Amanda Gouws' column (11 March) on "being white" was as annoying as a recent article in the New York Times about Cape Town as a "...Divided City: Many Blacks See Echoes of White Superiority." The obsession with race amongst academics, politicians and the media belies their deeply superficial observations.
Gouws invokes race to legitimise claims of her own identity and ‘progressiveness'. Judging her readers' responses harshly, she falls into the very trap she accuses them of and is astonished at how personally attacked they felt; that their responses did confirm racial stereotypes about white people; that many white people are not conscious of how they offend; that they are indeed intolerant; and that when Simphiwe Dana complains about how unwelcome she feels in Cape Town, she is merely complaining about structural racism.
Gouws commits the cardinal sin as a columnist. She underestimates her readers' intelligence and resorts to insults when they do not agree with her.
Living and teaching in a white enclave and ivory tower in Stellenbosch, Gouws claims to know how black people feel about the Cape and implies that white superiority is the problem. For this she draws on the twitter-fest between Simphiwe Dana and Premier Helen Zille. The disaffection some black people claim to feel about the Cape is simplistic and rather irritating.
In this debate black foreign nationals, coloureds and Indians are simply invisible. No one ever considers talking to coloured people or other minorities to ask them how they feel about the new dispensation or the new "racial hierarchy" - a phrase used against me by a prominent black leader in a board meeting, when I raised questions about financial probity.
"The problem with you, Rhoda Kadalie" she scolded "is that you do not know your place in the racial hierarchy." Yes, there is a new racial hierarchy perpetuated by the new black elite. The abolition of apartheid reveals that whoever governs very quickly adopts a superiority complex and that this is not confined to whiteness. Coloureds are as alienated by their exclusion from the political discourse of nation-building, as are many others, and restitution for former District Six residents still eludes them.