"Rome was not built in a day"
As it is not in my nature to keep quiet
when faced with issues related to discrimination, inequality, crude comments
about the country I live in, let alone a man who sacrificed his personal life
alongside many others, who I have known personally and indirectly, to allow the
following comment from a certain David Cocks who commented on Sir Richard
Branson's blog about "Mandela's
Way" to go unanswered.
David
Cocks had this to say in his comment:
"I
was living in South Africa at the time when Nelson Mandela was the chief
motivator for the ANC as well as the major influence for APLA and various other
anti-white organisations. He was the
force behind indescribable murders and torture carried out on innocent white
people who very often were employers of black staff on farms and in other
business. Their deaths left vast numbers
of black families unemployed and homeless apart from the actual brutality of
the callous murders themselves. Before
slapping Madiba on the back and shaking his hand, just ask the vast majority of
blacks, coloureds and indian [Indian]
people still living in South Africa, (not
one of the millions of new illegal immigrants who flood across the borders
every day); what they really think of the 'Rainbow Nation'. The answers may shock you."
David
Cocks as a "coloured" person
who inherited this classification from the past apartheid government "still living" in South Africa
let me give you my opinion. An opinion I
would not have been able to give under the previous regime without possible
arrest and detention, most likely without trial, torture (and as a female –
rape), and possible death.
I
grew up in a time when I could not sit next to a white person on the bus or
train even if they were family. I grew
up in a time when most beaches were meant only for white people. I grew up in a time when all I knew about
Mandela was his name, and a name one dared not utter. I grew up in a time when the place I lived in
was declared a white area and along with my family and subsequent death of my grandmother, was forced to move to make way for white
people. I grew up in a time when friends
disappeared, never to be seen again. I
grew up in a time when meetings were held under the cover of darkness by
candlelight vigils because where three or more were gathered we were referred
to as terrorists.
I grew up. Yes I grew up, because under the old regime
there was no time to be a child if you were faced with a hand grenade or flying
bullets being aimed at you when it should have been a ball to play.
There
is a saying that goes "Rome was not
built in a day" well neither was South Africa, and for us who are here,
and who love our country, and its people, we will continue to build this
country in the best way we can. If we
grow up too quickly we just might miss out on the many lessons there are to
learn which Mandela lives by.
If
what you say about Mandela is true then in is his defence, I would like to say – he
probably had a moment of "madness". After all who spends 27 years of his life
behind bars for wanting to see a better South Africa for all its people and
comes out sane? Be that as it may, his "madness" if so, was
short-lived. Personally, I do not think that what you had to say is true. Today I live in country
which is a Rainbow Nation. It is a
country which I am very proud of.
This
country could have been in so much turmoil had Mandela and the previous
president FW de Klerk not sat at the same table and decided to make amends and
work towards a free, democratic South Africa.
Yes we have problems. As all
babies, we have teething problems, and one day when we have a full set of teeth
we will don the brightest smile. But for
now, while we Grow our Own Garden, we will continue to eradicate the "weeds"
as best we can.
When next you are in South Africa David Cocks, look me up, and we can have a braai (BBQ).
enjoyed the read CA:)
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