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Date
: 11/01/2006
Source: Department of Foreign Affairs
Title: Dlamini Zuma: Donations to victims of Hurricane Katrina,
Howard University
Remarks by Minister Dlamini Zuma in Howard University,
Washington DC
President Swygert, Board of Trustees of Howard University,
The dear student who spoke so movingly to us, Deans of the
University,
Faculty,
Ambassadors and members of the diplomatic corps,
Distinguished guests, and all the friends and family of Howard
University who are here
South Africa’s relationship with Howard University is one
with a long and proud history of collaborative efforts to end the
injustice that deprived our people of their dignity and disaffected
their human spirit. The support that academics, students and the
wider university community gave to South Africa is immeasurable and
will be remembered for generations to come both in the United
States and South Africa.
As South Africans, we cannot forget that many of our greatest
leaders were educated in the United States, and were all imbued
with the spirit of Pan Africanism, which binds us together today.
Leaders of the African National Congress (ANC) like Pixley ka Izaka
Seme, John Langalibalele Dube and Charlotte Maxeke, amongst others,
had first hand experience of what it meant to be black in America.
Thus WEB Du Bois wrote, "The problem of the 20th century is the
problem of the colour line". In choosing to assist Howard
University, we are directed by Du Bois and his belief that it was
the ‘talented tenth’ who would presage a common
liberation for all.
When Hurricane Katrina came ashore on the dreadful September day,
few could have imagined the sheer devastation and destruction it
would inflict on the lives of countless thousands in Louisiana,
Mississippi and Alabama. We followed with great sadness as the
scope of the sobering tragedy unfolded, and we learnt again that it
was always the poorest of the poor- those who need most, and have
least- who are inevitably burdened with the burnt of the suffering.
We could not help but share the pain, which no human being should
ever be asked to endure.
In the courage and devotion of the family at Howard, and in the
fortitude and resilience of the survivors, we are reminded of the
legacy of the greats like Sojourner Truth, Frederick Douglas, the
Rev Martin Luther King Jr, and Rosa Parks amongst others. Howard
University has done, as it should have done, and extended its
generosity to the people of New Orleans. Like Howard University, we
wanted to embrace our young brothers and sisters by lending a
humble hand. Our hearts have gone out to those who were
particularly vulnerable and marginalised during this trying period
on your history; and we wanted to contribute in the best possible
way to help alleviate the suffering.
This gift is a small token of the spirit that joins all of all
together, and it is in this spirit of understanding and through
embracing that notion that "I am my brother’s keeper", that
we decided to make this contribution.
When President Mbeki awarded Plaque of Appreciation to Howard
University in honour of all the Anti-Apartheid movement in the
United States, he wrote: "this plaque is a memorial to the triumph
of human spirit over oppression…and it is right and fitting
that it should be dedicated at Howard University."
Ever since the first South African Student admitted at Howard in
the early 1890s, to the dedication of the plaque by President
Mbeki, you have weathered the storm with us. You have helped us
rebuild and rejuvenate our spirit.
While tempest, uproar, wind and the gale will continue to rage,
nothing will shake the foundation of the human spirit, and nothing
will break the strong ties that the people of South Africa have
with Howard University. You are a microcosm of the Diaspora, which
stretches across the United States and beyond to the Caribbean and
Latin and South America.
We are confident that this esteemed institution, including the
contingent from New Orleans, will always renew and rebuild the
spirit of resilience that characterises the best of human
kind.
As you make even greater progress in the future, I am sure that
Howard University will continue to produce excellent and insightful
graduates who will help to lead us into a better future and a New
World. As we have heard about the President of the University who
is himself a graduate of this institution.
I believe that part of our striving is precisely for a system of
global political, economic and social governance that is more
inclusive than the status quo. A system where material resources
are not out of reach depending on place of origin or location or
gender on the colour of one’s skin, but accessible to all who
strive to improve their lives.
We stand at a new time of renewal and rebuilding, and I thought it
pertinent to borrow an extract from the celebrated novelist and
poet, an African son, Ben Okri: "There no such thing as a powerless
people. There are only those who have not seen and have not used
their power and will. It would seem a miraculous feat, but it is
possible for the unvalued ones to help create a beautiful new era
in human history. New vision should come from those who suffer most
and who love life the most…. Nature and history are not just
about the survival of the fittest, but also about the survival of
the wisest, the most adaptive, and the most aware."
We have been blessed with the brightest, the most adaptive, and the
most aware. This is why we are here today as survivors of the
apartheid, colonialism and slavery. We are powerful because
although we were raised on the legacy of oppression and struggle,
we still forgive but never forget where we come from. As President
Thabo Mbeki said: "We cannot win a grandiose war on poverty. But
after the tragedy comes opportunity. This is the post-Katrina
moment. Let’s not squander it."
Thank you.
Issued by: Department of Foreign Affairs
11 January 2006