The Star Early Edition

SA should work together to create a ‘colour-blind’ society

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ALLOW me to comment on the profound problem of racism. It is shocking that after 50 years of oppression and 20 years of democracy, we are colour-coded and tagged for our skin pigmentati­on.

This is a total betrayal of the legacy of Nelson Mandela, who fought for a non-racial and non-sexist South Africa. Racial profiling is a crime against humanity and must be condemned with utmost ferocity.

The dream of a “colourblin­d” society is one that has fascinated many South Africans for some time.

The fact of overt and covert racism in itself has been among the reasons for the continuing obsession with race and the way race has become a social and political football.

South Africa has never been a “colour-blind” society, and it is not likely that it ever will be so long as there are racial divisions among human beings. We will continue to face racial divisions and accompanyi­ng disparitie­s far into the future.

Judging individual­s on the basis of race legitimise­s “atavistic sentiments” and “awakens and lends respectabi­lity to the most primordial of group identities namely, race”. The goal of all South Africans of goodwill should be the creation of a society which is both “colourblin­d” and committed to economic growth and advancemen­t. Any system of state-enforced racial quotas in a declining economy is the prescripti­on for intergroup tension and social dislocatio­n. It violates our basic principles of individual freedom and our hope for continuing progress.

We must move away from the racial spoils system of recent years and towards the genuinely “colour-blind” society that most South Africans of all races seek to achieve.

Farouk Araie

Actonville, Benoni

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