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Date
: 30/10/2006
Source: Department of Health
Title: Madlala-Routledge: University of KwaZulu-Natal award
Deputy Minister of Health, Mrs Nozizwe Madlala-Routledge, MP,
honoured with a convocation award for Human Endeavour and Freedom,
Durban, KwaZulu-Natal
I am greatly honoured to receive this University of KwaZulu-Natal
(UKZN) convocation award for Human Endeavour and Freedom. I am
grateful to the university and all those who have supported me to
get to where I am now. I am grateful to my mother who is sitting in
the audience here this evening. She totally believed in education
and devoted forty years of her life teaching African children,
twenty-six of those years she served as Principal of Nomakhanzana
School, which started off as four classes in one small church
building. My sister, Thandi and two of our children, Mabongi and
Martin started their education at that school. It was from her that
I learned the values that I hold dear and continue to strive to
uphold: honesty, truth, integrity, commitment and courage. Not long
ago two of her former students were in trouble with the law.
Initially they did not want to disclose that they had been her
students, but when she was called they admitted being at the school
and said she had taught them to always tell the truth.
Before I came to the then University of Natal as a first year
medical student, the university had already been involved in my
personal development and growth. As a matric student at Inanda
Seminary, I took part in the summer school programme at the Gandhi
Settlement, organised by the university as part of community
outreach. This is where I met Steve Biko, Rick Turner and Laurie
Schlemmer. As part of the summer school, I joined other students in
doing community surveys at the Dube village and cleaning up the
Gandhi settlement. I also benefited from the political discussions.
On their part, the medical students did community work in the
Mahatma Gandhi Clinic.
Inanda Seminary ensured an all round education for all of us at the
school. During the time I was there, the teachers encouraged us to
be politically aware, without deciding for us. They got us involved
in debates and facilitated our meeting with young people of
different racial groups. As part of our political development, our
teachers encouraged us to analyse the news. This is how I came to
know about the Black Panthers and Angela Davies in
particular.
Many of the girls, like most black girls in South Africa at the
time used skin-lightening creams in pursuit of a white skin, even
if it was just your face. Our teachers were concerned about this
and wanted us to see why it was not right. Many of us used only our
Christian names. When Steve Biko and Barney Pityana came to Inanda
they taught us to be proud of our black skin colour and our African
names. They taught us to say, "I am black and I am proud. Say it
loud."
This was a crucial part of my political development because I
learned to accept myself and to be proud of who I was, even though
apartheid had tried to strip black people of dignity and
pride.
When I started my medical training I was immediately taken under
Steve Biko's wing and became involved in student politics.
Unfortunately, my studies suffered and I was excluded by the
Medical School. Although I did not finish my medical studies, I
learned much more during that time. University of New Brunswick
(UNB) was a melting pot of talent, and I had a wonderful time, so
much so that I returned every holiday to see my friends
there.
Later, when I was active in the Natal Organisation of Women and in
the United Democratic Front (UDF), we often used the Alan Taylor
Residence (ATR) for our activities, when during the State of
Emergency; very few places were available for political meetings.
On one of these occasions we came to ATR and the whole place was
teeming with soldiers. The hall where we were meant to meet was
surrounded. We were not deterred. We found ways to fool the South
African Defence Force (SADF) into thinking we were singing church
hymns and reading scriptures. I am certain that the part that our
former Deputy Chairperson had found to read from her Bible said
"let my people go."
The university provided the space for us to organise. It also
sheltered us. When I came out of detention I got employed in the
Centre for Social and Development Studies (CSDS) working with
Professors Francie Lund and Paulos Zulu. One day the Special Branch
of the Security Police came to interrogate me at the CSDS. On
impulse, I thought of a plan. I was not going to let them
interrogate me without a witness. So, I went to Professor Bekker
who was in charge of the CSDS and asked him to sit in during the
interrogation. The police were dumbfounded. They got up and left
without subjecting me to an interrogation.
I want to close by re-iterating the importance and relevance of our
universities in teaching and upholding the values that hold us
accountable to one another, that help us separate truth from lies,
that help us retain our integrity and dignity as a people.
Universities have a role to keep alive the intellectual debate
about social issues. Virchow, a German doctor who was sent to
investigate the bubonic plague in Poland said in his report, "the
people need full democracy."
The desire for freedom is what inspired total commitment and
sacrifice. I thank the people who were part of the struggle for
freedom who taught me so much. I thank my husband, Jeremy, my
children, the extended family for supporting me and for making the
sacrifice that came with me entering the field of politics. I thank
the youth for their faith in the women in National Organisation for
Women (NOW). At one stage when all the organisations in the UDF
were banned, it was the youth and women that kept the organisation
going. I hope the new generation of young people will keep the
flame of freedom alive. I thank Inanda Seminary and the UKZN for
contributing to my academic and political development. I thank
Pingla for that lovely citation and for believing in women. I thank
all of you for being here and for listening to me.