Category Archives: symphony way occupation

The New Age: An Upside Down World

http://thenewage.co.za/blogdetail.aspx?mid=186&blog_id=1025

An Upside Down World

Jared Sacks

“We live in a world turned on its head – a desolate, de-souled world that practices the superstitious worship of machines and the idolatry of arms – an upside-down world, with its left on its right, its belly button on its backside and its head where its feet should be.

It’s a world where children work and don’t play, where “development” makes people poorer, where cars are in streets where people should be, where a tiny minority of the world consumes a majority of its resources.

“If the world is upside-down the way it is now, wouldn’t we have to turn it over to get it to stand up straight?” – Eduardo Galeano.

Celebrated Uruguayan writer Eduardo Galeano would surely also agree that there is something upside-down about the way freedom of speech is meted out in our society.

In South Africa, anyone can say anything she or he likes. We are “free”. We have the right to freedom of speech, or so says our Constitution. ANCYL leader Julius Malema can mouth off all he wants about nationalisation while standing to benefit from it and DA leader Helen Zille can falsely claim that there is no more raw sewage on Cape Town’s streets.

We are free to listen to the views of the elites, non-stop. From Generations to Tutu to Zapiro. Sometimes, what is said is also a damn accurate description of how f****d up our world is today.

Yet, there is something wrong with even the most well-meaning voices that we listen to, read, or watch, in the media today. It’s not necessarily that they are wrong, but that these voices are upside down.

These voices are vetted, compartmentalised and sold for an industrial complex that has one bottom line: profit (and not just any profit, but profit without risk).

There is an inequality of communications that rivals the inequality of wealth in this country. We hear politicians, academics, and development professionals talk about a poverty that they have, with few exceptions, never even experienced. Yet, where are the voices of those actually living in this poverty? We listen to the likes of Malema (who has enough money to buy thousands of hectares of farm land) speak about land redistribution.

Yet where are the voices of the landless?

When Helen Zille installs a prepaid water meter in her own home in front of dozens of cameras, she claims that if it’s good enough for her, then it’s good enough for Cape Town’s poor. Yet, for those who are the forced recipients of such meters and who end up begging their neighbour once their water is cut, where are the cameras?

The poor and landless have learnt that they must burn tyres and destroy roads to bring the cameras!

Yes. Something is surely amiss. Something is definitively upside-down. I ask myself: why am I writing this piece when I’m not even the author of the book I am writing about here? What was my role, really?

I created space for an anthology to be published, when such space should have, in the first place, existed! My role should not exist.

This is why we must all work to turn things right-side up. Self-written histories such as No Land! No House! No Vote! Voices from Symphony Way cannot be the only one of its kind in post-1994 South Africa.

The struggle for a true people’s history cannot end with the co-option of United Democratic Front-affiliated civil society, thereby making it the government’s history.

Has there really been much change in the South African media since the ANC came to power? Voice was and still is the property of the corporation.

Perhaps the only difference nowadays is that the voices of poor black shack dwellers, instead of being ignored outright, are sometimes interviewed, analysed, and interpreted.

But they’re always interviewed from a certain viewpoint, always analysed with specific agendas, always interpreted via specialised misinterpretations.

So when Conway tells us to “put your shoes into my shoes and wear me like a human being”, we’d better do as we’re told.

When Mina says: “I am not stupid, you can rather kill me but I will never agree to something that I am not satisfied with”, we should not underestimate her resolve.

And when Jacqui writes “turn your ear to the poor, hear them cry”, we must know that she has something important to say.

We cannot humanise our world through a vanguard media – as comradely as it may seemingly investigate society’s lack of humanity. To me, this is the ultimate lesson given by the 45 pavement dwellers who wrote this anthology.

Through Galeano again, we find that:

When it is genuine, when it is born of the need to speak, no one can stop the human voice. When denied a mouth, it speaks with the hands or the eyes, or the pores, or anything at all. Because every single one of us has something to say to others – something that deserves to be celebrated or forgiven by others.

And this is true in our case too. Our world and the media industry that speaks for it, has shrunk the pavement dweller’s voice into a small, though beautiful, 160-page book.

