Come on, South Africa, let's build that non-racial nation

 

Precondition is unity of purpose and action by the people

 

 

Mac Maharaj, The Star, Johannesburg, 14 January 2016

 

On Sunday the Johannesburg City Hall overflowed with more than 3 000
mourners who had come to bid farewell to a figure in South African history
who represented the antithesis of the recent outbursts of racism in our
society.

 

Indres Naidoo, who died at the age of 79, was being given an official
provincial funeral and the crowd in the hall reflected the non-racial nation
he'd fought for all his life: young and old, across the gender and race
spectrum. 

 

In a week when race forced itself on the nation's attention, when South
Africa seemed to awaken from 20 years of pretending that race had been
consigned to history's dustbin and when its persistence evoked revulsion and
condemnation, the moment of Indres's funeral was something that we all
needed to share.

 

It was an event that ought to have been embraced enthusiastically, not only
as an antidote and counterweight to the racist conduct that drew revulsion
and provoked deep-seated anger among those who have been at the receiving
end of white supremacy and those who abhor racism. Yet it received scant
coverage in our media.

 

When his passing became public, The Star urged that his death "affords us
all a moment to pause and reflect". 

 



 

Mac Maharaj and Indres Naidoo in the Morning Star newspaper building,
London, 1977

 

Such reflection should be aided by facts and events on the ground. The
celebration of Indres's life demonstrates how struggle activism and the
pursuit of democracy, non-racialism and non-sexism is part of the DNA of the
Naidoo and Pillay families who draw their lineage from Thambi and Veeramal
Naidoo, colleagues of Mohandas Gandhi.

 

Why, then, did the moment fail to find attention in the media?

 

Aubrey Matshiqi, in a different context, invokes the image of "parallel
universes" where there are "attempts by some to dust away the sins of the
past with the sins of the present".

 

All of us, not just the politicians, have a duty to help our nation break
out of these "parallel universes". 

 

The funeral of Indres Naidoo was one such moment. Those who failed to convey
this moment deprived the public of the opportunity to share a moment in
history that encapsulated South Africa's march to non-racialism, non-sexism
and democracy. Those who were not at the funeral missed out badly.

 

Wishful thinking

 

In the introduction to Reflections in Prison (2001), I wrote: "There are
those who seem to believe that the end of apartheid meant the end of racism.
Perhaps our society had to pass through the euphoria generated by the first
democratic election to be able to grapple with the need to deracialise our
society."

 

That hope of 15 years ago was wishful thinking on my part.

 

Recent events have shown we are far from the goal of deracialising our
economy and society, let alone changing the patterns of behaviour nurtured
by white supremacy and racism.

 

Are we poised to break out of the denialism that characterised
post-apartheid SA?

 

Fikile Ntsikeleko-Moya, in the Cape Times of January 6, 2016, recounts that
"Penny Sparrow and her racist comment did not emerge from a vacuum. They are
the inevitable outcome of a racist society that would not confront the
reality of being racist".

 

The past few days have shown that there is an overwhelming desire to reject
racism; they have also shown that there are things happening, small things
like the emergence of #nobodyisborn racist, to which almost 100 parents have
responded with pictures and comments showing their children playing with
children of other races, and groups that have sprung up in Cape Town,
KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng have gathered 65 000 members already.

 

On Monday in Scottburgh, KwaZulu-Natal, about 300 people drawn from across
the colour line staged a peaceful march against racism. (Scottburgh is where
Penny Sparrow hails from.) Is it not time that our media went out of their
way to be partners in the project of the making of the nation?

 

Tell it like it is

 

Just as the ugly manifestations need to be subject to the harsh glare of the
scorching sunlight, so too should the public be made aware of events that
celebrate our unity in diversity. This is not a call for the media to serve
a party political agenda, but for the fourth estate to be a partner in
realising a national imperative. Discerning the significance of events and
sharing the funeral of Indres with the public is to bring attention to the
features that were part of the event - a matter of telling it like it is.

 

And it is critical that the story of where we come from as a people, the
journey we have travelled in evolving as a South African nation, is embedded
in the consciousness of all South Africans. There can be no South African
nation unless such a polity is stripped of every vestige of racism and
sexism.

 

1910 produced a schizophrenic nation, a divided nation in which even the
ruling white community was at war with itself. 1994 laid the foundations for
us to build a united nation where our diverse languages, cultures, religions
and colours become the warp and weave of the wondrous tapestry of a people
at peace with themselves.

 

There is unease about the pace and quality of change that has happened over
the past two decades. This is the time for the uncompromising spirit that
drove us to defeat apartheid to combine with the realism born of experience
and the restlessness of youth to realise the promise we made to ourselves in
1994. 

 

The precondition, as demonstrated by Indres's life, is the unity of purpose
and action by the people.

 

.    Mac Maharaj is an ANC and Umkhonto we Sizwe veteran

 

 

Also in the Cape Times at:
http://www.iol.co.za/capetimes/break-out-of-parallel-universes-1970568

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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