Negotiated Partition of South Africa – An Idea and its History (1920s–1980s)

ABSTRACT This article analyses a number of academic and journalistic proposals on the negotiated partition of South Africa coming from different schools of thought, from within South Africa and abroad, from the 1920s up to the late 1980s. These proposals of dividing South Africa into a ‘predominantly black’ and a ‘predominantly white’ state were presented by their authors as an alternative to apartheid and seen as a way out of the impasse created by the unwillingness of the National Party to accept the one man, one vote principle for a unitary state. The article examines how the proposals gradually foresaw giving the economically most relevant parts of the country to the ‘predominantly black state’. The article argues that this debate also has to be seen in the context of the Cold War where the partition of countries had been a means to pacify divided societies, at least temporarily.

the outset: The partitionist proposals discussed here were understood by their authors as an alternative to the sort of 'segregation' or 'partition' as defined and practised under apartheid policy. The latter was indeed officially 'South Africa's Politics of Partition', as journalist Patrick Laurence (1937-2011) subtitled his analysis of the political history of the Transkei 'Bantustan' in 1976. 10 As one critic analysed in 1967: [F]or those Africans not actually in the employment of Whites, apartheid calls for macro-segregation, i.e., round-the-clock separation in totally distinct regions, namely the Native Reserves, now in the process of restyling under the name of Bantustans. Macro-segregation thus becomes synonymous with the government's notion of total territorial partition, accompanied, of course, by White political paramountcy, even in the African areas. 11 The ideological origins and the execution of apartheid and segregationist plans have been widely researched and it has been shown that 'segregation […] was part of a wider pattern of modernization of South African society.' 12 Yet, in this 'context of the formal elaboration of apartheid from the 1930s to the 1950', as well as later on, 13 counter-discourses also evolved. One of the issues debated in these counter-discourses about 'alternatives' was the possibility of 'total separation', 'radical', or 'negotiated partition'. The history of this idea has found relatively little attention amongst researchers, mostly by political scientists. 14 Yet, it is part of South Africa's intellectual history, for it depicts a 'development in South African political thought', 15 and needs to be seen in the context of 'racial ideologies of modern Afrikaner nationalism' and its adversaries. 16 Historian Saul Dubow bemoaned years ago that the 'continuities and discontinuities which marked the transition from segregation to apartheid 10 S. Dubow, 'Afrikaner Nationalism, Apartheid and the Conceptualization of "Race",' Journal of African History, 33, 2 (1992), 209. 14.
The most comprehensive account is by G. Maasdorp remain undertheorised and poorly explained'. 17 The political and academic writings since the 1920s about a possible partition of South Africa into independent states offer at least some explanations regarding these (dis)continuities, as they underline counter-discourses and the active search for alternatives. However, the ever-changing context of apartheid politics also explainsin partthe changing argumentative focus of the debate. In these long-lasting debates about 'alternatives' (amongst academics, journalists, and politicians) it is important to note that contributions focusing on the possibility of partition, starting in the 1920s, came from diverse schools of thought (from within South Africa and abroad) across the political spectrum. The texts considered in this article are chosen to indicate this wide political spectrum, thereby laying bare divergent motivesfrom early forms of (in the parlance of C.R.D. Halisi ) 'black republicanism' 18 to Afrikaner 'realists' who anticipated the end of apartheid but were eager to ensure the 'protection of cultural rights '. 19 Early voices in favour of partition: a communist and a liberal tradition Amongst Africans involved in politics who came of age in the decade after Union, the influence of Garveyism or communism grew markedly. These circles underlined that their more radical ideas, like claims for one man, one vote, were not their last word. 20 Indeed, 'partition has been mooted […] since the 1920s.' 21 In the 1920s, Africans associated with the Marxist-oriented Industrial and Commercial Workers' Union made clear that they did 'not necessarily seek inclusion in a common society on the basis of equal citizenship.
[African] Rejectionism could be compatible with segregation,' if the latter was a way to more rights and possibly self-determination. 22 Since 1928, the Communist Party of South Africa (CPSA, founded in 1921) officially followed the 'correct slogan proposed by the Comintern [Communist International] calling for an independent native South African republic as a stage towards a workers' and peasants' republic with full, equal rights for all races'. 23 However, this 'idea that black liberation had to be framed in terms of state-independence' (at the expense of 'dreams of socialism'), as enforced by Comintern, was thoroughly  Jabavu (1885Jabavu ( -1959, the first African academic at the University of Fort Hare and prominent liberal critic of the Hertzog government's segregation policies. He is generally considered an 'advocate of nonracialism' who 'espoused South African territorial nationalism rather than black African nationalism'. 30 Yet, he was equally aware of the previous debates on the left and was looking for a response to the 'sharply escalated oppression of blacks' following the re-election of J.B.M. Hertzog . 31 At the All-African Convention, held in 1935 in the (failed) hope to halt discriminatory legislation, 32 Jabavu declared: 'Segregation and colourbars must go; alternatively we want a separate state of our own where we shall rule ourselves freed from the present hypocritical position.' 33 This alternative, however, was only his second best political choice. In the words of his biographer, Jabavu's 'worldview [was] shaped by the old Cape Colony ideal of "equal rights for civilized men",' based on the hope for one 'South African state that embraced assimilation and rejected segregation'. 34 Behind Jabavu's claim for an altogether 'alternative' plan, 'a separate state', was the notion in the 1930s that 'land questions' were increasingly blended with 'race questions'. The Hertzog government had promised to Africans 'extended communal land rights in specific "reserved" areas'. It did so to soothe African anger about the disenfranchising of Africans in the Cape. The politics behind the segregationist legislation was thus based on the 'assumption that one kind of right [access to land] could be traded for another [voter's rights]'. 35 However, Africans had made their own experience with the 'reserved areas' since the inception of this system with the Native Land Act of 1913 that, according to Jabavu in 1928, had for its 'purpose […] to confine the black man within such circumscribed limits that he should never be territorially independent'. 36 Hence his demand for 'a separate state', completely free from white domination.
