| Truth and Reconciliation in South Africa Gallagher’s New Book Spotlights the Writings of Exiles and 
            Prisoners
 
  CONFESSING ADMIRATION FOR the victims of apartheid 
              in South Africa, Professor of English Susan VanZanten Gallagher 
              is the author of a new book on writings from that nation. 
             
              
                |  
 |  |   Truth and Reconciliation: The Confessional Mode in South African 
              Literature was published this fall by Heinemann as a part of 
              its Studies in African Literature series. 
 In the book, Gallagher relates the concepts of self, society and 
              confession to the problem of apartheid, focusing on the writings 
              of exiles and prisoners. She ends by conveying the power of confession 
              — which she defines as both admitting guilt and testifying to the 
              truth — in the healing of South Africa.
 
 This national healing is made visible in Gallagher’s account of 
              the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) hearings of the mid-1990s. 
              In these government hearings, she says, both definitions of confession 
              were prominent. Perpetrators confessed in public to crimes of violating 
              human rights, and victims of apartheid testified about the atrocities 
              they suffered. The perpetrators were granted immunity if they confessed 
              everything, and if they proved they had committed the crimes in 
              pursuit of a political goal. The victims were formally thanked for 
              their testimony, which, they were told, would help create a more 
              just system of government.
 
 Gallagher’s earlier book, A Story of South Africa (Harvard University 
              Press, 1991), deals with the writings of novelist J.M. Coetzee, 
              a white South African whose novel Disgrace won the Booker Prize 
              in 1999. “After I wrote the book on Coetzee,” says Gallagher, “I 
              became interested in the theme of confession, which shows up everywhere 
              in South African literature. The practices of religious and judicial 
              confession affected the people who were writing.”
 
 By studying South African writers, Gallagher also rediscovered her 
              own Dutch roots. She felt a kinship with the Afrikaners whose Dutch 
              ancestors had settled in the African nation. “I decided to concentrate 
              on South African work written in English. I fell in love with the 
              stories, which contained some of the most gifted and moving writing 
              I’d read.”
 
 In 1996, Gallagher traveled through South Africa, attending the 
              TRC hearings herself. She later wrote in Christianity Today, “Apartheid 
              South Africa was deliberately structured 
 to silence those who 
              were demonized as ‘other.’ The TRC process, in response, was designed 
              to restore ‘the human and civil dignity’ of the victims of apartheid 
              by giving them a collective opportunity to tell their stories, to 
              fashion new public narratives and identities.”
 
 In Truth and Reconciliation, Gallagher shows how confessional 
              literature, like the TRC hearings, can offer a chance for reconciliation. 
              She writes, “In the confessional mode of acknowledging debt … new 
              human associations based on peace, justice and faith can be born.”
 
 
— By MARGARET D. SMITH— PHOTO BY GREG SCHNEIDER
 
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