Secondly, there are things happening in blogosphere.
Opening Chapter's Blag - a Blag = Bl(og) + (M)ag(azine) - has finally been launched. There are articles in it by some bloggers known to you - including this blogger... The Blag is an online arts and literature magazine - and they're open to submissions... So...you might also want to become a blagger! Check it out!
Then, the Shameless Lions appear to be regrouping for the creation of a collective story. Should be fun, might get out of control... Go and take a peek...
Finally, given my recent ordeal, I decided to watch the local premier of an excellent documentary by ex-South African and Oscar winner, Jon Blair, last night. Presented by another ex-South African, Sir Anthony Sher, it is called Murder Most Foul and deals with crime in South Africa. (The documentary had its world premier on the True Stories strand on the UK's Channel 4 on 25 September.)
In it Blair describes crime in South Africa as being on an "industrial scale". Archbishop Desmond Tutu says "something has gone horrendously, badly wrong". The Minister of Safety and Security, however, says (of people like me): "They can continue to whinge until they’re blue in the face, they can continue to be as negative as they want to or they can simply leave this country...".
What struck me most forcibly was this: I expected to be harrowed and horrified by the film. I was not. Why? Because I am numb. Because this is what we live with every single day. This crime - it is becoming South Africa. We say "it is not acceptable" and yet we all accept it. I was not shocked or overwhelmed by it as Anthony Sher was, because this is how I know we live - white, black, brown - crime isn't interested in race. We have, unwittingly, become desensitised and, as such, dehumanised. And that is indeed a sad indictment of South Africa and South Africans - and more so that it takes a documentary like Murder Most Foul to make us sit up and take note. (I hope we will sit up and take note and not, instead, start berating the producer and presenter for being "white sensationalist shit-stirrers".)
What I find even more disturbing are the South Africans who seem unwilling to accept this horrific crime is happening. I'm not talking about the government here - we know they are asleep - they, after all, denied there was an AIDS pandemic until the world stepped in and opened their eyes so they could see the thousands dying. No, I'm talking about fellow South Africans who are so determined to focus only on the positive - got to be "positively South African" you know to be a good South African - god forbid you should criticize (but where would we be without criticism?) - but it is they who fail to see the woods for the trees. One South African blogger said: "Quotes like “Violence has always been a way of life in SA” are bullshit and misleading." Hmm, I wonder where he was when all the children were being gunned down in Soweto in 1976... I wonder where he was when families were being torn apart by apartheid, women were being raped by the police and activists and ordinary people lived in fear of their lives and police brutality. Where was he when people were put in detention without trial? Anyone who thinks violence is not part of our heritage and our legacy is floating down a very long river called Denial. I would say beware to them, there be crocodiles...
At the end of the apartheid era many feared a bloodbath - but it didn't happen and the world marvelled at our peaceful transformation to a democracy. But as Sher commented - there is a bloodbath it's just happening slowly and over a very long time. Last year 18 500 South Africans were murdered. In the past year 20 000 have been murdered. This does not include the unreported cases, the rapes, the child rapes, the mutilations, the torture, the robbery, the hijackings, the attempted murders...
If you are interested and get a chance to see Blair's documentary, do. Unreported World - also UK Channel 4 - will also be reporting on current levels of violence in South Africa tomorrow night 28 September.
Funny that it takes outsiders to see our problems while so many of us are hell-bent on playing ostrich and others are intent on screwing their rose-coloured spectacles to their head. Sounds, in fact, rather frighteningly familiar of our not too distant past...
20 comments:
wish you a speedy recovery, how are you feeling now...
I hope to catch the documentary somewhere online soon.
Hey faithful Rambler - I'm doing okay, not great but a whole lot better. Bit of a voiceless wonder though - sound more like a frog smoking Camels or Gauloises than the real me...
If you get to see the documentary, I think it will answer a lot of the questions you've had in your mind about crime in SA - even though it does tend to focus on two specific murders which it uses as an example of what's going on.
Me too. I don't have access to either of those channels but we do screen True Stories here, maybe it'll pop up. You're right tho . . it's easier to deny what's going on than do something proactive about it. Glad to see you're back on the horse kiddo.
Welcome back, but do continue getting better until you are back to the real YOU, dear heart.
We don't get Channel 4 here either, Baino but when I ran a search for Murder Most Foul I found it had already been screened on True Stories. As you say, it may yet pop up in Oz, or it's bound to turn up online sooner or later.
I must say the one criticism that I have of the film is that it focuses primarily on the murders of two young white men - I realise the producers did this so it could serve as an example - and because this was what had originally really struck Sher - I also understand the creative construct of the "plot", but I was glad that they had also made a point of going into the townships (ghettoes) to speak to people in those communities about their lives because that is where the root and the worst of the matter sits - both in terms of perpetrators and victims.
Thanks, Bonnie, you're a sweet heart, truly you are. Big hug to you. And don't worry, I'm taking it very easy - not having had a decent night's sleep in over a week I'm feeling more than a trifle wiped out.