In 1939 the 'German-English […] liberal European' 37 Alfred Hoernlé (1880-1943), professor of philosophy at the University of Witwatersrand and since 1934 chairman of the South African Institute of Race Relations (SAIRR), published his seminal South African Native Policy and the Liberal Spirit. Here he openly denounced South Africa as 'a dictatorship of the White minority over the non-White majority' and declared categorically that 'domination intended to be permanent […] is, in principle, irreconcilable with the liberal spirit.' 38 Already for the preceding 15-odd years, Hoernlé had been a 'trenchant critic of the segregation policy and all its works' as implemented by the Hertzog government. 39 But he recognised, like his fellow South African liberals, that he was 'swimming against a rough segregationist tide'. 40 Thus, Hoernlé's South African Native Policy is seen as 'indicative of […]  society' in South Africa, standing at odds with any liberal notion of equality and justice, was 'bound in the end to fail'. 42 Consequently, South Africa's 'most outstanding English-speaking liberal intellectual in the 1930s and early 1940s' discussed the possibility of 'total separation' (as he called the option opposed to 'thoroughgoing parallelism' or 'total racial assimilation') of South Africa's 'races'. 43 Under the heading 'Is a Liberal Native Policy Possible?' Hoernlé argued that 'Total Separation', given the white rejection of legal equality for other races and common citizenship, 'should be the liberal's choice'. 44 However, Hoernlé admitted that even though 'total separation' 'was ethically sound, [he] […] thought that whites would refuse the enormous sacrifices that would be required to make it a reality'. 45 Also, the first commentators on Hoernlé's ideas about how to achieve liberty and equality for all South Africans noted his 'confess[ion] that he can give no confident answer' to the 'all-important question' about the applicability of his ideas. 46 Historian of race and philosophy Robert Bernasconi has recently pointed out that 'there is still no consensus' about the meaning of Hoernlé's arguments and in particular 'about what this long-standing opponent of segregation might have meant when he proposed "Total Separation"; even though he did explain that by separation he understood "the organization of different groups in several mutually independent, self-determining societies".' 47 Later Hoernlé defined and distinguished: 'Segregation […] is most perfectly realized in a multi-racial caste-society. Separation, falsely also called "segregation", is most perfectly realized when the different racial groups are sorted out into their own territorially distinct societies.' 48 Was this, in other words, an argument to divide the Union of South Africa into two or more independent, internationally recognised sovereign states with their own governments, capitals, and currencies? Indeed, already in 1936 Hoernlé had considered the possibility to 'make segregation complete [what he elsewhere called "the position of the double-minded segregationist […] Conversely, historians such as the Marxist Martin Legassick have suggested that Hoernlé's arguments were not based in this history of land use and segregation but, rather, that they were to become, in the future, an important contribution to the 'formulation of apartheid'. 50 This opinion, however, seems based on an erroneous reading of Hoernlé's definition of liberty and his quasi-teleological argument that 'the spirit of liberty is ineradicable and cannot in the end be denied'. 51 Also, Hoernlé's scathing criticism of South Africa's 'division' into 'Native Reserves' and, as he added, 'White Reserves', 52 his contempt for this policy of 'kraaling Blacks and Whites apart in territorially-separated areas' whilst keeping up the economic entanglement between them, leaves little room for making him an intellectual forerunner of National Party (NP) politics in the years after his death. 53 The usage of terms such as 'separation' or 'Native State' did not make Hoernlé the intellectual 'founding father' of the pseudoindependent homelands, such as the Transkei or Bophuthatswana.
Historian Paul B. Rich, on the other hand, pointed out that Hoernlé 'recognizedlong before the creation of Homelandsthat any artificially created black state would be subject to white control' and thus white lordship would remain intact. However, Hoernlé 'failed to offer any politically feasible solution' and provided, so Rich, a 'generally gloomy analysis of South African politics'. And still, the argument for territorial separation 'offered a model for the decolonization of South African society before the advent of popular African nationalism'. 54 Yet, it appears that the alternative to the South African racial 'caste society', as coined by Hoernlé, was more paradox and had a more complicated relation to questions of its practical implementation. Hoernlé was well aware that his critics called him a 'pessimist', to which he replied that he merely had 'no use for confidence based on illusion'. 55 In the words of Bernasconi, 'Hoernlé was not advocating "Total Separation" in practice'he was not doing so for political and ideological reasons: Hoernlé noted that there was no 'will' to execute such plans and he 'knew full well that no form of liberalism could accept the measures [for example infringements of property rights and freedom of movement] that would be necessary to implement the "Total Separation" liberalism called for' when faced with the racial hierarchies executed 50 in South Africa. Rather, he 'seems to have been saying that he, as a White liberal, could not advocate "Total Separation" because he could not advocate the means necessary to bring it about, while at the same time inviting "the Native peoples" to pursue this course'. 56 Hoernlé, who had recognised the 'colonial dimension to South African society', did not believe in 'ambulance work' of reformist assumptions; these were indeed illusions. 57 After all, in the final section of his book he did not shy away from pointing to the agency and the 'force' of the 'non-European majority' that would be decisive for the future of South Africa. It was nothing but blunt when Hoernlé predicted in 1939: 'The caste-structure of South African society has no intrinsic stability and permanence.' 58 The repercussions of the Second World War in South African politics were profound, as evidenced by the NP's victory in 1948. And still: The rise of Afrikaner nationalism to state power did not preclude the existence of voices emanating from the White minority in favour of coming to terms with African aspirations for equality. 59 The Second World War, as Shula Marks puts it, was 'an important factor in releasing left and liberal energies' in South Africa. 60 Liberals 'wanted government to accept that the process of racial integration, particularly in the cities, was irreversible'. 61 Recalling his own childhood, historian Hermann Giliomee (*1938) mentions implicitly receiving a 'message', namely 'that uncontested white domination would not last forever'. 