Yet, we must not forget that they spoke in myriad other ways: through their occupations, their protests and, of course, their unique little commune called Symphony Way that they built as they spent 21 months on an asphalt pavement opposite their N2 Gateway dream homes.

This article is appearing in the catalogue of the 2011 Jozi Book Fair. Jared Sacks is the compiler and supporting editor of No Land! No House! No Vote! Voices from Symphony Way, and the executive director of Children of South Africa

Pavement Dwellers in Joburg to promote their new book

Symphony Way Anti-Eviction Campaign
3 August 2011

Pavement Dwellers in Joburg to promote their new book

‘A beauty, extraordinary in every way.’
Naomi Klein, author of ‘The Shock Doctrine’ and ‘No Logo’

The Symphony Way Pavement Dwellers who now stay in Blikkiesdorp have just arrived in Johannesburg to promote our new unique anthology, No Land! No House! No Vote! Voices from Symphony Way.

We invite all our supporters, detractors and anyone interested in learning more about our struggle to hear Sarita, Lilly, Jane, Tilla and Mina speak about their daily struggles dignity in the new South Africa.

They will be featured in a panel discussion today at the NGO/Social Movement Fair and will be hosting a book launch tonight at Love and Revolution in Mellville. On Thursday evening, five of the authors will be speaking about their critique of urban planning at Wits university. On Saturday, Finally, the authors will be hosting a stall at the Jozi Book Fair for the entire event, from the 6th until the 8th of August. On the 6th of August, they will be hosting another panel discussion at the Fair.

These events will be an important opportunity for our communities to speak about their struggles for land, housing and dignity.

If you are not able to attend, please consider buying our book available at most South African bookstores or online at Kalahari.

Here are the details of the events in the next few days:

Event: Panel Discussion on their new book at the NGO Fair
Host: Symphony Way Pavement Dwellers
Date: Wed, 3th August
Time: 12h00 – 13h00
Venue: Arena (at Museum Africa in Newtown)

Event: The Joburg launch of No Land! No House! No Vote!
Host: Symphony Way Pavement Dwellers
Date: Wed, 3th August
Time: 18h30 – till guests drift
Venue: Love and Revolution, Shop 4B, 7th Street, Melville

Event: Special Cities Seminar on evictions and urban planning
Host: Symphony Way Pavement Dwellers
Date: Thurs, 4 August
Time: 17h30 – 19h00
Venue: First floor seminar room, John Moffat Building, Wits East Campus

Event: Panel Discussion on their new book at the Jozi Book Fair
Host: Symphony Way Pavement Dwellers
Date: Saturday, 6th August
Time: 12h00 – 13h00
Venue: Arena (at Museum Africa in Newtown)

The authors will also be promoting their book the entire weekend at the Jozi Book Fair
Date: 6th – 8th of August
Time: 09h00 – 17h00
Venue: Museum Africa, Newtown
Contact: 011-336-9190 and jozibookfair [at] khanyacollege.org.za

For more information about the book and the tour, please contact:

Sarita Jacobs @ 0764699843
Auntie Tilla @ 0764772508
Mina Mahema @ 0782142373

PS – The authors will be continuing their tour in Grahamstown from the 10th of August until the 14th of August. Details to come soon. For more information contact the Rhodes University Students for Social Justice at benfogel [at] hotmail.com

The City of Cape Town has created this war in Blikkiesdorp

29 July 2011
Press Release

The City of Cape Town has created this war in Blikkiesdorp

We warned the City.
We warned the courts.
We warned the public.

Fearing for our lives and with a heavy heart, we write this to tell Zille, Plato and de Lille and say: We told you so!

Yesterday, the morning of the 28th of July, Blikkiesdorp exploded into a full-scale drug war.

This is what we warned the government against when we resisted our eviction to Blikkiesdorp from the pavement of Symphony Way. The shacks we built ourselves were better than the shacks that our City has built and dumped us in.

