Hand in hand: Prof Rajmohan Gandhi spoke of bringing people closer together in a "coalition of consciousnesses".
If hate, fear and greed are the "real enemies" of humankind, then connectivity between leaders and citizens - and between people - would be one way to overcome our troubles. So said Professor Rajmohan Gandhi, biographer, research professor at the University of Illinois and grandson of Mahatma Gandhi, when he delivered the year's third Vice-Chancellor's Open Lecture at UCT on 23 March.
More often than not, the blame for the world's troubles is pinned on one group or another, as is happening with Muslims around the world, said Gandhi. But, as he'd learned from his grandfather - at 74, he's accepted that he'll forever be introduced as "Gandhi's grandchild" - and through his decades-long work with Initiatives of Change International (IoCI), which strives to build "relationships across the world's divides", this is both misleading and dangerous.
"It's very tempting to think of a whole group of people as a flawed people," said Gandhi. "[But] there is no such thing as a flawed group of people.
Instead, it is hate, fear and greed that divide people, he argued. Only a "coalition of consciousnesses" and a "deeper connectivity" among people would help overcome these divides.
"I think the path to [this connectivity] is listening - listening to the other person," said Gandhi.
This lesson is applicable to South Africa, too.
"Your problems are immense, but they are not really unique," he observed.
(A podcast of the lecture can be found here.)
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Please view the republishing articles page for more information.