Africa stood behind South Africa during apartheid. Countries sacrificed, protested, and pushed globally for their freedom. So why does xenophobia still exist today within the same continent? If unity was possible when it mattered most, what changed?
Are we forgetting history, or are economic realities stronger than shared identity? Because it’s hard to reconcile past solidarity with present division. Where did the disconnect begin?
1 Comments
History is one thing, survival today is another. People act based on current pressure.
But that’s exactly the problem. If pressure erases history, then unity was never real.
Economic frustration is driving most of it. People need someone to blame.
Still not an excuse. Other Africans are not the enemy
Lmao, true. Pan-Africanism sounds good until jobs become scarce.