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I am no apologist for Allan Boesak, who hit the headlines again this week after he resigned from the Congress of the People. However, I have known the man for a long time and have tried to understand his mind through all the dramas in his life.

These dramas, of course, include the Di Scott affair and his subsequent affair with his present wife, Elna. I spoke at length to him and his former wife, Dorothy, about what was happening in their lives at the time and it was clear to me that both of them were suffering a lot because of his indiscretions.

I have also seen him in court on fraud charges and how he steadfastly refused to give evidence in his own defence because he feared he would sell out his former comrades who he had helped with money given by foreign donors to his Foundation for Peace and Justice.

Boesak is, ultimately, a flawed individual who has made some stupid decisions in his life. Does this necessarily make him a bad person or a bad leader? I don’t think so.

I don’t believe Boesak is more flawed than most of our political leaders, including those people who are criticising him today. I also believe that many ordinary South Africans who have been criticising him should first check whether their own houses are in order. You know what they say about people in glass houses throwing stones.

I know fraud is fraud and crime is crime, but it is interesting to note that the amount that Boesak took was significantly less than what was taken by a lot of politicians who are still in their positions today.

It is so easy to forget the role that Boesak played during the dark days of apartheid, when he and Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu led the sanctions campaign against the former regime.

The ANC would like to make us believe that it was because of pressure put on the apartheid regime by Umkhonto weSizwe that we have our liberation today, but I believe that the international sanctions campaign played a much bigger role than MK could have ever hoped to play.

Boesak was head of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches when he was still in his mid-thirties. He had the ear of the Kennedy family in the US and just about every prominent African-American leader in those days.

He operated on the world stage and spoke about the injustices of apartheid on every occasion. At home, he helped to inspire millions of people and gave them hope that apartheid would end in their lifetime.

The role he played in the United Democratic Front and in the religious movement in South African cannot be underestimated. My humble belief is that Boesak, not unlike many of our leaders today, got seduced by his power and influence. He started to believe that he deserved to live the high life. In some ways this made him lose touch with ordinary people but ordinary people have always believed in him.

If I could give him some advice, it would be to leave politics to the politicians and to craft a role for himself based on his natural gifts: theology and his appeal to ordinary South Africans.

I struggled to agree with Boesak’s decision to join Cope but I understood why. Like so many other South Africans, he was desperate for a relevant alternative to the ANC and thought that he had found this in Cope.

I remember thinking at the time how long it would be before he left Cope. What he does after Cope is going to be important to determine whether he will have any credibility left. If he rejoins the ANC and/or tries to get a diplomatic posting, then he would lose credibility in my humble opinion.

There has been talk about the possibility of forming a social movement, which is something that Boesak should seriously consider. He can then use this foundation to act as a watchdog on government, the ruling ANC and other political parties.

I can’t claim to have any influence on the man, but if I had I would strongly encourage him to consider starting a social movement in which he could carve out a completely new role for himself.




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30 Responses to “Understanding Allan Boesak”

A balanced, nuanced, textured and thought-provoking commentary on a dynamic and layered personality….much enjoyed……

(Report abuse)

Zi Karon on November 5th, 2009 at 3:19 pm

I agree with much of what you say, particularly Boesak’s unquestionable financial support to organisations and activists in the 80s. His personal indiscretions should also not be a yardstick by which we measure his contribution to the struggle to build a democratic society. The pious ones who attack him personally are usually those who stood by watching, or cheering on when the apartheid government abused and vilified Boesak.

Still it seems that you have too much ‘understanding’ for Boesak’s political choices and demeanour. While not writing a critique of Boesak but merely aiming to make us ‘understand’ him, your sympathetic treatment of him does us no good. We know that, even during the 1980s, there were criticisms about Boesak’s glorifying in and cultivation of the personality cult around him ( the intentionally late entrances at rallies…).

I listened to him giving the Ashley Kriel Lecture last year and was inspired by the power of his rhetoric and the possibility he raised of a renewed ANC and a social movement, not in opposition to, but not in the service of the ANC either… something that many of us would welcome. However, to then join COPE (not an opposition to, but a disgruntled representation of the ANC) exposed his political opportunism all too clearly. His search for spotlight was obviously not met by the declining fortunes of COPE, and hence we see the reverend’s exit form the stage again…until the next opportunity to bask in political glory presents itself?

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David Africa on November 5th, 2009 at 3:21 pm

your empathic observations about the rev Allan Boesak have touched note here. I feel like I understand the man yet mistake him for other things.passionate,participant,engaged,confused,selfdestructive. I have met him in stockholm. He made people enjoy yet shocked and annoyed me still.real dude.

