OPINION
Engaging ‘Awake SA’ on white privilege
Nic Haussamer - Martin van Staden |
16 February 2016
Nic Haussamer and Martin van Staden respond to Bruce Muller's initiative

*Open and Honest: Engaging ‘Awake SA’ on White Privilege*

Last week, Bruce Muller, a branding agent, founded an initiative called
‘Awake SA’, a website <http://awakesa.co.za/> and Facebook community
<http://www.facebook.com/Awake-SA-1048243205226516/> dedicated to ‘waking
up’ white South Africans to their privilege. According to a *News24* article
<http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/time-for-an-education-on-white-privilege-awakesa-20160204>,
Muller founded the project in response to recent events in South African
society, amongst which the Penny Sparrow-Chris Hart-Gareth Cliff fiasco is,
apparently, included. The vehicle for this ‘waking up’ is a ‘Pledge’ in
which white South Africans ‘acknowledge’ their privilege, dedicate
themselves to fighting racism, and ‘giving back’ to the community.

We, the authors, are writing this article in response to what Awake SA
seeks to do, and what they have published since their establishment.
Inspired by their calls for open and honest engagement, we will address
what they regard to be one of South Africa’s biggest problems, referring
specifically to their arguments, and also to those forwarded by critical
race theorists in general.

*An Open and Honest Discussion*

Calls for open and honest engagement on the topic of race and identity, and
the role it plays within the South African context, have been widespread
since the end of the Apartheid era. However, it is often forgotten, or
overlooked, that race and identity have been critically interrogated during
the lifespan of the former regime. Entities such as the Institute of Race
Relations and the then-Progressive Federal Party did not come to the
conclusion that all individual South Africans, regardless of race or
ethnicity, should be treated equally in the face of just law, on a whim.
The black consciousness movement was also founded during the height of the
National Party’s power. It is therefore important, going forward, for us to
acknowledge that race has been discussed and hotly debated (both
constructively and destructively) within South African civil society.

Awake SA’s goal of making South Africans more politically-conscious is
laudable; this objective is largely shared by the *Rational Standard*.
Moreover, issues of race can be significant, and should be explored in an
open and honest manner - as they have been before.

Awake SA’s manner of doing things, however, seems backwards: taking the
‘Pledge’, as the website suggests, is a pre-requisite for joining their
community and learning more about white privilege. This is problematic for
any initiative or project which aims to educate and facilitate
introspection, since it appears to pre-emptively define the boundaries (and
perhaps, conclusions) of thought and opinion, rather than allow exploration
and independent learning.

It is important to consider how Awake SA intends to facilitate an open and
honest discussion around white privilege if, from the outset, it requires
engaging whites to acknowledge their white privilege. If the participants
acknowledge their privilege and declare their intention to help with the
combating of racism and the advancing of social justice, is the exercise
not futile?

Indeed, it appears as if Awake SA simply seeks to gather pledges. Any
pledger who rejects the notion of white privilege after having ‘signed up’
and internalised the underlying theory advanced by Awake SA, exposes
himself to accusations of hypocrisy. This, ostensibly at least, appears to
negate the idea that these discussions will be ‘open’ and ‘honest’.

This raises an important question: to what extent will dissenting views (if
at all) be tolerated? Dissenting viewpoints are important in discussion and
education - which Awake SA seeks to facilitate - and present a healthy
opportunity for both sides of a debate to strengthen their arguments.

Before Awake SA continues in its mission, we recommend it considers the
following
<https://1philosophicallyspeaking.wordpress.com/2014/09/19/the-impoverished-notion-of-white-privilege/>
statement
made by an unnamed student of philosophy:

“It is the view that *it is impossible to be incorrect about the reality of
‘white privilege’ or one’s attribution of it to particular cases*. Anyone
who disbelieves in it does not see the issue clearly enough, or cynically
benefits from it, or endorses white privilege.

Conceiving of ‘white privilege’ in this way renders the position of the
believer in ‘white privilege’ *unfalsifiable*. Such is the sign of an
impoverished notion. Any seemingly falsifying evidence against ‘white
privilege’ can be dismissed out of hand.”

Are we allowed to come to the conclusion that white privilege does not
exist? Or may we perhaps conclude that white privilege is not a problem?
Can we say either of these things without being considered, as a default
position, ignorant or malicious? If Awake SA’s answer is ‘yes’, then it is
clear that it is committed to an honest discussion on the topic. If the
answer is ‘no’, then Awake SA has predetermined the outcome of its
initiative, which has the effect that it is not a ‘discussion’ or an
‘engagement’, but rather a lecture.

