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On Angry South African Expats

On Angry South African Expats

Old Sep 3rd 2014, 11:52 pm
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Default On Angry South African Expats

Ok so a family member (from SA) posted this one on Facebook recently. Yes we as expats can be angry. After all we left our home country, some still have family members in SA etc etc ... emigrating is not easy.

But why on earth can't south africans just be allowed to emigrate like people from other countries? Why the criticism from those that remain in SA? People emigrate all the time from NZ/AUS/the UK/the US to other countries. They don't get criticized.

Anyway, I just thought I would share this one with you guys to get your comments on the subject.

What I’ve come to realise, over the past few weeks, is that there can be no angrier, more unreasonable person on the planet than the South Africa expat who is told that the country has not gone up in flames (yet) and that we actually spend a lot of time camping, hiking, hanging out on the beach and drinking very nice, inexpensive wine on our expansive lawns in the sunshine while somebody else does the ironing.
The above piece just shows how naive some South Africans can be. Susan obviously believes that all South Africans have this lifestyle. Unfortunately its not the case. Those that are doing the "ironing" are normally the ones that cant afford your lifestyle. Is this what makes living in SA good?

here is the rest

I think it is fair to say that a goaded bull with a punctured testicle being shown 42 red flags simultaneously could not be more enraged than the (ex) South African who sold up, spent all their money on relocating their family to Wellington before the Swart Gevaar put a torch to the entire country only to find that it’s not quite the utopia they imagined and that their life is actually kakker than before.

When I wrote On Moving Back to South Africa I really did it for myself. It was a way of coming to terms with my own feelings, and trying to make sense of this country I choose to call home. Never in my wildest imaginings did I think it would get over 40 000 views in the first few weeks, get posted and re-posted all over the world, appear on the official South African Homecoming Revolution website and that I would get inundated with comments, thoughts and opinions. And while most, by far, have been extremely positive and a few have politely but vehemently disagreed, there is a small contingency who were made so cross by my allegations that South Africa is still a rather nice place to live out ones days I could practically see the spittle flying from their mouths as they did Rumpelstiltskin dances of rage and shouted abuse at me from their couches in Queensland.

And it’s a curious thing, because if you’re really, really happy in your new home abroad and you’re really, really pleased to have left this cesspit of hell, why would you care enough to get so emotional? All that their comments told me (which were, unfortunately, verging on abusive so I had to trash them) is that they feel deeply conflicted about their decision to leave, and that my story of settling well and loving what this country has to offer seriously messes with their heads. And I can understand that – it must be a **** up of note to have convinced yourself that we were on the verge of apocalypse and that leaving was the only sensible option only to come back in December and find that your friends are doing very nicely in their holiday houses in Onrus, rump steak costs next to nothing and Woolworths dips keep getting better.

I have friends who left for Canada a while back and come back every summer, and their confusion is tangible. Because it’s the same old place it ever was. Even with that mad bastard JZ in power. We still go for picnics on Clifton 4th; hang out on the café strip; drink bubbly and watch the sunset; swim in our pools; have lekker braais. The story they had to tell themselves (and keep telling themselves and everyone who’ll listen) about why they left the country they loved gets a bit frayed at the edges when their buddies invite them over for fresh kreef and the kids have a jol being outdoors all day and half the night and Spur sauce still tastes good on everything. I’m not saying this country doesn’t have serryass problems, but for now it’s the same old place and sheesh, you have a cool life.

And neither am I saying that some people don’t leave South Africa happily and settle well and never look back, but they aren’t the ones writing me cross letters. And I feel for them, I really do. For me, leaving South Africa permanently would break my heart. Maybe their hearts got a bit broken and the only way they know how to deal is by running the country down and calling those of us who still live here – or, god forbid, came back – names. A writer whose name I forget once said in a novel, ‘Africa is not easily forsaken by her children.’ I never forgot those words. For whatever reason, this country gets under your skin. It holds you in its grip, and I see a kind of emotional attachment I haven’t witnessed in any other place. A journalist friend of mine went to Australia to interview South African expats, and many had had to undergo some kind of therapy in order to come to terms with leaving. You hear of South Africans going down on their bended knees and kissing the tarmac when they get off the plane. I did it myself when we moved back permanently. Maybe it’s because our country has suffered so much, and we have witnessed its turmoil and anguish and then danced in its (rather short-lived) victories. Or maybe it’s something else; an intangible, indefinable quality that inspires this deep love and reverence.

So, I say this to the expats who need to sound off and be haters in order to justify their choices: let us love our country if that is what makes sense to us. We don’t yell at you and accuse you of abandoning ship because you’re living in Maida Vale. We are happy that you have homes in London because now we have somewhere to stay when we go overseas with our tragic Rands. You made a choice to go, like we made a choice to stay. No amount of shouting is going to convince us that we’re deluded. We read the papers; we get it. You don’t have to point out crime stats to us. For better or for worse, we have made peace with our decision, as you are going to have to make peace with yours.

And the thing is this: you talk about not being ‘free’ in South Africa. I lived in Sweden for eight years and as I ventured out, day after day, under a low-hanging grey sky to take my children to school in a gloomy, high-rise building where everybody I encountered seemed chronically depressed, that is when I felt unfree. Where there were so many rules I was afraid to do anything; where the weather was so crap we spent our lives watching TV, and where everybody lives for the end of the year so that they can get the hell out and feel like they’re alive. Now, I feel alive every single day. And it’s freaking awesome.

A moment of shameless sentimentality, but I love this so much. And, like old Thabs says, today it feels good to be an African.

On Angry South African Expats | The Disco Pants Blog

Last edited by kiwibok; Sep 3rd 2014 at 11:54 pm.
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Old Sep 4th 2014, 8:50 am
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Default Re: On Angry South African Expats

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Old Sep 5th 2014, 12:55 pm
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Default Re: On Angry South African Expats

Well, there are a lot of angry South Africans. But some have good reason to be angry.

Personally, I loved my time in SA. It shaped and moulded me, made me wiser and more compassionate, and also taught me that going insane at government incompetence and corruption doesn't help.

Now I'm in Jamaica - a country with less than 1% whites and a similar level of infrastructure and standards of living, exchange rate challenges and difficult economic growth levels - and things are much better already. Government officials are helpful and friendly, the police appear to be trustworthy and don't have roadblocks on the motorway during rush hour and people look out for each other. I am not treated as a "bloody bastard agent" over here and even driving with nutjob taxi drivers hasn't freaked me out - because they cut you off with a smile and a wave rather than a 9mm.

South Africa is a wonderful place with wonderful people. There are assholes everywhere - there just more of them, and in more positions of power in South Africa.
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