There is no doubt that the recent social media posts by white supremacists referring to black people as animals and the uneducated, dirty masses are mere symptoms of an entrenched phenomenon of racism.
Anti-black racism has been the order of the day in South Africa
and our 22 years of democratic rule have dismally failed to uproot its causes.
Why do white people despise blacks? Why is it that they find it easy to look at
us with disgust and undermine our humanity?
The answer lies in the structural organization of black lives,
the material conditions that have been made exclusive to black people. What
colonization and apartheid did was to make poverty, hunger, undereducation,
landlessness and cheap labor part of the exclusive identity of black people. It
did not matter that one black person, or a family, or a group, was educated –
maybe even better than whites – as long as the majority of black people lived
in conditions of squalor, this remained the identity they shared.
A black revolution should therefore be about the structural
transformation of the black condition as a condition of inhumanity. Until such
a time, it is futile to expect any white person or white people as a group to
respect black people or treat them like human beings.
The attitude of white supremacy, the idea that white people are
brought up with – that psyche of being above blacks – rests on their privilege
and advantage over black people. It rests on the reality that each day of their
lives, from birth, their lived experience as a collective is to be served by
blacks.
From the people who clean their homes, streets and schools; to
the people who serve them in restaurants and markets; and those who do all the
menial work in the country. They are raised, some directly and others
indirectly, to believe that blacks exist so that they can live a better life.
The point of the colonial project was precisely to achieve this
fact, that, as much as possible, there must always be millions of black people
available as cheap and easily disposable labor for the advancement of the
privilege of white people.
The sooner we accept this as a country, the closer we will get
to the resolution of anti-black racism.
We will not uproot the attitude of white supremacy unless we
deal with the black condition, because white supremacy is founded on the black
condition, which maintains and reproduces it.
One only needs to look at how cheap a black life truly is to
white people by comparing the fact that 34 black mineworkers are massacred in
broad daylight, and white people never even run a petition online.
Although rhinos are poached daily, we do not see poachers
poaching them like we did when the police shot and killed the workers. Yet,
there is a big campaign and a huge investment in saving the rhino. People have
statues of them everywhere, they even organize marathons where they “run to
save the rhino”.
This tells you, right here in South Africa, a country with a
majority of blacks, that black people are worth less than rhinos.
If you do not buy the rhino story in relation to mine workers
who were massacred by the ANC government in protection of white monopoly
investment, then the other example is white people’s pets. Here, you find that
the dogs and cats of white people have medical aid, while the black garden and
kitchen workers do not and cannot afford it.
To ask whites to view black people as human is an impossible
request from their structural point of view. If you were in their position you
would be the same, because it is impossible to look at Gugulethu or Alexandra
and see a human image. What you see is not different to how rats live;
congested areas where people live with their dirt in absolute proximity.
Each day we ask white people not to tell us that this is the
case and they are shocked. We say to them: “Do not tell us that we live like
rats and in absolute proximity to dirt.” Each time we say it is racist, they do
not understand how naming facts could be a bad thing. But what they all forget
is precisely that they, as a group, are the cause of the suffering and
animalization of black people.
From recent announcements, even by former president FW de Klerk,
we know that they have no remorse about what they have done. It should have
been clear when De Klerk took his oath as second deputy president to Nelson
Mandela in Afrikaans that he is not apologetic. It was a sign of arrogance
shown to the nation that he was not remorseful of white supremacy and its
legacy.
What, then, is to be done? Economic freedom is the only answer
to the transformation of the condition upon which white supremacy rests; the
day black people attain economic freedom, white people will lack the basis to
despise us, and the attitude to despise will not affect anyone’s access to a
means of subsistence.
Economic freedom means the distribution of land to end congested
townships and lead agrarian reform; and nationalization of mines and banks to
fund free, quality education, sanitation and healthcare, to name a few. This
will restore the dignity to black people; any project that does not focus on
this will only result in cosmetic changes.
It will result merely in silencing whites while they continue to
live their lives as white supremacists without interruption
“I could not have closed on my first home without Mr, Benjamin Lee ! Benjamin and his team went above and beyond for me on this transaction. He handled my very tight turn around time with ease and was always available for me when I had questions (and I had plenty), even when he was away from the office, which I greatly appreciated! He and his team handled many last-minute scrambles with the seller and worked tirelessly to make sure that I could close before my lease (and my down payment assistance, for that matter) expired. Mr Benjamin is incredibly knowledgeable Loan Officer, courteous, and patient. I went through a couple offers on properties before my final purchase and Benjamin was there to help with each one, often coordinating with my agent behind the scenes. I felt supported throughout the entire process. Thanks to Benjamin and the tireless efforts of his team, I am now a proud home owner! I would encourage you to consider Benjamin Briel Lee for any kind of loan.Mr, Benjamin Lee Contact informaions.via WhatsApp +1-989-394-3740 Email- Lfdsloans@outlook.com.
ReplyDelete