Abstract:
This article analyses the different assumptions about migrants in South Africa, coupled with
levels of abuses and marginalisation of black African immigrants, which seem to be a source of
depression and emotional pain for them in their strange land. Previous studies did reveal that
African migrants face rejection, xenophobic attacks, abuses, marginalisation and socio-economic
exclusion through rowdy practices of public officials and perceived institutionalised prejudice
in South Africa. However, White Western and Indian-origin migrants are perceived to be better
treated with dignity and respect in the same host country. This article investigates the argument
that emotional pain suffered by the abused and traumatised Nigerian and other African
immigrants could be responsible for the deviant behaviour of some of them in South Africa.
Moreover, this article also scrutinises the notion people have that xenophobia in South Africa is
Afrophobia. Most South African citizens are of the perception that all African immigrants are
criminals, harbingers of disease and drug dealers, whose presence in their country is responsible
for all their woes. On the other hand, Nigerian migrants are of the notion that they are the
most hated at community and individual levels in South Africa. However, if appropriate social
coalition policies are formulated and adopted by the government and all stakeholders,
it can be of assistance in tackling the issues concerning citizens’ suspicions, migrant
abuses, marginalisation and social exclusion, which seem to be hampering the
co-existence of citizens and African migrants in South Africa. We should bear in mind that
almost all of us in South Africa are from somewhere or the other, as clearly explained in sahistory.
org.za. The whites and Indian migrants, whom I call ‘earlier alien settlers’, are from Europe and
Asia, respectively. I call black Bantus from Great lakes in Central Africa, ‘earlier alien settlers’,
whereas the Khoikhoi who originated in the northern area of Botswana as the ‘earlier dwellers’,
while Nigerians and Ghanaians from West Africa, Zimbabweans, Malawians, etc., are called the
‘new alien settlers’. Do the ‘earlier alien settlers’ have the right to deprive the ‘earlier dwellers’
and the other ‘new alien settlers’ the right to have their space and settle in a democratic South
Africa? Finally, an instructive pastoral care methodology is proposed in this article for
traumatised migrants to be appropriately cared for and provided with wholesome wellness.
Description:
This research is part of the
project, ‘Pastoral Care and
Trauma Counselling’, directed
by Prof. Dr Maake Masango,
Department of Practical
Theology, Faculty of
Theology, University of
Pretoria.
Dr J.U. Olisa
wrote the article out of his PhD thesis "Pastoral care for Nigerian migrants in South Africa". Prof. M.J. Masango supervised the the thesis and this article. (http://hdl.handle.net/2263/71017)