I hope to do the writing meme tomorrow. Rather looking forward to it! ;-)
I wish you a speedy recovery, Vanilla. Looking forward to reading your writing meme. I'll try and catch that documentary.
Glad you are back, AV, and thanks for your visit to my blog. I've sent you an email too. I'll look for blagging now. Good morning. Still dark in USA.
Thanks, Marie - do let me know what you think of tonight's Channel 4 showing if you see it - I've not seen that one, only Murder Most Foul.
Hope you enjoy the blag, Carla . Still dark, eh, what happened to that wonderful moon? ;-)
I'm glad you're back, AV, and hope you'll be feeling much better soon.
But the sadness at South Africa's fate... well, that's something else... unfortunately almost impossible to get better over those feelings of helplessness and despair. My heart cringes when I think of all the victims of this world.
I'm with you, Vanilla, for what it's worth...
You're a sweetie, Vesper, thank you.
welcome back - missed you! thanks for the head's up on the blag and murder most foul. we'll see if it makes it to this side of the pond. I hope each day has you feeling better - remember lots of fluids! xx
Thanks, Kimy - if I drink more fluids, I'm going to turn into a lake! ;-) Big hug.
OMG Vanilla .....
I just read your post "My Africa" (it wouldn't come up a week ago when I read your blog interruptus post ..)
And here I am in Bubbletown blathering on about my divorce like it is some sort of event ... and I really have no clue, do I?? (that's rhetorical)
I'm so sorry that happened to you. I experienced something quite similar years ago when I lived in Los Angeles, California: a group of Hispanic men surrounded me inside my car in a strip mall parking lot. I inched the window down and asked them what did they want. A smile that was more a predatory grin flashed at me: "We want to fix your car - $100 bucks." (yes, it had a few dents) ... umm where? i asked. They indicated an alley behind the strip mall. So I agreed reluctantly, told them I would follow. As I edged out of my space, I turned the car in the opposite direction and took off - thankfully they didn't follow me.
But my heart was pounding all the same.
Years later, I was living in Guatemala. Our car and driver were carjacked at the busiest intersection in the middle of the afternoon !! Nobody noticed. The men asked our driver where was the little blonde boy (my oldest son.) thankfully he was at a birthday party. The men had the driver drive to a deserted part of the city, dumped him (alive) and stole the car .... that was when I knew it was time to leave the country - as much as I had grown to love it. We never knew whether our driver was IN on the plan or not ...
but even these isolated incidents do not compare to what you face each and every day of your life. yes i can see where numbness sets in ... how else could you deal with the constant fear and stress??
and now the flu .... ah, vanilla ... i do hope you get well soon ...
I'll keep an eye out for that documentary, perhaps the Sundance channel will air it over here in the states.
Ah, Red Dirt Girl, don't pound yourself, divorces are painful and horrible experiences - been there, got that t-shirt. The good thing is once through them, life begins earnestly and vibrantly.
I'm so sorry you've also had awful predatory experiences - I think they can happen anywhere, any time - it's just that here, well, it's constant. And yes, that makes it time to leave - just as you had to leave Guatemala.
Thank you for the kind thoughts and wishes. x
Do that, Silver - it may help to make a lot of sense about some of the stuff I warble and witter on about.
As a long-time-left-South-Africa South African I don't feel qualified to make any accurate judgements on the state of the nation as it is now; what I have observed however is that in 90% of the white Sarf Efrikens that I bump into in Britain, the Apartheid gene remains, now thinly veiled by the apparent respectability of being a 'New South African'.
One would expect the narrow mind to expand (at least slightly) when exposed to the vast psychic landscape that constitutes London, but no: I hear them talking about the same subject, with the same abject ignorance, as they did in the bad old days of Botha.
I think you are entirely right, Pisces Iscariot - the apartheid gene does remain - not just in those who've left but in those who remain - possibly because the shift in cultural landscape. It strikes me that racism is as alive and well as it ever was and it is potentially worse as one now sees it from every angle - not just from whites. It is a curse which blights us all.
It's interesting what you say about the S'Efrikens in the UK - the time that I spent there back in the late 80's - mid 90's shifted my world view radically - so I find it sad that it has not shifted the view of many others. Mind you, I do have an ex SA friend in the UK who is possibly worse now than she was when she were here. We are, all of us, tragically driven by our fears - particularly of things different, which make us unable to celebrate and respect our similarities. And so the cycle continues.
As for the violence, the complexity of that runs deep and unquestionably has its roots in apartheid, most particularly the breakdown of family structures - ans as such, values - through the forced migrant labour system. So, one can explain it, though how one resolves it, I am not sure. As Desmond Tutu said, we need massive rehabilitation.
Thanks for visiting.
You are a true warrior, Abvanlah.
Keep bringin' the gospel,
John Little Bear :)
Well, John, my real name means Victory (more specifically Victory of the People), so yeah, there must be a warrior spirit in me :-)
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