*The Dominant Narrative: the media and intellectuals*

This section of our argument will not touch directly upon anything that
Awake SA is claiming. Instead, we believe this is relevant to the broader
context of the ‘social justice’ community to which Awake SA ostensibly
belongs.

Advocates of social justice have claimed, quite consistently, that the
South African press media act as defenders of the *status quo*, which is
likely considered to be the system of ‘white supremacy’. A basic
understanding of Marxian theory would reveal the parallels: white supremacy
is the ‘base’, and the media is part of the ‘superstructure’ which supports
the base. Part of this superstructure, of course, is the business
community, the Democratic Alliance, AfriForum, the court system, and
according to some, even the African National Congress government.


*In Marxian theory and its derivatives, society comprises a 'base' and a
'superstructure'. In terms of racial power relations, this composition is
thought to be as shown in the diagram above.*

However, we have discovered quite the opposite to be true. Awake SA’s
establishment was reported in *News24* within a week of its founding.
*News24*, as we know, is a subsidiary of Naspers - a company often accused
of being a financial beneficiary of Apartheid. It has been referred to as
an Afrikaner megacorporation.

Nonetheless, here is a guardian of white Afrikaner monopoly capital, giving
good press to an initiative which seeks to expose the very foundation it
wants to protect! And, certainly, this is not a once-off occurrence: *News24
Voices *has been the host to many a social justice advocate’s essay, and
these have, in fact, come to dominate the opinion-editorial columns of most
of the South African press media.

Building on the dominance of the social justice narrative in the press
media is its widespread support in intellectual circles. This is not
necessarily limited to academics at public universities, but includes civic
‘thought leaders’ and community activists, such as the founders of Awake
SA. We are of the opinion that this school of thought is certainly not
marginalized, and represents the intellectual *status quo*.

Indeed, Awake SA’s initiative is predicated on the idea that social
conflict along racial lines is at a zenith. This, too, is indicative of the
Marxian roots of Awake SA’s underlying point of departure. ‘Class conflict’
is a central theory in Marx and Engels’ works, and purportedly exists on a
perpetual basis between socio-economic classes. It is accepted that this
‘conflict’ has the potential to turn violent.

Neither of these scholars pointed to a tangible example of what was
described in the class conflict conception, though, and there has also not
been such an instance since their death. An entire philosophical movement,
known as the Frankfurt School (‘Critical Theory’), was established to
examine and explain *why* this conflict never erupted.

Nonetheless, intellectuals and civil society in South Africa have
transposed this notion of class conflict onto the race debate, and have
long since accepted its premises. Clearly, Awake SA is of the opinion that
a state of ‘social conflict’ exists between white and black South Africans.
The Institute of Race Relations reported earlier this year that the
majority of South Africans, of all races, believe that race relations have
improved since the end of the Apartheid era.

On the ground, in schools, in friend circles and on the street, there is no
‘social conflict’. The ‘conflict’ exists in statistics based on false
premises, in academic studies, and only according to certain academic
theories. Indeed, when Oxfam reported recently that a very small minority
of the world’s population owned the majority of the world’s wealth, no
riots or outrage occurred among the common man, but only among those with
an academic interest in it. While inequality may present various issues,
none of them are based in ‘conflict’, or in race.

Marx paradoxically spoke about the inevitability of class conflict and
struggle, while insisting that it was the role of intellectuals to create
the ‘consciousness’ needed to bring about the opposition. Those
intellectuals who would paint race relations in South Africa as being
significantly worse than they are, run the risk of fulfilling that role -
thereby manufacturing the conflict themselves.

*Conclusion*

We have not gone to great lengths to address Awake SA’s specific arguments
related to white privilege in this article. However, this is intentional.
This piece stands to set the tone for the open and honest debate we hope to
have with initiatives such as Awake SA and its partners on the concept of
white privilege.

We have addressed two central points we believe must be stated at the
outset of the engagement: the premise of ‘open and honest’ discussion, and
the fact that we do not engage from a dominant and widely-supported
perspective. We believe we offer an alternative narrative to that which
currently dominates. One thing is for certain: the debate around white
privilege is, contrary to popular opinion, far from settled.

*Haussamer is an actuarial science student at the University of Cape Town,
and Van Staden is a law student at the University of Pretoria.*

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