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Date
: 24/09/2005
Source: The Presidency
Title: Mbeki: Heritage Day celebrations
Address of the President of South Africa, Thabo Mbeki, on
the occasion of the Heritage Day celebrations, Taung, North West
Province
Minister of Arts and Culture, Pallo Jordan,
Honourable Ministers,
Honourable Premier of the North West Province,
Edna Molewa,
Your Worship, Executive Mayor of Bophirima District Municipality,
Kaone Lobelo,
Your Worship, Executive Mayor of the Greater Taung Local
Municipality, Nicholas Khonkhobe,
Kgosi Tshepo Mankuroane,
Traditional Leaders,
Your Excellencies, Members of the Diplomatic Corps,
Distinguished guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Fellow South Africans:
Dumelang!
On behalf of the government and people of South Africa, I convey to
you our warmest greetings on Heritage Day.
This is the day on which we celebrate the rich and diverse cultural
traditions and heritage that have been passed down to us by our
forebears. As on previous occasions, we celebrate our cultural and
our living heritage, as expressed in our traditions, oral
histories, in performance, rituals, popular memory, skills and
techniques and indigenous knowledge systems.
It is indeed fitting that we celebrate this day at the Taung World
Heritage Site, which was recently recognised by the 29th Session of
the World Heritage Committee in Durban this year.
The recognition and affirmation of Taung and Mokapane’s
Valley in the Limpopo Province as World Heritage Sites bear further
testimony to Africa and South Africa as a cradle of
humankind.
It was here in Taung that in 1924 Raymond Dart discovered the
fossil bones of our human ancestors. This was to open an important
global development of research and discovery about human evolution.
Indeed, Taung placed our country on the world map as a place in
which humanity emerged.
In recent weeks further discoveries of early hominid tools at
Sterkfontein reveal that South Africa has many sites of
humankind’s oldest and most important heritage, our capacity
to make tools. The primitive implements uncovered at Sterkfontein
launched those first human ancestors on a technological journey
that has today taken humanity to the most remote corners of the
earth as well as outer space. It was those instruments that gave us
the possibility to change re-shape and even re-direct our living
environment.
Our sub-theme this year is “Our Indigenous Foods, Our
Knowledge and Our Heritage”. The significance of the
sub-theme is self-evident because food is our primary source of
sustenance.
The significance of indigenous knowledge systems that people in
every part of the world have developed over centuries to solve and
to attend to everyday challenges is underscored by our shared
ancestry evidenced here.
Our hominid ancestors’ ability to make tools spurred on their
hunting and food gathering, opening up the possibilities of
permanent settlements and consequently a more secure livelihood.
From the East to the West, from the North to the South, human
beings have come to regard the production of food as more than a
necessary activity to satisfy the most basic human need.
Our government under the auspices and leadership of the Minister of
Arts and Culture, Minister Pallo Jordan, envisages a Heritage
Policy and Strategy, that seeks to harness our heritage resources
to improve the lives of our people.
Indigenous foods and other indigenous knowledge systems can play a
pertinent and crucial role in that Heritage Policy and Strategy.
All of us as South Africans, irrespective of origin, must and will
contribute to this endeavour.
Chairperson,
On the occasion of this Heritage Day it is important that we
briefly touch on some of the questions which we have to attend to
as South Africans. This is the question of identity and the manner
in which our heritage can help in defining what a South African
is.
In this regard, we need to answer the question as to what it is
that distinguishes a South African from other people, be they
Chinese or American. What are the characteristics that inform the
manner in which a South African approaches a variety of matters and
challenges?
We have to answer these questions because a Heritage Day that is
celebrated by all our people should suggest that indeed we do have
a past to be proud of; we do have a heritage that helps us face
modern challenges and we do have a value-system that guides our
behaviour at the individual, family and community levels.
A superficial answer to these questions may suggest that it is not
possible to speak of a single South African character and identity
which derives from a common value-system because we are a diverse
society. Indeed, there is no dispute about the fact that we are a
diverse society and all of us have consistently urged that we
should use this diversity as a strength that should unite our
people.
However, within this diversity there are dominant values and an
ethos that bind communities together and ensure social cohesion.
These values and ethos drive community members to act in solidarity
with the weak and the poor and help members of these communities to
behave in particular ways for the common good.
An unpublished study by the organisation called ‘Africa
Now’ dealing with leadership models among different
communities asserts, for instance, that there is a strong community
spirit among the Afrikaner community in which, particularly through
churches and cultural organisations, group identity and solidarity
are central to the community.
The same study speaks of the Jewish and Indian communities that
have strong family and community structures that ensure coherence
and solidarity among the people.
As we know, the African people in this country have, over many
centuries evolved a value-system of Ubuntu with its basic tenet
aptly captured by the saying: motho ke motho ka batho. Many of us
have been brought up to uphold values based on this old-age African
adage. Through socialisation many Africans have ensured that our
families and communities are themselves grounded on the
value-system of Ubuntu.
A close examination of the central tenets of the values that drive
the behaviour and approach of the Afrikaner, Indian and Jewish
communities reveal that there are many elements that are consistent
with the value-system of Ubuntu.
This obviously excludes the misguided racist views that informed
the apartheid system which, for a long period of time was used to
divide our country and oppress the majority of the
population.
Today, government as well as civil society, use elements of this
value-system of Ubuntu in their approaches to the day to day
challenges. Some of these examples are the government’s
Batho-Pele campaign that seeks to place the interests of the public
at the centre of government work and delivery of services.
Further, government as well as various communities have on
different occasions embarked on programmes based on some of the
basic elements of Ubuntu such as Letsema and Vuk’zenzele to
mobilise people to act together to advance the objective of a
better life.
However, we have not done enough to articulate and elaborate on
what Ubuntu means as well as promoting this important value-system
in a manner that should define the unique identity of South
Africans. Indeed, there has not been a campaign to ensure that
Ubuntu becomes synonymous with being South African.
Accordingly, I would like to use the opportunity presented by this
Heritage Day to suggest that we should perhaps constitute a Task
Team that would look closely as this matter of Ubuntu, elaborate on
its value system and suggest the manner in which we can use it to
define ourselves as South Africans.
Clearly, we have a responsibility to utilise the many positive
attributes of Ubuntu to build a non-racial, non-sexist and united
South Africa. We also have to use to better effect the values and
ethos of Ubuntu in our Moral Regeneration Campaign. This we should
do because I am confident that all South Africans, black and white,
will agree that this value system should characterise a South
African.
Chairperson,
In a society, which for centuries, has been divided and separated
and which has denied our people the opportunity to share and
experience freely one another’s culture, we need to use an
important national day such as the Heritage Day to meet and learn
from one another the values that our ancestors bequeathed to us so
that together we can preserve and conserve that wisdom for
prosperity.
As we dance, sing, eat and drink from the same source, we are
forging a new South African identity which knows no discrimination
on the grounds of race, colour, ethnicity, gender or creed.
Together we need to break down racial, tribal and gender boundaries
and instead invoke the common traditions that bind us as a nation,
as South Africans and as human beings. We once again affirm our
common humanity at one of the sites where our species first
emerged.
I would like to wish all South Africans a happy Heritage Day.