Continue reading

Launch at Book Lounge of “No Land! No House! No Vote!” and picket by Blikkiesdorp in front of Parliament

Launch at Book Lounge of “No Land! No House! No Vote!” and picket by Blikkiesdorp in front of Parliament

Picket by Symphony Way Pavement Dwellers and Blikkiesdorp Residents

* Where? at Parliament (Cnr Roeland St & Plein St)
* When? 12noon–1pm on the 16th of May
* Why? To promote their new book and to protest against the horrible conditions in Tin Town and the government’s failure to honor their agreement to engage with us on our struggle for housing. No Dignity! No Vote!
* For more information on our struggle, please contact Aunty Tilla @ 0764772508 and Sarita @ 0764772508

—————————————————————————————————————-

From there, the authors will walk over to:

* The Book Lounge at 71 Roeland St
* at 5:30 for 6 – entrance is free
* RSVP to booklounge@gmail.com or 021 462 2425 or RSVP on Facebook

The Symphony Way Pavement Dwellers will be holding a book launch to present to the public our new acclaimed anthology: No Land! No House! No Vote! Voices from Symphony Way

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Acclaim/:

“A compelling testimony to the ingenuity of people to organise themselves and invent newer forms of struggle.”
– Issa Shivji, University of Dar es Salaam

“An extraordinary collection of writings from the spirit of resilience and strength of the collective which lay bare the betrayal of the people in post-­??apartheid South Africa.”
– Sokari Ekine, author and award-winning blogger

“This anthology is both testimony and poetry … The stories blew me away.”
– Raj Patel, bestselling writer and activist

No Land! No House! No Vote! Voices from Symphony Way

http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/72304

No Land! No House! No Vote! Voices from Symphony Way

Raj Patel

Before the Soccer World Cup last year, I was asked to write a foreword to an anthology of life stories told by South African pavement dwellers, living on Symphony Way, near Cape Town. The stories blew me away. It was very easy to write the short introduction below, just as it’s easy to encourage you to take a look at it now. The book is called No Land! No House! No Vote! Voices from Symphony Way, and it’s available here.

ON SYMPHONY WAY

For those outside South Africa, particularly for the generation of activists who fought apartheid, it’s tempting to imagine that after Mandela was freed from Robben Island, and lines snaked outside polling booths in the first free elections, and after the ANC won, and the national anthem became Nkosi Sikelele Afrika, and after Nelson Mandela held high the Rugby World Cup trophy, that even while the Soviet Union collapsed and capitalism crowed triumphantly from the United States, all was well in the Rainbow Nation.

But despite the close-harmony singing and the holding aloft of leaders, South Africa isn’t ‘The Lion King’. It’s more like ‘Animal Farm’. Orwell ends ‘Animal Farm’ with a scene in which we see the pigs and the humans whom they displaced, sharing a meal together, and it being hard to tell pig from human. Over the past two decades, a few black South Africans have become very wealthy, as Steve Biko predicted in 1972:

‘This is one country where it would be possible to create a capitalist black society, if whites were intelligent, if the nationalists were intelligent. And that capitalist black society, black middle class, would be very effective … South Africa could succeed in putting across to the world a pretty convincing, integrated picture, with still 70 percent of the population being underdogs.’

For many, the struggle against apartheid never ended, because apartheid continues to live. The introduction of neoliberal economic policies have led to falling levels of social welfare for the poorest. In South Africa, human development levels are now lower than in Palestine.[1] The ascent of a new black capitalist class isn’t, however, the end of the narrative. The state itself, in trying to stamp out the uncomfortable appearance of poverty, and in behaving in ways similar to the Apartheid regime, has done much to fan the flames of dissent, and to continue the story of the fight against apartheid.

Think, for instance, of over one hundred families living in backyards across Delft, who thought that Christmas had come early in 2007. They received letters from their local councillor inviting them to move into the houses they had been waiting for since the end of Apartheid. They left their backyard shacks, to occupy their new homes along the N2 highway. For a brief moment, all was as well as can be expected. The quality of housing on the N2 project is an ongoing scandal, but at least the homes were theirs.

Then the families received another notice. They were to be evicted. The original letters authorising them to move into their new homes had been sent illegally. The local councillor who sent them suffers the modest indignity of being suspended for a month. The N2 residents are treated altogether more harshly. They are kicked out of their homes with nowhere to go – their former backyard shacks having been rented to new families the moment the old ones left. The city tried to move them to the temporary relocation areas, many kilometres away from the communities they have grown up with. The units that pass for housing here are tin shacks, ‘blikkies’, ramshackle blocks of metal in the sand, wind and baking sun, sealed in by armed police yet beset with crime. The evicted families refused to move to ‘Blikkiesdorp’. They organized, setting up a temporary camp on the pavement of Symphony Way. The government threw its might into the legal system, extracting an eviction order that, by October 2009, soon after the letters in this book were written, moved all 136 families to the sandy wastes of Blikkiesdorp, in time for the tin shacks to bake in the summer heat.

