Great topic, really. Interesting reading for a change.
The anthem was cobbled together in an honest, if misguided, effort to hold everybody together during a very dangerous time in SA history. But IMHO the effort was misguided, as I said. It tried to include everybody, make everybody feel comfortable by dragging the differences together.
Like the names of streets and towns etc. it now divides. And like the anthem, changing those names to 'heroes' of both sides will continue to divide.
We have to acknowledge that in SA there is a side that feels pain at being reminded of the past. But at the same time there is also a side that feels pride in the things achieved - including a peaceful transition - outside of the racial oppression of apartheid. The agreement in transition was that all sides should have an equal future in this country.
Names and the anthem that highlight seperate groups' pain and pride will tear this country further apart. All political names should be changed to neutral names and the anthem should be neutral, focussed on a united future and not a divided past.
I'd rather live in an improving country looking to the future than live in a country spiralling down into oblivion looking at a past they cannot change. Those that want to constantly cry about the past, on all sides, should be marginalised.
It is time to change the anthem. All of it.
Re the 1976 uprisings. I as an Afrikaans speaking person I can not for one moment criticise anyone for rioting on that issue. It is widely understood as a reaction to being taught in the 'language of the oppressor'. My understanding of it is slightly different. Beyond the aforementioned, and much more importantly, if I was say a Zulu speaker and had to learn in another language, I'd certainly not want to learn in Afrikaans. What an utter waste of my years of education to study in another language that is only a local language. If I could not study in Zulu it certainly had to be English, a near universal language.
Insisting on Afrikaans was at best utter stupidity in an already volatile situation.