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I might not be a South African

May 22nd, 2008  |  Published in Activism, Africa, Human Rights  |  2 Comments



I might not be a South African

But I’m black, my skin is the same as yours
My colour is the same as yours
My genes are African, nothing but African
When your leaders were beaten by whites
I was there to shelter them
I was patient with them
I offered them food, shelter,
Most of all, I offered them protection

I might be a South African

I can’t speak Zulu, cause I’m Vhenda
I can’t speak Zulu, cause I’m Shangaan
I don’t know what an elbow is in Zulu
As much as you don’t know it in my language
Since when was Zulu the only South African language?
Yes……………I’m not from Gauteng
I was not born here, but I’m South African
Where should I go if you beat me
I’m not beating your father, mother, brother or sister who works at my
area in the mines
I’m not calling them makwerekwere though they can’t speak my language.

I might be dark in complexion

I might have the foreigners looks
I might have the foreigners body structure
Now I am scared to go to the only place that I call home
I’m scared of working down the street without my ID
Whites wanted me to do that centuries ago
Now you, my black brother is acting white

Why should you Black South Africans do this?

What makes you think that you better than me?
Who told you that I’m responsible for your unemployment?
Who told you that I’m less human
If I need to go back to Vhenda……..let all the Zulus go back to KZN
Let all the Tswana’s go back to Botswana
Let all the Sotho’s go back to Lesotho
Let all the Ndebele’s go back to Kwandebele
Let all the Xhosa’s go back to Eastern Cape
Yes…………let all the Swati’s go back to Swaziland

Is this not ignorance?

Your unemployment is your responsibility
Use your intellect
Get up and work
Let education empower you
Seek humanity

Before 1994 you blamed whites
Now you are blaming me
Who are you going to blame after chasing me away?
Who are you going to blame after killing me?

For what it’s worth…………………..

I’m sorry I was not born here
I’m sorry I can’t speak Zulu
I’m sorry for being too dark for your Joburg
I’m sorry for cleaning the toilets you don’t want to clean
I’m sorry for doing your garden
I’m sorry for repairing your shoes
I’m sorry for protecting your leaders while they were in Exile
Yes…………………what you call Exile………..is my country
And most of all…….I’m sorry for building South African infrastructure.

Source: Deejay
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  1. somebody says:

    May 23rd, 2008 at 12:54 pm (#)

    I am a black African.

    One thing I have noticed among some Africans is a blame mentality. We like blaming other people for our problems.

    We blame people of a different skin colour. Or we blame the West. Or we blame our Government. Or we blame political parties. Or we blame the rich. Or we blame another tribe. Or we blame the next village. Or we blame something else. We never blame ourselves. We never see the need for personal change.

    As long as we refuse to change, and insist on blaming others for our problems Africa will continue in its cycle of dependency and remain a dark continent.

  2. Imnakoya says:

    May 23rd, 2008 at 5:18 pm (#)

    True talk!

    You have captured the systemic nature of the African malady. The default nature of many Africans is look for excuses rather than ask the hard questions. If I may add to your list, slavery and colonization are other causes some African pundits love to list as causes of our problems.

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