When Nelson Mandela was inaugurated as the first black president of South Africa on May 10, 1994, the world watched with awe as the brutal system of racial segregation known as apartheid seemed to finally crumble. But if you were to walk 20 minutes east of South Africa's capital Pretoria, past a high fence, you'll find a secluded, 8.6km² community where every one of its 1500 residents is white. Founded in 1990, the secretive enclave of Kleinfontein is manned by white security guards and presents itself as a counter-model to the challenges facing the democratic South Africa, plagued by notoriously...