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Jacobs: International Council of African Museums (04/10/2006)

4th October 2006

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Date: 04/10/2006
Source: Western Cape Provincial Government
Title: Jacobs:International Council of African Museums


Speech by the Western Cape Minister of Sport and Cultural Affairs, Whitey Jacobs, at International Council of African Museums (AFRICOM) cocktail function, at Iziko Museum, Cape Town

Members of the Diplomatic Corps
First Lady of the Western Cape, Ms Shabodien Rasool
Members of the Provincial legislature
President of AFRICOM, Cheldia Annabi
Executive Committee members of AFRICOM
President and executives of Society of American Mosaic Artists (SAMA)
Chief Executive Officers (CEOs) of public entities and heritage managers
Esteemed guests, ladies and gentlemen

At an occasion of great significance like this, it is quite fitting to quote from President Mbeki's speech at the fundraising dinner for the Timbuktu Project, held in Pretoria last year when he said, "We must contest the colonial denial of our history and we must initiate our own conversations and dialogues about our past. We need our own scholars to interpret the history of our continent."

Ladies and gentlemen, if it is also true that a people, a country, a continent and the world without its past and history has no future, then the African renaissance has no future. The establishment of AFRICOM was indeed a very important step in taking the African heritage into the mainstream, in line with New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD) ideals.

This is a very important platform that is bringing together top brains in the cultural and heritage landscapes on our continent, to begin the process of re-claiming and re-writing of our own heritage as part of the NEPAD agenda, and for the African renaissance.

I want to take this opportunity to pay tribute to the men and women of our continent, in particular, for making this event a success and most importantly, for gracing this occasion with their presence.

The Western Cape government is proud and indeed honoured to have been selected to host the 2nd General Assembly and the conference of AFRICOM.

We value the participation of heritage practitioners of your calibre in this conference greatly. As peoples of this province, we are particularly thrilled that a conference of this immense importance is held in the Cultural Mecca of South Africa, the Western Cape Province.

This gathering of great minds must be seized with challenges that our continent is grappling with. At the political front, through the NEPAD goals, African leaders are spearheading a process to develop a new vision that would guarantee Africa's renewal. One of the main objectives of NEPAD is to halt the marginalisation of Africa in the globalisation process and to enhance its full and beneficial integration into the global economy.

This important gathering speaks to the outcomes of the Africa's renewal agenda that for broad and deep participation by all sectors of society, there must be partnerships between and amongst African people. This 2nd Assembly of AFRICOM demonstrates that Africa is really coming of age, and taking charge of its own destiny.

Museums, in general, are institutions in the service of society available to the public for research, communication, exhibiting, purposes of study and education. Our museums should bear relationship with the past, left by our ancestors and aim to protect our cultural heritage for future generations.

As the MEC of Cultural Affairs, it is one of my objectives to strive to safeguard and preserve the diffusion of the Western Cape and South African cultural heritage at most our museums to present our identity and diversity in an ever-changing world.

In this regard South Africa still faces a daunting challenge of ensuring the complete transformation of museums so that artefacts and exhibits do not depict only the history of our colonial masters, but mirror the rich heritage of this continent. You all have the will and the intellectual capacity to assist this political agenda.

There was life in Africa before colonialisation, and however fragmented our histories might be due to its subsequent destructions, our scholars have a responsibility to put these pieces of the puzzle together for present and future generations.

One of leading contemporary scholars on the Timbuktu Manuscripts, John Hunwick notes that these documents demonstrates that "Many Africans could write their languages long before European missionaries and colonialists came to impose their own forms of writing upon them, and in fact replacing the Arabic script and suppressing its usage in the case of such major languages as Hausa and Swahili."

In South Africa our colonial masters have driven the languages of the Khoi and San communities, the aborigines of the Western Cape, to almost extinction following many centuries of cultural oppression and subjugation.

As a result of that systematic oppression, today only a handful can speak the Nama and San languages; these are challenges I think this conference should attempt to provide answers to and help South Africa manage the transformation process better.

Ladies and gentlemen, the vision of the Pan African Parliament provides a common platform for African people and their grassroots organisations to be more involved in discussions and decision-making on the problems and challenges facing our continent. The African parliament acts as a voice of the people of Africa representing their opinions, their concerns and aspirations.

One of the committees of the African parliament is responsible for education, culture, tourism and human resources. The purpose of this committee is to assist the Pan African Parliament to promote policy development and the preservation of culture. This confirms a protocol that will strengthen continental solidarity and build a sense of common destiny among the peoples of Africa.

Undoubtedly, as experts in the field of heritage and having covered quite some ground during the six years of your existence as AFRICOM, you have a huge contribution to make in realising some of the objectives of the Pan African Parliament.

The Western Cape is in the process of reviewing its current legislation applicable to museum services. The new legislation will address the cultural, political and economic divide to ensure that our museums depict the history of all our people to advance the strategic goal of building a non-racial South Africa and a home for all.

In an attempt to give practical effect to the transformation agenda, we piloted a scrapbook project and an oral history project, bringing previously marginalised histories into our museums. We certainly look forward to the outcomes of this conference and are able to take some lessons to accelerate our own transformation agenda.

In conclusion, I want to quote from President Mbeki when he said, "Through our collective actions, we are setting the tone of the new discourse and we are asserting an African identity and sense of purpose, of place and history of the great cities and states of our continent. We are asserting our right to tell our own stories, about our glorious history, and we do this to honour our past and claim our future."

I want to wish the new leadership of AFRICOM success in steering the ship to the desired destination during their new term of office. There is a huge task ahead of them and as government we will be there to lend a helping hand because we ascribe to the goals of AFRICOM.

I thank you.

Issued by: Department of Sport and Cultural Affairs, Western Cape Provincial Government
4 October 2006
 
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