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Joel B. Pollak

Joel B. Pollak

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South Africa Journal: Vicky's Place Revisited

South Africa Journal: Vicky's Place Revisited

My friend Vicky Ntozini was a successful township entrepreneur until she was murdered last year by her husband. After reading online that her children were still running her bed and breakfast in the sprawling township of Khayelitsha, I decided to

South Africa Journal: ANC Glasnost

In this morning’s Cape Times, Minister Trevor Manuel–formerly the well-regarded Minister of Finance under Thabo Mbeki, now serving in Jacob Zuma’s cabinet–published an op-ed that fully repudiated the views expressed earlier in the week by the ruling party’s provincial leader,

South Africa Journal: Race Quotas and the Opposition

At a dinner party last night, a black acquaintance ribbed me about my former boss, Tony Leon, who once led the Democratic Alliance (DA) from political obscurity to opposition dominance. Why was Tony involving himself in party affairs, this gentleman

South Africa Journal: Boxing Day Beachmageddon!

Boxing Day, December 26, is traditionally a day for black and “coloured” (i.e. mixed-race) South Africans to head to the nation’s beaches. That tradition has remained strong, twenty years after apartheid, even though the segregation laws that helped foster the

South Africa Journal: A Homeless Christmas

Cape Town’s summer weather brings hazards in the form of the southeast wind, which spreads fires quickly. In addition to the brush fires–some natural, some human-caused–that tear across the landscape, there are also shack fires that can devastate the city’s

South Africa Journal: Christmas in July

For only the second time in eight days, the infernal southeast breeze that blusters throughout the Cape Town summer has stopped for a few hours, allowing the heat of the early morning to sink in. It is early Christmas Day,

South Africa Journal: Cape Town Shines

It’s been four years since I spent time in Cape Town, and seven years since I came back to the U.S. The city has come a long way since then. Amidst stories of crisis and decline in the country as

South Africa Journal: Throwing away a Win

South Africans are up in arms about their national cricket team’s decision, with victory within reach, to accept a draw with the visiting Indian squad rather than risk a loss, which would have put the two-match series out of reach.

South Africa Journal: Nelson Mandela, Mossad Agent

One of the top news stories in South Africa this week has been the controversy over new allegations that Nelson Mandela received training from Israel’s Mossad spy agency–albeit inadvertently–when he received military training in Ethiopia in 1962. After the then-banned

South Africa Journal: 'Neo-Liberal Fascists'

In Monday morning’s Cape Times, Songezo Mjongile, the provincial secretary of the African National Congress (ANC), took to the op-ed page to defend the Times‘ firing of editor Alide Dasnois. His article ran alongside that of a “Black Consciousness” professor,

South Africa Journal: When the State is All

While in South Africa, I’ve been enjoying Anton Harber’s excellent Diepsloot, an exploration of life in a teeming informal settlement north of Johannesburg that did not exist when Nelson Mandela was freed from prison but has since become one of

South Africa Journal: Obama's Media Cadres

Press freedom has been a major issue in post-apartheid South Africa, especially since 2000, when President Thabo Mbeki and the ruling African National Congress (ANC) launched a campaign against the media, accusing it of racism. In fact, the media’s main

South Africa Journal: The Dignity of Difference

If the United States is a melting pot, South Africa is a potpie kos–a stew of different ingredients that never quite lose their distinctiveness, even while blending together in the same dish. For a variety of reasons–some good, some bad–South Africans

South Africa Journal: Failure to Connect

There are many immediate, practical differences about South Africa that strike an American visitor. Driving on the left is one: the hard part is not so much staying on your side of the road as adjusting to the physical dimensions

South Africa Journal: The Life of the Party

When I worked as a speechwriter for the opposition Democratic Alliance (DA) in the South African parliament, it emerged that despite controlling just over 12% of the seats, the DA asked something like 70% of the questions in the legislature

Obama, the Middle East, and Israel: An Overview

Obama, the Middle East, and Israel: An Overview

The Obama administration has had a profound effect on the U.S.-Israel relationship, with implications for the future of the region as a whole. Overall, President Barack Obma has overseen the emergence of a more unstable and dangerous environment for Israel

South Africa Journal: Extraordinary Generosity

As a corollary to my earlier post about crime in South Africa, it is only proper to point out another element of the South African national character that coexists, both tragically and ironically, alongside this society’s more violent tendencies: extraordinary

South Africa Journal: Have Fun! Try Not to Die.

South Africa Journal: Have Fun! Try Not to Die.

We arrived in South Africa yesterday morning on a beautiful, and typical, Cape Town summer’s day: clear blue skies, a cloud gently brushing Table Mountain and a stiff southeast breeze ripping through everything except the harbor. (It blew away the

Netroots vs. Tea Party: Oppositons at Odds

I’m in transit from Los Angeles to Cape Town, and with a long layover in Paris, I’ve managed to push through an old opposition manual–from the far-left: Crashing the Gate: Netroots, Grassroots, and the Rise of People-Powered Politics, the 2006

The Post-Mandela Era Begins

The Post-Mandela Era Begins

Nelson Mandela has been laid to rest. And with his burial in his ancestral homeland, the new South Africa has truly begun. No longer can it enjoy the “Madiba magic” of its charismatic transitional leader. No longer will it be

Fake Mandela Interpreter Burned Two People to Death with Mob

Fake Mandela Interpreter Burned Two People to Death with Mob

Fake sign language interpreter Thamsanqa Jantjie, who “translated” for President Barack Obama and other world leaders at the memorial for former South African president Nelson Mandela last week, admitted to South Africa’s Sunday Times that he had been part of a vigilante mob that

Obama Tries to Legalize the IRS Scandal

Obama Tries to Legalize the IRS Scandal

The Obama administration is attempting to create a new rule that would legalize the abuses of power that it committed during the IRS scandal, when Tea Party and conservative non-profit groups were targeted. The Treasury has proposed a new rule