Violence And Relationship In Sindiwe Magona's Mother To Mother

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Mother to Mother
The novel Mother to Mother created a controversy that brought to light the horrors of apartheid. The murder of Amy Biehl took place near the author’s residence, easily could have been her son involved. Sindiwe Magona describes a society suffering from violence and lack of education. Mandisi, mother of Mxolisi is directing a huge part of the blame for her son’s actions, on a society that did not give him many choices in life. She is not condoning her son’s actions for taking part in the murder of this young American woman but describing the life they must endure in a society that is under apartheid. She is implying that they as parents, the government, and society, have failed this generation.
This generation is angry, bitter, …show more content…

There was no welfare assistance program in place, and the only services provided were services that protected the white community. The tuberculosis clinic in Guguletu provided the necessary medicine free of charge to all of its residents. Not out of concern for the population that lived there, but because the white employers did not want one of their servants bringing this disease to their home. “The Boers are scared we will give it to them. Since our mothers work in their houses, if we all get TB, then they will get it too” (Magona 16). A decent welfare system would have avoided so many confrontations and provided some relief to an overburdened society. Magona describes through the eyes of Mandisi how congested Guguletu is. “A town filled with sad small houses that lean on each other for support. Streets filled with debris, pools of stagnant water infested with mosquitoes, and flies. From morning until night, ragged clothed children play in it” (Magona 27). What a dismal picture of daily existence in Guguletu. “South Africa is an upper-middle income country, but is a country of stark contrasts. The extreme inequality evident in South Africa means that one sees destitution, hunger and overcrowding side-by-side with affluence” (Woolard

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