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Tuesday, 23 February 2016

Then and Now - My fight for freedom for students of all races




In the mid to late 60’s I attended Dokkies (Durban Onderwys Kollege), Most of the instructions were done in English (for the English) and Afrikaans (for the Afrikaans) whereas  specialist subjects were lectured in both languages seamlessly. My notebooks bounced from English to Afrikaans and back again. It made for interesting studying!


I had been brought up in a sheltered white English speaking home so meeting up with and dating an Afrikaans guy was a little bit frowned upon but what the hell. I was at college and college is the time you explore your horizons. It didn’t take me long to gravitate towards the more progressive students. They were exciting, they were poking at the lions in their cages of parliament. They were pushing the boundaries. They were fighting for injustice. We were fighting for black people all over this fair country of ours. We had the power to try to move mountains. I was never very deep into politics (Politics had never intrigued me – it still doesn’t) But people – people intrigued me. I needed to get to know people of different upbringing, of different colour, of different cultures. I needed to try to understand why we were considered different. I never understood it. Some people made me laugh, some made me cry some made me sad but all had something to show me of their culture. And nothing made me compare my skin to theirs.


We went to multicultural parties – my staid mother would have been horrified. I have an idea that my father may have respected me as most of the notions I have took seed from comments he made. This was very dangerous in the 60’s there were nightly raids on mixed race parties. We went on multiracial religious camps. Desmond Tutu (Merely a lowly vicar at the time) was talking to our group and he put his arm around me and said “Who has the right Vera, to tell us we can’t be friends?” A profound moment that I didn’t appreciate until many years later when I saw his promotion and I started scratching to find THAT photo. I still need to find it.


A lifetime ago I was fighting for YOUR freedom. A lifetime ago I was your friend. A lifetime ago I laughed at your jokes, shared your food slept in the same tents as you and now your children are chanting that they want me dead. Your children want to destroy what we fought so hard, so passively to put in place.


I am a pacifist – maybe that’s where I went wrong. I enjoyed the peace that surrounded our camps and our parties. We were a group of young people finding enjoyment in life, finding common ground. Oh that we could have taken that idealism forward with us in our lives. I wish our children and grandchildren could glimpse the high ideals we set ourselves. I wish they could appreciate that for things to succeed we need to build up not tear down. You and me – we laid some pretty firm foundations – I beseech that the modern generation build on those foundations to find the peace that we found when together chatting our idealistic thoughts.


I am in you and you are in me.

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