Tomorrow is Freedom Day.
This bulletin is about two African youth, one Muslim, one Christian…
freedom fighters.
Has anybody here
Seen my old friend Bouazizi?
Can you tell me where he’s gone?
He inspired a lot of people
It seems the good, they die young
I just turned around
And he’s gone!
In the latest issue of The Thinker, Dr. Essop Pahad
waxes eloquent about Tunisia:
“Tunisia is an
African country. Its glorious history of
Carthage and Hannibal is part of our African heritage… Tunisia
was one of the first countries in Africa, in 1956, to wrest its political
independence from France. It is one of the founding members of the OAU
and later the AU. Now, 55 years after
that glorious event in our continent, Africa should take pride in the heroic
actions of the people of Tunisia.
“An unemployed
university graduate Mohamed Bouazizi is harassed, assaulted, humiliated and
forcibly prevented from earning a meager income by selling fruits and
vegetables. In desperation and in an
action of defiance he sets himself on fire.
This act of self-immolation triggered demonstrations by his family in
Sidi Bouzid. They were joined by
hundreds of people, mainly young, in their protests. Very rapidly this demonstration spread like wild-fire
throughout the country and eventually brought down the President.
“This young hero,
Mohamed Bouazizi, will forever be credited with inspiring the overthrow of the
23-year old regime of Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali.
Under this regime Tunisia had been lauded and fêted as a very
successful, wealthy, fast-growing economy; and according to an IMF report it
was the “most competitive economy in Africa”and ranked 40th in the
world.
“Progressive
organizations and individuals, including journalists, were subject to arbitrary
arrest, detention and torture. This
iron-fisted rule was the bedrock of an economy that spawned massive inequality
between rich and poor, high unemployment rates, including many jobless
university graduates, ever-increasing prices of basic commodities and a serious
lack of any form of redistribution…
“The developments in Tunisia are
earth-shattering. They have had a
massive impact, for the good, in Egypt,
Algeria, Jordan, Yemen
and other countries in Africa and the Middle East. Mohamed Bouazizi and the other martyrs did
not die in vain. Whatever happens, Tunisia will
never be the same. The democratic
process cannot be halted, neo-colonialism has suffered a huge blow and
autocratic regimes in Africa and the Middle East
are feeling the heat. However, the
forces of neo-colonialism and monopoly capital may still take advantage of
current instability to push for the establishment of new governments
sympathetic to their interests, thus threatening the independence of these
countries and the democratic rights of their people.”
The problem with Colonialism was foreign interference. The Ben Ali regime was independent, so no one
intervened - while people were denied their freedom. Is booming economic growth reason enough for
the hands-off approach to human rights abuses?
What does that say about what matters most?
The last C4L Bulletin contained the sad news of another
death, another sacrifice, another young African who wanted a better deal for
the poor.
Has anybody here
Seen my old friend Tatane?
Can you tell me where he’s gone?
He mobilized a lot of people
It seems the good, they die young
I just turned around
And he’s gone!
Disparity in South
Africa is phenomenal. Driving along the R21 highway this week from Pretoria to Joburg, I observed so many huge mansions sprouting
up on the hill by Irene Mall, then within minutes the sprawling township of Tembisa.
It is graphic to the point of being shocking. Someone described South Africa as a First World
Country and a Third World Country occupying the same space.
But the same is true in global terms! This week I also retuned to Africa from Europe – it’s just as graphic. Is anyone “free” in a society or a world like
that?
Andries Tatane was on the right track.. There is a Myth of Spontaneous Development. It doesn’t just happen, it gets kick-started
– by facilitation, activism and resources.
In fact “intervention” actually means that someone has to “come
between”. So Tatane was out there,
protesting the lack of service delivery.
There are risks in being a freedom fighter.
It has often been said that if you are not part of the
solution, then you are part of the problem.
If our convictions and values allow us to stand by and watch while
people’s rights are denied, then we are
guilty of passivism, maybe even fatalism.
Ouch! Not everyone is a
volunteer, but Voluntarism offers so many diverse ways to get involved.
In the days when there were still Second World Countries
(the Communist Bloc as these were also called) there used to be dissidents and
occasionally, defectors. Then Alexander
Solzhenitsyn started writing books about the Gulag… then glasnost… then perestroika…
and a New World Order. Migration is now booming
– causing a brain drain for Africa.
Earlier cries of Uhuru!
(freedom) turned to Amandla! (power) under
Apartheid. The Struggle was not just for
liberation but for empowerment. Now the
question is being raised whether BEE (black economic empowerment) is going over
the top? Pallo Jordan once
wrote that the purpose of affirmative action was to create circumstances in which
affirmative action would no longer be needed.
It is a means, not an end. But
there are concerns that it is becoming a destination, not just a journey - a permanent
feature of the landscape. Will the time come when the adjective “positive” will
dropped from in front of “discrimination”. Does it dignify people to be
selected by that criteria, and not competency?!
Is entitlement “freedom”?
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