This morning a man passed me
with a T-shirt that says, “Praat Afrikaans of hou jou bek!” – “Speak Afrikaans
or shut up!” As I passed the man I
wondered what would motivate someone to proclaim something like that? This reminded me, once again, that
South Africans are diverse; that there are no monolithic definitions for the
different groupings in our country.
The man who passed me fits a
certain stereotype of Afrikaner men.
And maybe even that is not true – he might wear this T-shirt as a form
of sarcasm. In “Knowledge of the
blood” Jonathan Jansen points out that in South Africa,
“It would be a mistake,
however, to cast all whites (or for that matter all Afrikaners) as expressing a
monolithic response to defeat.
Among Afrikaners, there are at least three responses to history,
transition, and the future.”
He describes these responses
as:
- Nothing
happened. - Something
happened – now get over it! - Terrible things
happened.
The first group believes
that apartheid wasn’t bad. That it
was an experiment that had its good – and a few bad points. For this group, “What whites achieved was on the basis of
their own hard work in a barren land through superior skills”
The second group knows that
something was bad about apartheid.
Yet, they think that the hype about it is exaggerated and therefore to
dwell on the past should stop.
This group, therefore, find it absolutely incomprehensible to revisit
the apartheid era’s stories. “Let
is just move on – democracy is here and the playing field is now level” is one
of the sentiments in this group.
The third group is
subdivided into another three groups.
Those who believe something terrible has happened can be described as
activists, gradualists and confessionalists.
The activists are those who actively opposed the apartheid regime. “In this group there is immediate
concession of privilege, that what they have is a direct result of being
treated differently as whites, and a consequence of the dispossession meted out
against blacks. This group of whites does not need to be told that something
happened; it readily owns up to a terrible past.”
The gradualists are those who, after 1994, came to the realization what
happened under the apartheid era.
“This is a group that does not want to speak about the past; its members
are quiet but acknowledging of the terrible past. They will often work determinedly to correct wrongs, advance
affirmative policies for the excluded, defend practices that include others,
and even demonstrate considerable sensitivity towards blacks as they grasp the
enormity of the terrible things that happened.”
The confessionalists are
those who can remember direct incidents of how their racism caused pain. This group “want to talk”, “they want
to talk, in order to confront the demons within themselves and settle and
reconcile with those whom they hurt and despised not long ago.” Adriaan Vlok is a prime example of
someone in the confessionalist group.
A few weeks ago, after a
particularly tough session in our interracial group, Jacques wrote a blog post
in which he verbalized some of his own frustrations of being cast into a
monolithic stereotype of an “Afrikaner”.
He wrote,
I don’t want to be
stereotyped, dismissed, ignored, burdened with the tons of baggage simply
because I’m part of a particular group. In essence, and here’s the kicker, I
don’t want to be treated the way we have treated blacks for decades.
Jansen’s descriptions help to differentiate. I find this
helpful and hopeful. My question
for the day: “where do you think followers of Jesus should fall in the above
descriptions?
- Nothing happened.
- Something happened – so let’s get on?
- Something terrible happened? (Activist, Gradualist, Confessionalist)?
- A combination?
#1 by daryl on June 15, 2010 - 2:31 pm
I don’t think Jesus would have got involved in secular politics. Jesus told His oppressed Jewish brethren to give Ceasar what was due to Ceasar and be obedient citizens. His solution to slavery was to be obedient harder working slaves. No rebellion no opposition. Because thats faith. God is aware of the problem, He permitted it to happen. God has a reason for it happening. Not my will be done but Your will be done. As is written ‘do not resist the evil man’ ‘our fight is not against flesh and blood”love your enemies”pray for those who persecute you”etc.
When Christians get involved in the worlds political problems and join protest groups, they need to ask who are we ultimately protesting against, who allowed this to happen, and in truth they will realize that the protest is a rebellion against the will of God. True Christian character and faith is tested in suffering through trials and tribulations and not in protesting against them. So definately jesus would not have gotten involved, He would have been to busy trying to save souls for His Fathers kingdom than get sidetracked by peoples political sufferings that when compared to the sufferings awaiting them in hell…..
#2 by Thomas on June 15, 2010 - 2:47 pm
Hi Daryl,
It was exactly this kind of dualism that led to the justification of Apartheid. Jesus had some very hars words against the Roman Empire and was ultimately killed by the powers.
Even ascribing the title Lord to himself directly opposed the Caesars who called themselves Lords.
The line of thought you are propagating here was the kind of thinking used to justify apartheid in my country.
So I disagree with your split between the secular and the sacred.