Abstract:
The theme of poverty has recently dominated various scholarly platforms, including academic
presentations and public debates. Nevertheless, it has emerged that the rhetoric about poverty
reduction seems to be the project of the elite who apparently write and speak on behalf of the poor.
The plight of the majority of the poor is problematised so that transformation is superficially
democratised with the ultimate aim of benefitting the elite. The present study reflects on Eben
Scheffler’s contributions on poverty and the poor in the Old Testament books of the Pentateuch,
the Psalms and the Proverbs. Although this study refers to Scheffler’s other works on poverty from
time to time, particular attention is paid to four of them, namely, (1) ‘The poor in the Psalms: A
variety of views’; (2) ‘Of poverty prevention in the Pentateuch as a continuing contemporary
challenge’; (3) ‘Poverty in the Book of Proverbs: Looking from above’; (4) ‘Pleading poverty (or
identifying with the poor for selfish reasons): On the ideology of Psalm 109’. Scheffler points out
that it was the ancient Israelite elite who played the role of writing and speaking on behalf of the
poor. It is essential to note that Scheffler’s thrust is not an appropriation exercise, although in some
places he makes reference to the ‘contemporary world’. Thus, the present study attempts to explore
the land debate in our contemporary world, with a special focus on South Africa’s (SA) land
expropriation without compensation (LEWIC) debate and the foiled fast-track land reform
programme in Zimbabwe, as elitist projects. The Zimbabwean Fast-Track Land Reform Programme
(FTLRP) was a prototype of LEWIC in SA. It is argued that the poor rural communities in Zimbabwe
continue to languish in poverty in a country endowed with abundant natural resources, including
land. The study argues that land allocation in Zimbabwe benefitted the elite.
Description:
Dr Rugwij is participating
in the research project,
‘Exegesis and the Theology
of Isaiah’, directed by Prof.
Dr Alphonso Groenewald,
Department of Old Testament
Studies, Faculty of Theology
and Religion, University of
Pretoria.