Yess! Politicians, the GBS, large corps. All the fore mentioned thrive because they push for division, when we all unite we will bring in the golden age
@@jn8922 she still made a point of identifying herself as a South African. No one flees South Africa, they emigrate, and recent stats show most of them come back.
@@thabokabai4188 oh Thabo even if you're this nice, they still don't like your melanated self and south Africa has no Whyte people, but it does have Whyte people who colonized it though.
@@missqt48in her defence, she is speaking under time pressure in a middle of a busy street. She did a great job in representing her self and us. 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾
"Doesn't matter" I love how when the guy interrupted, she wasn't phased. She didn't have to make a comment about how rude he was, she managed to stay put and found her train of thought again.
Yes that's exactly what she talked about too. Try to understand where the people coming from. That is also including not letting yourself interrupt that much and react solely emotional because then you can't really get people and accept them
Yep, she sees through the identity politics and stereotyping / grouping game. It's all just being normal people and enjoying normal things. We put down the victim cards and coloniser talks and it turns out we can all be human and nice to each other.
Y’all fall for anything read my comment she is from KZN, she left SA we recognize her racist self. Interview me I will call her out on social media. As we say in SA Haibo masepa. She left SA, she called us K…..s if you’re South African it is equivalent to calling American’s the N WORD. She is nasty.
I am from Durban also known as KZN. I would say to her Patricia you are very racist you left South Africa as you said at the time fleeing from these K……S If you’re South African you know what this means. It’s equivalent to calling AMERICANS the N word, even worse. She has her moment of fame, not realizing we Bantu people are also in social media. Haibo Patricia as we know her masepa???
She's not wise at all. She doesn't understand human behaviour. Blacks mainly want to be with fellow blacks and whites want to be with white. No utopian dream is going to ever change that.
@@yousigiltube Then you look at rhodesia,SA,and you think twice. There's a reason this lady doesn't live in south africa anymore. It's easy to speak about coming together when you don't live in that hell,because her family decided to bolt at the end of apartheid.
This lady is a treasure. What she says resonates. Factionalism is not a natural thing it is taught. I have lived and worked on many countries and have worked with Indian, South African, Kenyan, Brit, Malaysian, Singaporean, Pakistani, Botswana, Philipino, Chinese, Japanese and so many more nationalities and what I learn is most people do not care of anyones background as long as there is respect between us. Its the few who can profit from conflict who stoke the fires. 99% of the world are awesome kind people who will share with no reservation. I have danced with Traditional Kikuyu (Kenyan) travelling band and have danced with Indian co workers at an office party and it was all a vibe. Embrace the world folks. Its a beautiful place and experience. One love from Zimbabwe.
Yes. We should embrace our difference not in the way of hate, but in love and sharing our cultures so we can all understand each other, have fun together and work for a better future.
This ! you can see that it's something she's been holding on to and practicing for a while but didn't have a platform to spread the word so she seized the moment. WHat a wonderful soul
This knowledge is thousands of years old most indigenous communities around the world stress the importance of relationships not with just people but all things. It's balance, the world is completely out of balance.
@@XxgoodbudsxX You can be proud of your country of origin (or race) and still include others. Her point was to engage with those who are different so we can see the similarities rather than the differences. You don't have deny your heritage to do that.
@elleanna5869 a beautiful flag. Sorry, I am a little simple and all I could see was all the beautiful colors on their flag. Their flag is how we should be, proud of your color but strong in standing by others who share your values if not the same color.❤
@@XxgoodbudsxXSouth Africa 🇿🇦 is NOT a race. It’s a country. OP was expressing pride in this wise woman and the fact that she is a fellow South African.
Yep. Proud of this lady discourse. She's an excellent ambassador for South Africa, Africa and general folks that actually choose to advance their intelect and mindfulness via education
The interviewer looks so shocked like, "I can't believe what I just heard," he doesn't know what to say. His response as the interview wrapped up says it all. I'm so proudly South African right now😊🇿🇦
@@user-em3vl6li5w I travelled a similar road to her and I'm still finding it a joy to get to know my fellow South Africans that I was effectively cut off from growing up during apartheid. We have our issues as a country but wow we have wonderful people.
Beautiful woman. ❤ She come from the 80s. We were doing all that work and I think she's right about social media. It's dividing us and undoing all that work over decades since the 50s to make relationships. Love her ❤❤
It’s so easy to type out a mean comment or send hate from behind a keyboard. Like this lady said if you’re face to face with someone it’s harder to do (although there are folks who do spit hate in your face) because you can see that they’re a human being not too different from yourself. I started to type a mean reply to someone recently then thought, “Would I say this to their face?” No, I wouldn’t, so I didn’t send the comment.
My husband is Afrikaans from South Africa and he embodies these beliefs as well, as do I. I’m of Romanian blood (Romanians can be racist) but my parents weren’t so I’m not. Parents have SO much influence when it comes to racism. Beautiful interview
I've worked with people from all over the world. Most people want to live in peace with each other. It's the big capital that tries to divide us for their own gains. Stay strong and united brothers and sisters!!
