When law student Chidimma Adetshina clinched a coveted spot as a Miss South Africa finalist, her triumph unleashed a vicious backlash, unearthing a seam of xenophobia that lies close to the surface for some in the country.

The 23-year-old’s name hints at her connection to Nigeria, but internet detectives wanted to know more and combed through every inch of her life. They found that her father is Nigerian and though her mother is South African, her family had come from neighbouring Mozambique.

Ms Adetshina is South African, as verified by the organisers of the pageant. She has said in interviews that she was born in Soweto - the township next to Johannesburg - and grew up in Cape Town.

However, the “go-home” sentiment, and even harsher attacks, flooded social media. There was also a petition demanding her removal from the high-profile televised competition that amassed more than 14,000 signatures before it was taken down.

  • Flying SquidM
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    74 months ago

    That’s not what I was even beginning to suggest. I was suggesting that you would think people who lived under the oppressive thumb of apartheid for decades would be less closed-minded when it came to racism.

    • @moistclump
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      74 months ago

      Yes and no. It takes a lot to unlearn and heal from a system like that. I’m not surprised there’s internalized xenophobia.

      • AmidFuror
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        74 months ago

        And my point was that people, even in South Africa, don’t just learn these things from whites. Xenophobia is a human traits. There are many tribes in South Africa with a history that includes conflict.

        Yes, colonizers exploited those conflicts to seize power for themselves, much like they did in North America. But they were feeding off existing discord.

    • @notaviking
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      54 months ago

      Sometimes the oppressed becomes the oppressors, take us whites in South Africa, after being put in concentration camps in the Anglo Boer war, which Nazis took inspiration from, became oppressors afterwards to protect Afrikaner interest. Now we realise the injustice of perpetuating injustices. Israel and Palestine really remind me of being oppressed, claiming to protect your people afterwards but letting other people suffer and becoming an oppressor.

      • Flying SquidM
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        -104 months ago

        I get that you’re very proud of your whiteness. You don’t need to keep going on about it.

        • AmidFuror
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          4 months ago

          Try reading the comment again. It criticizes responding to oppression by becoming oppressors, including when Afrikaners did it.

          Edit: coming becoming

          • Flying SquidM
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            -64 months ago

            This person has put the fact that they’re white in bold in every comment. Sounds like they’re pretty proud of it to me.