The Citizen (Gauteng)

It’s just a braai, Ms Fakie!

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Dirk Lotriet

Ihave a confession: I, too, lit a braai fire on Heritage Day. Which makes me, according to Ayesha Fakie, head of the sustained dialogues programme at the Institute for Justice and Reconcilia­tion, something bordering on a exploitati­ve white capitalist, white supremacis­t, gender oppressor and racist.

The persistenc­e of Braai Day results from deep denial to confront the brutal oppression of colonialis­m and apartheid done in the name of white people, Fakie said in an opinion piece this week.

I believed I was only preparing lunch in a harmless, social way.

“My black neighbours borrowed my cooler box to braai in the park,” a friend said after he read the article. And I’m sure my Indian neighbours braaied – they braai more often than we do.

In my own defence, I have to mention that I don’t braai regularly. I believe it’s silly to make a fire outside to grill meat if you have a working stove in the kitchen.

And I’ve always called Heritage Day by its proper name – never Braai Day.

But I have been known to don the braaier’s apron from time to time. My family enjoys the odd grilled chop or piece of wors.

Little Egg simply loves it. When I wipe the dust off the kettle braai, she runs through the house and shouts: “Braai is lekker!”

And, believe it or not, I very much doubt that my chubby twoyear-old daughter is a white supremacis­t. She just loves food.

Even the lovely Snapdragon tolerates a braai and she’s no racist – she disapprove­s of everything and everyone, regardless of race, gender or culture.

Except for babies. She adores babies.

But my despicable vice has nothing to do with supremacy.

Call me an idiot and a cheapskate, but I can’t afford the label of white capitalist. Not with the cost of fuel, the cost of data, the cost of chops and wors … While most people complain about the cost of meat, I’m left speechless just by the price of charcoal.

I’m nothing more than a lower middle-class South African who battles to make ends meet while cursing the 15% VAT rate and dreaming about the Lotto.

But I take note of your objections to the way a lot of us spent Heritage Day, Ms Fakie.

And as an olive branch, I promise to leave the braai tongs in the drawer next year.

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