Daily Maverick

168 ‘Burning’ of flag can’t kill SA’S flame of unity on sports fields

The South African flag unites, not divides, us, and in the past 30 years it’s been a symbol of far more good news in the country than bad. By

- Craig Ray 11 – 17 May 2024 DM

In 1991, I was tending bar at an establishm­ent frequented by military men of the old South African Defence Force (SADF). This was a time of sweeping change in the country and, as a young man just out of school, preparing for adulthood in a country that was no longer a pariah excited me.

The unbanning of the ANC, the release of Nelson Mandela and the promise of a return to internatio­nal sport, among many other changes, meant hope for the country. Hope for young people such as me, and hope for so many others who never had it.

On this night, two officers – one a huge captain, at least 2m tall and the other a short, stocky lieutenant – were in discussion about the future of the country.

I didn’t understand it then, but as permanent force members of the SADF, they were probably frightened of what the future held.

At this stage in the discourse of the country, there were reports of changing the name from South Africa to Azania and changing the flag. As we know, the name never changed, but the flag did. And it was the hot topic of discussion at the bar that night.

The short officer was red and fuming. In Afrikaans, he declared that “the day that this country becomes Azania, and the day they change the flag, is the day I fight until the bitter end”. It was quite extreme stuff.

The response of the hulking captain has always stayed with me.

“Ag, f**k man, it’s just a f***ing name, and it’s just some colours on a piece of material. It’s not worth dying over,” was his comeback in Afrikaans. It silenced the puce lieutenant as he mulled this idea.

And that’s the thing with nationalis­tic symbols – some are willing to die for them, and some see them as nothing more than an abstract idea.

Riled up

Which brings me to the DA’S “flag burning” advert this week. It’s got the country talking – mostly by those riled up about it, though many have also defended it.

I’ve always been wary of nationalis­tic symbols because they can be manipulate­d by self-serving politician­s for power in strategic moments. A bit like the DA just did.

But as a sports journalist, and as someone who has been afforded a career covering local and internatio­nal sport because of the changes this country went through after its painful history, my associatio­n with the South African flag is intertwine­d with success and triumph.

Cheslin Kolbe and Bongi Mbonambi draped in the South African flag, doing a lap of honour at the Stade de France after the Boks won the Rugby World Cup in 2023, is an abiding image of the tournament.

Images of Josia Thugwane, Chad le Clos, Roland Schoeman, Ryk Neethling, Darian Townsend, Lyndon Ferns, Tatjana Schoenmake­r (now Smith) and Natalie du Toit, among others, standing proudly under the

flag after winning Olympic or Paralympic gold medals never fail to move me.

Literally hundreds of moments of sporting excellence accompanie­d by the rainbow flag over the past 30 years have epitomised the best of the country.

“Burning” that emblem is, to my mind, not the best way to get a point across about state failure, because I associate and attach success and unity, rather than hate and corruption, to the sight of the flag.

The collapse of South Africa’s parastatal­s, the free-falling economy, the rising crime and the increasing sense of desperatio­n and hopelessne­ss of so many are symptoms of a failing state. But the flag, especially in a sporting context, presents exactly the opposite image. It’s a symbol of courage, determinat­ion, skill and good old South African grit.

Unites us

Many of us might not be proud of what’s happened and is happening in the country, but the flag is the thing that unites us. It

certainly does not divide us. When national teams play, the stadiums are awash with the colours of the rainbow nation.

That doesn’t mean people are oblivious to the problems in the country, because they aren’t. But we are all united in this struggle of being South African under one flag.

With the help of animation technology, the DA symbolical­ly “burning” the flag just sits

uncomforta­bly.

Literally hundreds of moments of sporting excellence accompanie­d by the rainbow flag over the past 30 years have epitomised the best of the

country

Much is failing in the country and the DA, or any other political party, should point it out and strive to be better. The DA does a good job in the Western Cape, even an excellent job by comparison with the rest of the country.

But the Western Cape also happens to be a part of the country that falls under the flag it “burned” for dramatic and shock effect.

The flag is the one thing that evokes positive images of South Africa, mostly but not exclusivel­y linked to the excellence of sporting success in a country that routinely punches above its weight on fields and arenas globally.

The flag might “only” be an emblem, but in 30 years, it’s been a symbol of far more good news in the country than bad. That, to me, is the point that was missed.

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 ?? ?? Springbok Bongi Mbonambi celebrates with the South African flag after the team’s victory at the Rugby World Cup last year. Photo: Gaspafotos/mb Media/getty Images
Springbok Bongi Mbonambi celebrates with the South African flag after the team’s victory at the Rugby World Cup last year. Photo: Gaspafotos/mb Media/getty Images
 ?? ?? Flag bearers Phumelela Mbande and Chad le Clos at the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games in Tokyo, Japan, on 23 July 2021.
Photo: Jamie Squire/getty Images
Flag bearers Phumelela Mbande and Chad le Clos at the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games in Tokyo, Japan, on 23 July 2021. Photo: Jamie Squire/getty Images
 ?? ?? Cheslin Kolbe proudly drapes the SA flag over his shoulders after the Boks won the Rugby World Cup 2023 in Paris.
Photo: Xavier Laine/getty Images
Cheslin Kolbe proudly drapes the SA flag over his shoulders after the Boks won the Rugby World Cup 2023 in Paris. Photo: Xavier Laine/getty Images
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 ?? ?? Josia Thugwane flies the flag after winning the marathon at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta, Georgia. Photo: Mike Powell/allsport
Josia Thugwane flies the flag after winning the marathon at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta, Georgia. Photo: Mike Powell/allsport
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