62 Dubow underlines the concurrent development of competing world views in this period, speaking of the 1940s 'as a decade in which several "new" South Africas were imagined'. And, thus, 'in no sense […] was the advent of apartheid preordained.' Dubow identifies three lines of political thought in the era: African nationalism, Afrikaner nationalism, and a 'liberal or social-democratic South Africanism' that 'overlapped to an extent with African as well as Afrikaner nationalism'all with their distinct hopes for the future. 63 As an example of the latterthe 'shifting middleground' 64stands the poet and language scholar N.P. van  favour of recognising the national ambitions of all nations within South Africa. The rejection of the notion of nationalism as an exclusive preserve for the Afrikaners led him to envisage 'four white and four black separate states in southern Africa'. 65 But, as Giliomee adds, Louw, like Hoernlé, 'left the whole question of the actual division of land obscure'. 66 Only in 1960 did Louw make a 'brief reference to the "two halves of this large country of ours" to which whites and blacks had claims'. 67 In this respect it should also be recalled that 'few liberals in the 1940s accepted equal political rights for black and white.' 68 It is hard to establish concrete links between the writings and opinion pieces of a few academics, on the one hand, and politicians, on the other. In 1946, Judge Henry Fagan (1889-1963), a former United Party cabinet minister, was appointed by Prime Minister Smuts to head a Commission on the Native Laws in order to investigate the issue of African urbanisation. Not unlike Hoernlé, the commission under Fagan 'outlined three theoretical options for South Africa: total segregation (partition), which it called "utterly impracticable"; equality (no racial discrimination), which it also rejected; and an "inbetween" one, which it endorsed'. 69 Practically the commissioners thus recommended relaxing the influx control of Africans to urban areas in order to stabilise the workforce. This made the Fagan report, according to researchers, '[a]rguably the most liberal official document produced in the segregation era'. 70 As a (negative) response to the Fagan report, in 1947 the NP's Daniel F. Malan (1874-1959) appointed a party commission headed by Paul Sauer and charged it with drafting a report 71 that would turn 'apartheid into a comprehensive racial policy'. 72 The Stellenbosch academics who were involved argued in favour of a strict regulation of African migration to urban centres and the restriction of political and social rights of Africans outside their socalled 'homelands'. They considered the suggested 'in-between' solution to lead to 'racial levelling' if 'race as a legitimate criterion' was rejected. 'Significantly, the [Stellenbosch] declaration referred to a white and a black group, each having its own territory. The idea of ten black ethnic groups each with its own homeland was a later elaboration.' 73 Evidently, these (quasi- )government commissions and their reports exposed cleavages and controversies over the form of white dominance. 74 For example, in 1948 Fagan wrote a response on the NP's policy of 'total territorial segregation': If the attempt succeeds, well and good. If not, it will nevertheless be a preparatory step […] to bring the mentality of the public to maturity and to get people to acquiesce in a policy which concedes the impossibility of territorial segregation and […] to find the best way of adapting ourselves to what is possible. 75 For the new Prime Minister, Daniel F. Malan, it was obvious that the white minority would unilaterally decide on any borderlines to be drawn within the country between black and white. Plans in this direction were under way. 76 Notwithstanding the implementation of apartheid by the authorities, the 'period of the 1950s proved to be a fertile one for liberal debate in South Africa'. 77 Whilst in this liberal context some exchanged opinions about the legitimacy of partitionist proposals, others argued not only about the 'impossibility of territorial segregation' 78 but, most of all, refused to see its necessity for a future South Africa. The Multi-Racial Conference of 1957 at the University of the Witwatersrand is an example in this respect. Under the auspices of church ministers, the conference 'tried to define the nature of economic, social and political duties in a "common society" and was hailed by some observers as being one of the most representative gatherings ever held in South Africa'. 79 In 1959, the lawyer and liberal Cape politician Donald Molteno (1908-1972) declared 'Hoernlé's three a priori theoretical objectives of parallelism, assimilation, and separation as being of marginal use, since even Hoernlé had recognized that they were politically impracticable'. Rather, Molteno hoped to develop feasible and democratic alternatives by asking why Hoernlé's objectives were impracticable. Thus, whilst Molteno argued and hoped for 'piecemeal reforms' in order to liberalise the system, this was exactly what Hoernlé rejected to accept as a feasible solution for South Africa's 'race relations'. 80

Arguments for and against partition in the face of Bantustans
Others in South Africa and beyond continued to weigh the advantages and disadvantages of partitioning South Africa. They did so in light of the ongoing implementation of 'Bantustans', such as the Transkei, following the introduction 74.
A , on the other hand, the 'Leninist principle of "democratic centralism" was rapidly gaining ground'. 83 It was in this adversarial Cold War context that, beginning in the late 1950s, a steady flow of publications aimed at laying out apartheid policies. They justified these policies or proved them wrong, in particular from a theological, legal, historical, or economic point of view. Famously, parliamentarian Helen Suzman , of the Progressive Party, laid bare the 'anomalies' and inconsistencies of 'race classification' and other perversions of the idea of the rule of law; 84 others described the economic problems through increased inequality as caused by apartheid economics; even historians 'warn[ed] contemporary Afrikaner cultural leaders that viewing the Afrikaner people as a chosen people with inter alia an apartheid's mission was basically wrong'. 85  Academics, journalists, and others likewise weighted the chances for alternatives, also based onas one contemporary put ita 'growing awareness among whites that their [dominant] position cannot be maintained indefinitely'. 87 Leaders of the World Council of Churches, including some South African theologians, at the South African Cottesloe convention (1960) expressed their conviction: 'The segregation of racial groups […] involving discrimination leads to hardship for members of the groups affected,' 88 a claim that was subsequently rejected by the Dutch Reformed Church. In the aftermath of the 'traumatic conjunction of Sharpeville [1960] and the final moves to bring about the Republic', 89 these alternatives were searched for (internationally) with an increased sense of urgency. 90 Evidently, 'an alternative racial policy acceptable to the majority of whites and non-whites alike has not been formulated' in the 1960s, 91 but with regard to ideas about subdividing or partitioning South Africa, a number of titles shall be summarised hereunder.
