Category Archives: Pastor Xola Skosana

News 24: Refugees: Welcome to Hell

http://www.news24.com/MyNews24/Refugees-Welcome-to-Hell-20120413

Refugees: Welcome to Hell

On Saturday, while many Capetownians were running through leafy suburbs from one ocean to another and while others drank and/or sang themselves to stupor in celebration of the resurrection of Jesus Christ, a unique group of about fifty people staged their second annual Welcome to Hell “Crucession” from Gugulethu to Khayelitsha.

Drenched by the pouring rain despite wearing black garbage bags, we walked, sang and danced a full 16.3 kilometres without even a peep of attention from the local newspapers. I participated in the march, which was organised by the controversial Way of Life Church based in Mandela Park in Khayelitsha because of its message that reminds all of us that 18 years since the fall of the National Party, the ghettoised townships where the poor majority are forced to live, remain a living hell.

While the scourge of shack-fires in the townships can be solved politically with a real authentic commitment to service delivery, this is only a facelift solution to the real problems of poor blacks. Indeed, recent fires in Kennedy Road in Durban and QQ Section here in Khayelitsha demonstrate that a simple inexpensive electrification and blocking of shack settlements will remove almost all threats of fires from these communities. It’s a simple technical task which governments continue to eschew in the name of keeping these decades old settlements ‘temporary’.

And while more efficient and equal service delivery might make the inferno of township life more palatable, it does next to nothing to demolish the everlasting torment of the ghetto.

Each and every participant that day knew that apartheid remains; that the long walk to freedom could not be solved with a few RDP homes, some job training and the racist separate-but-equal mantra that hides beneath a class-based system of segregation that makes Cape Town one of the most unequal and racist cities in the world.

Despite how the Democratic Alliance views it, structural racism cannot be quantified by the number of instances someone gets refused entry into a dance club. Instead it is present everyday in the very make-up of the socio-economic fabric of society; in the way police ignore poor blacks’ attempts to lay charges of theft, in the way security guards only watch over black shoppers, and in the way politicians address occupations of Chappies while criminalising township protests.

Only a city turned on its head could confidently cry provincialism and label poor blacks from the Eastern Cape refugees in their own country when in fact it was the forsaken European socio-economic outcasts who colonised Africa and the rest of the world. Helen Zille, whose parents were both displaced persons from Nazi Germany, would never admit that township children who attend Model C schools are education refugees from Cape Town’s ghetto.

Still, both inequalities are one and the same.

The small march which proclaimed in one of its’ banners that “All Whites are Refugees” was reminding us of this contradiction. Poor blacks in South Africa are perpetually being made into foreigners in their own land, not because of inefficient service delivery, but because of white supremacist capitalism: a system which stole the land, colonised the mind, is now trying to hide this fact by proclaiming political equality and a façade of equal opportunities.

The unequal development of capitalism throughout the world, in South Africa, in Cape Town and even within the family structure, is a feature of the oppressive, racist and misogynistic society we live in.

Hell remains hell even if its residents can now buy food at their local PnP or forget the heat while watching Generations on a brand new flat screen. Botox merely hides the cold-blooded violence beneath.

Pastor Xola Skosana of the Way of Life Church explained this after his Jesus had HIV sermon that he interprets the story of Easter as indicating that Jesus put himself in the shoes of all people who experience oppression.

Yet as the shackdwellers movement, Abahlali baseMjondolo points out, no one will ever be able to solve their problems “for us, without us”. What more, then, can one do but build more consciousness of structural oppression and through that more peoples power? Even a small group of 50 committed people can remind us that enough is enough. Eventually, somewhere, somehow, something will click and the rest of us will leave behind our dumpies, soapies and other opiates and come join them.

It is up to us, the people, to resurrect the

Cape Times: Do not vote, shack dwellers told

http://www.capetimes.co.za/do-not-vote-shack-dwellers-told-1.1061832

Do not vote, shack dwellers told

April 28 2011

A SHACK-DWELLERS’ movement, Abahlali Basemjondolo, has urged people not to vote in the May 18 local government election because “politicians are self-centred”.

“By voting you are giving away your powers to politicians. Your vote is not your voice and politicians use poor people as a ladder to enhance the rich and their interests,” its chairman, Mzonke Poni, said to loud cheers at a meeting of about 100 people in a tent in Khayelitsha’s QQ section.

Abahlali had called the meeting to look into what caused shack fires, how adequate government intervention programmes were and how best residents could react in a fire, but speakers instead voiced concern about a lack of service delivery.

Community members demanded that the City of Cape Town provide electricity to their shacks to prevent the loss of life and property.

