Following the recent posts about banning the old South Africa flag, News24 columnist Colleen Figg I think puts it best, a position I fully endorse. The old flag is part of our country's history, a history that cannot be undone. A portion of the population, yes, may view it as a symbol of oppression but equally, another segment does not. Many whites who fought the ANC could make the same argument that the ANC colours represent terrorism, the enemy. Let's desist with the revision of our past and give it a rest. Let's instead learn from it to build a better future and not let it continue to divide us.
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Should old SA Flag be banned?
Old South Africa flag should not be banned
I saw a report that there has been a call for the legal banning of the old South African flag.
The chief reason for wanting the flag banned is what it symbolises to the historically oppressed sector of this country. When I said, in answer to an online question, that I would be sad to see the flag banned, someone asked me whether I do not care about what the flag means to millions of black people.
Of course I care; I care as much as I can, as much as I, a white kid from a privileged background, with no real understanding of a black person's life under apartheid, can. I wish I could fully steep myself in the experiences and then maybe I could honestly and emphatically say, ban that flag.
But you see, for me, and for millions of other South Africans, this issue is not about race, but about emotion, patriotism, the sense of belonging.
That was the flag we grew up with, the flag our men did their national service under, swore allegiance to, for better or for worse; most of the time with no knowledge, politically speaking, of who or what they were swearing allegiance to, not embracing any ideologies, just simply being the product of their own upbringing, the same as the black people who hate the flag were being.
But the issue is difficult and complex and its very expression implies insensitivity to other people's experiences. What is important to the people who love this flag becomes hateful and hurtful to those who hate it, so it is very hard to avoid sliding down the treacherous slope of the political or racial angle because for many, there simply is no other angle.
I do not agree with the flag being waved at rugby matches (which is what sparked the call for banning) or saluted or recognised as a secondary South African flag, but an outright ban I do and will resist as vocally as possible.
Am I expected to expunge from my emotional memory, all symbols of my own past? Am I not, as a South African who did not choose which regime she lived under, still entitled to love what I grew up knowing?
Is there a way that we, black and white, can sit across a table, and understand, each of us, what the other sees, perceives and feels with regard to potentially explosive topics such as this or will we always be polarised, I in my camp and you in yours, forever unable to truly grasp what the other is saying and meaning?
Do we, will we, always only see things through our own perspectives - which I am also doing here, I admit - or will there come a day when we will break through and understand the layers that make up a life, that make up a perception, that make up an individual’s own reality, his own history, his own past?
If that day comes, we will all be truly free.
ANC-moordkomplot se beskuldigdes weer in hof
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Die vier mans wat daarvan beskuldig word dat hulle deel was van 'n komplot
om ANC-leiers te vermoor, sal Vrydag weer in die Bloemfontein-landdroshof
vers...
37 minutes ago
2 Opinion(s):
If you ban the flag, then it will solidfy its emplacement as a sign of rebellion and defiance. This is what elite black SA are attempting to achieve. If you wish to see it more prevelant at SA events in other countries, ban the flag. Hell, who knows, even the Hell's Angels may adopt it - as per swastika.
Leave the flag alone, do not turn it into "fuel for fire." There are way more important issues at hand, like changing street name and pissing people off in a more centralised manner. But I guess the street renaming has not had the desired affect. Niether have the Proteas/ springbok saga,BEE, AA and all the other sh*t that has been tossed at the White Saffa, has not done a good enough job to provoke us into retaliation. The flag is a cheap,as in cheaper than renaming towns, streets and final last ditch attempt to discredit the SA whitey completely.
If you watched the prematch chatter before the Super 14 finals, the black presenter kept on reffering to Tshwane, and the white presenters insisted on calling it Pretoria. For the viewer, it was a insidious and detectable two way dig.
You have a good point, Joe. Make it illegal, and it becomes a symbol of rebellion, even martyrdom. The very techniques used by the ANC themselves to get into power. This is something conveniently overlooked by the guvmunt in its perpetual mission to shift blame away from its own stuff ups onto the old, old, old scapegoat of South Africa under a white government.
Perhaps they are afraid that more poor blacks are becoming aware that nothing is changing for them. The forever disadvantaged masses might just be looking at the old flag with some nostalgia. For all its blame shifting, even the most educationally challenged are sussing out the ANC. That is their biggest fear.
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