Denis V Cowen (1918V Cowen ( -2007, professor of comparative law and dean of law at the University of Cape Town, in his Constitution-Making for a Democracy (1960), explicitly searched for An Alternative to Apartheid (the sub-title of his work) by drawing-up a 'new constitution'. Without mentioning Hoernlé, he argued: 'If apartheid could measure up to an ideal […] of fair territorial partition with real autonomy for each territory and full rights of each race, it is […] a solution which could be morally justified, calling for the greatest self-sacrifice.' Yet, given the difficulties of defining the meaning of 'fair' ('Where exactly should the boundaries be drawn?'), Cowen thought that this plan had no real prospects. Apartheid thus remained 'a wrong policy, one of despair'. Cowen rather argued in favour of a 'territorial federation' and proposed the possibility of a 'racial federation' with constitutionally guaranteed rights for minorities. 92 A couple of months later, however, in October 1960, the economist Johannes de Villiers Graaff  published an article in the Cape Argus newspaper in which the subject of 'partition' of South Africa re-emerged 'as a possible solution' to end apartheid. Graaf argued for a negotiated partition of the country 87 into two states: the east was to be inhabited mainly by Africans, the west mainly by Whites. Remaining vague on the future borderline, he was nevertheless quite open in his intention to keep the eastern state rather small, including Natal and parts of Transvaal, excluding the gold and diamond mines. This border was to be secured 'internationally', that is by troops of the United Nations. Graaff estimated that no negative economic effects should be expected in Southern Africa from this plan. 93 Soon after this publication Graaff found a veritable opponent in Cowen, who in his book The Foundations of Freedom (1961) discussed critically Graaf's 'possible solution'. Cowen characterised the 'partition' plan not only as unrealistic and conflict-prone but also as a confession of 'abject failure' of the South African society in the assumption that 'whites and non-whites simply cannot live together in peace'. Cowen was rather intent to convince his reader of the political and constitutional necessity for a 'fresh start' in South Africa, namely a federation. This was preferable to apartheid, civil war, or the 'ultimate resort of partition', which, Cowen argued, would have to be 'far more favourable to the Africans' to be acceptable ('The whites might be lucky to keep the Western Province') and which, for him, was rather a 'strategic withdrawal, a shortening of the lines of defence'. 94 The economist F.P. Spooner, a one-time economic adviser to the government, argued in the South African Predicament (1960) for the 'survival of White influence and leadership [in South Africa]for without such influence the country will surely decline'. 95 However, having emphasised his Afrikaner-British origins, he rejected the NP's Bantustan policy and apartheid. Long before international observers predicted that 'apartheid would prove economically unsustainable', 96 Spooner characterised this ideology as 'a one-way street leading to the collapse of the country's economy'. Given the impoverishment of the African majority in times of an unprecedented boom, Spooner rather hoped for a generally improved development of the wider region of southern Africa and insisted on a more equitable sharing of economic gains with South Africa's non-white majority. Having predicted that apartheid will result in 'the downfall of the Whites in the Union', he found that apartheid could 'succeed' in 'one sense only', namely 'partition, where the white and the nonwhites are given full control of their respective areas, after an equitable division of the country'. With a view to the practicability of such plans, Spooner admitted that 'boundaries would be hard to define; it would also inevitably entail immense hardship'. 97

93.
Jan Franco-Austrian journalist Paul Giniewski (1926-2011), in his book Bantustans: A Trek Towards the Future (1961), undertook to analyse, with an unmistakable colonialist undertone, the original idea of Bantustans in a more positive light; but, importantly, he also questioned whether the government was actually doing what it preached. Accepting the official view of distinct 'nations' within South Africa, Giniewski argued in favour of a 'regrouping of territory' along national lines. He considered that the 'solution by partition is the only realistic and moral one […]. Partition is the answer for human groups whose sentimental and therefore irrational aspirations diverge.' Like other critics of the 'Bantu policy', he was certain: '[N]othing except complete political emancipation will satisfy [the Africans]', and therefore he demanded the '"creative withdrawal" of the Whites from the Black territories'. Giniewski accepted the idea of several unrelated territories (yet seven, more encompassing areas than those scheduled by the South African administration) and saw them bound in a 'Bantu federation' of independent states, including British-administered Basutoland, Swaziland, and Bechuanaland. Regarding the 'frontiers of a partitioned South Africa', he wanted them 'generous' in favour of the new African states and predicted a 'Bantu horseshoe' reaching from East London to Kuruman and the borders with Southern Rhodesia and Mozambique. 98 As a contemporary critic assumed, this plan 'would be rejected by urban African leaders as it would "Balkanize" South Africa into perpetually weak economic states'. 99 A similar critique of the Bantustans 'as a form of "balkanization"' can still be found in the most-recent historiography. 100 However, it is important to recall that some Western observers were open to see South Africa's 'homelands' and, in particular, the development of the Transkei, 'the flagship of its homelands policy', as a first step towards the 'decolonization' of South Africa. 'The Guardian accepted the principle of separate, viable white and black spheres of influence, leading ultimately to full partition.' 