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zanele aidzumo baqwa on November 5th, 2009 at 3:51 pm

I met you too. was touched by your openeness and humility and humanity, made my mind to have contact with you.

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zanele sidzumo baqwa on November 5th, 2009 at 3:55 pm

He stole money intended for destitute coloured orphans of the Little Karoo. And he used it to buy BMWs and a mansion in swanky Constantia.

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Blip on November 5th, 2009 at 9:44 pm

I do not know the man from close. From observing the publicity revelations, he is either a socially involved and concerned individual or a shrewd politician.

The reported invites of the ANC to rejoin, make me feel he could be the latter if he accepts.

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Benzol on November 5th, 2009 at 10:16 pm

What have we come to ?

He is flawed and makes stupid decisions, has questionable morals and is a convicted criminal, but at least he is not as bad as the rest of our leaders.

Just how far have we lowered our standards ?????

(Report abuse)

Sean on November 6th, 2009 at 6:45 am

South Africans are a funny lot. If they could treat Mbeki with such disdain, having dedicated his life to the liberation of the black man, then what do you expect they would do to Boesak.

(Report abuse)

Zamo on November 6th, 2009 at 8:09 am

a
fake
spineless
selfserving
egocentric
pastor

:(

(Report abuse)

Siphiwo Siphiwo on November 6th, 2009 at 8:59 am

@Zanele Sidzumo Baqwa

This is Nceba and we met while I was studying in Oslo, Norway and I conducted the choir Inkululeko. PLease drop me a mail on mnukwana@sun.ac.za
I would like to make contact. I am back in South Africa for good. Ihope you are well.

Ncebakazi

Sorry web-editor I sure this is not the intention of this blog, but I fear losing contact with Mrs Sidzumo-Baqwa, even if you forward this mail direct to her.

(Report abuse)

Kazi on November 6th, 2009 at 10:42 am

He’s a manipulative crook, a liar, and unrepentant about it. The fact that other politicians are also manipulative crooks does not take that fact away.

Ryland Fisher’s first sentence is a lie. Thereafter I lost interest.

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MFB on November 6th, 2009 at 11:37 am

Totally true; well said it; bears quoting:

-“What Boesak took was significantly less than what was taken by a lot of politicians who are still in their positions today.”
-“the international sanctions campaign played a much bigger role than MK could have ever hoped to play.”
-“He started to believe that he deserved to live the high life. In some ways this made him lose touch with ordinary people”
(I asked him personally before his conviction on live radio; he said that this [his excessive lifestyle] is what the people wanted.)

Excellent advice: “it would be to leave politics to the politicians and to craft a role for himself based on his natural gifts: theology and his appeal to ordinary South Africans.” AND “I would strongly encourage him to consider starting a social movement in which he could carve out a completely new role for himself.”

Only partially true:
“but ordinary people have always believed in him.”

Graffiti seen on wall in Cape Flats at the time:
BOESAK POEPSAK
STEEL DIE GELD
STEEK DIT IN SY BROEKSAK

(Report abuse)

Twannie on November 6th, 2009 at 12:08 pm

How is it that we can excuse corrupt behaviour by comparing it to other politicians that have stolen more money..when a judge considers theft, he looks at the act of stealing, not at others actions that are worse, and thereby excusing it? It is a sad state of affairs that corruption has become so blase, and that honesty is a scarce commodity in our politicians today. I do not think Boesak is trustworthy as a leader, however he does have an amazing ability to convince his audience otherwise, even when his actions prove the contrary!

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Nadia on November 6th, 2009 at 12:36 pm

Just for the record. MK played no role in the liberation struggle.

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Flower Child on November 6th, 2009 at 12:37 pm

First of all -let me get this straight!I have a problem with you and all those coloureds who were active in the struggle for your being a part of a colonialistic and capitalistic paper like the Tony O`reilly stable and you failure to fight the coloured anti-black stance in this post`94 era which you are very much aware of the k-word dropping from evey coloured lips in reffering to blacks!

I disagree with you that for the flaws of boesak he does not deserve to be written-off since protocol requires that once a politian`s flaws are exposed he or she must stop campaignin for a political office or step down or be removed.

Obama came very close in stopping campaigning for office after things or something he did which could have been embarrassing in his private life but because there was no clarity or irrefutable evidence he stayed on.

if a politician continue in office or campaigning for an appointment then its up to the electorte to vote their parties out as a warning to other parties that if you keep a rotten potato we will vote you out!

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Tim on November 6th, 2009 at 12:54 pm

Boesak is my least liked person in the country. anyone that can steal from starving children deserves no sympathy or understanding or anything good from anyone. he should be in jail as far as i am concerned. he calls humself a man of God? does he think God cannot see him outside the church walls? to hell with the man; i’m just glad he lives far away from me!

