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The visit ‘home’: Do SA émigrés ever wish they’d stayed?
Anyone who has attended a 40-year high school reunion, knows the uncomfortable feeling when you meet classmates from several decades ago, who immigrated to other countries and have had vastly different lives. After five minutes of warm greetings: “Wow, it’s so nice to see you again! Do you remember when we played Sunday league soccer together?”, an uncomfortable silence falls over the gathering, amidst awkward attempts to joke about the passing of time and how everyone is getting older.
GEOFF SIFRIN
The gap between their lives and yours is too great for easy conversation.
That often happens when people who left South Africa decades ago, come visiting family here, to attend a funeral or wedding. The relative who has built a life in America – or the UK, Israel, or elsewhere – and has American kids, and who is full of praise for his new country, has little appetite for understanding the complicated, worrying politics of South Africa.
He might rage about how Americans could elect someone like Donald Trump as president, but the equally bizarre realities of South Africa are of little interest, serving mainly to validate his decision to leave long ago.
We are living in “exciting” times, for those with the insight to see it that way. No less than a new liberation struggle is required against the degenerate regime, the once-proud ANC has become – similar to liberation movements elsewhere after they gained victory over oppressors.
Journalist Jacques Pauw’s recent book, The President’s Keepers, and other publications by struggle heroes such as Ronnie Kasrils, all confirm South Africans’ worst fears about how the corrupt ANC leadership has damaged this country.
Superficially, white South Africans’ lives, and the Jewish community, have changed little since the émigrés left. They drive the same kinds of cars, live in similar large houses, employ domestic maids at tiny salaries, run successful businesses, and send their kids to private schools.
Of course, they are surrounded by high security walls and electrified fences, but they say they have got used to it.
There was a brief historical moment after Mandela emerged from jail and became president, during which South Africans would gloat and say the émigrés who had left had erred, and had missed out on the inspiring country South Africa had become.
Showing a South African passport when travelling, was a proud action, then. Today, however, there is shame, with the decline to junk status financially and politically. It evokes gloating from those who had the wisdom to leave after Sharpeville or similar events.
Current happenings in Zimbabwe add fuel. Jews remember the once-proud Zimbabwe Jewish community which has all but vanished after 37 years of Mugabe’s despotic rule, the liberator-turned-dictator, who is finally being thrown out after destroying the country. Is that our destiny here?
Last weekend Professor Njabulo Ndebele, an academic and fiction writer, and former vice-chancellor of the University of Cape Town, addressed an ANC Struggle Veterans’ meeting, bemoaning the bunch of thieves the government had become. The country’s spirit may “run dry”, he said, without a new “imaginative political project to give life and shape to it… [South Africans] require entirely fresh perspectives from which to view and understand themselves.”
What will it mean in 10, 20 years to be a Jewish South African? It is up to far-sighted leaders to articulate a new vision for a community half the size of what it was in the 1970s, and still shrinking. Sadly, such leaders are scarce.
Ten years from now, when émigrés come visiting for a reunion, will they find family and friends inspired again? It certainly could happen; the country’s spirit, today, has not yet been broken. We are again at a crossroads. But the jury is still out.
Read Geoff Sifrin’s regular columns on his blog sifrintakingissue.wordpress.com