Ironically, in seeking to be a champion of non-racialism, Heidi Holland provides an outstanding example of racist thinking in its purest form. ('A disservice to white citizens,' The Star May 21 2009)
Holland's article is based on the following premise: if a person (who happens to be white) criticizes the behaviour of another person (who happens to be black) the white person speaks for all whites in criticizing all blacks. Because of the history of apartheid, no white has the right to do this. If they do, they are racist, and doing a disservice to all whites.
They must therefore apologise. (A black person, according to an inversion of this logic, faces no such constraint.)
This kind of racism was rife in the early years of our democracy. It relegated whites to "second class citizens", unable to state a fact if any black person might be offended by it. This warped logic has thankfully diminished somewhat due to many (black and white) South Africans rejecting it for the nonsense that it is.
It is difficult to reach consensus on a definition of racism, but most people agree that it starts with generalizations. It involves projecting the attributes of an individual onto a group as a whole on the basis of race, with pejorative connotations. Heidi Holland's narrative is a classic example of this kind of racist thinking.
She uses it make the argument that I should apologise, on behalf of all whites, for my criticism of Jacob Zuma. Whether I was telling the truth about Jacob Zuma having put his wives at risk by having unprotected sex with an HIV+ woman is irrelevant. So is the fact that this was one sentence in a logically structured letter to a newspaper in response to a vicious personal attack on myself. Holland's point is simply this: as a white, I have no right to criticize the President's behaviour.