Noblesse Oblige

Originally published in the Informanté newspaper on Thursday, 28 April, 2016.


“Nobility Obliges.” Or that is how Noblesse Oblige translates directly from French. I’d first encountered the phrase when I went to study at the University of Stellenbosch, where it was the motto of my residence, Simonsberg. More formally translated: “Nobility has a duty.” Or as the Oxford Dictionary puts it, nobility constrains to honourable behaviour, and privilege entails to responsibility. 

Today, of course, we no longer have a nobility, no class of citizens that officially ‘above’ the rest. We live in a free country, as equals, and as such, we seem to have forgotten the concept of Noblesse Oblige in our new free world. It seems that while we’ve embraced our new freedom of being equal before the law, we have forgotten that we are not all simply copies of the same person. Some are more equal than others. 

Some inequalities are easily observable. If you look around, you will see people of different genders, different races, different heights, different builds, even at different ages. You will see people with different abilities, of different means and people who’ve had different opportunities. But because we’re all ‘equal,’ we’ve come to think we’ve earned what we’ve got, and that no one can tell us what to do with it.

This idea of a ‘self-made’ man, is of course a myth. No one was born with the ability to feed and dress herself, or to read herself, or so many other things. No one built the roads he drove on himself, laid the pipes and wires that supply his house with water and electricity himself. No one built a company all by herself without employees. We were, and are, all dependent on one another for our survival in modern society. 

Some of us have found ourselves of greater means than our fellow citizens, either due to having greater ability, or by having had greater opportunity. But all that we have achieved, we’ve had our society that has carried us and given us the opportunity to do so. Why is it, then, that we’ve forgotten Noblesse Oblige?

Over the past few decades, as democracy and freedom has taken hold across the globe, it seems a sense of dog-eat-dog individualism has overtaken the world. We believe we are entitled to the fruits of our labour, and we’ll go to great lengths to ensure we take every opportunity to get what is ours, and to frustrate the efforts of those who would take some from us.

It is why when the Panama Papers were released, we saw so many of the rich and powerful worldwide try to hide money from their own governments, that they did wish taken from them in the form of taxes. It is why the problem of corruption and state capture are so endemic in our southern neighbour. It is why people were so up in arms when our President floated the idea of a Solidarity Tax. And it is why, when a poor beggar is asking for money or food, people make up all sorts of excuses to avoid helping their fellow man.

“They’ll only spend it on booze!” Because that’s what you would do if you’re in their position? Or is it that you assume being poor reflects a moral failing? Corruption and tax evasion arte certainly not moral positions, and yet they almost exclusively occur amongst those already rich. I think it’s fair to say that your financial position in no way determines your moral character. Or is it that you do not think they’re entitled to what you’ve earned? That implies you think you are entitled to what you’ve earned… 

If you take a look at the word ‘entitlement,’ you’ll be sure to notice its root. The word ‘Title.’ An entitlement, traditionally, was a title to a deed of land given to a noble of the king. We might need to start remembering that these ‘fruits’ we’re ‘entitled’ to, was granted to us by the society we inhabit, for utilizing our talents and opportunities. We might all be free, but all of us who have been entitled, also have a duty to the society that has entitled us. Noblesse Oblige. 

In my opinion, it was the most entitled man in history, John D Rockefeller Jr, who explained it best. “I believe that every right implies a responsibility; every opportunity, an obligation; every possession, a duty. I believe that the law was made for man and not man for the law; that government is the servant of the people and not their master. I believe in the dignity of labour, whether with head or hand; that the world owes no man a living but that it owes every man an opportunity to make a living. I believe in the sacredness of a promise, that a man’s word should be as good as his bond; that character—not wealth or power or position—is of supreme worth.” 

No man is an island, and so too can no man be a success in isolation. It is a form of supreme arrogance to recognize your own hard work and perseverance in your success, but not to recognize those people and the society that has helped you achieve it. While you may not have reached the pinnacle of success, it remains easy to see those around you who have not. Your noble success entails a responsibility. 

The world is slowly recognizing the need for those privileged few who have reached the zenith of success to reach out and help the society that has aided in success. The billionaires of the world have taken the credo of John D Rockefeller Jr and built on it, via the Giving Pledge. Started by William Henry Gates III, the Giving Pledge campaign has so far had US$ 365 billion pledged by 139 high net worth individuals to be donated to charity throughout their lifetimes or on their death.


We are fortunate to live in a country where the government embodies the spirit of Noblesse Oblige. Our President Geingob won the election with an unprecedented majority, on the promise that he will use the power granted to him by the people, for the people. His Harambee Prosperity plan shows his commitment to the duty his noble office demands of him. But it will all be for naught if the people themselves don’t embody the duty we have towards our society as well.

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