101 The Belgian-American sociologist Pierre L. van den Berghe (1933-2019), in his influential South Africa, a Study in Conflict (1965), an angry analysis of the flaws and injustices of apartheid policies and ideology, made sure to lay out that the Bantustans had nothing to do with an 'equitable geographical partition' between ethnic groupsdespite all official propaganda. It was not only a fact that Whites kept 87 per cent of South African territory for themselves but the talk of 'independent Bantustans' was also a sham. 102 Van  to mitigate worries in parliament that the 'self-governing Native areas would be sovereign'. Verwoerd underlined: 'We cannot mean that we intend […] to cut large slices out of South Africa and turn them into independent States.' 103 With a sense of sarcasm van den Berghe described 'equal partition' as '"ideal" apartheid' that 'the government has never seriously envisaged' to implement since this 'would entail the political and economic disruption of the entire country'. 104 Van den Berghe was also eager to include the perspective of the African majority on any partitionist proposals: '[M]ost politically conscious Africans are against any territorial partition along ethnic lines and will not settle for anything less than control over the entire country.' Most '[n]on-White leaders', he argued, 'envisage various forms of a multiracial country within present frontiers.' 105 Also the SAIRR, in the meantime the nation's undisputed pedestal of liberalism, 106 kept an eye open towards the solution of partition. The institute's president from 1961 to 1964, Oliver D. Schreiner (1890Schreiner ( -1980, had been, prior to his retirement, amongst South Africa's most distinguished jurists who, as a judge of appeal, had been passed over twice for the chief justiceship. Considering his refusal in the 1950s to endorse the disenfranchising of 'coloured voters' in the Cape, he 'was clearly regarded as politically unsafe by the Nationalist government'. 107 Schreiner, describing in 1961 the risks of a 'composite nation' consisting of several nationalities with varying degrees of loyalty to the state, was aware of the possibility of 'the state breaking up', like 'Austria-Hungary' after 1918. Even though 'partition agreements' were preferable to 'liquidation by battle', such a 'division of an established state […] is a desperate remedy, […] it confesses failure'. 108 Clearly Schreiner's preferences lay elsewhere when looking for a '"U" turn', an alternative to the despised apartheid system. With regard to the Bantustan policy, Schreiner, in his 1962 presidential address to the SAIRR entitled 'Realism in Race Relations', pointed to the questions left open for debate by the National Party: 'whether, for instance, there would eventually be African states inside our existing boundaries, with their […] armed forces […] and customs barriers […], and with the right to make treaties with other countries'. 109 In 'South Africa -United or Divided' (1964), Schreiner emphasised that the 'Bantustan policy […] bears no relation to what would be a fair method of dividing the country between the groups.' He argued for a general franchise and equality for all and openly ridiculed the 'Bantustan' elections: for him it did not matter if the ballot papers there would be 'dropped into a well' or in the ballot box. 110 Only in passing did Schreiner refer to what his predecessor Hoernlé had described as 'the liberal's choice' 111 : 'A system of partition would not necessarily be a sham.' But, like others, Schreiner considered partition, if it were to achieve equality and fairness, 'politically and economically impossible [because] […] we are so well mixed up that there is no possibility of sorting us out'. 112 Nic J. Rhoodie (b. 1932), a Ph.D. student of sociologist Geoff Cronjé -'one of the chief ideologues of apartheid' 113did not concern himself with these concrete challenges when he spoke of South Africa's possible 'radical geo-political partition' in his Ph.D. thesis (1965) on apartheid and racial partnership. Replete with apartheid apologetics and terminology, his chapter on 'separate development and geo-political partition' can be read as an attempt to include the thinking about 'partition' into an apartheid narrative about the future of South Africa and its Bantustans. 114 In more than one way Rhoodie tried to present a counter-narrative to van den Berghe, who had offered a quote of Dr Verwoerd of 1951 as a clear indication that the South African government had never envisaged to create 'independent States' out of the present South Africa. Rhoodie, on the other hand, quoted Verwoerd from 1964 when he propagated the future 'independence' of 'our Bantu territories'. But most of all, this piece was a 'Sauer report-reloaded' that showed Nic Rhoodie, similar to his brother Eschel (later to be disgraced in the Muldergate scandal), as an academically sophisticated defender of apartheid and 'ethnogenesis'. From the selfconfidence of Rhoodie's assumption that 'South Africa's policy of separate freedoms […] will in the course of time crystallise in […] the geopolitical separation of White and Bantu interests' and territories, the contemporary context can be clearly discerned: the early days of John Vorster's premiership have been termed by historians as the 'golden age for the white polity' when economic growth 'was rampant'. 115 Correspondingly, Rhoodie left African aspirations for self-determination at the mercy of the National Party, whose politicians had already for a long time intended including 'the British protectorates' (Botswana, Lesotho, Swaziland) into any territorial reorganisation of the sub-continent. The creation of 'Bantu South Africa' would thus have to include the former British territories and South Africa's homelands, resulting in a territory that 'will eventually comprise a surface area at least equal to that of White South Africa' (an argument which the Fagan report had already referred to as useless for solving the 'issue of migrant workers'). Rhoodie's understanding of 'partition' 'elicited considerable interest in political and academic circles', as the author proudly explained in the English edition of his book (published in 1969). Rhoodie reminisced on reactions from NP members who indicated openness. Further 'support' came from journalists, 'provided [partition] could be equitably implemented […] [Following the English edition,] a group of English-speaking South Africans held a symposium in Durban during which the merits of, and the motives for, radical geo-political partition were discussed'. 116 However, it would require other proposals, also from abroad, for a more equitable territorial solution to be weighted and considered a feasible way out of the South African impasse.
