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42 pages 1 hour read

Cry, the Beloved Country

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 1948

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Symbols & Motifs

Johannesburg

Despite Reverend Stephen Kumalo hailing from the rural village of Ndotsheni, Alan Paton uses the city of Johannesburg as his main motif, alongside the concept of the tribe. Johannesburg represents a long history of Dutch and English colonization, and with it, a trend of white supremacy that marks South Africa well into the present. The city draws young people away from Ndotsheni because it promises a better life—specifically, modern (capitalist) desires. However, “when people go to Johannesburg, they do not come back” (38)—these people including Kumalo’s brother John and sister Gertrude. This is due to the ravenous nature of the city, its tendency to exploit Black labor; while John runs his own business, Gertrude is forced to partake in sex work and the sale of alcohol to support her and her son. When Kumalo arrives in Johannesburg and observes it for himself, he realizes its promise of success does not extend to Black South African people. Rather, its wealth comes at the expense of Black lives and spirits: Black people can work but will never truly belong and be rewarded the same benefits as white people. In this regard, the place exemplifies the government’s oncoming apartheid. Amid large houses owned by white families, many descended from colonizers, the government segregates Black South African people to areas like the destitute Shanty Town.

The Tribe

Paton explores the theme of the Breakdown of Family and Community through the motif of the tribe. In Kumalo’s experience, the tribe represents identity, community, and the larger history of Black South African people. He finds comfort and peace in tribal society because of its connection to family traditions. In Johannesburg, his goal is to restore the tribe—or at the very least, his own—by bringing his son Absalom, sister Gertrude, and brother John back to Ndotsheni. To Kumalo’s friend Theophilus Msimangu, white people originally broke the tribe by colonizing, but it has “not suited [them] to build something in the place of what is broken” (56). In other words, white people benefit from segregating Black people—from them and each other—as a lack of tribe leaves Black people with less power to undermine white power. Kumalo finds it difficult to accept this truth because the tribe as a concept has long given him peace. Without it, he fears Black South African people will quickly assimilate into white society, losing their culture and history amid colonization.

The Mines

Paton explores the exploitation of Black South African people through the motif of mines. Throughout Cry, the Beloved Country, white South African people become obsessed with local mines because the economy depends on gold. However, the miners responsible for obtaining gold are Black and actively exploited for white people’s benefit. To Kumalo’s brother John, “[South Africa] is not built on the mines…it is built on our backs, on our sweat, on our labour” (68). Like the current bus protests, the mining protests make white South African people nervous because they “realize how dependent they are on the labour of the black people” (223). Yet, they fear that if they pay Black miners a fair wage, it will bring about “the loss of [their] whiteness” (110). White power relies on the dehumanization of non-white people, the prioritization of greed over human lives. Thus, like Johannesburg itself, the mines represent white supremacy.

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