Kadalie in defence of the DA's Grapes of Wrath
John Steinbeck in his celebrated 1939 novel ‘The Grapes of Wrath' says: ‘and the little screaming fact that sounds through all history; repression works only to strengthen and knit the repressed.' Rhoda Kadalie in her recent article rather than add her voice to vent the plight of repressed farm-workers, casts a flimsy screen of diversion to hide the failure of the DA government in responding to the plight of farm workers whilst at the same time masquerading as a human rights activist. Instead she regurgitates old hash and deflects attention away from those who are responsible for perpetuating modern day slavery.
This sick behaviour is to be expected from those who put profits before and above the well-being and human dignity of fellow citizens who languish under the most appalling conditions on farms.
The only parallel between the plight of mineworkers and that of farm-workers is that those who for centuries have generated billions in revenue and constitute the lifeblood of the South African economy enjoy the crumbs of poverty as reward for their efforts. In turn the DA's privileged constituency, the super-rich farm-owners and mining billionaire magnates, sip world class wine and live lavish lives as they watch the 'wild fires' of workers' frustration burn.
That she ventures to draw the parallel with Marikana is noble and certainly is a crisis of the same magnitude or even greater. To blame the response of farm-workers to the centuries old exploitation of them and turn a blind eye to the daily realities of abuse, hunger-wages and lack of security of tenure on external ‘forces' requires myopia and delusion of a special kind - the type that Kadalie has in recent years made her trade-mark.
Kadalie in familiar refrain deflects blame from the ruling DA government and blames me for fuelling unrest in the Western Cape but fails to acknowledge the complicity of farmers, Western Cape Agriculture MEC Gerrit van Rensburg and his department for the perpetuation of the terrible living and working conditions on farms in the Western Cape.