Academic 'realism' in drawing the line? Tiryakian's 'Partition for South Africa (1967)' Even though it has been argued that 'Hoernlé's idea that racial [total] separation might be compatible with liberalism did not find much favour internationally', 117 the previously mentioned works, also written by non-South Africans, show otherwise. At least one American academic turned favourably to the idea of an equitable partition of South Africa into two viable autonomous states. Associate professor of sociology at Duke University, Edward Tiryakian (b. 1929), who had early on developed an interest in South African matters, travelled several times to the country to 'gather materials'. 118 In his 'realistic sociological appraisal' of the state of affairs, he concluded in 1967 that a partition 'may be the optimal solution'. 119 Thirty years earlier, Hoernlé had apparently 'never […] thought of "Total Separation" as a practical possibility'. 120 Tiryakian, on the other hand, considered the practical aspects of partition plans in particular and at length. This opposing point of view might be one reason why Tiryakian decided to never refer to Hoernlé, even though it seems unlikely that he did not take notice of South African Native Policy and the Liberal Spirit. Tiryakian aimed at presenting an alternative to the dystopic perspectives on South Africa of '[m]ost sociologists' and of van der Berghe in particularwho, as he saw it, allegedly predicted 'that the only outcome to the South African situation is a revolutionary holocaust'. Discussing a number of 'possibilities' ventured so far for South Africa, ranging 'from the ideological far right to its polar extreme', Tiryakian aimed at showing how they 'are either unfeasible, impractical, or morally unacceptable'. With reference to contemporary challenges to coexistence in Canada, Belgium, and Cyprus ('still bitterly divided along ethnic-cultural lines'), Tiryakian excluded the possibility of a 'successful policy of racial-cultural integration in South Africa'. Given the 'fate of the Asiatic minority in East Africa', he assumed that under 'black dominance', through the 'one-man, one-vote' principle, 'alien races [would be excluded] from decision-making functions in political processes.' 121 Five years after Algerian independence, this case loomed large in Tiryakian's argumentation. He asked what would be the consequence of an 'Algerian-type situation', meaning an 'all-out war of liberation': '[C]ould a prolonged war lead to the Europeans being "driven into the sea" […] that is, to their voluntary migrating away from South Africa after defeat?' 'Again, the outcome of the Algerian war would seem to suggest this possibility.' However, whilst Tiryakian considered it 'conceivable' that the English-speaking community might '"return" to their "homelands",' just as other minorities '(e.g. Israel, Greece)', he deemed it 'unlikely that the Afrikaners would "rather switch than fight"'. He spoke of the 'wishful thinking expressed in some quarters that everything would be amicably settled if only the Afrikaners could be persuaded to leave South Africa'. Finally, the 'extermination of the whites' would be unacceptable 'to the West'. Therefore, Tiryakian warned of the consequences of a 'racial war', which 'should give pause to those who see a blood bath as a necessary catharsis for purifying the South African atmosphere'. 122 Given these 'unfeasible' alternatives, Tiryakian considered the partition of South Africa the 'inevitable answer' and opened his argumentation with quotations from the above-mentioned works of Spooner, Cowen, Giniewski, and Schreiner, published just a few years before; thus illustrating that 'South African liberals have had to recognize grudgingly that partition is the only solution.' Whilst there had been several commissions since 1910 in South Africa to investigate 'race relations' and 'some form of territorial segregation', no commission 'has ever been appointed to examine the feasibility of partition'. 123 A number of questions was thus open: 'What would the partition of South Africa look like? What would be the major consequences of partition?' Would Africans 'also reject partitions' the same way they rejected segregation? As mentioned, van den Berghe had predicted they would 'not settle for anything less than control over the entire country'. 124 Tiryakian, however, pointed to 'the absence of public opinion polls of urban Africans' and was of the 'opinion that a great majority [of (urban?) Africans] would endorse' Jabavu's demand for 'a separate state of our own'. Unfortunately he left open why he was of this opinion. 125 Tiryakian was confident about 'sketch[ing] a tentative proposal' for a partition of South Africa into two new states, 'viable economically and politically'. He presented a map that showed the dividing borderline as follows: On the one hand a 'black' state composed of the bulk of the Transvaal, Natal, Lesotho and Swaziland […] On the other hand, there would be a 'white' republic consisting of the Orange Free State and the Cape Province […] the Transkei and perhaps the Ciskei could be detached from the Cape, thereby restoring the older historical boundaries between whites and Africans back to the Kei or Fish Rivers […] Conversely, the predominantly white area of the Transvaal […] (the Klerksdorp-Potchefstroom district) including Vereeniging would remain a part of the white republic (as would Pretoria but not Johannesburg). 126 Given the sovereignty over the Witwatersrand mining area, agricultural centres in the Transvaal, and industrial centres like Johannesburg, Durban, and East London, the 'African state would have a diversified economy'; this was a decisive difference to the above-mentioned plan made by Villiers Graaff in 1960. Tiryakian counted on the 'realism' of the 'whites' to accept their much-shrunken state: If the white population were to feel that a shrunken territory would be legitimated by black popular leaders […], if they felt there would be a place in the African sun for their grandchildren, then we suggest that pragmatic considerations would make them accept this difficult alternative to an Algeria-or Kenya-type all-out conflict. 127 In both new states, 'unrestricted adult suffrage would be a sine qua non for the international acceptance of partition'. Thus, in the Cape those called 'coloureds' were to be given back their vote; all racially discriminatory legislation like 'pass laws' was to be done away with. 'Relocation' for both 'black' and 'white' would have to be encouraged, but both groups were free to stay either as 'permanent citizens' or as 'expatriates on a temporary visa' in the 'black' or the 'whitecoloured' state. 128 Also, given South Africa's history of forced removals, 129 Tiryakian did not envision any sort of perfect or clear-cut division based on colour; 124. Van  the futility of which already Jabavu had stressed in 1928 with regard to many regions of South Africa ('the costs of buying [occupants] out of their possession would be fabulous'). Jabavu thus had concluded 'that territorial segregation on the model of Basutoland [a small and densely populated territory exclusively for blacks who were expected to work for whites nearby across the 'border'] is an absolute impossibility in the Union'. 