I was born in Britain and raised in South Africa they produce manners respect and a warrior sprite Britain could never give me what Mzani gave me thank you
@@bevturner2258 I actually meant to respond to the original post not you. But whether it’s her grand parents or great grand parents, she descends from some whereelse, obviously.
Sometimes the internet serves up something so wholesome I regain some of the hope I lose daily in humanity. Please give this aunty a Bell's(South Africans will know😂)
We all have a light to shine. Imagine if we all worked together, listened to one another, had compassion and kindness, what kind of world we’d have. 🇨🇦
I am a PROUD SOUTH AFRICAN living in Canada, and Trish makes me proud to be South African ❤🇿🇦❤🇿🇦❤🇿🇦All that work we did back in the day is not in vain. I love you, Trish, a true Mzansi girl. Ek is in jou kant❤
It was perfect. She did said that we should start relationships on streets. And it showed what she was speaking about - the tall dude immediately became confrontational while she remain calm and understanding... And at least 50 people in social media reacted as she warned about
It was very indelicate, but common, is that the “worse of society”? Really? People do dumb stuff. I didn’t like to watch him interrupting her, she has a strong line of thought and carried on, that one can say!
If i may speak for that commenter, I think you may misinterpreting their point. They're saying the what the guy did is representative of the worst of society, not that it IS the worst of society. Entitlement, callousness, bravado, acting without thinking, need for negative attention - I could go on. Those qualities are, in my opinion, the root cause of many of the actual worst things we see in society. This is just a demonstration of those qualities on a singular level.
South African here. She is talking the truth. When the tables turned and Nelson Mandela came into power, I worked for various black managers, female and male and we formed bonds and friendships and mutual respect for each other that has lasted a lifetime. I heard my black managers stories, how they grew up, the challenges they had as some of them studied to become welfare workers, city planners, etc. all university degrees. We should climb out of the racism and color box and start seeing each other as humans. We have no excuse.
Proudly South African , that's why I will never ever leave and my heart is to make things work. Everyone I work with respects me as Malome ( aka Uncle ) because we are all in this together and I help where I can with South African pride and respect.
I love my Saffers. I am an adopted Saffer. Have a lot of maties, strong community in the UK, very hospitable, good jol, good braai and having a lekker time. Good people
OK, Can we repeat her sentiment multiple times over EVERY DAMN WHERE? And dude was a perfect example of the nonsensical mess we are in that she spoke of.
i love it when that guy tries to bomb the video and the lady still concentrating says...""it doesn't matter"" she is the real deal and the hug...we need more people like this talking to our youth.
UBUNTU is an ancient African word meaning 'humanity to others'. It is often described as reminding us that 'I am what I am because of who we all are'. Glory to JAH
This is the best street interview I’ve ever seen. You asked a passerby an important question that she just happened to have an extremely informed and respectful answer to
Wisdom comes through walking through hardships, choosing forgiveness, and learning to love. South Africans have been through the fire and this is the result. Proud SAFFA in Aus.
@@royboy4571 there's a quote from Socrates that every generation people think somebody recently said it. If not for the archaic language, people would think it was GenX about GenZ. It never changes. Every generation thinks their grandkids' generation is going to hell in a handbasket.
I have been saying this my whole life. We are ALL Homo sapiens. One Tribe. We ALL share this wonderful place called Earth as home. One Planet. We need to shed these divisive labels and become ONE. ❤
When you can come together no matter your differences, nothing will stop the change that will follow. Alllowing yourself to see things through someone elses eyes and meeting in the middle is far more difficult than the other option. But far more rewarding
Unity in diversity Comes from accepting we are different and multifaceted individuals At the same time, we are all human No one is special No one is other
Another smart South African. We've been through it all. Hopefully we've emerged from our ordeal with widom. South Africa is an amazing place. So proud to be one.
Yes, this Mzansi Woman makes me proud to be South African. The philosophy of Ubuntu, so beautifully expressed, is one of our greatest blessings to share with the world.
From corporate business to government politicians,it’s all about divide and control for their own gains. United we stand divided we fall. Love South African people. 🇿🇦🇿🇦
In the new South Africa we were 'South Africans'. This was unifying. Similarly people can be 'British', 'American', 'French' etc. These are unifying terms. They set aside silly differences that drive wedges between us. Our enemies seed and exploit divisions hoping we'll rip ourselves apart. Indeed it is our humanity that pulls as together. Together we are stronger.
See that? The older woman, put on a few pounds, ignored by the stereotypes of that genre....We women of age who have lived experience need to be seen and heard! I gave up worrying about people's opinions years ago and have fun engaging absolutely everyone as I walk through life. I'm a Christian. The love of Jesus is infectious!
Love her! This wonderful, insightful woman should be on a speaking tour. She has a powerful, positive message and delivers it very eloquently. End Racism!
I am 25 and she is absolutely right saying social media is one problem in our generation. In my job you can not talk anymore to a minor without instantly hurting their feelings because social media does not teach you how to communicate. But it teaches you anxiety on a high end level!
The mad thing is it’s a pretty common position across all racial lines in South-Africa. It’s only the race hustling politicians and poverty that make it appear otherwise.