Cape Times

Madiba wouldn’t be impressed with dangerous, self-serving sloganeeri­ng

- Yonela Diko

THE ANC, over the last few years, has been plagued by people who, out of ignorance rather than by design, earnestly plug ridiculous­ly simplistic answers to our most complex problems. They are sloganeers whose Idea of thoughtful analysis is often limited to what will fit on a T-shirt or a bumper sticker.

These simple-minded sloganeers are doubly dangerous: dangerous because they can distract and confound our leaders and clog decision-making channels, and because of the chance that one of these slogans might actually become official policy.

Madiba always knew that if the ANC was to enjoy hegemony among all classes, all social strata, social forces, in keeping with ANC’s revolution­ary mass character, it would have to possess almost a divine wisdom, with an exceptiona­l ability to see opportunit­ies that may help deepen unity of purpose.

Today, there is no shortage of people who want to wrap black people in their own perceived injuries, so eager to escape imagined traps of white authority that they are willing to cede values of the organisati­on – honour, generosity, Batho Pele (people first).

Who said being previously disadvanta­ged excuses you from being respectful; who said being black excuses you from being kind, from working hard, from earning your living through hard work and sacrifice?

The curious phenomenon in South Africa is that the family in Constantia, entrenched in privilege, with a preconcept­ion about neighbourh­oods across the divide, has Madiba’s picture in their living room, as has the family in a crumbling makeshift shack in Philippi.

This speaks to the profound era of Madiba which gave both these people a new idea of themselves. Madiba seemed to offer an opportunit­y for collective redemption. This, Madiba knew, reflected a reality that society’s sense of hope is indivisibl­e.

You cannot preach hope to one group and the threat of despair to another and not have an overall sense of decay in all society.

What the ANC needed to do was to leverage any sense of common purpose that the birth of a new nation was showing, however small. That is why the best conditions for economic transforma­tion have always been economic growth. This would mean as boats are shifting their structure and ownership, they are also rising.

So what would Madiba think of today’s almost religious-like edict of Radical Economic Transforma­tion, presented without any sophistica­tion by the even less sophistica­ted RET champions? What would Madiba think of today’s leaders using RET to hide their mischief, and the almost scaremonge­ring nature of its postulatio­n?

What would Madiba say if he were here with us in 2017, at a time when our country has become even more divided, on race, divided due to corruption, poor leadership and a nagging sense that our country’s decline is inevitable, our discourse pettier and more poisoned? Would he lose heart and declare the reconcilia­tion project a failure?

I believe Madiba would commend the discussion documents the ANC has released towards its policy conference, particular­ly the Organisati­on Renewal section, especially its sophistica­ted nature, contrasted with the loud hailing and noise by our leaders daily, but Madiba would lament that even these documents are proving vulnerable to the noise-makers with an exaggerate­d sense of grievance.

It does not serve anyone for us to undersell our accomplish­ments as an organisati­on for fear that we would lose those who are today too angry about the pace of change.

I believe Madiba would be proud that in the past 23 years: we have cut the gap between black earnings and white earnings by historic margins. But I believe he would not let us forget that the wealth of black households still averages less than one-tenth that of white households.

I believe he would be proud that black South Africans’ employment is at its highest level in history and black poverty at its lowest.But I believe Madiba would not let us forget that black South Africans still earn much less than white South Africans; he would not let us forget that black unemployme­nt is unbearably much higher than white unemployme­nt.

Ultimately, I believe he would tell us that people of different racial and ethnic background­s, of all faiths and creeds, can not only work and live together, but can enrich and ennoble both themselves and our common purpose.

● Diko is ANC Western Cape spokespers­on

 ??  ?? NELSON MANDELA
NELSON MANDELA

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