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Date
: 10/11/2005
Source: The Presidency
Title: Mbeki: Inauguration ceremony of Southern Africa Large
Telescope
Speech of the President of South Africa, Thabo Mbeki, at the
official inauguration ceremony of the Southern Africa Large
Telescope (SALT): Sutherland, Northern Cape
Director of Ceremonies, Dr Rob Adam,
Honourable Minister of Science and Technology,
Mosibudi Mangena and Deputy Minister Derek Hanekom,
Honourable Premier of the Northern Cape, Dipuo Peters,
Chairperson of the Board of SALT, Dr Khotso Mokhele,
Our distinguished foreign guests, Board Members and Shareholders of
SALT,
Distinguished participants at this important ceremony
I am honoured to welcome this historic occasion the partners who
combined to create this magnificent instrument of learning, the
Southern Africa Large Telescope we commission today. I am
especially pleased that so many of our international partners could
join us here today.
I am also very glad that we have among us a distinguished galaxy of
astronomers and other professionals who are an integral part of the
global pool of brainpower without which this large telescope would
never have been born.
To you all, on behalf of our government and people, I am privileged
to extend a very warm welcome to this ceremony organised officially
to inaugurate SALT, the Southern Africa Large Telescope.
At the same time, I must extend our humble thanks to the Premier,
the provincial government and the people of the Northern Cape and
Sutherland for their co-operation in transforming our collective
national dream into reality, by supporting the establishment of
this unique facility.
On 25 November 1999, our then Minister of Arts, Culture, Science
and Technology, Dr Ben Ngubane, gave the “green light”
for the construction of the SALT, the Southern Africa Large
Telescope we are inaugurating today. The sod turning ceremony took
place the following year, on 1 September 2000.
Even those of us who know nothing about astronomy have awaited this
day with great anticipation, feeling, perhaps instinctively, that
this giant eye in the Karoo would tell us as yet unknown and
exciting things about ourselves.
We have felt our heartbeats quicken as we were told that SALT would
have the power to tackle fundamental questions about the Universe,
such as:
* what was the universe like when the first stars and galaxies were
forming?
* what kind of worlds orbits other suns?
* how are the stars in nearby galaxies different from those in the
solar neighbourhood?
* what can these stars tells us about the scale and age of the
universe?
* how do quasars and gamma rays outshine trillions of stars like
the sun?
In truth, we have also felt a sense of national fulfilment as again
we were told that this multi-national scientific venture would,
among other things, provide all humanity with the largest and most
modern single optical-infrared telescope in the Southern
Hemisphere, while enabling our country and continent to remain
among the front ranks of those involved in astronomy.
We remain very hopeful that, together with our partner African
countries, we will be given the opportunity to host the Square
Kilometre Array (SKA) radio telescope. We are convinced that the
global scientific community and humanity itself would benefit
greatly from the establishment of a complex of astronomical
establishments in Southern Africa and Africa that would include the
already established SALT, the existing high energy stereoscopic
system (HESS) gamma ray telescope in Namibia, the planned
scientifically ground-breaking demonstration Karoo Array Telescope
(KAT), and the SKA radio telescope.
Our government and people are determined to provide everything
necessary to create the optimal environmental and other conditions
to support and facilitate the research efforts of the world’s
astronomers, including the most up-to-date information and
communication technological infrastructure.
This observatory is a place dedicated to the pursuit of knowledge.
Its sole purpose is the discovery of the unknown, and therefore the
further liberation of humanity from blind action informed by
superstition that derives from failure to fathom the regularities
and imperatives of the infinite natural world.
Hopefully, the daily voyages of discovery into outer space that
will be undertaken from this place of scientific inquiry will help
millions in our country, our continent and the world to repudiate
the fear of knowledge that the Englishman, Thomas Gray, an Old
Etonian, sought to celebrate when he said, in his “Ode on a
Distant Prospect of Eton College”,
To each his sufferings: all are men,
Condemned alike to groan,
The tender for another's pain;
The unfeeling for his own.
Yet ah! why should they know their fate?
Since sorrow never comes too late,
And happiness too swiftly flies.
Thought would destroy their paradise.
No more; where ignorance is bliss,
'Tis folly to be wise.
Out of this place, enveloped by the quiet peace of the Karoo and
its starlit skies, must and will come the message that thought is
humanity’s stepladder out of Hades - that ignorance is
nothing but condemnation to live for eternity in the world
inhabited by the souls of the dead.
By communicating to all humanity the evolving and ever-changing
truths about the universe, this observatory, empowered by cutting
edge science, engineering and technology, and staffed by the most
excellent and daring inquiring minds, must help to free us from the
seductive grip of the astrologers and the false consciousness that
wears the fine apparel of pernicious common sense.
Thus would we gain further mastery over our actions as human
beings, as did Edmund, son of the Duke of Gloucester born out of
wedlock, when, in Shakespeare’s “King Lear”,
repudiating the falsification of the influence of the universe of
the stars on his fate, he said:
“This is the excellent foppery of the world, that, when we
are sick in fortune - often the surfeit of our own behaviour - we
make guilty of our disasters the sun, the moon, and the stars: as
if we were villains by necessity; fools by heavenly compulsion;
knaves, thieves, and treachers, by spherical predominance;
drunkards, liars, and adulterers, by an enforced obedience of
planetary influence; and all that we are evil in, by a divine
thrusting on: an admirable evasion of whore master man, to lay his
goatish disposition to the charge of a star! My father compounded
with my mother under the dragon's tail; and my nativity was under
Ursa major; so that it follows, I am rough and lecherous. Tut, I
should have been that I am, had the maidenliest star in the
firmament twinkled on my bastardising.”
