SAIRR Today: Will we ever be able to live with each other? - 23 May 2008
South Africa is reeling from the xenophobic attacks that continue to rage across the country. Far from dying down, these violent incidents seem to be spreading and intensifying. These events raise important questions about our society, and paint a very gloomy picture of our national psyche.
The vast majority of South African history is one of division, both
cultural and racial, and it seems that that history is shaping the
events of today. Blacks fought whites, Zulus fought Xhosas, Boers
fought the English. On every level, both between and within every
cultural grouping, South Africans have been taught to fight each other
by our fathers and their fathers before them. The xenophobic attacks
that have thrown our country into turmoil serve as a bitter reminder
that our history of inter-racial and inter-cultural conflict continues
to harm our nation to this day.
For some years there have been widespread protests in poor communities
over service delivery. To many in these communities, it has
increasingly felt as if their pleas have fallen on deaf ears, and that
the government will never take notice of their suffering. Policy
failures and lack of communication from the government have allowed
these grievances to fester, but none of these frustrations can find an
outlet when dealing with the highest bureaucracy in the land.
Foreigners, however, are close at hand. They are an easy target, they
are offered only minimal protection in our legal system, and, best of
all, they are easy to blame and even easier to punish.
This culture of blame and retribution can only lead to social and
economic disaster, and it has done so time and again throughout Africa
and indeed the world. The problem is compounded by the fact that blame
can indeed be apportioned for the current circumstances of the poor and
downtrodden in South Africa. We can blame generations of colonialism,
apartheid, racial discrimination and institutionalised injustice. But
these causes cannot be punished. They cannot be reprimanded or altered,
and the results remain long after the perpetrators have gone to their
graves. There is little satisfaction to be gained by condemning our
past, but it should not escape our notice that continued inter-cultural
hatred condemns our future as well.
Our government has done little to foster inter-cultural forgiveness and
understanding, for the thrust of government policy implies that
inter-cultural or inter-racial competition is at the very heart of
South African life. Our policy-makers are determined to redistribute
land from white farmers to black ones, in business our hiring policies
are structured on explicitly racial grounds, and the highest levels of
our economy are governed by black economic empowerment and similar
race-based laws. The policy environment is one that accepts the fallacy
that there are limited resources, and that cultures and races need to
compete for these resources. In South Africa we have an environment
where the vast majority of our resources remain untapped and
unutilised. We have a workforce that is large and underemployed, but we
have failed to train them. We have well established infrastructure that
is sufficient only for some, but we insist on redistributing ownership
of that insufficiency rather than building more capacity. We have a
nation that is desperate to heal the wounds that have been inflicted on
us for generations, but we have compounded the injury by framing all of
our arguments in the terms of the oppressors. We are a nation divided
and dividing, as factions replace families and foreigners replace
friends.
We have been taught to blame one another. We fail to see each other as
people, rather we find it easier to dehumanise one another and put each
other into categories of culpability. Our neighbours are not people;
they are part of a monolithic faceless group that is the source of all
our woes. We are not maiming and burning human beings, we are punishing
perpetrators. We are administering justice.
The irony is that race and culture are only illusions. They serve as
proxies for social status and economic power. They are arbitrary
groupings that we assign to ourselves and to others so that we can
simultaneously assign value. For a racist white person, all the
negative aspects in our country can be assigned to the blacks. For a
xenophobic black person it will be foreigners that are to blame for
social ills. It is a quick and easy way of saying who is bad or good,
since those values are seen to depend not on an individual but on group
membership.
History has taught us the danger of these methods of thought, and the
current violence sweeping parts of the country serves as a powerful
example of it. Perhaps one day, South Africans will discover that our
strength flows from our unity and our humanity, not from the colour of
our skins or the languages we speak. It is with infinite sadness that
we must acknowledge that that day is not today.
- Marco MacFarlane