130 Viability, economic and political, was decisive for the maintenance of independence of both states after partition. The 'partition could be supervised by the United Nations with a period of five or ten years given for relocation.' Tiryakian did not believe in 'a last-ditch liberal argument' and talk about 'deep feeling of racial good will' as a basis for coexistence. This he considered 'wishful thinking' that had to face the reality of the 'damage done to race relations by past white oppression'. Therefore, upon his return from South Africa Tiryakian summarised his impressions of the 'urban African' as 'craving for emancipation, for being one's own boss in one's own country'. 131 These concerns 'for being one's own boss in one's own country' were also taken up in other studies that sought for 'a way out of the South African dilemma': Multistan (1974), by Paul N. Malherbe (b. 1927), was but one of several plans advanced in the 1970s 'for multiracial, bottom-up cooperation'. 132 At the outset he asked: 'Are there persons todaypolitically sophisticated personswho support apartheid because they believe it can succeed?' 133 Even before the Soweto uprising this was more than a rhetorical question and, in its sense of crisis and unavoidable change, far away from the brash confidence in the future of the apartheid order exhibited by Rhoodie and others barely five years earlier. Multistan was a plan for a unified area with a common roll irrespective of ethnicity (contrary to the Bantustans) that formed part of a South African federation composed of mainly 'white' and 'black states'. Malherbe was thus not advancing a sort of two-state solution but asked for smaller administrative units bound in a federal systemnot unlike the concept of a South African Federation promoted by Gatsha Mangosuthu Buthelezi (b. 1928), then leader of the KwaZulu territorial authority. 134 For Malherbe, KwaZulu (he still spoke of Zululand) was 'a Multistan Prototype' for which, to succeed politically and economically, it was however necessary to include the property of 'white land-owners', who were to retain their land under a common roll (evidently dominated by 'Zulu voters') and equal rights. 135 This way, as former liberal senator for Zululand, Edgar Brookes (1897Brookes ( -1979, summarised in a positive review, 'white residents can remain political sharers in Kwa Zulu without humiliation'. If the Kwa Zulu example succeeded, this would convert whites in other South African regions 'to the view that a black majority can rule whites without economic, political or personal disaster'. 136 Making international headlines: the maps of Blenck and Ropp (1976) Opposition parliamentarian Suzman called the political correspondents in Cape Town her 'most helpful allies'. In her memoirs she brought to mind 'foreign correspondents from overseas papers whose support gave me great encouragement in my more despairing moments'. The coverage of South African politics by New York Times journalist Joseph Lelyveld (b. 1937) was particularly relevant in this respect. 137 And the New York Times also played a major role in disseminating the idea of 'negotiated partition' of South Africa to an international audience. No less a journalistic authority than Cyrus L. Sulzberger (1912Sulzberger ( -1993, former lead foreign correspondent of the newspaper, pointed in 1977 to the 'negotiate[d] territorial partition' of South Africa. For Sulzberger this was a way of 'Eluding the Last Ditch', which encompassed, for him, the prospect of 'widespread war'and for this end he referred to an 'interesting' study by Jürgen Blenck and Klaus von der Ropp. 138 Both the geographer Blenck (1938Blenck ( -2016 and the lawyer von der Ropp (b. 1938), working for the think tank Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik, were rightfully characterised by Sulzberger as 'African specialist[s]'. 139 They had widely published on the current affairs of the continent and in 1976 had jointly published in the German foreign affairs review Aussenpolitik (Hamburg) a study on the partition of South Africa. 140 The following year the piece was translated into English and published in South Africa under the title 'Republic of South Africa: Is Partition a Solution?' 141 Over the following years von der Ropp continued to discuss these proposals, which were the most elaborated hitherto, not only in German and English publications but also in French, Dutch, Australian, and Mexican journals.
Based on the contemporary context (partitions from Ireland to Cyprus), two tenets were important for the argumentation at the outset: first, the notion of the historicity of plans for an equitable partition of South Africa, strengthened by the observation that the 'advocates of this type of solution have been recently been speaking out more frequently'; 142 second, the assumption of irreconcilably opposing views, animosity, mutual fear, and conflict of interests of white and black South Africans. Already three years earlier von der Ropp had quoted a statement that Anglican Bishop Gonville ffrench-Beytagh (1913-1991), expelled from South Africa for subversive activity against the state, had declared in Bonn, West-Germany: 'an integrated society can only be realized in heaven, not in South Africa.' 143 Consequently, Blenck and von der Ropp described the partition of South Africa as the only alternative '[i]f a racially integrated society were to remain an illusion'. 144 Their proposal for partition, illustrated by two often reprinted maps, contained the following elements: South Africa is to be partitioned into two states ('Black' in the east, 'White, Coloured and Indian' in the west) along a border that runs from Sishen over Kimberley and Bloemfontein to Port Elisabeth. In both states the one man, one vote principle is to apply. This border takes into account historical and economic factors that aim at fairness and equal development potential in order to ensure the viability and independence of both states. The eastern, 'Black' state would have at its disposal over about 50 per cent of the territory of South Africa with 70 per cent of the total population and about 75 per cent of the gross national product, including, contrary to Tiryakian's plan, all goldmines and the Johannesburg/Pretoria industrial centre. Each state would have three major port cities. Major population movements were foreseen, 'in which contrary to separation policy until now White and Asian Africans would be most affected. In all some 4.6 million were to be resettled.' Given these staggering numbers, the authors emphasised that this partition 'would only represent a viable solution if it remains the only alternative to years of bloodshed'. In order to assure the White minority of the durability of this solution, the West was to guarantee the existence of a smaller, western state by offering membership in the Western defence community. Both, the western and the eastern South African state, were to be provided with extensive Western economic aid, 'comparable to the Marshall Plan'. 145 Already in 1976 this proposal drew considerable attention from South African and German newspapersthe Soweto Uprising and the independence of neighbouring Angola and Mozambique caused an upsurge in international awareness of the urgency to find alternatives to apartheid acceptable to both parties. As historian Jamie Miller remarks: 'These years  marked […] the crossroad for the apartheid order.' 