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cheryl on November 6th, 2009 at 1:14 pm

You’re right! Fraud is fraud and crime is crime and we are all flawed human beings. But we don’t all continue to ignore that in order to try to lead the nation. Fair would be ‘one strike and you’re out’, for all those caught with their fist in the narrow-necked honey jar. Perhaps that way, we would eventually have only the honest to deal with. Boesak’s mistake, I surmise, is trying to claw his way back into anything. Why doesn’t he just start his own quiet, little business and suffer like the others who are unemployed? His sweet wife probably makes fantastic muffins; let him peddle them to businesses.

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MLH on November 6th, 2009 at 1:38 pm

Some people get a kick out of kicking a man when he is down. Especially a lost (and found) soul like the Rev. Yes, he may be all what you claim he is. Does that make him smaller than you or me? No! You hate that, don’t you? So, your only weapon is keep on kicking on the Rev.

I remember, in the ’80s, I used to listen to an LP of his sermons and speaches. One of the inspirational sermon/speech was “Cain, where’s your brother?”. Yes, he stole - and admitted so. He fornicated - and admitted so. He lied - and admitted so!

Let he who has not done the above continue to judge. As for me, I live in glass house.

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Sibusiso Kumalo on November 6th, 2009 at 3:49 pm

You toady! Well now, he was “the first to start stealing before the gravy train even moved from the station= it is still said out aloud … and got caught-out and then was punished by the Danish ultra-respectable Protestants in Church Aid and SIDA, the Swedish State development Aid (so that Elna could get a new artistic studio) etc etc …. then into the wilderness HE did trek (a posh place in Constantia really, that stolen money went far it seems), waiting for a CALL (that is as a diplomat maybe?) from ABOVE (Pretoria/Tswane maybe?) - which did not come, then joins the COPE isiXhosa Nostra and now leaves them and now back to the ANC to seek that diplomatic passport for more scams and smuggled goods (not Bibles I am sure!). He is a liar, thirf and criminal but maybe you get a pro quid pro …. you were always bending over backwards!

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Selim Y Gool (dr) on November 6th, 2009 at 6:03 pm

Alan Boesak clearly has many outstanding attributes. He also has many flaws. The attributes cannot mitigate the flaws. The flaws tarnish the attributes. If he was spiritually wise he would stay out of politics and devote his energies to correcting the flaws.

(Report abuse)

Rory Short on November 6th, 2009 at 6:42 pm

No, Boesak still protests his innocence on the embezzlement of Danchurch Aid funds for the orphans od ZOar to this day. He calls it “struggle accounting”. I call it theft.

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Blip on November 6th, 2009 at 8:49 pm

Appointing Boesak as a leader of COPE was a big mistake. The ANC is known to be full of convicted felons “forgiven ior redeployed” and COPE was ostensibly established to free politics from criminality. However, Boesak, a convicted felon himself, discredited this noble intention and thereby discredited COPE as well.

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ian shaw on November 7th, 2009 at 6:19 am

@Sibusiso Kumalo
I for one am not into kicking Boesak. He doesn’t matter much and he said a few thinks I liked –but that was just before he joined -and left- COPE)

But it may be that many kick him not for the hell of it, when he’s down -but to KEEP him down!
They may dislike fornicating, lying and stealing politicians already –but when this person is an opportunistic Man of the Cloth too boot –that may be just too rich to swallow.

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Twannie on November 7th, 2009 at 7:46 am

I remember standing outside the Lenasia Community Hall waiting to listen to Boesak. More than 2000 of us waited for more than three hours and then he arrived to a thunderous applause as the crowd surged towards him.That night he made me reflect on where we were heading as a Nation and I was covinced that whatever we achieve as a Nation we will achieve because he was with us.

Like all humans he has fallen short of the glory of god but so have so many of us.I hope he is back on his “righteous” feet and he has learnt from his errors.

I look forward to him making a contribution to governance in SA and uplifting the masses. May the strength and enthusiasm of the UDF be yours again Dr Boesak.

Forward SA Forward with Boesak.

