Mail & Guardian

Let’s talk about black tax

A new essay collection examines the practice but the pieces can feel a little monotonous

- Zaza Hlalethwa

The countdown to December has begun. In six weeks a large chunk of South Africa’s black working and middle class will be putting in their leave days, packing their bags and reluctantl­y preparing their bank accounts for their annual trip home.

As if to create a virtual support group in which one can find solace — while navigating financial independen­ce and setting boundaries for loved ones — Niq Mhlongo compiled Black Tax: Burden or Ubuntu. Through observed and personal accounts from 23 contributo­rs, the collection of essays tackles the phenomenon and how it unfolds in South Africa every day.

To put Black Tax together Mhlongo approached literary colleagues and friends whose work he had been following. These include Mohale Mashigo, Angela Makholwa, Lucas Ledwaba and the Mail & Guardian’s Thanduxolo Jika. “We can all talk about this topic but not everyone can write,” says Mhlongo during an impromptu phone call with the M&G.

Mhlongo is a prolific writer with five books to his name, but he chose

Black Tax,

to tackle this particular subject matter by calling for contributo­rs because his understand­ing of black tax is “narrow”. By having the perspectiv­e of young and old, black men and women in urban and rural settings, Black Tax looks to “broaden the conversati­on and make it inclusive without it being conclusive”.

Compiling Black Tax began in September 2018. By the end of the year Mhlongo had a shortlist of contributo­rs who had agreed to share their stories. The brief was simple: “write about your personal experience­s and understand­ing of black tax” and have a first draft ready in two months.

The anthology went through a series of “rigorous” edits before the final manuscript was completed in June. The first set of edits saw Mhlongo requesting changes that had to do with developing the stories by asking the contributo­rs to “elaborate on this, get rid of that and so forth”. After this came copy editing by Katlego Tapala and proofreadi­ng by Paul Wise.

In the resulting roadmap through black tax, the contributo­rs unpack topics such as spatial planning, affirmativ­e action, migration, childheade­d households, life expectancy and the National Student Financial Aid Scheme.

These are all subjects that we ceaselessl­y come across in the news and academic spaces, but in this book they are rendered with a human touch through the contributo­rs’ intimate examples.

At some points the reader is offered insights into the uncensored disdain that comes with having to support relatives who refuse to seek employment. In others, the reader shares in the protagonis­t’s delight of bringing groceries home for the first time.

Although there may be a need to archive these recollecti­ons, the samebut-different nature of growing up in a black household poses a challenge. Because all the contributo­rs were given the same brief, there is a monotony to the essays. Perhaps this is why the essays do not appear to follow a thematic order and why their grouping into chapters comes across as haphazard.

Many of the essays hop back and forth across the murky line that can exist between creative personal accounts and opinion. With contributo­rs writing about how the reader “should” perceive black tax, the essays are as prescripti­ve as they are descriptiv­e. The writers’ suggestion­s about whether a reader should categorise the phenomenon as a burden or ubuntu come across as absolute. So even though Mhlongo’s call for various opinions was a democratic way of archiving this national discourse, the opinions read like a binary poll.

But this does not take away from the fact that the essays are generous outpouring­s that turn the domestic experience of black folk insideout to reveal an essence that is so instinctiv­e it often goes unnoticed. Examples range from firstborn children taking on the responsibi­lity of a guardian, one’s home being open to people far removed from the immediate family or sending a portion of a bursary stipend home.

At its core, Black Tax is a socioecono­mic dissection of a post-apartheid, capitalist­ic South Africa. The contributo­rs are a sample of what it looks like when a black population that was dealt financial and spatial marginalit­y tries to recover.

Mhlongo says the end goal for Black Tax is for the book to spark a national debate that will help black South Africans to “identify the concepts about the phenomenon that we can keep and those we should discard”.

On a second read, after considerin­g the reasons for and against the phenomenon, Black Tax displays the relentless and selfless nature of the black excellence that Africans strive towards. All the grandmothe­rs, mothers, sisters and other protagonis­ts in Black Tax begin their personal journeys toward financial redemption from below zero. Yet at every stage of their success — no matter how slight — there’s always enough to go around.

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edited by Niq Mhlongo, try to answer the question of whether it’s a burden or ubuntu. Photo: Delwyn Verasamy
Debate: The essays in edited by Niq Mhlongo, try to answer the question of whether it’s a burden or ubuntu. Photo: Delwyn Verasamy
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