SOUTH Africans should celebrate their cultural heritage and acknowledge that the various cultures did not develop in isolation, Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe said yesterday.
"We should not enclose what we deem to be our racial or ethnic cultural heritage within the walls of Jericho," he said in a speech prepared for delivery in Upington, in the Northern Cape.
"Culture does overflow boundaries of time, race and ethnicity since it is the totality of lived reality."
Most South African cultures had influenced each other, he said.
"Even at a time when racial domination was scarring the South African social landscape, cultural influences still managed to find outlets to decant into different social domains."
Evidence of this could be found in modern South African languages, where words from other cultures were often incorporated into another culture's vocabulary.
Heritage Day was for the celebration of individual and collective cultural, traditional or ethnic identities. These elements made South Africa unique in its rich diversity, he said.
"[Heritage Day] seeks to acknowledge our injurious past and the history which diminished the use and status of indigenous languages and free cultural expression," he said.
"During apartheid, culture was used as a tool of racial oppression, but it was now a unifying force to be celebrated by all.
"If in the past the main enemy was the oppressive system of apartheid ... today the biggest enemy facing our society is the triple problem of poverty, inequality and unemployment," Motlanthe said.
On corruption he said: "Resources that are meant to improve conditions and lives of our people are diverted by the few, well-positioned individuals to feed their insatiable greed."
Celebrating South Africa's common heritage signalled that the country was leaving behind its divisive past, he said.
"Let us use this day to move towards that vision of national unity and cultural harmony." – Sapa