CECIL JOHN RHODES AND THE RADICAL IMPLEMENTATION OF THE SECOND PHASE OF THE NDR
Race relations in South Africa are more fractious now than they have been at any time since 1994. The triumphal removal of Rhodes' statue from UCT and the campaign against other symbols from the pre-1994 past are symptoms of more deep-seated racial attitudes - particularly among the disaffected youth of the emerging black middle class.
The media images of recent events have been deeply troubling: Rhodes' statue, bound and hooded - like some ISIS hostage; the crouching burger guarding Paul Kruger on Church Square irreverently doused in bright green paint; and students dancing on the tables at a UCT Council meeting, singing “one settler, one bullet!”
This aggression against the symbols of the past has its roots in stereotypes of white South Africans that have long been promoted by the ANC/SACP. As a result, many people truly believe that:
Whites ‘stole’ the land that they now own (even though much of it has been bought since 1994);
Whites are rich - not because they have worked hard, built businesses and acquired marketable qualifications and skills - but because of the advantages that they accumulated from centuries of black exploitation;