Crisis in Alan Paton’s Cry, The Beloved Country 

 

and injustice: “God save us from the fear…” , from injustice (191), since the white 

man, as Stephen Kumalo ruminates, “had taken most of the pieces away” by 

means of “fear” and “injustice”. (195) Paton, like Frantz Fanon in Black Skin, 

White Mask (1952), explores in Cry, The Beloved Country psychological impasse 

created by the white minority in South Africa. Under the psychological effect of 

fear and injustice, there occurs what Fanon terms in The Wretched of the Earth 

(1963) a “contested culture”, by which the black people attempt to destroy the 

domination and legacy of former colonialism and oppressor in their land. (238) 

In Cry, The Beloved Country, however, Paton, as a white writer, also aims at 

eradicating to some extent this “contested culture” in South Africa and thus tries 

to reconcile the black natives and the white minority in South Africa in two ways. 

First, he employs Christianity as a means of reconciliation and brotherhood to 

achieve a practical cooperation between two races. In his own life, Paton himself 

was politically active; he was one of the founding members of the South African 

Liberal Party, established in 1953, to stand up against the National Party’s 

apartheid policy in South Africa, yet he, rather than politics, paradoxically 

employs religion to eliminate the racial conflict in society. Through his 

representation of the views of Stephen Kumalo and Msimangu, therefore, Paton 

admits that John Kumalo is right in his analysis of political and economic 

situations (Paton 36-37), yet he is against John Kumalo’s method of seeking their 

rights through political means or through violence. Instead, he stresses that “love 

[of brotherhood in religion] is greater than force” (182). Once he returns to 

Ndotsheni, therefore, Stephen Kumalo begins to pray regularly for the restoration 

of life in the valley, yet he is also confused in his views, since he, though different 

from his brother in his strategy, comes to realize that an action is necessary to 

achieve restoration of life, and his attempt is collective: “Somewhere down here 

upon the earth men must come together, think something, do something.” (195) 

Through the view of Stephen Kumalo, however, Paton seems ambivalent in his 

view about religion, and thus criticizes it that it has failed up until now to 

accomplish love, brotherhood and reconciliation in South Africa. In John Kumalo’s 



36 

Ali Güneş 

view, the church, like the chief, demands obedience, speaks well, but remains 

ineffective to bring solution to the problems in society (34). Besides, he argues 

that there is also racial discrimination even within the church, since white priests 

receive a much higher salary than their black counterparts. (35) For him, “what 

God has not done for South Africa, man must do.” (25) Furthermore, there are a 

hundred, and thousand of voices and cries that the English-speaking churches 

and Afrikaans-speaking churches disagree; “there is to be no equality in church or 

state” but separation, division and discord. (71) What is also paradoxical is that 

even the priest Msimangu concedes that “there are times ..... When God seems no 

more to be about the world.” (67) In addition, Msimangu thinks that only 

reconciliation and cooperation between the two races based on “love” and desire 

for “the good of their country” may save South Africa (37), yet he also fears that 

this may also prove unachievable: “I have one great fear in my heart, that one day 

when they are turned to loving, they will find we are turned to hating.” (38) For 

Paton, therefore, religion does not prove an effective method to get rid of racial 

discrimination peacefully in South Africa. 

Paton’s second solution to reconcile the black and white is faith and 

goodwill, even though this process is very slow and needs a lot of time to make 

both sides aware of good intention. In Cry, The Beloved Country, it is Arthur Jarvis, 

a young white man, who represents this good intention, goodwill and faith. He is 

profoundly “interested in social problems” and in promoting “the well-fare of 

non-European sections of the community” in South Africa. (66) Paton uses Arthur 

Jarvis not only as his own voice but also as a white man to take initiative that the 

reconciliation is possible if the white man gets rid of his sense of superiority and 

“selfishness” and feels goodwill and consideration for the black people. (126) Like 

Paton himself, Arthur Jarvis, a well-known social reformer shot dead by Absalom 

Kumalo during a robbery, campaigns for the well-fare of the native black people 

and criticizes the “exploitation” of their mine and gold by the white man, who, he 

believes, deliberately disintegrates “native community life and deteriorates “the 

native family life, in poverty, slums, and crime.” (126) Influenced profoundly by 



37 
The Illusion of Freedom in South Africa: 

Post-colonialism, Exploitation and Identity Crisis in Alan Paton’s Cry, The Beloved Country 

