Are we betraying our Children?
As we pass through another cycle of remembering our
heritage, it would appear as if now is as good a time as any, to lance a few
pus-filled cysts that continue to hinder the emergence of a discourse or
discourses, which could help to heal the ailing body which we today call South
Africa.
Race, and the ever elusive national question, the ebullient idea
of the rainbow nation, appear to be slowly receding into the back alleys of
history, to lurk there in the shadows, and to haunt us, like the unfulfilled
promise of a lover.
In its place, growing stronger by the day and being fed with
more and more urgency, stands a familiar shape of a dark history we had thought
was forever banished…..”never and never again”, echoes, Madiba`s words.
Like a mirror image, whose reflection we cannot escape, the
deep and pervasive logic of race, has and continues to deeply imbue our lived
realities in ways that mimics the logic, reactions and ideology of the past.
This is not to say that all those who seek to find solace in
logics of race are necessarily avaricious opportunists who have historically sort
to use race as a ticket to the member’s only banquet.
To the contrary. There is a growing generation of young people, who have neither lived through the apartheid era and who have despairingly not tasted the fruits of the promise of a Post-Apartheid South Africa.
In the absence of both the promise and the social, educational
and experiential grounding required to emerge from the dark debilitating
shadows of what can be colloquially called the non-VIP section, the youth of
our townships are creating their own cultures and claiming their own spaces
against the creeping perceptions of marginalisation and its concomitant, hopelessness.
Some are fighting back by engaging in crime and other peripheral
economic activities, others through education and yet others though civic and
popular actions. But these livelihood and survival strategies are also deeply
impacted by social discourses including economic, ideological and philosophical
views as well as traditional and cultural norms and standards.
Across South African townships, youth are grappling with
what might loosely be termed their own struggle for freedom. Encased in old and
stagnant notions of the present, nurtured on often ill-informed versions of the
past, the youth of the township ghettos are rebelling in a myriad of ways in
order to redefine their futures.
In the midst of our silence, our youth have only heard the growing
murmur, nay raucous cacophony, of chauvinistic ethno tribal embraces and the fetishistic
and pious clinging to race as the definer of our future.
Never and never again, we said, we wrote non-racialism into
our constitution, and yet we remained silent when step by step, inch by inch we
reaffirmed and re-cemented the place of race in our society. So it should be no
surprise to us when our youth return to race as the touch stone of their lived
reality.
This visceral return of race has become increasingly apparent in society at large, but has become increasingly tense among the previously colonised. A deep echo is rumbling along the fault lines of ethno-racial categorisation in South Africa.
This can be felt in every corner of the country, from the deep rural areas of Venda to the lush green lands of Kwazulu-Natal, the windy hills of the Eastern Cape and even to the Western Cape, where 350 years of colonialism has “perfected” racial domination.
So the question begs. Have we regressed in terms of putting
in place the long term building blocks for a future non-racial South Africa?
It is perfectly rational to accept that we cannot expect to
have moved much considering that the time passed since the change of government
amounts to only a fraction of the time spent setting up the multi layered and systemic
structures which formed the foundation for racial logic and subjectivity.
Indeed, as individuals and as communities, we are never static, but develop over time. We are not born racist but we are taught to be racist. Race is fed to us from early on in our development, and the relenting machinery which reinforces race never seems to stop turning.
If we ever hope to escape the duplicity of mirror images and
familiar dark shadows, then we must ensure that we stop feeding our body politic
and society with race at every turn and in every alleyway.
Race in its final definition rests on the same ideological foundations as those of the AWB and the National Party. It is about enclosure and separation.
Race in its final definition rests on the same ideological foundations as those of the AWB and the National Party. It is about enclosure and separation.
During the early years of the Post –Apartheid buzz, among the
previously-colonised, there was in my experience, and in hindsight, a much more
relaxed and accepting culture that seemed to be on the ascendency.
The hope of a non-racial future appeared, through the misty haze of relief and euphoria, as a distinct possibility in the future.
The hope of a non-racial future appeared, through the misty haze of relief and euphoria, as a distinct possibility in the future.
Today, I sense a concern, if not glaringly lucid realisations,
among some colleagues and friends who are all suddenly noticing the increasing marginalisation,
of particularly “coloureds”, in particularly government circles but also in workplaces
in general, including among civil society sectors and especially among the
youth, the generation that would be the pioneers of a non-racial society.
My point in this article, is not to unpack whether this growing
perception is justifiable or not, but rather to point to the fact, that with
unerring consistency, most people who cohere to some form of racial or tribal
identity did not suggest that the problem of marginalisation they perceived or
lived is most likely the same for all youth who live marginal lives on the
outskirts of middle class utopia.
Their first port of call in finding answers
to their predicament was race. I have also found that this is true for most
people who cohere to some form of racial identity. The tendency towards blaming
race for all our problems or as the central pivot around which the world
revolves, is common among those who cohere to a racial or ethnic identity.
Yet to acknowledge that race impacts on us whether we like
it or not, is a critical part of realising that in the absence of a collective
Mea culpa among those who were previously colonised, the growing reality of marginalised
communities retreating into racial laagers in which the “Other” is more often
than not an enemy and not a friend and where group identity becomes a survival
imperative, is slowly emerging as our unchanged reality.
It is possibly only when we collectively accept that:
the obsessive and systemic manner in which our Parliament has been building structures aimed at reinforcing ethnic and racial structures of governance,
while promoting ethnic and racial affirmations in our regulations
and which are all underpinned by an exclusionary, chauvinistic and hierarchical notion of “Blacks in general and Africans in particular”.
Only when we accept that it is of our collective making and encouraged by our collective silence, in the face a slow creep return to the Apartheid logic of difference seperation and conflict.
Only when we have accepted our own complicity in reincarnating apartheid`s tools, could we finally hope to realign our Titanic towards a non-racial future.
the obsessive and systemic manner in which our Parliament has been building structures aimed at reinforcing ethnic and racial structures of governance,
while promoting ethnic and racial affirmations in our regulations
and which are all underpinned by an exclusionary, chauvinistic and hierarchical notion of “Blacks in general and Africans in particular”.
Only when we accept that it is of our collective making and encouraged by our collective silence, in the face a slow creep return to the Apartheid logic of difference seperation and conflict.
Only when we have accepted our own complicity in reincarnating apartheid`s tools, could we finally hope to realign our Titanic towards a non-racial future.
It is perhaps Audrey Lorde who bests sums up our challenge:
“For the master’s tools will
never dismantle the master’s house. They may allow us to temporarily beat him
at his own game, but they will never enable us to bring about genuine change.
Racism and homophobia are real conditions of all our lives in this place and
time. I urge each one of us here to reach down into that deep place of
knowledge inside herself and touch that terror and loathing of any difference
that lives here. See whose face it wears. Then the personal as the political
can begin to illuminate all our choices.”

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