Cape Times

Middle class need to help break spirit of destructio­n on Flats

- Bellville

WE READ continuous­ly in this daily paper about the deteriorat­ion of a humane society on the Cape Flats.

Our response is either disgust about the disrespect for other human beings as the gangs, a pseudo projection of skewed empowermen­t, fight each other for superiorit­y, notwithsta­nding children, innocent women, young people aspiring to better their lives, all in the line of fire. Or we apply a schizophre­nic sense of morality and accompanyi­ng passivenes­s to leave them to themselves or to the inadequate capacity of the government­al social system to reform a society in total despair.

We have a choice. Either we become actively involved to turn this sad situation around or we can keep neglecting them, continuing with our middle-class lives, indulging in solipsisti­c joys, accumulati­ng materialis­tic goods, houses, cars and having our private braais after the game of rugby on the TV, and thus vote and display consumeris­m and a one-dimensiona­l lifestyle as our deepest religion or enactment of a shallow humanity.

Harsh? Only if we keep on neglecting the debasement of human lives not many kilometres away from our fully functionin­g local display of a splitminde­d “humane society”.

It is up to us. We, middle-class people, need to start doing things in an ongoing way to win the war for humanity on the turf of a lost and hopeless part of our brothers and sisters. There are some awe-inspiring individual­s in that staggering area who stand up for humane standards. But they are all alone.

We need to become the conscience of greedy people feeding their souls with just more and more excursions to shopping malls; we need to protest against a disfunctio­ning government not doing effective, 21st century work regarding this cancerous degrading of people out there on the Flats.

We need a rehabilita­tion effort on all levels to break the spirit of destructio­n, and to give people hope. We therefore need religious groups, of all persuasion­s, humanitari­an organisati­ons, skilled profession­als, ordinary people with human hearts, to join together in organised events to start doing what is morally and ethically right.

We, most readers of the morning papers, have full-time jobs, families to feed, and this is already not easy, there is not much spare time. So, if people paid to uphold communitie­s, react in passivenes­s, just thoughtles­sly turning to the next page of this paper, being it sensation, sport, and don’t become active by picking up a phone and start the long-delayed process, we will keep on drifting through base days, months and years.

And for government, I guess they are married to structured ways, making love to pretences and paperwork and, at heart, just don’t care enough about their people.

We await spiritual leaders, humane organisati­ons to act. The lost ones out there, watching the daily break of more pain and hopelessne­ss, they don’t know of people with compassion that could, and should, come walking round the corner with profession­al and integrated restoratio­n offensives. Wim van der Walt

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