See Africa in a whole new light

The Safari Company and the Economist showed maps of Africa which gave a better understanding of the sheer size of Africa " a continent into which the US, Mexico, India, China and most of Europe could fit. Photo: Supplied

The Safari Company and the Economist showed maps of Africa which gave a better understanding of the sheer size of Africa " a continent into which the US, Mexico, India, China and most of Europe could fit. Photo: Supplied

Published Sep 20, 2014

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If size does matter then our continent should get more credit, writes Jos Kuper.

The Ebola virus strikes in West Africa and what happens? Potential tourists immediately cancel their trips to Kenya, Tanzania, South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe and Zambia.

The tourism industry (via The Safari Company) countered with an info-graphic which points out that people living in Europe and Brazil live closer to the outbreak zone than anyone in east or southern Africa.

Part of the reason is ignorance: most of the “world” sees Africa as one country and not the 54 independent nations that make it up.

But… maybe it’s not so surprising when one looks at maps of the world.

Most world atlases tend to underestimate the size of Africa as the Mercator projection (on which most world maps are based) distorts the size and shape of large objects, as its scale increases from the Equator to the poles. Maybe this “down-sizing’ of the continent has subconsciously influenced and reinforced the belief that Africa is less important, somehow inferior?

The Safari Company and the Economist (via a twitter link) produced maps of Africa which gave a better understanding of the sheer size of Africa – a continent into which the US, Mexico, India, China and most of Europe (including eastern Europe and Siberia) fits comfortably.

But this shouldn’t explain why South Africans also undervalue Africa and their African roots.

Futurefact finds that 64 percent of South Africans believe that, in general, people from South Africa are superior to those from other parts of Africa with 52 percent agreeing that they see themselves as South African rather than African (even black South Africans were more likely to describe themselves thus). 42 percent believe that South Africa is more like Europe and America than Africa. Almost three-quarters distance themselves from Africa believing that South Africans should look after itself and its own people and not worry about the rest of Africa. Half of us believe that most criminals in South Africa are foreigners.

At the same time, 78 percent of South Africans really appreciate the music, arts and culture coming out of the rest of Africa. South African companies are already major investors in Africa (outstripping countries like China and the US in terms of the number (if not the value) of projects according to last year’s Ernst & Young’s African Attractiveness Survey.

Africa can catch up and catch up quickly. Almost 50 percent of South Africans already had smartphones last year but were inhibited from accessing the internet by high data costs. But Facebook is investigating ways of providing free internet access in Africa and Asia and many South African cities are providing free wi-fi hotspots, as are taxis and other forms of public transport.

Maybe when Africans (including South Africans) start valuing our own continent, other people will start taking it more seriously and realise its potential.

Futurefact has been surveying the attitudes and beliefs of South Africans since 1998. The findings presented above are from futurefact 2013 which is based on a probability sample of 3 025 adults aged 15 years and over, living in communities of more than 500 people throughout South Africa representing 21.6 million adults. Futurefact 2014 is currently in the field with results due in November.

* If you would like to find out more about futurefact and its extensive attitudinal databases please check out www. futurefact.co.za

**futurefact is a home-grown research and conference project co-ordinated by a team of wellknown researchers.

They work with respected opinion leaders and their subscribers to come up with findings that are relevant and stimulating based on hard data.

**** The views expressed here are not necessarily those of Independent Newspapers.

Saturday Star

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