 

the views of Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president of the USA (1861-5) and a 

republican, who declared the freedom of slaves with the Emancipation 

Proclamation, Arthur Jarvis also upholds the freedom of native people and their 

education in South Africa, and he thinks that the white man just exploits and does 

nothing to improve South African society, causing the physical and moral 

deterioration of native people. His another argument is that committing crime 

and being prostitute are not in the nature of native people in South Africa, yet it is 

caused by the fact that “their simple system of order and tradition and convention 

has been destroyed” by the white man to control them and satisfy his greediness 

and “selfishness.” (126-7) As a white man, Arthur Jarvis is also unhappy about the 

application of the white minority in South Africa and notices the double 

standards, in which the white man not only sees himself as “superior” and native 

people as “barbarian” (71, 82), but also views South Africa in a position that it, 

unlike the white civilization, is doomed not to progress, so that the white man, in 

his view, does not want to do anything for South Africa (134), yet Arthur Jarvis 

believes that what he is doing is true and thus tries “to end the conflict of [his] 

soul” by dedicating himself to the improvement of South Africa in terms of law, 

human rights, development of economic conditions and so on. 

Moreover, Paton also uses Arthur Jarvis’s father James Jarvis, a wealthy 

white man, in a way that James Jarvis also strives to help the native people in the 

village of Ndotsheni as an initiative for reconciliation; he attempts to please the 

indigenous people. After the death of his son Arthur, therefore, James Jarvis 

devotes himself to social progress of Ndotsheni, donates ten thousand dollars to 

start the Arthur Jarvis Club, gives milk from his estate to help starving children 

during the drought and arranges for a dam to be built in Ixopo to prevent further 

droughts in the valleys. 

However, all these attempts become ineffective to reconcile the two races, 

since there emerges an idea among the black people that the white man is giving 

back very little of what he has been taking away from them for years, so that what 

Arthur Jarvis did and what his father does is not convincing for the black people. 



38 

Ali Güneş 

For the construction of the new dam, for example, James Jarvis sends a young 

agriculture demonstrator, who examines the valley and tries to see if the dam 

suits the land, and the local natives, including Stephen Kumalo and his wife, 

become very happy that “there will be a new life in this valley” - a new life that 

will come into existence when the dam waters the pasture in the valley of 

Ndotsheni; the grass will recover, and the cows will graze at and eventually give 

enough milk for those children who are about to die of starvation. Stephen 

Kumalo ironically sees all these as great deal of endowment by James Jarvis as 

benevolent white man. He asks the young demonstrator who his master is, since 

the native people have been psychologically convinced for ages that there should 

always be a “master” to organize things properly, which actually gives rise to an 

sense of identity constructed as being controlled, dependent, and unconfident in 

life (228) – the “master” is always the white man with his so-called “superiority”, 

literacy, advanced knowledge and civilization as in Conrad’s representation of 

Kurt in Heart of Darkness, who represents European mastery in the Congo River 

to “civilize”, progress and “enlighten” the native Africans (Conrad 11, 102). For 

example, Kurt is preparing “a report” for the “future guidance” for future post-

colonizers called “the Suppression of Savage Customs”, in which he argues how 

the white men represent themselves to “exterminate all the brutes”: “we whites, 

from the point of development we have arrived at, ‘must necessarily appear to 

them [African savages and brutes] in the nature of supernatural beings – we 

approach them with the might as of a deity,’ and so on, and so on. ‘By the simple 

exercise of our will we can a power for good practically unbounded.’” (71-2) 

Indeed, this is how the white man establishes himself as “supernatural beings” 

and “a deity” to suppress and control sneakily the indigenous people; the whole 

purpose is different – it is to exploit them, exploit their natural resources and 

their “ivory” (38, 70, 81) The sense and psyche of “superiority” and worship of 

power obviously corrupt Kurtz in particular and the white Western Civilization in 

general. 



39 
The Illusion of Freedom in South Africa: 

Post-colonialism, Exploitation and Identity Crisis in Alan Paton’s Cry, The Beloved Country 

 

In Cry, The Beloved Country, likewise, Paton represents his own 

dissatisfaction with the view of “master”, “supernatural beings” and “a deity” 

attributed to the white man through his representation of John Kumalo and the 

young demonstrator who both reject the view of superiority in different ways. 

When it comes to the issue of “master”, the young demonstrator tells Stephen 

Kulamo that he does not have “master” to guide him but works independently for 

his country and people to advance them further to a point which will enable them 

to be independent and free and to stand on their own feet without depending 

upon the white man. As for what the white man is doing now, moreover, he also 

tells Stephen Kumalo that the white is actually giving nothing to them: 

“Umfundisi, it was the white man who gave us so little land; it was the white man 

who took us away from the land to go to work. And we were ignorant also. It is all 

these things together that have made this valley desolate. Therefore, what this 

good white man does is only a repayment.” (Paton 228) The young man seems 

very disturbed in his views, feeling and life, and thus wants the black people, like 

