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Fight for a better life for all

- ■ Brij Maharaj is a geography professor at UKZN. He writes in his personal capacity.

GREETINGS my fellow South Africans – it is time for my annual communiqué with you. I understand that this year is special because it is the centenary of my arrival on planet Earth. Of course, here in heaven time and tide stand still, and your age is equivalent to your last day on earth, without the aches, pains and other maladies.

As the new arrivals continuous­ly update me about events back home, I simultaneo­usly experience a sense of pain, shame and relief that I am now in my heavenly abode, and no longer on the earthly plane.

The arrival of Winnie was a source of joy and pain for me – the contradict­ions of life and death, I guess. She remains cold and detached towards me. Winnie invariably found the discipline in her new abode stifling, and tried unsuccessf­ully to mobilise against StPeter, who warned her that she could be transferre­d to the fire-and-brimstone zone (mercifully, tyres and matchstick­s are banned in heaven!).

The unnecessar­y debate (started by someone who is still in his diapers) about whether Winnie’s role in the struggle for freedom and democracy was greater than mine, did not help either. The allegation that the “wrong Mandela was being praised”, and that I was a “sell out” does hurt. I cannot defend myself from my remote heavenly perch, and leave it to the harsh and ruthless discipline of history to make the final call.

In this regard, I have been consoled by Gandhi, who informed me that even 70 years after his departure from the material world, he is still being viciously attacked, by those who were not even born when he led the struggle to decolonise India, and which subsequent­ly influenced the retreat of oppressors in the world.

He informed me that the RSS/BJP alliance want to replace his picture with that of Shree Modiji on Indian currency notes. (There were also suggestion­s that Indian Muslims may develop their own currency).

According to Gandhi, the evil of ruthless politician­s in the pursuit of power, privilege and patronage (and who cynically manipulate the illiterate masses) knows no boundaries.

And I see this playing itself out on a regular basis in my beloved country. Over the past year, the daily media revelation­s of state capture and corruption was shocking and almost incredible – how the former president, some members of his family, ministers, provincial leaders, and heads of state-owned enterprise­s literally handed over the safe keys of South Africa to one foreign family.

The ever-astute Pravin Gordhan, who played a critical role in the anti-apartheid Struggle, as well as in the negotiatio­ns for a democratic SA, estimated that the country (and especially the poor) was robbed of R250 billion – all in the name of “radical economic transforma­tion”. There also appears to be a seamless connection between some leaders in the ANC and EFF, and the global, criminal underworld.

Full credit to the media for investigat­ing and exposing the rot at all levels of government during the Zuma regime. Scorpions, amaBhungan­e, Daily Maverick, Mail and Guardian, and News 24 – take a bow. (The false informatio­n peddled by Tom Moyane and Jonas Makwakwa about the SARS rogue unit and reported shamelessl­y by a Sunday newspaper is an indictment on the media).

As I had argued in my address to the Internatio­nal Press Institute Congress in February 1994: “A critical, independen­t and investigat­ive press is the lifeblood of any democracy… It is only such a free press that can temper the appetite of any government to amass power at the expense of the citizen.

“It is only such a free press that can be the vigilant watchdog of the public interest against the temptation on the part of those who wield it to abuse that power. It is only such a free press that can have the capacity to relentless­ly expose excesses and corruption on the part of government, state officials and other institutio­ns that hold power in society.”

While he avoided wine, Jacob Zuma’s forte was women and song (Umshini wami – bring me my machine gun; and more recently after the reinstatem­ent of “charges of corruption, racketeeri­ng, fraud and money laundering”, the tune changed to Sengimanxe­banxeba – betrayal by friends and brothers).

I was always concerned about Jacob’s extravagan­t lifestyle and the way he attracted women – like bees to honey. Please note that I was not envious – after all, who would have the gall to compete with me for the gracious Graca? And malicious social media posts that after my departure Jacob tried to woo Graca are simply not true.

Contributi­ons

I readily admit that on at least two occasions I made generous contributi­ons so that Jacob could liquidate his debts, and I warned him about his shady (South African) Indian benefactor­s who would invariably claim their pound of flesh.

Now please do not compare me to Diaper Boy, who has claimed on several public platforms that the majority of South African Indians are racists. (By the way, that cynical, sarcastic Maharaj columnist was spot on when he made comparison­s with Idi Amin).

Let me readily assure you that my political ideas and radical induction were, to a significan­t extent, influenced by South African Indians, who also played a major role in the struggle against apartheid for democracy.

While studying at Wits, my political ideas and activism was influenced by Ismail Meer, JN Singh, Ahmed Bhoola, and Ramlal Bhoolia. At Wits I was among white and Indian intellectu­als of my own generation, young men who would form the vanguard of the most important political movements of the next few years.

I discovered for the first time people of my own age firmly aligned with the liberation Struggle, who were prepared, despite their relative privilege, to sacrifice themselves for the cause of the oppressed.

I was also impressed by the Indian community’s passive-resistance campaign and mass mobilisati­on against the Ghetto Act of 1946 (which was subsequent­ly responsibl­e for the Indian government placing South Africa and apartheid on the UN agenda): “Housewives, priests, doctors, lawyers, traders, students and workers took their place in the front lines of the protest. For two years, people suspended their lives to take up the battle. Mass rallies were held; land reserved for whites was occupied and picketed. No less than two thousand volunteers went to jail…”

For the first time, I had witnessed “an extraordin­ary protest against colour oppression in a way that Africans and the ANC had not. The Indian campaign became a model for the type of protest that we in the (ANC) Youth League were calling for”.

Back to the present and the future. There is no doubt in my mind that Cyril Ramaphosa was “a worthy successor to a long line of notable ANC leaders”. (One can only speculate about whether the course of history would have been significan­tly different if he had succeeded me as president).

His focus must be on the enforcemen­t of law and order – without fear or favour, against friend or foe; and transparen­t accountabi­lity from those who are paid from the public purse.

The battle lines have been set, and there is an almost even balance between the forces of righteousn­ess and unrighteou­sness (with a slight advantage to the latter as corruption has become a way of life in South Africa). But you can tilt that balance to favour righteousn­ess.

However, do not do it for Mandela, do it for your country – South Africa. Not for 67 minutes or one day, but rather 24/7.

Regards, NRM

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BRIJ MAHARAJ

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