With Freedom Day yesterday, Poni said: “The people living in informal settlements cannot celebrate 17 years into democracy because there is nothing to celebrate.”

He urged the crowd not to “liaise” with political parties and to hold back from taking part in the election.

Although he acknowledged every individual’s right to cast a vote on May 18, he discouraged those who were enthusiastic about voting, declaring: “The freedom we have is so limited. People are still living in appalling conditions.”

Referring to residents who were leaving the ANC to join the DA, Poni said: “People are not joining these political parties because they have confidence in them, but because they are disappointed with empty promises.

“Politicians should be ashamed that old-age people in the townships still use plastics when they want to relieve themselves because services to the people are lacking.”

Another speaker, Loyiso Mfuku, the chairman of the Mandela Park Backyarders Association, told the crowd that “if politicians cannot tell us what they will be doing in the next five years, we should not vote. As long as people don’t govern, there is no democracy”. Nolusindiso Ketani, 29, whose baby was permanently disabled by injuries sustained in a shack fire that swept through Langa’s Joe Slovo informal settlement in 2005, could not hold back tears.

She said that next week her family and neighbours will gather again in commemoration of the tragedy. Today, the six-year-old Indiphile Ketani’s right side is not functioning properly and he cannot go to school. He has been in and out of Red Cross Children’s Hospital 10 times already, she said.

Another speaker, controversial pastor Xola Skosana, who made headlines for saying Jesus was HIV-positive, said the electorate should think twice before casting votes.

“Any government that allows its people to continuously live in shanty conditions is an evil government. Why vote if the people still live in houses with broken windows and doors, leaking roofs and littered streets?” asked Skosana.

He said until the government had put its house in order, people should not think about voting.

The crowd, led by Skosana, marched through some Khayelitsha streets, singing and holding placards and photos of shack fires, and returned to the tent to light candles in remembrance of those who had lost their lives in the fires.

27th April UnFreedom Day Mass Rally at QQ Shack Settlement, Khayelitsha

27th April UnFreedom Day Mass Rally at QQ Shack Settlement, Khayelitsha

Tomorrow the 27th April, most people through out the country will be celebrating 17 years of our so called freedom or democracy.

Abahlali baseMjondolo Western Cape joined by Mandela Park Back yard dwellers, Gugulethu Anti-eviction Campaign, Delft Anti-eviction Campaign, Langa Concerned group from Langa TRA's and by many other community based organizations including pastor Xola Skosana who led a march from Gugulethu to Khayelitsha on the 23rd April under the campaign 'Welcome to Hell South African Townships' will be hosting a shack fire summit at QQ informal settlement from 10: am till 13:00 pm.

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Sowetan: Townships are hell, says cross-bearing pastor

http://www.sowetanlive.co.za/news/2011/04/26/townships-are-hell-says-cross-bearing-pastor

Townships are hell, says cross-bearing pastor
26-Apr-2011 | Sabelo Mpana

A CAPE Town pastor, Xola Skosana, marched almost 14km carrying a huge wooden cross to proclaim that “South African townships are hell”

The march – from Gugulethu to Khayelitsha – took place on Saturday.

Though the huge cross was fitted with a wheel to enable Skosana to drag it the pillow on his shoulder, on which the cross rested, showed that it was still a very heavy load.

“If people do not stand up against their poor living conditions there will be no change in their lives,” Skosana said.

“They cannot outsource their responsibility to politicians. People must have faith in themselves to bring change in their society.”

Flanked by supporters and carrying his customary “Welcome to Hell: South African townships” banner, Skosana’s march attracted about 300 people from the black consciousness-aligned group Blackwash, Abahlali baseMjondolo, local back-yard associations and the DA.

At one stage Blackwash supporters clashed with DA members and a DA T-shirt was set alight.

Lonwabo Kilani of Blackwash said: “The march was not organised so that political parties could hijack it. We burnt a DA T-shirt not because we support the ANC. The DA and ANC are the same. They are responsible for the conditions of the black people in the townships. We could not find an ANC T-shirt. We wanted to burn the T-shirts of both parties,” Kilani said.

The march took about five and half hours, with frequent stops to explain to people what was happening.

Bystander Wellington Lubambo, 51, said he was happy to see that the church cared about the living conditions of people in the townships.

“We have lived here for the past 16 years and only promises have been made. No one has ever come back to fulfil those promises. We have neither electricity nor clean water and this place is dirty,” an angry Lubambo said.

“Our children are always sick because of the dirty water running down our streets.”

Abahlali baseMjondolo leader Mzonke Poni urged the crowd not to be loyal to political parties.

“Political parties have disappointed us for too long. As a result, many of our people are politically confused. Last year they were wearing Cope T-shirts. This year they are wearing different T-shirts,” he said.