Us pictured here with our director, Steve Wiebe Johnson and community leaders from the Lwandle township. |
Dan at meeting of Grace Community Church leaders, Colesberg |
Our last update “A week in the life” outlined our preparatory
work for a project in the gang-affected high schools, and the cross-community
dialogues being carefully encouraged in a couple of areas. It is slow work, and
as we get to know locals, more than one has told us that we are wasting our
time. I spoke at a Unitarian Fellowship recently, and realized that many people
have distanced themselves from reconciliation, and from how deeply healing will
need to go. But I am fascinated by what I hear from other folks, and I come
back to something I heard at the mediation training that seemed particularly
innovative: Stereotypes are the gaps between real and perceived identities, and
reconciliation is reducing that gap. Think about that for a moment. I had to, but
it fits, doesn’t it? So the rest of this update is going to be more reflective
and personal about the themes that we are working on as peacemakers.
Kathryn presenting at election mediators training, Cape Town |
Identity work is tricky. In defining ourselves, we carry identity and our baggage with our strongest emotions, and it is very easy to become defensive when put in a mixed group talking about identity. Do blacks ever see me as more than white? You can’t tell by listening or looking at me that I was born in Africa. Then I say I’m American, but how would you know that only one of my grandparents spoke English as a first language? Then there’s my pacifist and Mennonite upbringing with its own flavours and value shaping. And then there’s my unique experience of being raised in an inner-city ghetto in California – my sister is the only other white person I know with this history. Along with the blacks, Hispanics, and Pacific Islanders of my neighbourhood, I was bused to white high schools as part of a desegregation policy in the 1980s*. Black kids wouldn’t sit next to me on the bus because I was white, and white kids wouldn’t sit next to me in class because I lived with black people. So I know what prejudice and fear look like; but from a young age, I could also recognize the common humanity just below the surface.
Dan with teachers in workshop for conflict management and team-building, Khayelitsha, Cape Town |
My younger sister and I were the only two white kids in our
elementary school of over 700 students. It was an intense place of learning
about our civil rights heroes, with special assemblies for Malcolm X, as well
as Martin Luther King Jr. One skit we did every year was to reenact the Rosa
Parks story; the woman exhausted after a long day who refused to take her place
standing in the black section of the bus. It’s a beautiful story of
conscientious objection that led to change, and I loved the story, especially
because there was a heroine. I suppose I understood that I was never going to
be given the part of Rosa when our classes performed this skit for the school,
but I didn’t know why I always had to play the bus driver. I asked the teacher
this question – while honoured to have one of the few speaking parts, I didn’t
like to always be the villain in the story; could I play a different part? This
made her laugh, but she couldn’t even answer me – I just needed to be the bus
driver. It was not until many years later I put it all together. As the only
white child among several hundred students in the upper grades, that was my
role. That community, still raw from the pain of the civil rights movement just
twenty years before, could not cast me as a different character. There were
parents who were vocal in their disapproval of a white girl even being at their
school, and my teacher both stuck up for my right to be there, and made me the
bus driver.
SADRA has initiated a local cross-community dialogue right
where Oscar (our Director) lives – leaders of white and black bordering
neighbourhoods sat down together for the first time a couple of weeks ago, and started
to get to know each other. We have been using John Paul Lederach’s Little Book of Conflict Resolution,
where he talks about how to build new relationships and break old patterns of
relating. He underscores the importance of identity, saying “In my experience,
issues of identity are at the root of most conflicts.” How we relate to others
has everything to do with how we define ourselves. If after defining ourselves
we decide that it is not worth investing in a relationship with those who are
different from us (also a defined identity), then discussions about
reconciliation and restitution become academic. As SADRA, we are trying to
integrate identity work into our peace trainings, and sometimes we feel like
pioneers on uncharted ground.
Kathryn with community activists, Manenberg, Cape Town |
The politics of identity, Apartheid Museum, Johannesburg |
If reconciliation is working to close the gap caused by
stereotypes, now is the time to work at that both here in South Africa, where
twenty years have passed since their painful civil rights struggle, and in the
US as you approach your national elections. Anyone working to expose the gaps
between perceived and real identities, who can stay patient and listening
instead of defensive, and can live with the mystery of contradiction, is
actively engaged in peace-making. Join us in this exciting work, and let us know
how it’s going!
No comments:
Post a Comment