SA Letter Goes Viral Suggesting Zuma Should Take a Run
Capetonian Kim Stephens has been overwhelmed and humbled by the response to an open letter she wrote to the South African president asking him to “take a run”. Apart from media requests, she’s also received “about 1 friend request every 2 minutes from complete strangers”! Kim said on her facebook page that 99 percent of […]
Capetonian Kim Stephens has been overwhelmed and humbled by the response to an open letter she wrote to the South African president asking him to “take a run”. Apart from media requests, she’s also received “about 1 friend request every 2 minutes from complete strangers”!
Kim said on her facebook page that 99 percent of the response to her letter – which actually asks President Jacob Zuma to take a run so he can see how the people in his country are living and struggling – has been positive. “Some people sharing my post have absorbed my intention, others have turned it in to something else and sprinkled it with their own agendas. That’s just the way it goes.”
The original post has been shared over 9,000 times from her timeline. Yesterday, just after it had reached 600 shares, Kim wrote “I am passionately pro SA and all its beauty, diversity, and complexities. To the few that have messaged me to say that I am posting from a privileged perspective – I am, you’re right.
“I am very privileged compared to the vast majority of South Africans. That is what moves me to want to see change.
“I am also passionate about understanding our divides, and finding ways to bring us all closer together. United we thrive. Be cognicent of your past, and positive about your future. Give back, uplift and listen. Mostly, listen.”
Here is Kim’s original letter in full (which can be viewed on facebook here):
I feel like Zuma needs to go for a run. Takkies on, lube up, head out for a trot, sir. One foot in front of the other, on the pavements of your country. Pass your voters, and non voters. You can’t tell them apart via race, sir.
Foot in an uncovered manhole? Sorry about that. Dodge the human waste of the homeless. Run on. Wide berth around the tik head that might take your emergency R20 Coca-Cola cash. Run. Run some more.
Pass the businesses advertising closing down sales, the derelict office blocks. Pass the homes with laundry hanging on communal fences. High five the babies playing in dirt. Steer clear of the children that should be in school. The school with the long drop, no text books, and an under-paid teacher.
Run, Zuma. Greet the doctors and nurses stumbling bleary-eyed on to public transport to return home after a 48-hour shift for pittance. Breathe deeply as you pass the sewerage pumping in to the sea. Smell that? Nearly half way now, Zuma. Sweating? Run some more. The committed flower seller, the Big Issue peddler, the beggar. Another beggar.
Oh, look sharp Zuma! Stay right! Blue light brigade coming through. Big cars, flashing lights. Someone more important than the man voluntarily patrolling his neighborhood to protect his children and neighbours. More important than the Big Issue salesman, the beggar. VIP in a big ass car.
Run on.
Pass the men sitting on upturned boxes waiting for manual work. Any work. Around the pothole. Climb higher. Run that hill, now. Report the water gushing out of an unkempt pipe, as you run by. Spare a thought for the farmers suffering through the drought, while you do so. Climb. Push up, past the sprawling informal settlement awaiting housing.
You might want to keep your head down here, sir, as you promised them service delivery in return for their votes… Years ago. Keep going.
Now from that summit, as you sweat, look down. Look at your people, voters and non.
See the big shot business man quietly funding a school project. See the housewife paying school fees for another woman’s children. Look at that beach clean up team, the students volunteering in an orphanage and the food parcels arriving from a leading grocery chain. You didn’t, so they did.
Observe the community spirit when a fire breaks out and ravages the shacks of an under-resourced community. Or when a fire ravages part of our precious natural heritage.
Look far from your vantage point and note the unity, mixed marriages, mixed families, students of all races standing together for a common cause.
See the colour-blind children of South Africa. Observe keenly the pain and suffering of the poor, with their lack of role models and inefficient education.
Take note of the growing force that is standing up against you, to uplift the poor and bring about true equality.
See the privileged communities becoming aware of their position, and using it to improve the lives of others. You didn’t, so they did. Now run home, Zuma. Back to your 20th child. Back to a life of luxury and total lack of empathy.
Mind you don’t trip on your shoelace as you go.
Kim will be on the Algoa FM breakfast show on Wednesday morning at 7:45 am.