The truth behind white fear is not black and white
Reports of a white South African farming family seeking asylum in the US have once again sparked debate about crime against white South Africans. According to one report this family is not alone, and among many applications to a number of developed countries, 129 South Africans have already been granted asylum status in the US alone (see here).
Afriforum has described the situation on farms as a ‘crisis that has left many with no alternative'. Others would dismiss this reportedly growing trend as the result of paranoid (and racist) whites wanting to leave because they want no part in a black-governed South Africa. The truth is not as clear cut as either would have us believe.
We should not dismiss so-called ‘white fear' simply because we think it has racist roots. The feelings farmers have may be very real. Put yourself in the shoes of a white farmer on an isolated farm that has been the victim of a number of crimes. As is the case with many crimes in South Africa, the police fail to catch the criminals involved.
At the same time a number of groups are making you feel victimised. There are statements by Julius Malema and others about shooting white farmers and white land being expropriated. Add to that the voices from the right, telling you that this is part of organised discrimination (or genocide, as some would have it) against white Afrikaners, and you might start to believe that your life is at risk and you should leave the country.
The feelings and perceptions of white South Africans leaving because of fear and supposed discrimination might be real, but whether those perceptions are supported by fact is an important question.