An Active Letter to South Africa. Go On, Pick Your Fighter!
Photo Cred: Mike Sharman

“We need to be an active South Africa. Regardless of your race, religion, affluence or location, it’s time to rage against the political rhetoric that thrives on populist narratives,” writes Mike Sharman.

 

South Africa (17 January 2023) – An Active Letter to South Africa. Open letters are lame; they lack action.

Covid, riots, Eskom, floods, <insert any Sunday story from Carte Blanche> are the clearest set of binary indicators that we, South Africans, are well and truly on our own.

I’m dubbing 2023 ‘The year of subsistence citizenship’ because it’s time for us to take care of ourselves first and then band together as a community, second. The collective can be the neighbours who share your street, the colleagues who occupy your workspace, or even the parental peers who you smile at (or ignore) on your daily school drop-off.

We are tired of being the ‘resilient nation’. The one with record-breaking Gender-Based Violence (GBV) stats, and unemployment rates, a feeble (un)education system, deployed cadres, and roads crumbling under ruin.

By making our own micro-solves, we can take back ownership of our dignity and our values. We need to be an active South Africa.

Where is our pride?

We can prove that we don’t rely on an antiquated system of government. Change starts small, then snowballs.

  • Mow the lawn in the common area of your street if your municipality is inept.
  • Offer a hot desk at your generator / inverter-lit office space to an SME.
  • Volunteer to be on the fundraising committee of your school.
  • Fill a pot-hole. There must be a YouTube video for best practice. There’s a tutorial for everything.
  • Sort out your personal admin and have an ID for when voting registration opens.

I’ve seen remarkable headmasters at rural schools being present and physically changing the environment, positively, for people living in abject poverty. I’ve seen solar panels added to a middle-class government school – thanks to parental-inspired crowdfunding – driving upside for inquiring young minds.
Regardless of your race, religion, affluence or location, it’s time to rage against the political rhetoric that thrives on populist narratives.

It’s time for real action. I want us to prove the world wrong, so let’s do it.

What small thing are you going to do to change your life in order to positively inspire your street, neighbourhood, colleagues, school parents, friends, and strangers?

For some inspiration, I asked AI to show me ‘South Africa as a superhero’. Go on SA, pick your fighter…


Sources: Mike Sharman 
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About the Author

Brent Lindeque is the founder and editor in charge at Good Things Guy.

Recognised as one of the Mail and Guardian’s Top 200 Young South African’s as well as a Primedia LeadSA Hero, Brent is a change maker, thought leader, radio host, foodie, vlogger, writer and all round good guy.

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