Y'all know nothing about
struggle. Think affirmative action
is discriminatory? You must be joking, right? It brings me tears that
black pain remains invisible in the day of
information, globalisation and technology
My mama served tea and sold
fruit in train stations during the day and she waited tables at night. She took herself to school,
paying for her education and she passed her matric. She did this while her
mama, uMakhulu, was raising her child, me. UMakhulu was, and still is,
a tea girl, a maid and a servant.
UMakhulu would put me on her
back and take me with her to work. I would be placed on the white people’s green grass before she would go and
carry her daily chores. I would play with the
whites’ dogs until she would come to the backyard. This would be the time she
would be hanging clothes to dry. Little did she know that I
felt like life was hanging me to die.
The mama before uMakhulu, my uKhokho, worked for the same family: “Cheerfully” cleaning
after them; “gladly” raising their children. These children would grow
to subject her to her lowliness. She “happily” cooked food for
them and “offered” her service (and love) knowing very well that
these people could be the next killers of her kin.
She gave quality time to
their young ones more than to her own. For days and weeks she
would abandon her own to be with theirs’. And like bunnies her babies
would long for her scheduled visit at the end of the month. Perhaps some leftovers
from the Huis would prove her love. These delights, all of you
whose mammas work in the kitchens know very well. Nothing is as precious or as
delightful as having mama bring food from the white folk’s
house. It’s the best food ever,
with the best taste.
The aromas (quads as we call them) alone rumble
children’s tummies. They are a calling
for neighbour’s to come and visit. White people’s food,
izikhotho, cause rifts between sister and brother. A father could sell his
hat for just a bite. An unborn baby could push
herself to life just to taste the food. For as your tongue met the
food, excitement would kick you over. Quarrels break because
some start to eat faster than others. This to a stranger looks
like savagery but to an insider it looks like deprivation.
Often little do the
children know that their mama had to skip lunch for all this to happen. Who
needs Santa when mama is coming home?
There she would be uKhokho hungry
and starved looking at her children eat, with a great deal of satisfaction and her soul full of contentment. For that’s all she wants:
her children to be happy. And if this was happiness,
even if it is temporary then my Khokho's job
was done.
UMakhulu and her
siblings thought they were neglected by uKhokho. What kind of a mother shows
love to other people’s children but barely shows up to see her
own children? When she came to see them, they did not know how
exhausted she was. This was her time off but to them this was the
time for her to raise her children. Is there rest for the
black soul nje?
As uMakhulu and 'em grew up they knew and began to understand that my Khokho was raising other people's children. UMakhulu knew very well these
children would employ her someday, at least she hoped. So Makhulu would go and
help out in the kitchens. This was training and served a trial run. If they saw how hard she works, then after Khokho she
would be the next girly.
Yet she was the child who
raised herself selling a pint of African beer for a penny. She was the child who
would sell stazza-stazza (home cooked tripe) to help out at home. She was the child who knew
nothing about playing with toys but was a master at ducking tear gas, bullets (rubber and live ammunition) in townships. She was the child who knew
that as years go by, she too would be like her mama. What she hated the most,
she would now become a mother who is away from
her family in body. A mother who would see her
children have some moments of happiness but a lifetime of pain and
not be able to do much about it.
So sadly I stand to say
this to those who cannot see the black plight: you have chosen to blind
your eyes to the daily struggle of millions. Millions of South African
who earn an honest living. Though they may be
subjugated and dehumanised they continue to push the
wheels of production. They continue to break their
back for the economy’s "stability". Yes the ones who threaten this stability when they demand fair wage, are the forces behind our economy's growth.
If you think protesting
against systematic racism in universities is about being fussy
and looking for a new hobby. Then you have not been
trapped in this circle and chain of poverty. You have not seen your
father leave in a train to go to the city, never to come back. You have not witnessed how
black men were not allowed to marry. If they married, they
would be separated from their families. Yes the politics were evil
but it would be the economics that would break families. Stolen land that would be "discovered" and occupied by foreign settlers and later by European migrants. Excessive taxes that would go to aid the white minority.
You have not seen how blacks’
UBUNTU is defined by their ability to hide their anger, pain and hate for this unjust system and show love to “ALL”. You have not seen how a
black child’s intelligence is measured by their ability to speak
a foreign language so that they can communicate with the masters in their
native tongue, or at least closely related language to their mother tongue. You have not witnessed how
blacks' dignity was tarnished when people would be denied to go to their loved
ones’ funerals because they needed to apply for a
dompas.
You have not seen how our
bodies are violated, our hair policed, our men represented
as aggressive barbaric monsters, our women ignored and our 'others' denied their existence. You have not seen how our
ancestors’ graves are left alone for the altar of a foreign god. You have been oblivious to
how African Spirituality has been rubbished for a Christian belief that
too has no basis of fact. You have not seen how our
spiritual forces have been demonised made to look like they are
from the devil when for millennia they protected us. Our African doctors have
been insulted. Our magic has been vilified. While their magic (Easter Bunnies, Tooth Fairies and Virgin-born boy) has been exalted.
You have not seen how
black family life will take at least a century to recover from the cruelty of forced
removals, from the instability of becoming lodgers, and the injustice of being
denied to own land or property. You have not come to grips
with the fact that the right to transact, save, invest, be entrepreneurial, be
enterprising, be educated and be a professional was illegalised. Where the vast majority of
profits go to capital owners, it was made sure that blacks do not, and will not anytime soon, own capital. This is an economy that is
capitalistic and where capital owners are white. So it's no surprise that all the economy's returns go to a proportion of the population that is less than 10% in 2015.
Did you notice how
liberals think that Corporate Social Investment is our saviour? When our
environment has suffered from the corporates’ hands. You have been ignorant of
how corruption has gone unpunished in the private sector. Remember the Broederbond? What about De Beers, Ackerman, Lonmin and 'em's labour exploitation? Come on at least say you remember the South African Construction Cartel and the 2008 Crisis? Hear the media write about this?
You are oblivious how the black child has no choice on their medium of instruction. But his counterparts of European descent can choose between Afrikaans
and English in basic and higher education. You forget the 1976 riots when our forebears protested learning
in Afrikaans in their home country. You forget that symbolism and Art and everything else in South Africa is still extremely
white and racist.
It is for some of these reasons we have movements like RhodesMustFall,
TransformWits, OpenStellenbosch. It is for these reason that black anger, and perhaps
aggression has surfaced out, from behind the banners of a “rainbow”
nation. For I have NEVER seen a rainbow with the colours black and
white. Maybe that is why I have not seen both blacks and whites joining hands to
fight the African struggle: the ill of Colonialisation and the injustice of Apartheid. I hear a call to end government corruption but nothing about fighting corporate
greed and exploitation (our number 1 problem), perhaps I am deaf.
So ndithi: Mayibuye iAfrika, for it is not ours yet
amaAzania.
-SNLV kaJolinkomo
