Monday, December 21, 2009

From a South African Friend: A Local Teacher, Sandy Govender *

South Africa’s ‘colourful’ past renders it an interesting case study for justice and its implementation. Major class differences exist among the citizens of our beautiful country; luxurious suburbs slumber adjacent to monstrous informal ‘squatter’ settlements. Such extreme differences in wealth and lifestyle exacerbate crime.
Although apartheid has disappeared from our legislation for fifteen years, its legacy still taunts us, having left some sectors of the population financially secure and others poverty stricken. For many South African youth poverty is the order of the day and a sense of hopelessness pervades. Many view crime as the only alternative or rather hope.
Initially when I hear of suffering inflicted on my people by ruthless criminals I wish for a justice system that would cause them as much pain and suffering as they so vengefully inflict on their victims. However, such reasoning is quite primitive and unproductive and does not serve to improve our society. Justice which does not sought to rehabilitate criminals is base and when we behave in this fashion we are lowering our standards of behavior to match that of criminals.
Many South Africans are disillusioned as our justice system battles to process the growing number of trials with efficacy. Hence many criminals walk free. Added to our disappointment and yearning for justice are our country’s new leaders who confuse serving ‘selflessly’ and ‘selfishly’, corruption is rife. Politicians line their pockets rather than the bellies to the nations growing population of AIDS orphans.
I am pretty sure that by now you are contentedly chewing on your apple pie marveling at how dark Africa really is. But to me, a 36 year-old female, a South African of ‘Indian origin’, this is my home, warm and familiar. Justice for me takes on many dimensions not just judgments and criminal courts. My personal beliefs are very strongly rooted in the law of Karma. Karl Marx described religion as the opium of the masses, yet I am quite content leaving justice to be meted out by God. “Behind the sometimes seemingly random or chaotic succession of events in our lives as well as in the world lies concealed the unfolding of a higher order and purpose” (Eckhart Tolle- A New Earth). Although this maybe difficult to conceive, especially, with the many senseless murders, we must realize that sometimes what is lost can never be found, we must accept and so find peace. Peace comes from a place of knowing that we are just a small part of a higher order and as expressed in the old zen saying “The snow falls, each flake in its appropriate place.”

Sandy Govender
November 20, 2009

*Added to blog with permission from Sandy Govender

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