146 Where Sulzberger soberly noted, '[s]uch a surgical operation would be cruel', others expressed their 'doubts' and 'pessimism concerning the readiness' of the parties to the conflict to divide 'their country'. 147 Given the rejection by the NP government of the one man, one vote principle and the Soweto uprising, it even seemed possible that partition would only be executed once open war had broken out and the 'whites' were forced to take refuge in the southern Capeland, thus making partition a fallback plan and a reality only after bloodshed, as in most similar cases throughout the twentieth century. 148 A former German ambassador to South Africa called partition a 'radical solution out of desperation'. 149 Ten years earlier, Tiryakian had already admitted apodictically that 'partition goes counter to liberal ideas of integration'. 150 And a later analyst noted, also with reference to the unclear solution of intergroup conflicts between Whites, Indians, and Coloureds: 'Partition cannot be ruled out, but it is not a promising idea.' 151 In the following years, other proposals were tabled according to which, for example, 'the entire present appearance of the Republic of South Africa will be radically changed by manipulation of internal borders' and 'adjustments to few external frontiers'. However, such attempts, arguing with 'natural regions' and complaining about 'arbitrary geopolical borders', appeared more like a benign Bantustan policy, hoping to give away these 'black states' by 'incorporating' them with Lesotho or Botswana ('amalgamation'), whilst still imagining the largest parts of South Africa as 'White country'. 152 Yet, considering South Africa's worsening political and human rights situation in the late 1970s, European politicians became more involved in debates about concrete alternatives to apartheid. In Germany, for example, the Social Democrat Egon Bahr (1922Bahr ( -2015, until 1976 minister of economic cooperation and an éminence grise of German politics, took a special interest in southern Africa. In a newspaper interview in July 1977, he spoke not only about the future of Namibia but also about South Africa. The interview clearly showed how the idea of 'negotiated partition' of South Africa had reached beyond academic circles. Rejecting for South Africa the 'simple propagation of the "one man, one vote" principle', Bahr emphasised the necessity to find a settlement that links the coexistence of Black and White with the security of the rights of both races. The 'easiest' arrangement of such problems in world history was partitioning. This cannot work in South Africa. Thus, we need a hitherto unknown model of equitable cohabitation with a special protection for minorities. 153 In South Africa, then leader of the Progressive Federal Party van Zyl Slabbert, in his sober assessment of South Africa's Options (1979), took note of Blenck and Ropp's 'radical and equitable suggestion' and considered it 'morally quite defensible'. Yet he cautioned that 'quite likely the line [of partition] will be drawn where the battle has ended'. 154 This dystopian consideration of the partition option was, however, not the end of the discussion. In 1980 the economist Gavin Maasdorp (b. 1937) collected several of the 'forms of partition' discussed so far, including those that clearly fell within the orbit of apartheid measures, like the infamous Eiselen line of 1955. 155 From the late 1970s even the NP government launched studies into potential constitutional reforms for South Africa that included a geographical reordering of power. Prime Minister P. W. Botha , in his Twelve-Point Plan of 1979, set as a policy objective: (3) The creation by the Black nations of constitutional structures giving them the greatest possible degree of self-government within states which are consolidated as far as possible. We believe that part of the right to self-determination of these Black states is to allow them to grow towards independence according to their own judgement. 156 In the words of political scientist Deon Geldenhuys (b. 1950), the plan 'represent [ed] the lowest common denominator' within the NP. However, this party position on the future of the 'homelands' was not only a mere continuation of the policy since the 1960sand thus a far cry from the above-quoted ideas about 'negotiated partition' put forward by academics and journalists (thus indicating the limited impact of these authors)but 'international opinion [also] rejects the balkanisation of South Africa into separate black homelands and the granting of independence to them.' 157 Whereas Prime Minister Botha rejected notions of 'negotiated partition' and remained intransigent towards a federal or consociational future of South Africa, others in his party, namely Piet Koornhof , Minister of as the discussion above has shown. What has become equally clear is that the meaning of 'partition' of South Africa remained disputed amongst authors and that it changed over time. To give one last example, the editor of Die Transvaaler, G.D. Scholtz )an ardent nationalist hagiographer of Afrikaner leaders who was despised by professional university historiansproposed his own definition of 'partition' because of his opposition to the term 'apartheid', stylising in the 1960s and 1970s '"partition" to be the seminal concept of Afrikaner political thought'. 165 Be this as it may, others thought of 'partition' as a political solution to a moral, social, and economic catastrophe that, under the term 'apartheid', had been turned into a 'hegemonic ideology' which 'had achieved broad support in white society'. 166 Considering that there were Afrikaner voices heard in the discussion about 'partition', it is to be noted that these critical voices attest to the heterogeneity of the Afrikaner community, parts of which expressed their 'own discomfort with apartheid'. 167 Whereas authors opposed to partition plans tried to disqualify any thought about dividing the country in two by claiming that it was the architects of apartheid who had 'original partition aims' once the Bantustans were economically self-sufficient and could accommodate all Africans, 168 the maps produced by researchers giving the greater part of national wealth, including the Rand, to black Africans, indicate that 'partition' could be defined very differently. Evidently, besides the model of two independent states, others were discussed as future alternatives to apartheid; there was, as Geldenhuys put it, 'a range of scenarios', from dismemberment (including 'radical territorial partition') to reintegration (of South Africa as a 'unitary state'). 169 Given this plethora of suggested options and 'plan[s] for the future', an American scholar characterised South Africa as a 'real graveyard of social science prophecies'. 170 Counter-factual questions about the prospects of a negotiated partition of South Africa becoming a reality at different times need not be discussed here. However, where did the thinking about partition come from? Two considerationsone domestic and one on foreign policyare particularly