Country Roads: a Reconciliation Day interfaith meander

On Reconciliation Day, December 16th, we have traditionally in Cape Town have organised an Interfaith Walk in District 6. But over these 3 years this became beset with various problems, not least the changing behaviors post-covid and the current divisive world climate.

So yesterday, myself, Cecil Plaatjies, Nic Paton, Aidon Allies, Marie-Therese Nga set out for Mamre to visit the Seutloali family. We took a different route from usual and meandered through upmarket suburbs, vast tracts of farmland, past farm workers’ homes, growing townships and forgotten areas with meaningful names like, Atlantis.

A journey that points to so much that should still be reconciled in this country. Along the winding roads north of Cape Town, we reflected on spatial division, and how many have been flung to outlying areas, with not much access to amenities and opportunity.

It was my second visit after the devastating fire which destroyed the Seutloali homestead. (See “Rising from the Ashes”). We were met with broad smiles and warm hearts. It was a lesson in resilience, hope and victory of the spirit. The Seutloali’s are rebuilding their home and planted crops again.

The homestead

We spent the afternoon in conversation and encouraging each other, and also got to meet another family from the community who came over to visit.

How we spent Reconciliation Day

Interfaith is often viewed as a public event consisting of many different religions on the same platform. Person-to-person dialogue does not make good copy. It is invisible, not easy to quantify and label, but it is a model of real peace work and reconciliation. Something that should become part of our daily interactions with each other.

Without planning or ceremony, we found ourselves having been meaningfully involved in an act of Reconciliation.

Rising From The Ashes

We visited Stevie and Deborah Seutloali’s house off Silverstream Road near Mamre which burned down on Saturday evening. They have been part of our interfaith community for some years, and have stepped out to create a life outside the city limits.

Thank you to all who have taken part by accompanying the visit, with material goods, or financial donations. Yesterday, James Ellman and Ferdy Truby of Elsies’ FHLC and Cecil Plaatjies and myself of CTII squeezed into the car full to the roof with food and many other useful things and headed north up the N7.

Continue reading “Rising From The Ashes”

Maputo: an inspiring sojourn

On Wednesday 23rd April 2025 a group of South Africans from Johannesburg, Durban and Cape Town flew to Maputo, Mozambique and returned to Johannesburg on Saturday 27th. The program was organised by the Turquoise Harmony Institute, a South African organisation headed by Ayhan Cetin. THI have extensive contacts in Mozambique, and their sister organisation, Ilhas de Paz (Islands of Peace) is headed by Mehmet Baslik in Maputo.

Continue reading “Maputo: an inspiring sojourn”