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Dear racist, it’s 2024, so please get out of my dreadlocked hair

Allegedly racist incidents in schools should concern not just black people, but all of us. They should be challenged because they have no place in the society we are fighting so hard for.

I remember going for my first job interview three months after graduation and facing the dilemma of what to do with my Afro, which is my hair’s natural state.

Back then, 2006, which isn’t actually that long ago, images of working professionals were very different to what we see now, and Afros were not the norm.

Many of my contemporaries also faced this situation, and some were even told that their dreadlocked hair was undesirable in the workplace because it brought with it negative connotations of smoking weed and being dirty. Instead, slicked-back hair that was contorted and chemically pressed into “acceptable” sleek styles – often ones conforming to Western ideals – was viewed as looking professional.

Some of us were brave enough to withstand this pressure and challenged employers who tried to enforce these preferences, and so we managed to maintain autonomy over our own bodies, but many couldn’t dare.

This is why, like every other black person, I was outraged when Pretoria High School for Girls tried to force black pupils not to wear their natural Afros to school in 2016. It felt regressive and served as a reminder of our colonial past in which black people were forced to bend to the system of whiteness that sought to divorce us from our African identity and renounce our blackness.

Most of all, however, my then 34-year-old self was pained to the point of tears that a new generation of children were being subjected to this racial injustice, just as we had been. I remember penning an article that was published in the now defunct The Daily Vox. I am even more angered that these words bear repeating today. 

I wrote: “My heart hurts for all the black little girls and boys out there whose identities are being broken and invalidated by illegitimate white educationists intent on snuffing out blackness. What are our children being told when instructed not to embrace their natural hair?

“They are being told that Africanness and blackness is something to be restrained and feared, something to be fought and resisted, an undesirable, a threat… No learner should have to take on a system designed to further an oppressive agenda.”

So now, when we fast-forward to the present day and we are facing yet another furore over alleged racism at the same school, one can only question educators’ commitment to a progressive, non-racist school environment. Another hair incident at Johannesburg’s Jeppe High School for Girls, in which similar issues were raised, occurred the previous week.

Read more: ‘It’s heartbreaking,’ says Pretoria Girls High parent as school faces fresh allegations of racism

Read more: Gauteng education department ‘disappointed’ as 12 Pretoria High School for Girls learners cleared

These are just two examples among many other allegedly racist incidents in schools that should concern not just black people, but all of us. They should be challenged because they have no place in the society we are fighting so hard for – a nurturing one that provides safety and a sense of belonging to children in order to ensure they grow up to be healthy, well-adjusted adults.

Hair is a political issue the world over, and no less so in South Africa as a result of our divisive history. Such a relic of the past has no place in our pursuit of unity, non-racism and social cohesion, and must be condemned with the disdain it deserves. DM

This story first appeared in our weekly Daily Maverick 168 newspaper, which is available countrywide for R35.

Comments (10)

Harold Porter Aug 5, 2024, 05:00 PM

2. ...and the white headmaster had said that he was in no position to make judgement calls about girls' hair, let alone black girls' hair, and had in fact sought advice from the black principal of a neighbouring township school....

Harold Porter Aug 5, 2024, 05:02 PM

3....that principal had given my principal a copy of his school's hair policy, which my principal had found far too strict, and ammended to make it more lenient....and it was this hair policy that was adjudged to be 'attempting to snuff out blackness'...sometimes you can't win.

Rod MacLeod Aug 5, 2024, 05:07 PM

Take it easy folks - you cannot criticise the DM journos for their partial opinions - like the Nkulululeko thread on the PHSG - the whole comments section will just be shut down by the DM head prefect of moderating as soon as it gets too close to the bone.

Karl Sittlinger Aug 5, 2024, 06:08 PM

Yup, shutting down comment section is exactly what happened to Nkulululeko threads on the PHSG.

Cobuswelgemoed Aug 5, 2024, 07:48 PM

Jip, my post here was removed after it appeared because I dared to question the journalist’s bias and lack of facts. Maybe time to reconsider my support.

Kent Kihl Aug 5, 2024, 06:35 PM

About 15 years ago my nephew was expelled from his school for having cornrows. I as Swede was quite angry. Got an appointment to meet with the schoolboard, they didn't budged, he was not allowed bak in school unless he removed the cornrows. After a few weeks we got him into another school that did

ttshililo2 Aug 5, 2024, 07:15 PM

1stly I suspect the author can hold more than one thought at once- whataboutism isn’t an argument. 2nd, when can black peoples expect an apology from your daughter’s ancestors ( you included)? ?

Fanie Rajesh Ngabiso Aug 5, 2024, 11:07 PM

Are you saying that in history no black group has ever done anything bad? And do you carry the guilt for them even though you weren't there? And can you say with certainty that if the white people had been defeated way back then our black ancestors would have treated them nicely?

Trenton Carr Aug 6, 2024, 09:40 AM

When can we expect your apology when your ancestors sold their black neighbours into slavery? And why do you insist on carrying their crimes with you?

Middle aged Mike Aug 6, 2024, 10:00 AM

Obtaining apologies from the long dead is difficult. I've been trying to extract the same from my great-great grandfather who was stupid enough to come here when he could have gone to Australia.

deon50 Aug 6, 2024, 01:50 PM

?

B M Aug 6, 2024, 12:18 PM

My (unborn) daughter's ancestors have pre-emptively apologised to the collective black peoples for all and everything they did wrong, and what you perceive they did wrong as well. They are profusely, profusely, sorry for all your aggrievements.

Gretha Erasmus Aug 5, 2024, 08:17 PM

I agree with the writer that we shouldn't be fighting about hair rules in 2024. The problem though is the recent PHSG fiasco was NOT about any teacher policing any PHSG pupil with regards to hair. It began with a girl, who later made a racist video, who fought with another girl, who sent dubious WAs

Gretha Erasmus Aug 5, 2024, 09:01 PM

I see now DM removed all the comments from the article about the disappointment by the GDE wrt the PHSG outcome. I am pretty sure this one will follow the same fate. So other should be no debate when journalists misrepresent facts in their articles? No debate when writer bias triumphs truth?

Middle aged Mike Aug 6, 2024, 10:05 AM

Ja, it's not a great look and makes me quite uncomfortable, especially considering how the tilt seems overwhelmingly towards the woke. Having said that I support the DM due to the outstanding investigative journalism they engage in, the absence of which would have us a lot further down the road to Zimbabwe-fication and I won't stop.

Malcolm McManus Aug 6, 2024, 11:34 AM

JA, Absolutely support DM for the most part. Constructive criticism should be welcomed and seen as a tool to keep themselves at the level of journalism we have come to expect and appreciate from DM. This article, and the PHSG have deserved constructive criticism.

Middle aged Mike Aug 6, 2024, 10:26 AM

As much as I hated school discipline and rebelled against it almost as a matter of religious duty, I have grown to realise that being forced to tow a line, even an apparently arbitrary one, can instill useful life skills. The grown up world isn't a free for all any more than it's 'fair' or equitable and learning early on that it doesn't revolve around you can come in handy.

Cachunk Aug 6, 2024, 10:49 AM

The journo in the PGHS article was reporting as fact that which had been disproved. When readers criticized this, the DM wrung its hands and shut down the comments. Very bad precedent DM...

B M Aug 6, 2024, 12:29 PM

"... we are facing yet another furore over alleged racism..." The critical word here is alleged. When evidence validates the allegation, then we can make judgements about how the racism is dealt with. Let there be racism first, before we try to fix it. Otherwise, the energy is better spent elsewhere