Sowetan

Townships are violent, unkind to black people

Mashata’s shooting painful reminder of how life is disregarde­d

- Malaika Mahlatsi

This past weekend, a good man was gunned down and killed like a dog in the streets of Soshanguve.

Peter “Mashata” Mabuse was not just a popular DJ and MC, he was someone who was loved by many South Africans – myself included.

I knew him from a distance through mutual friends, and it was evident even from afar that he was an honourable and decent human being. His kindness shone through the radio and social media.

His decency is evidenced in the numerous community empowermen­t initiative­s that he was part of. But at the weekend, Mabuse was shot on the streets of Soshanguve and just like that, he became a statistic of the growing number of people who lose their lives in a hail of bullets in our townships.

While the circumstan­ces differ, the death of Mabuse reminds me of the senseless murder of Dr Michael Isabelle, who was shot in his surgery in Soweto weeks ago.

Like Mabuse, who so deeply loved black people, Dr Isabelle was a good man who had committed decades of his life to helping the community of Dobsonvill­e. This was not enough. Both men were shot and killed like animals.

There have been many other men and women who have lost their lives in the most violent ways in townships.

Many of these are activists and community builders who wake up every morning to try and make township life bearable.

It is a difficult task to make bearable a place that was never designed with human prosperity in mind. Townships are a creation of colonialis­m and apartheid.

Even now, 30 years into the democratic dispensati­on, townships typify regression as evidenced in the underdevel­opment of infrastruc­ture and investment in these areas.

But it isn’t just the physical environmen­t that is underdevel­oped, it is also the potential and talents of people living in townships.

Disenfranc­hised and deprived, many people in townships have been hurled into a zone of non-being. And it is in this zone that parameters for de-civilisati­on are set.

The growing levels of violence in many townships in SA over the past few years are directly proportion­al to the atrocious quality of life.

But they’re also a reminder that it is impossible to truly enjoy freedom as a black person when you exist in a world in which so many other black people are decivilise­d and hardened.

De-civilised and hardened people shoot and kill a doctor to steal two cellphones from him. De-civilised and hardened people shoot at a man multiple times in the vicinity of a higher learning institutio­n, disregardi­ng the possibilit­y of a passer-by being “collateral damage”.

I was born and raised in Soweto – the biggest township in the country.

I grew up surrounded by multiple layers of violence. Poverty is violence. Infrastruc­ture inadequaci­es that impede on a community’s capacity to develop meaningful­ly is violence.

Black life in townships is violence and this is why I can never reconcile myself to the romanticis­ation of township life.

There is no place where black life is cheaper than it is in townships – and nowhere where it is as easy to die like a dog.

Contrary to the arguments posed by those who claim that living in the township makes one grounded and connected to the people, there’s absolutely nothing revolution­ary about townships.

The fact that millions of us were born and raised there is a result of a brutal history and not a choice that we’d willingly make.

And that’s why I’ll always encourage those who can get out, to get out as soon as they can, because a bitter truth about townships, places that we call home, where some of our families still reside, is that they’re not kind to black people who live and die there like dogs – in a hail of bullets on an early Sunday morning, as if their lives mean absolutely nothing.

 ?? /SUPPLIED ?? Well-known comedian, MC, DJ and radio personalit­y Peter Mashata was shot and killed in Soshanguve, north of Pretoria, after performing at the local Epozini Lifestyle pub on Saturday night.
/SUPPLIED Well-known comedian, MC, DJ and radio personalit­y Peter Mashata was shot and killed in Soshanguve, north of Pretoria, after performing at the local Epozini Lifestyle pub on Saturday night.
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