Confronting Racism and Discrimination is Everyone’s Problem

As  South African Jewish citizens, we have an obligation to combine our own specific concerns as a community with active participation in addressing problems facing our country as a whole. One particularly pressing area involves dealing with the continuing threat of racism and other forms of prejudice in our society. The Board is an active, visible presence in the various initiatives that have been launched to confront this scourge. In addition to being the correct moral and ethical thing to do our participation allows us to maintain  and enhance valuable partnerships with other human rights activists which lends additional credibility to our efforts to combat antisemitism.

This week, National Director Wendy Kahn took part in two important public events aimed at addressing racism and bigotry in our society. On Monday, she attended a Convention towards a Front for Nation Building, Social Cohesion and Reconciliation, and the following day attended a press briefing held by the newly formed Anti-Racism Network of South Africa to announce the upcoming launch of Anti-Racism week (14-21 March). The former event, held under the auspices of the Ministry of Arts and Culture, was organised in response to the recent spate of racist incidents highlighting that some South Africans still today remain bitterly divided along racial lines. As was correctly pointed out, the current situation urgently requires people to focus on what unites, rather than what divides us and that the concepts of equality and inclusivity have to become engrained within all of us if we are to succeed in meeting the challenges facing us as a nation.    

The Board also continues to be actively involved in the work of the Hate Crimes Working Group (HCWG). Alana Baranov, Vice President of the Council for KwaZulu-Natal Jewry, is a member of its Steering Committee. Last week, she was responsible for coordinating a series of interviews with, amongst others, various organisations representing the Somali, Nigerian, Ethiopian and Rwanda refugee communities for the HCWG Research Unit in order to collect testimony from victims of hate crimes and discrimination.

Recent Articles

SAJBD Responds to DIRCO's Abandonment of South Africans stuck in Israel

The South African Department of International Relations and Cooperation (DIRCO) on Sunday issued a travel advisory urging South African citizens in Iran to exercise caution and register with the South African Embassy in Tehran. It is outrageous that DIRCO did not offer similar assistance or services to its citizens in Israel. With the Advisory the Government and DIRCO have clearly shown disinterest and abandoned the many South Africans, be they Christian, Jewish or Muslim who are stranded in Israel. The Government's stance on this current situation confirms once again its lack of concern for not only the citizens of Israel, but its own citizens in Israel.

​DIRCO supports terror regime once again

DIRCO supports terror regime once again

South Africa’s expression of concern and condolences for the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran serves once again to show their decision to always side with dictators, terror organisations and human-rights abusers. DIRCO supported the Assad regime in Syria, Muammar Gaddafi in Libya, Omar Hassan Ahmad al-Bashir in Sudan, Sadam Hussein in Iraq, Hamas in Gaza and now Ali Hosseini Khamenei in Iran. All these dictators have a strong history of oppressing their own people and exporting terror.