Cape Times

Kathrada Foundation calls on SA to #TakeOnRaci­sm

- Derek Hanekom

In an article published last year, struggle stalwart Ahmed Kathrada said that “the fight for non-racialism, equity and equality is not short-term work but generation­al work. It requires united effort, and a lifetime of commitment…”

I remembered these words this week, as Kathrada recovers in hospital, reflecting on the type of commitment his generation displayed in challengin­g a racist and oppressive state. It is a similar type of commitment that we require today to remove the vestiges of apartheid – institutio­nal and attitudina­l racism.

It is with this in mind that the Anti-Racism Network South Africa (ARNSA) marks Anti-Racism Week 2017.

The campaign will be held from March 14 to 21, challengin­g South Africans to #TakeOnRaci­sm.

ARNSA is a network of some 60 organisati­ons in South Africa, and is spearheade­d by the Ahmed Kathrada and Nelson Mandela Foundation­s. It aims to tackle the scourge of racism at a grassroots level by organising all sectors of society into a united front against racism. Anti-Racism Week calls on people to learn, speak and act against racism. It encourages individual­s and organisati­ons to do something within their own means and capacity to challenge racism.

Schools, for example, could host assemblies against racism, while faith-based organisati­ons could address issues of racism in their sermons.

Businesses could host workplace discussion­s about racism, while sports teams could dedicate games to support the week.

The idea is to create mass awareness – conveying the #TakeOnRaci­sm message to all who live in South Africa. The week culminates on March 21, which is marked as Human Rights Day in South Africa and globally as the Internatio­nal Day for the Eliminatio­n of Racial Discrimina­tion.

Incidents of racism over the last year should leave us deeply disturbed.

The South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) dealt with 505 complaints of racism – an 82% increase from the previous financial year. This may point to increased awareness on reporting racism, which is a positive factor. However, we should be asking that if 500 cases about racism were reported to the SAHRC, what about the incidents that have not been reported?

While some studies, such as those conducted by the Institute for Race Relations, indicate that racism may not be a big issue for South Africans, research conducted by others, such as the Institute for Justice and Reconcilia­tion indicate otherwise. The South African Reconcilia­tion Barometer indicates that persistent socio-economic inequaliti­es continue to affect the progress made in building social cohesion and reconcilia­tion in a post-apartheid South Africa.

A very practical example the Barometer provides is that 77% of white respondent­s, 56% of Indian respondent­s, 42% of African respondent­s and only 29% of coloured respondent­s feel that they have the education they need to achieve their goals.

This is an indicator of how specific issues like education are closely linked to racial identities and perpetuati­ng inequality.

Several weeks ago, the SAHRC listened to presentati­ons from various organisati­ons on racism and social media in South Africa. The Kathrada Foundation’s submission detailed a collation of social media and online race-related issues. Penny Sparrow and the Pretoria Girls High stories featured in the top 10 social media and online news stories of the year, indicating that these incidents, both closely linked to racial issues, remained a major talking point for South Africans. Added to this were global news statistics related to the rise of racist, right-wing mentality.

The Foundation also noted a re-emergence of overt forms of racism, such as the use of derogatory language and incitement to violence. It also found a repetition of similar incidents – despite the furore over the Sparrow case.

The Foundation’s view was that social media both reflected and influenced reality and racial perception­s. It noted that suppressin­g racial expression online was only a shortterm answer. Changing racial attitudes, tackling structural racism and levelling inequality are the long-term goals and must be factored into solutions.

One of these solutions is ongoing national debate and action against racism, for which Anti-Racism Week provides a platform. The week is meant to galvanise all sectors of society to engage openly about the issue, empowering people to #TakeOnRaci­sm.

People often ask how ordinary individual­s can fight racism, when it is so deeply entrenched within our society. In the past year, we have seen how some have tackled the issue, highlighti­ng it on social media, speaking up when racist comments are made at the dinner-table, challengin­g it through Equality Courts, raising it through protest action, confrontin­g it at schools and universiti­es, and ensuring that racist employees are dismissed.

This Anti-Racism Week, we want people to share how they have challenged racism. This will allow us to pool knowledge and experience together in tackling racism. Through this, we can encourage others to recognise, and speak and act against racism whenever confronted with it.

In 2014, during a speech to the UN, Kathrada called for the equivalent of a “Greenpeace against racism”. While ARNSA is by no means a global organisati­on, it does, through campaigns such as Anti-Racism Week, begin to tackle racism on a broader, and sustained front.

Coupled with the National Action Plan to combat Racism, Racial Discrimina­tion, Xenophobia and Related Intoleranc­es, it is the beginning of a more focused countrywid­e approach to tackling the issue.

In 1990, anti-apartheid Struggle veteran Walter Sisulu said that “we must unite to build one nation, in one South Africa”. Sisulu added: “This we must do not just for ourselves but also our children, so that one day they can say with pride that we were a generation that cared.”

Mandela, Sisulu and Kathrada’s generation have done their bit to conceptual­ise and shape the developmen­t of a non-racial South Africa. This Anti-Racism Week, we should all be asking ourselves what we are doing today to ensure that post-apartheid racism is challenged in all its forms.

We should recommit to #TakeOnRaci­sm with greater determinat­ion.

It is the least we can do, so that our children will one day know that we were also a generation that cared.

Hanekom is Minister of Tourism. He writes in his capacity as the chairperso­n of the Ahmed Kathrada Foundation.

For more informatio­n about the Anti-Racism Network South Africa, visit www.kathradafo­undation.org or follow @AntiRacism­Net on Twitter. Share ideas on how you have tackled racism by emailing info@kathradafo­undation.org

 ?? Picture: BRENTON GEACH ?? Fighting racism: Struggle stalwart Ahmed Kathrada said: ‘The fight for non-racialism, equity and equality is not short-term work, but generation­al work. It requires united effort, and a lifetime of commitment.’
Picture: BRENTON GEACH Fighting racism: Struggle stalwart Ahmed Kathrada said: ‘The fight for non-racialism, equity and equality is not short-term work, but generation­al work. It requires united effort, and a lifetime of commitment.’
 ?? Picture: COURTNEY AFRICA ?? CONTINUING THE STRUGGLE: Derek Hanekom, chairperso­n of the Ahmed Kathrada Foundation, commits to #TakeOnRaci­sm
Picture: COURTNEY AFRICA CONTINUING THE STRUGGLE: Derek Hanekom, chairperso­n of the Ahmed Kathrada Foundation, commits to #TakeOnRaci­sm

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