Apartheid ends and apartheid remains.[2]

The squires of the new order bicker among themselves for the spoils.

The poor, who fought and died for justice, wait for it long after its arrival has been announced. Movements arise to hasten the day when apartheid’s remains can be swept away. The movements are crushed. At the beginning of 2010, when this preface is being written, the South African government has gone on the offensive against organizations of poor people across the country, from refugee camps to mob attacks against the leadership of the Kennedy Road Development Committee in Durban, to the residents of Symphony Way in Cape Town.

So why should you care about the pavements of Symphony Way when there’s no one there anymore, just in time for the 2010 World Cup tourists? The readiest answer is that while the government can take the people out of Symphony Way but they can’t take Symphony Way out of the people. As the residents themselves announced, “Symphony Way is not dead. We are still Symphony Way. We will always be Symphony Way. We may not be living on the road, but our fight for houses has only just begun. We warn government that we have not forgotten that they have promised us houses and we, the Symphony Way Anti-Eviction Campaign, will make sure we get what is rightfully ours.”

This book is testament to what it is to be Symphony Way. Written toward the end of the struggle on the pavements, this anthology of letters is both testimony and poetry. The power of the words comes not simply from confession, but through the art with which these stories are told. Every struggle has its narrators, but some on Symphony Way are wordsmiths of the highest order. When Conway Payn invites you to ‘put your shoes into my shoes and wear me like a human being would wear another human being,’ he opens the door to a world of compassion, of fellow-suffering, that holds you firm.

The letters do not make for easy reading. Lola Wentzel’s story of the Bush of Evil, of the permanent geography of sexual violence, will haunt you long after you close the pages of this book. In here you will find testimony of justice miscarried, of violence domestic and public, of bigotry and tolerance, of xenophobia and xenophilia. There’s too much at stake to shy from truth, and the writers here have the courage to face it directly, even if the results are brutal. Amid this horror, there is beauty, and the bundle of relationships between aunties, husbands, wives and children, of daughters named Hope and Symphony. All human life is here.

A few visitors have seen this already. Indeed, Kashiefa, Sedick, Zakeer and Sedeeqa Jacobs remark on the cottage industry of visitors, students and fellow travellers who visit – ‘Everyday there is people that come from everywhere and ask many questions, then we tell them its not lekker to stay on the road and in the blikkies.’ But this book isn’t an exercise in prurience. It’s a means to dignity, a way for the poors to reflect, be reflected and share with you. This book is testimony to the fact that there’s thinking in the shacks, that there are complex human lives, and complex humans who reflect, theorise and fight to bring change. This book is a sign of that fight, and in reading it, you have been conscripted. Mon semblable, mon frère[3] – you are addressed, reader, not as a voyeur, but as a brother or sister, as someone whose eyes dignify the struggle.

If your tears fall from your eyes as did from mine, you have will have been touched by the idea, the incredible realisation, that the poor can think for themselves, write for themselves, and will continue to fight for their humanity to be recognised. Whether or not you went to the 2010 World Cup, come to this book with open eyes, and you’ll leave with an open heart.

BROUGHT TO YOU BY PAMBAZUKA NEWS

* Raj Patel is an award-winning writer, activist and academic.
* ‘No Land! No House! No Vote! Voices from Symphony Way’ by Symphony Way pavement dwellers is published by Pambazuka Press.
* This article first appeared on Raj Patel’s blog.
* Please send comments to editor@pambazuka.org or comment online at Pambazuka News.

NOTES

[1] http://hdr.undp.org/en/statistics/
[2] This ambiguity is one soon to be explored by Sharad Chari in his ‘Apartheid Remains’ project.
[3] T his is a line from the poetry of Charles Baudelaire, whose finger-pointing to the reader was a little more accusatory. http://www.press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chicago/039250.html