Category Archives: townships

Welcome to Hell: A march through the SA townships

Welcome to Hell: A march through the SA townships

Way of Life Church Press Release
For immediate release – 23 March 2013

Start: Uluntu Centre, Klipfontein Rd in Gugulethu
Finish: Way of Life Church, 1 Joe Modise St in Mandela Park, Khayelitsha
Date: 30 March, 2013
Time: 09:00

South Africa’s Townships are nothing but glorified refugee camps, rat infested hellholes that must be dismantled. Let it be known across the breath and length of this country that the continuation of separate development is the perpetuation of the notorious group areas act of yesterday. Apartheid remains.

On the 30th of March 2013, a significant weekend in the Christian calendar which commemorates the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ (a story of suffering and hope), it is fitting that south Africans be reminded of the gruesome violence of township life. Through our 17km march from Gugulethu to Mandela Park, we want to bring to the attention of this nation the abnormality we have become too familiar with and desensitized to. We must interrupt the ongoing hypnosis that makes us accept such abhorrent living conditions.

All people who care about justice are invited to join us in the March as we highlight the historic evil intent in the design of South African townships. We call for the delegislation and decriminalising of the current face of South African townships.

It is our view that social ills such as unemployment, poverty, HIV / AIDS, the oppressive education system, etc, that is visited upon our people, are exacerbated by forcing blacks into township dwelling. This March must help strengthen the resolve of those trapped in the township to demand justice. More importantly, together, we must remind the government of it primary function: that of creating favourable conditions for its citizens to with dignity and to insure that everybody has an equal and fare chance to make something of themselves.
This year we will be joined by the wife of the late ANDRIES TATANE, and we will be highlighting, amongst other things, the scourge of police brutality against our people.

For more information please contact:

Zimkitha Zilo
078 954 0099

Way of Life Church
Tel:021 837 1239
021 367 2122
Be blessed!!!!

Click here to see some photographs from this march by Shachaf Polakow.

Sowetan: Look at black townships to see evidence of inhumanity

http://www.sowetanlive.co.za/columnists/2011/05/24/look-at-black-townships-to-see-evidence-of-inhumanity

Look at black townships to see evidence of inhumanity
24 May 2011 | HOME TRUTHS with Oupa Ngwenya |

EVERYONE born in the township, in any part of the country, needs no convincing that they were meant for black people.

Far from being an accident, black misery was by design from the cradle to the grave. Dumb or smart you were born into that life. And dumb or smart, meant to die there.

Conversely, white life was carefully ensconced in the northern suburbs, thoughtfully determined to be near towns and far from the madding crowds. The planned serenity was unmistakably a safe distance from the howling hours of industry and its attendant hazards.

South of this deliberate order of things stood the sprawling black townships. Its dwellers were confined to menial jobs, lowly paid, located further from workplaces and its children fed a demeaning education so as to perpetuate an endless cycle that renders them misfits in a white setting.

Against all odds, black life defiantly soldiered on to produce the peerless Albert Luthuli.

It graced us with indefatigable Robert Mangaliso Sobukwe who changed politics from protest to challenge. It gifted us with the acclaimed icon Nelson Mandela that the world just cannot get enough of.

Then there was that young, gifted and quintessential thought leader, Steve Biko, whose massive intellectual finesse set the country on an unstoppable liberation path as the founding father of Black Consciousness.

Even while producing such inspirational political stars, black life was, at least in the eyes of its oppressive tormenters, never destined to live in bodies deserving of common humanity.

Look at black townships to see evidence of this planned inhumanity. The haunting horror of that dehumanising undertaking today is evident in the scramble for shelter in desperate but permanent informal settlements due to lack of systematic policy response to urban-rural migration, cross-border economic refuges, job opportunities and poverty.

Never meant to be accorded full-blooded dignity and crammed in “matchbox houses”, life in black townships was bound to be unsafe, undignified, irksome and quarrelsome with propensity for crime.

Doubtlessly cruel to the core, it is a wonder how the authors of such a political system stopped short of building open toilets.

This shamelessly became the 2011 finger-pointing electoral issue, with some blaming it on budgetary constraints and others pleading ignorance of their existence.

Why is this unique to black life? This is one question that periodic elections, credited for helping a new-found democracy born on April 27 1994 to mature, seem unable to grapple with, nor possess a will to confront.

Being free to elect or stand for political office is well and good, but what matters most is a qualitatively different life for children to reshape a future we would like to see them inherit, keep and enjoy forever.

For as long as the dreams of some children are burdened with the longing for clean running water, enclosed toilets and struggle to go through school where they live, our democracy is far from maturing.

A democracy making no effort to change the misery of this unchanging reality risks being reduced to a ritual for leaders to take turns in the comforts of an uncaring power.

If these be vague words then those of Stanley Aronowitz and Henry A Giroux should be clear: “Democracy is not, for us at least, a set of formal rules of participation but the lived experience of empowerment for the vast majority. If one takes the view that schools are among our leading political and ideological institutions, it is a contradiction to envision a democratic society when its inheritors, the kids, are forced to live under conditions of unrelieved subordination.”