We must become a society where racism is accurately defined and universally condemned, where people are judged by their character, capacity and qualities; and where political parties are judged by their policies. We must become a society in which race is no longer the issue. The issues must become the issue.
Unless we can achieve this situation, South Africa cannot be a democracy.
It took the USA 232 years, from the Declaration of Independence in 1776 until the election of President Obama in 2008, for a majority of voters in the United States to transcend race.
At the extreme opposite end of the spectrum, epitomising the politics of race mobilisation -- is President Robert Mugabe. Mugabe has wrecked Zimbabwe more thoroughly than anyone would have thought possible. But the label "Mad Bob" misses the point. He is quite sane, and knows exactly what strategy to follow to stay in power. His sinister formula is: blame the "whites "and the "imperialists" for everything.
The sad irony is that Mugabe's victims are overwhelmingly black Zimbabweans. The 20,000 people he slaughtered in operation Gukurahundi in the 1980s were all black. The 700,000 people he drove out of their homes in Operation Murambatsvina in 2005 were all black. (Murambatsvina means, "Kick out the filth", which tells you what Mugabe thinks of ordinary black people.) The people beaten, tortured and killed during Zimbabwe elections are almost all black.
Mugabe knows he can commit any atrocity against black people because, as long as he denounces so-called "white imperialists", he will be guaranteed support by most African leaders. His latest outburst against the "bloody whites" will bring him a big round of applause. If Mugabe appeared at an ANC conference now, he would probably get a standing ovation.