About a month from now, we will participate in the inauguration of
yet another new and exciting architectural feature on our national
landscape. This is the Cradle of Humankind Interpretation Centre
attached to the renowned Cradle of Humanity World Heritage Site at
Sterkfontein.
The Centre will facilitate access to knowledge about the evolution
of humanity from its distant past, relying on hominid fossils found
in the irreplaceable Valley of Ancestors centred on the
Sterkfontein caves. Several of the world's most famous and
important hominid fossils have been discovered here, including Mrs
Ples (now believed to be Master Ples), dating back 2.5 million
years, and Little Foot, an almost complete ape-human skeleton that
is 3.3 million years old.
To date, a further 500 hominid fossils and over 9 000 stone tools
have been excavated in the area.
Three million years of human activity have taken place in and
around the caves at the Cradle of Humanity, including
humankind’s earliest-known mastery of fire. Forty percent
(40%) of all the world's human ancestor fossils have been found
here.
The great minds gathered here today to inaugurate the Southern
Africa Large Telescope have the possibility to peer into ordinarily
unimaginable vistas of time and space, to discover what the
universe was like, when the first stars and galaxies were
forming.
You will therefore not find it difficult to understand our
excitement that even as we probe outer space from here, elsewhere
in our country, the host of SALT, we also have the possibility to
continue investigating what happened on the tiny planet we call the
earth, relevant to the formation and evolution of plant, animal and
human life as we have come to know them.
Let me illustrate what I am talking about. Fossils of some of the
oldest organisms on earth have been found in the Barberton
sequence, towards our North East, dated at approximately 3 billion
years. In the period before some of the world’s first
dinosaurs walked the earth, there was already abundant plant and
animal life in the same Karoo basin where SALT stands, leaving
behind an unsurpassed record of the ancestry of mammals.
The largest collection of synapsids (mammal-like reptiles) are to
be found in the Karoo succession, documenting step by step, over a
period of 50 million years, the origin of mammals from primitive
reptilian stock.
250 million years ago during the late Permian age, this area
consisted of an inland sea surrounded by a vast alluvial plain. At
the time, several Mississippi-sized rivers flowed northwards out of
a mountain range some 1 000 km to the South. The most common
animals living on the flood plains during this period were therapid
reptiles, more commonly known as mammal-like reptiles.
Fossils found here and South America has provided evidence to
substantiate the hypothesis of continental drift, and therefore the
existence in the distant past of the so-called super-continent of
Gondwanaland.
Three million years ago, South Africa was also home to a vulnerable
new line of primates, the Australopithecines, which eventually gave
rise to humans. Adding to the long list of South African hominids,
which include fossils of Australopithecus africanus, Paranthropus
robustus, Homo habilis and Homo sapiens, the oldest identifiable
Homo sapiens fossils in the world (dated at approximately 110 000
years) have been found here.
It is on the basis of this vast paleontogical storehouse, supported
by additional evidence from elsewhere on our continent, that
scientists have come to the firm conclusion that our country is the
Cradle of Humanity.
It therefore seemed right, and a perfect expression of the
discovered symmetry of the evolution of nature, that this
extraordinary construct of the human intellect, the Southern Africa
Large Telescope, constructed to probe the formation of our
Universe, should be based here, the domicile of so much that
represents what constitutes historical and living reality of all
life on Planet Earth, itself the product of billions of years of
the evolution of the Universe.
To us, as South Africans, it has seemed right that for us as human
beings to continue the search for the origins of the infinite
beginnings of the universe, we should locate that inquiry, as
represented by SALT, in the very geographic space that gave birth
to homo sapiens.
We have said this to ourselves knowing that the outward journey of
homo sapiens from Africa into the rest of our planet, though
resulting in the formation of a diverse human family, has
nevertheless never subtracted from the fact that the Cradle of
Humanity remains, still, the home of all humanity, as demonstrated
by the population inflows since our liberation in 1994.
Shakespeare’s Hamlet was outraged to discover the cold
disloyalty of his mother, who would not give even limited time to
mourn the death of her husband and Hamlet’s father, the King
of Denmark, before entering into an amorous relationship with the
King’s brother, Hamlet’s uncle. These goings-on seemed
as unnatural as they were unconscionable.
Seeking to escape from this confirmed but painful and unbearable
knowledge, Hamlet cried out:
O, that this too too solid flesh would melt Thaw and resolve itself
into a dew!
Or that the Everlasting had not fix'd
His canon 'gainst self-slaughter! O God! God!
How weary, stale, flat and unprofitable,
Seem to me all the uses of this world!
Fie on't! ah fie! 'tis an unweeded garden,
That grows to seed; things rank and gross in nature
Possess it merely.
The scientific journey on which we will embark from today onwards
at this Large Telescope will take us far beyond a world that
presents itself as an unweeded garden that grows to seed, populated
by things rank and gross in nature.
It will not give birth to images that suggest that the uses of the
universe are but weary, stale, flat and unprofitable.
Surely, this new journey will speak of a world made exciting by the
rapid progression away from everything that is weary, stale, flat
and unprofitable in human knowledge, the lifting of the dark and
menacing shadows of ignorance and prejudice about the origin of the
universe, that circumscribe our very ability to eat, live and
think.
I am especially privileged to command the Southern Africa Large
Telescope to begin its work and focus its eye on the infinite and
vibrant depths of outer space and time past.