How can the arts contribute to freedom of expression?
The programme for the PEN World Voices Festival taking place in New  York at this time states that a key mission of the Festival “is to encourage  people to speak out against censorship and condemn the suppression of freedom of  expression everywhere”. The three signatories to this introduction – Laszlo  Jakab Orsos, the Director of the Festival; Salman Rushdie, the chairperson of  the festival steering committee and K. Anthony Appiah, the President of the PEN  American Centre that hosts the Festival - further state “we firmly believe in  literature as a key weapon in fighting this battle.”
South Africa  celebrates 17 years of democracy this week, 17 years of the abolition of  censorship boards, 17 years of freedom of expression guaranteed in the country’s  Constitution which states: “everyone has the right to freedom of expression  which includes a. freedom of the press and other media b. freedom to receive and  impact information or ideas c. freedom of artistic creativity and d. academic  freedom and freedom of scientific research.”
As part of the PEN Festival,  an excerpt of my play Green Man Flashing was staged as a reading at the Martin  E. Segal Theatre and was followed by a discussion.
The play is set six  weeks before South Africa’s second elections in 1999. Gabby Anderson, a one-time  political activist now working in government, alleges she has been raped by her  boss, a high-profile government minister with an impeccable anti-apartheid  struggle record and who plays a key role in quelling violence between the  African National Congress (ANC) and the Inkatha Freedom Party in his native  KwaZulu Natal. If the allegations go public, it could hurt the ruling party in  the elections, lead to a high number of deaths in election-related violence and  compromise international investment. The ANC sends a two-person delegation to  Anderson to convince her not to go through with the charges.
Rather than  the stark us-them, black-white, goodies and baddies binary oppositions of much  of the theatre staged in the apartheid era, Green Man Flashing seeks to explore  some of the moral contradictions, the racial ironies and the political  complexities of a society in transition. It juxtaposes individual human rights  against the greater good (albeit as defined by those in power) and the pandemic  of gender violence against political violence, challenging the audience to think  about their moral positions in a society struggling with political and moral  ambivalences.
When the play was first produced in 2004 with subsequent  seasons in 2005 (some time before Jacob Zuma - now South Africa's president  - was charged with rape), I placed books in the foyers of the theatres so that  audience members could articulate their responses to the play. The most  recurring – and for me, disturbing – comment was that this was a “brave play”,  “a courageous work”, the implication being that dealing with such themes in  post-apartheid South Africa was somehow considered to be daring, edgy and even  dangerous.
Why would this be the case, I wondered, when we were ten years  into our democracy; when, in the apartheid era, some of us were arrested for  staging a piece of street theatre that constituted “an illegal gathering”,  others had their works banned and still others had been detained without trial  for challenging the apartheid state through their artistic creativity. Why  should writers be considered “brave” in exercising freedom of creative  expression under a democratically elected government that had sworn to uphold a  Constitution guaranteeing human rights?
At that time of course, Thabo  Mbeki was president of the country and it was a period when the ruling party was  very sensitive to any kind of criticism, where those who dared to criticise – no  matter how legitimate the criticism - were dismissed as racists (or  ultra-leftists if they were not white), as people who simply could not accept a  black government. It was a time when self-censorship was rife.
Often,  international focus is on those countries where conditions are so repressive  that we marvel at and celebrate those artists and writers who challenge the  status quo at great financial, personal and even physical costs to themselves.  This is as it should be. But sometimes, even within democratic countries, there  is a need for writers, artists and musicians to speak truth to power, to  challenge new political dogmas, to provide a voice for those on the underside of  history. 
Democracies are generally works-in-progress and there will  always be attempts to restrict freedom of expression whether through overt  political censorship, withdrawal of economic resources, intimidation or other  means by political authorities or those who occupy positions of leadership in  some institution, community or cause. 
While the general view is that the  arts require conditions for freedom of expression, literature, theatre, music,  film, visual arts, etc are also means for creating and expanding such conditions  where they do not exist or are under threat. The best way to ensure artistic  freedom may simply be to practice it. 
Mike van Graan
April 29, 2011
NOTES 
1. The views expressed  in this column are entirely those of the writer and are not necessarily  representative of any of the organisations in which he is involved. 
2. This  column may be forwarded by the recipient to any other interested party, and may  be reproduced by any publication or website at no charge, provided that writer  is acknowledged.
3. To engage with the content of this column or to provide  feedback, go to
www.mikevangraan.wordpress.com
Mike van Graan is the  Secretary General of Arterial Network, a continent-wide network of artists,  activists and creative enterprises active in the African creative sector and its  contribution to development, human rights and democracy on the continent. He is  also the Executive Director of the African Arts Institute (AFAI), a South  African NGO based in Cape Town that harnesses local expertise, resources and  markets in the service of Africa’s creative sector. He is considered to be one  of his country’s leading contemporary playwrights.
For further  information, see
www.africanartsinstitute.org.za and
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