Stephen Kumalo, to realize that the white man is not donating anything to them 

and their country. He accounts for in detail how the white man is actually 

cheating and misleading the natives in a furtive way to cover up what has been 

done in South Africa so far. It is exactly what some global imperial powers and UN 

are doing today in many places throughout Africa to feed those people who die of 

starvation and of lack of food and water, because Africa, its land, mines and 

petrol, as well known, has been exploited for ages and continue to be exploited by 

the global powers at the moment. In the novel, Stephen Kumalo, as being 

deceived black parson and knowing nothing but the truth, does not like the young 

demonstrator’s talk; he does not like “new and disturbing thoughts”, since his 

identity and views have been shaped and constructed very much by the 

assumption that the white man is always divinely “master”, “supernatural beings” 

and “a deity”, so that he is submissive and obedient without any intention to 

cause trouble for the white man. Stephen Kumalo accepts this kind of identity in a 

way that he is hopeless and handicapped in his feeling, conscious, and attempts to 



40 

Ali Güneş 

free himself from the psychology of inferiority. That he gives us an impression 

that he is unable to survive without the white man is actually lost of an identity; 

he has no power and ability to stand up against what is decided for and given to 

him, and thus he admits defeat: “A white man’s dog, that is what they have called 

him and his kind. Well, that was the way his life had been lived, that was the way 

he would die.” (230) In fact, the imperial powers need the people, like Stephen 

Kumalo and the tribal chiefs, in the sense that they serve, cooperate with their 

imperial interest and smooth the ways for exploitation, for enforcing their 

interest and for dominating the indigenous people in a different way. In relation 

to Stephen Kumalo’s pinioned identity, if it is due to Christianity and 

brotherhood, then, there is hypocrisy in religion, which always upholds the 

subordination of the black people, even though it is supposed to advocate 

equality and brotherhood among its followers. 

At the very end of Cry, The Beloved Country, Stephen Kumalo thinks of his 

son Absalom Kumalo, who is sentenced to death for his murder of Arthur Jarvis, 

yet the way Absalom Kumalo had acted and killed a white man ironically avails 

Stephen Kumalo of the opportunity to re-assess life in South Africa in terms of 

why the native people have lost their basic human qualities such as kindness, 

tolerance, love, compassion, and so on. In this respect, Paton’s novel becomes a 

kind of lament for those lost values, for the deserted land, for “broken” ties, for its 

fragmented population and identities; it is a kind of objection to the inhumane 

ideology of the white man imposed upon the black natives in South Africa. 

Stephen Kumalo thus comes to a conclusion that the “salvation” of Africa “lay far 

off”, since men are not courageous enough to face the truth and reality in his view 

but “are afraid of it” and afraid of themselves and afraid of their wives and their 

children (235), yet he is paradoxical in his views in the sense that although he 

himself knows the answer, Stephen Kumalo acts as if he did not know it. The 

answer for why the native people are unable to get rid of their “fear” is that the 

way they have politically and culturally been treated and constructed for ages by 

the white man has created a culture of horror, a culture of “fear”, a culture of 



41 
The Illusion of Freedom in South Africa: 

Post-colonialism, Exploitation and Identity Crisis in Alan Paton’s Cry, The Beloved Country 

 

obedience, and a culture of despair, so that they are unable to recover and “be 

free [psychologically] to use the fruits of the earth”: “men were afraid, with a fear 

that was deep, deep in the heart, a fear so deep that they hid their kindness, or 

brought it out with fierceness and anger, and hid it behind fierce and frowning 

eyes.” (235) In the last section of Cry, The Beloved Country, however, Stephen 

Kumalo becomes a voice for Paton and tries to convince his fellow people that 

they will be free one day: “…that dawn will come, of our emancipation, from the 

fear of bondage and the bondage of fear, why, that is a secret.” (236) This is a kind 

of romantic, escapist or Shelleyan futuristic statement of Stephen Kumalo to 

release himself from the pain and inadequacy of his existence and identity. He 

wants to fly away from the shadow and “fear” of the present to a world of 

imagination, where “dawn will come”, where “emancipation, from the fear of 

bondage and the bondage of fear emancipation” will be achieved, where there will 

be no partings, no separation and antagonism between the black and the white but 

where eye will meet eyes, where there will be reconciliation and collaboration 

between the black and the white. Through his representation of Stephen Kumalo 

and his views, finally, Paton strives to provide hopeless people with hope; he, like P. 

B. Shelley and Virginia Woolf, tries to delight Stephen Kumalo’s spirit when he is 

psychologically frustrated by his “fear” and by the enmity between the two races. It 

is this delight that will keep failing hope alive in South Africa, yet the white man 

should establish a sense of empathy with the other, give up the demand of the white 

“superiority” and domineering mentality and do away with his greediness. Simply, 

the white man should also free himself. 

 

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