Sowetan

Poverty porn painful reminder of how society is failing black students

Not possible to know Ngobese’s story and not be touched

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A week ago, University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN) student, Dumisani Ngobese’s emotional graduation photo trended on social media.

The young man from a rural area in Empangeni was photograph­ed crying as he walked across the stage to receive his bachelor of arts degree.

Ngobese was raised by his maternal grandmothe­r who was a street vendor and the breadwinne­r in a household of more than 10 children. It is for this reason that unlike his peers, he could not afford a suit for the special occasion. He wore a black golf T-shirt, black chino pants and white sneakers. The poignant image of a weeping Ngobese captured the hearts of millions of South Africans and it was not long after this that a Durban-based businessma­n offered Ngobese a job. Many other people made monetary pledges to him. It is not possible to know Ngobese’s story and not be touched by the generosity that he has been shown by strangers. They have given the young man a fighting chance in a country where, for black people specifical­ly, a degree is not a guarantee of finding a job. This fighting chance means his family will likely be lifted out of poverty.

Research demonstrat­es that for black people in particular, poverty is generation­al.

Effectivel­y, poor grandparen­ts have passed poverty onto parents, who then pass it onto their children. These children give birth to children in poverty – repeating and reproducin­g the cycle of poverty.

This kind of poverty affects every aspect of a person ’ s life: physical, social, emotional and mental. It is a debilitati­ng condition to which millions are condemned.

I am happy for Ngobese, in great part because I know personally what it means to be the first graduate in a poor family and to have a job that helps rewrite the narrative. But I am also deeply saddened by the fact that he had to perform his poverty in order to find employment.

He is not the only one. Thousands of black people in our country, particular­ly graduates, are constantly having to engage in poverty porn before they can be given a fighting chance in the labour market.

I have seen many graduates standing at traffic lights holding up placards showing their qualificat­ions – pleading for jobs. The same thing happens on profession­al networking sites like LinkedIn. Everywhere in our country, black graduates are either performing their poverty to get jobs or to get help settling their student debt. And it appears that the more painful their stories, the likelier they are to trend and be assisted as a result.

There is something fundamenta­lly wrong with a country where graduates must resort to measures such as standing at traffic lights wearing their graduation gowns, or weeping uncontroll­ably on graduation stages, to be given a chance to make an honest living. Anyone who has ever been poor will tell you that poverty is deeply dehumanisi­ng. More than this, it is traumatic.

We should not normalise the production of a society that deems it legitimate to use the trauma of a disenfranc­hised people as a measure of their value.

A graduate should be employed as a means of investing in the future of a country. The Ngobese story normalises the employment of black graduates out of pity. Graduates do not need pity but a functional society that affords them opportunit­ies.

 ?? /SETHU DLAMINI ?? An emotional University of KwaZulu-Natal graduate Dumisani Ngobese weeps as he walks off the stage after he had been capped with a bachelor’s degree last week.
/SETHU DLAMINI An emotional University of KwaZulu-Natal graduate Dumisani Ngobese weeps as he walks off the stage after he had been capped with a bachelor’s degree last week.
 ?? ?? Malaika Mahlatsi
Malaika Mahlatsi

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