Monday 5 July 2010

Uber-optimism for South Africa

As Marianne Thamm points out in her article "The feelgood factor need not be confined to soccer", South Africa is in a very proud place - filled with joy, celebration and excitement. I hear it from all my friends over the phone, on twitter, on facebook. I see it on television. And for me, after more than 15 years of working in crime prevention in South Africa, I am absolutely thrilled that it is, indeed, possible to break the chains crime and fear.

Marianne says:

We've learned that with enough political will and police the justice system can, in record time, make life uncomfortable for criminals.
I remember once returning from a trip to Johannesburg and touching down on the Cape Town airstrip with a sense of relief. I remember feeling that Cape Town just didn't have the paranoia I had experienced in Gauteng, particularly in Johannesburg. I remember wondering if there could be some way that we could just choose, from one day to the next, to no longer have the crime scurge eat away at every South African's safety and security. I wondered if large scale community programmes could make crime just, ummm, go away! The poorest of the poor were suffering the most, even though the media was all about the privileged whose lifestyles were affected by crime. I saw, first-hand, how desperate people were in the townships. I saw how desperate young men in prison were. I saw how freaked out victims of crime were. And I wanted it to just stop. Sommer (as we say in South Africa - the word means just so or just because.... it's hard to translate. Sommer is sommer).

At the time I was the national director of fundraising, marketing and media at NICRO (national institute for crime prevention and reintegration of offenders). We were trying to turn the tide of crime - we wanted to stop turning our homes into prisons and prisons in to homes. The organisation was involved with programmes for offenders, ex-offenders, juvenile offenders, victims of crime and also with those who wanted to start economic projects through the economic opportunities programme. There were 100,000 clients and 240 staff. Many, many people's lives were affected by the work of NICRO staff throughout the country. I was coordinating a national campaign called Whistle Week which was to "blow the whistle against crime". I saw how people on the ground wanted to express their need to end crime in their communities. And I believed that there was a lot happening to find solutions to crime.

I understood all the underlying reasons for the crime and violence levels, but that day when I landed in Cape Town I was accessing a kind of uber-optimism. Today, when I read Marianne's article, I had the same kind of optimism. Today I am hoping against hope that South Africa can find a peaceful place to be when the World Cup is over. I am hoping that the last few weeks and the next few days can sprinkle magic dust on the country I still love so dearly, and offer peace and prosperity way into the future.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

How I share your sentiments! Well expressed Rosemary. So hard to see how except by building one brick at a time.
Ingrid W