May 7, 2010, Greencastle, Ind. — "The challenge for the world is to manage diversity," F.W. de Klerk told an audience at 69色情视频 tonight. The former president of South Africa spoke twenty years after he brought an end to his country's racial segregation policy of apartheid. In a Timothy and Sharon Ubben Lecture entitled "In Celebration: The 20 Year Anniversary of the End of Apartheid and the Challenges Ahead," de Klerk discussed our increasingly diverse and complex world and stated, "We hope that we will continue to show the way."
In a speech on February 2, 1990, President de Klerk -- who had only been in office for about five months -- called for an end to the system of apartheid and opened the way for the drafting of a new constitution for his country based on the principle of one person, one vote. Nine days later, Nelson Mandela was freed after spending 27 years in prison. In 1993 the two men were presented with the Nobel Peace Prize. That same year, de Klerk, Mandela and Yasser Arafat and Yitzhak Rabin were named TIME magazine's "Men of the Year" for their efforts toward promoting peace.
"Today, this year, is for us a commemoration of a seminal moment 20 years ago, like the fall of the Berlin Wall," de Klerk told the 780 people who braved severe weather warnings to attend his speech in Kresge Auditorium of DePauw's Green Center for the Performing Arts. "I believe that the historians will regard the beginning of February 1990 as the watershed of South Africa's modern history. There were many events that opened the way to the speech that I delivered to the South African parliament on 2 February 1990. However, the nine days between it and the release of Nelson Mandela on 11 February 1990 changed South Africa forever. Those crucial nine days set the country irreversibly on the road to a different and, I believe, much better future."
The former president insisted, "Change didn't start with me," stating that a number of factors were pushing South Africa toward breaking down its racial barriers, among them the increasing economic power of blacks in that country and the collapse of global communism in 1989, reducing fears of a possible Soviet takeover. (photos: Alex Turco '10)
"When history opens a window of opportunity, it is important to jump through it," de Klerk said at DePauw tonight. "We knew that the circumstances for a reasonable constitutional settlement would never again be so favorable. So, we jumped. "
It was clear apartheid had to go, the former president asserted, and it's the job of leaders to recognize when it's time to change course. "Even in your personal lives, in your professional lives, in the life of this University, the first step toward fundamental change is to think analytically where you are and to acknowledge failure where failure has occurred and to accept that you cannot improve a failed project or a failed object. You must turn your back on it and you must substitute a new vision and a new plan."
De Klerk spoke at length about the process by which South Africa changed and the crucial role of committed, honest negotiations -- in which all parties are willing to compromise and listen -- in solving disputes. He declared, "The problems of societies divided by conflict can ultimately be solved only by peace. And only when peace is restored in a divided society can the improvement of the quality of life of the people living there begin."
F.W. de Klerk was the seventh Nobel Laureate to deliver an Ubben Lecture at DePauw (previous guests were Mikhail Gorbachev, Elie Wiesel, Shimon Peres, Willy Brandt, Leon Lederman and Ferid Murad, a 1958 DePauw graduate). He received three standing ovations from the appreciative audience (.
South Africa, he told the crowd, has come a long way in the last 20 years but still faces many challenges, including an HIV/AIDS epidemic. He believes the dismantling of apartheid could make his homeland "a laboratory for multiculturalism throughout the world." He noted, "The reality is that in the new millennium the most serious threat to peace no longer comes from wars between countries; it comes from conflicts between ethnic, cultural, linguistic and religious communities within the same countries. Throughout the world, populations are becoming more cosmopolitan. The world's 200 countries now include more than 6,000 different cultural communities. More than 130 of those 200 countries have cultural minorities comprising more than 10% of their population."
The former president continued, "Did you realize, ladies and gentlemen, that our constitution says we have 11 official languages. We are a little Europe. And some way or another, each of the speakers of those 11 languages feel so strongly about it -- they dream in it, they cry in it, they grieve in it, they laugh in it. If you take it away from them, if you force them to choose, if you force them into a straitjacket of just all being the same, there will be an explosion." (at right: President de Klerk talks with a DePauw class this afternoon in the Memorial Student Union Building)
But de Klerk was quick to add that there are no perfect nor permanent fixes. "Perhaps the greatest lesson we have learned is that you never really solve problems in human relations. There is no point at which you can clap yourself on the back and walk away from your success. All human relations, including those between communities in multicultural societies, require constant and continuing attention, care, communication and commitment." He added, "Our greatest challenge in South Africa is to keep the miracle of our peaceful transition through democracy -- to keep it alive and successful."
De Klerk concluded his Ubben Lecture by stating, "The best contribution that we in South Africa can make will be to work day and night for the continued success of our complex multicultural society. I believe we must continue to show the world that there is another way, that different cultural communities can co-exist harmoniously within the same state, that there is a peaceful solution to even the most complex problems and disputes."
The evening speech concluded a busy day for the world leader. After arriving at the Putnam County Airport, President de Klerk attended a class led by Mac Dixon-Fyle, A.W. Crandall Professor of History, then had a news conference before attending a dinner at the home of DePauw President Brian W. Casey with students, faculty members and alumni. (BONUS CLIP:
A graduate of Potchefstroom University, de Klerk said he felt "very much at home" at DePauw. "I went to a similar university (to) DePauw. We only were 3,000 students. We knew each one by name. We had intimate, small classes where we could interact with our lecturers and our professors."
He added, "I feel like I can really relate to the intimacy which a small, dedicated, good quality university can have on its students. And, in the end, a university is about students."
Before he left the podium, de Klerk stated, "I wish this University everything of the best, and I believe you will continue to turn out individuals who will make a difference in this wonderful country which is now the leading country of the world and which we all hope won't deviate from the right course. Because if we lose you as the leading country of the world, if you go too much left or too much right, the rest of the world will be set back for many, many years."