(Report abuse)

Donald on November 7th, 2009 at 3:51 pm

Cope-ing Busak or no Cope,I was angry with the ANC.I vowed not to vote again as I alternative but the Party that brought us liberation.ANC was arrogant under Mbeki just like of late.People had to be on strike & loose salaries to be heard.Later no one cared.Mbeki will fly overseas when the country was crying for his leadership.I realised that this is not my ANC any more.They built tollgates,made Delmas drink water with faeces etc.Boasak was like me!He acted because leaders do so.But when Cope emedged I saw in them the same people who brought us the calamity.I had to save the ANC after it ‘vomited’.I stayed But of late the arrogance is creeping back again.Machadodorp, Siyabuswa,Pietretief,etc were on flames.It took 3 months to be heard.SABC/Tax?Tollgates?Shoot2kill etc.The previuos arrogant ANC is back.Zuma and Sicelo are examplary leaders of the ANC.Lafa!Elihle kakhulu!! after so much blood &ruined lives!Painful!Zuma please give direction ave to be brutal to be Kind.Boasak must climb back.This is home!He built it.This country s under contruction.Come back and fight for us who have no home and are orphanned!Credibility is a spinned word.Even de Klerk has it with his Apartheid crookes.Zuma and Sicelo! You worked and toiled for this movement.I am still angry too!I get encouraged as you stand up!Save ANC!

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What are we doing? on November 8th, 2009 at 4:41 pm

You have raised a very interesting point, but have not further elaborated on it. I think your questioning of the effectiveness of the military route taken during apartheid is quite critical. A myth exists that MK brought about the demise of apartheid and ‘liberated’ South Africa. By this I am in no way undermining the efforts of the thousands who left their home to join the various military wings of the liberation movement.

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Percy on November 9th, 2009 at 10:12 am

“Lafa!Elihle kakhulu!!…”-what are we doing?

What the hell does “kakhulu” mean?What language is that?

(Report abuse)

Facts.... on November 9th, 2009 at 2:54 pm

Now check out this important links:

http://www.politicsweb.co.za/politicsweb/view/politicsweb/en/page71619?oid=149514&sn=Detail

It is time for more careful attention in South Africa to the collapse of the ANC’s former support base in Eastern Europe. Time for more sober realism. Paul Trewhela is the author of Inside Quatro: Uncovering The Exile History of the ANC and SWAPO, Jacana Media, 2009.

The East European LEFT and 1989 ….. The Fall of the Wall in Perspective!

Go to: http://www.socialistworker.co.uk/art.php?id=19440

NOW let us have a sober discussion on the East European States, the Cold War, the Future of the Planet after the Fall of the Wall!

Have a further Good Day!

Boesak? Voet**k!

(Report abuse)

Selim Y Gool (dr) on November 9th, 2009 at 4:34 pm

The greatest mistake Cope ever made was to publicize Boesak’s membership of the party.
The “little” flaws you Ryland see in him(Boesak) could be blots of bloodstains in the eyes of others.
The trauma that Boesak caused his family by his second adulterous affair(and there could have been many) cannot be interpreted as ‘one of those events’, but a betrayal of society’s cornerstone.
But South Africa has become a leader of the world circus where men and women who get drunk with power and money turn on their own families with unparalleled fury and destroy them.
What kind of spouse divorces after twenty years of marriage? What cracks are there that cannot be overcome with that length of marital experience?
What damage is caused to children when their parents follow temporal desires and divorce?
Should we have such individuals in leadership positions?

(Report abuse)

Malose Nyatlo on November 10th, 2009 at 8:58 am

I agree wholeheartedly with Rylan Fisher’s insightful commentary on the life and times of Dr Allan Boesak. I have to say I feel sorry for the man - he is looking for acknowledgement for the role he played during the struggle against apartheid - and he will not stop until he finds it. That is the human condition - we all want to be acknowledged. And we all agree that he should be acknowledged - however he has robbed himself of the kind of acknowledgement he has so doggedly pursued - that of an ambassadorial posting to Geneva. The irony is that he, as a man of the cloth more than anyone should know that before one can be forgiven one needs to acknowledge and confess one’s transgression, ask for forgiveness (from whom ever one has transgressed against) then and only then can one be forgiven - who knows perhaps whether such humility would have given him his beloved ambassadorial posting afterall - but confession is one of the most difficult things to do - remember the TRC. No jail sentence will obviate the need to first confess and then repent. Instead of darting from one launchpad to the next in his quest for acknowledgement (and falling harder and further each time) - perhaps it would be better to just take time out away from the glare and cunning of politics, find his true self and serve God and the community and maybe then, when he least expects it, the acknowledgement will come.

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Sympathiser on November 12th, 2009 at 2:21 pm

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Ryland Fisher is former editor of the Cape Times and author of the book Race. This is his second book, following on Making the Media Work for You, which was published in 2002. He is executive chairperson of the Cape Town Festival, which he initiated while editor of the Cape Times in 1999 as part of the One City Many Cultures project. He received an international media award for this project in New York in October 2006.

His personal motto is "bringing people together", which was the theme of One City Many Cultures. It remains the theme of the Cape Town Festival and is the theme of Race. Ryland has worked in and with government, in the media for more than 25 years, in the corporate sector, in NGOs and in academia. Ultimately, however, he describes himself as "just a souped-up writer".
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