TITLE:
Beyond Fear: How Everyday Interactions Defuse Xenophobia in South African Townships
AUTHORS:
Odette Murara
KEYWORDS:
Xenophobia, Diversity, Social Interaction, Everyday Conviviality, Cosmopolitanism, South Africa
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Journal of Social Sciences,
Vol.13 No.12,
December
30,
2025
ABSTRACT: Scholarship and research following the onset of the widespread 2008 xenophobic attacks in South Africa have largely been negative, presenting a picture of perpetual hatred, communities falling into abysmal fear, livelihoods and lives being lost, and the relative peace and harmony enjoyed by locals and foreigners since South Africa gained its independence in 1994 being lost forever. Such rhetoric has been entrenched by the continued rise in cases of civil unrest, perpetuated by individuals and groups who champion selfish interests at the expense of foreigners. Yet, naturally, society has shown the ability to transform negative experiences into positive outcomes, characterized by deeper social ties, co-existence, and mutually beneficial oneness in diversity. Based on ethnographic research conducted to examine everyday social interaction among migrants from the Great Lakes Region and South Africans in Cape Town, this paper calls for a re-examination of the roots and results of xenophobia, showing, through the examples of Joe Slovo and Phoenix Townships in Cape Town, how positive social movements can be borne out of negative situations. The paper argues, with evidence from the two townships, that what may have changed since 2008 is the nature of the social fabric that is interaction-based, that which holds a people either together or asunder, and not their economic outlook. The paper delves into the controversy surrounding the social menace of xenophobia, which, although widely written about, none have been wholesomely able to account for. Perhaps the answer to why there has been this ugly scar on South Africa lies in the examination not of what has been, but in areas seemingly unimportant. The question is: why has xenophobia been continuously experienced in some areas more than others, yet poverty is as endemic and perpetual an element in South African townships? Part of the answer lies in the examination of social relations between African migrants and locals in areas least hit by the social cancer. Based on evidence, xenophobia in South Africa is argued to be more a social than an economic consequence, whose trajectory is changeable once the right social tools are employed. These positive results can also serve as models for social reconstruction if a sustainable solution to social ills such as xenophobia can be found.