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Molewa: Re-launch of Tribute Magazine (19/08/2006)

19th August 2006

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Date: 19/08/2006
Source: North West Provincial Government
Title: Molewa: Re-launch of Tribute Magazine


  Brief remarks by North West Premier, Mme Edna Molewa, at the re-launch of Tribute Magazine, the Rand Club, Johannesburg

Programme Director,
Tribute Editor, Mr Tlhopeho Modise,
Professor Sipho Seepe,
Distinguished guests,
Ladies and gentlemen:

The late reggae music legend, Bob Marley once sang:
“Rise up fallen fighter
Rise and take your stance again
He who fights and runs away
Lives to fight another day.”

I take this opportunity to thank you profusely for giving me this opportunity of being part of the rebirth that we are witnessing today, the re-launch of Tribute Magazine.

What this rebirth means is that a big void of two and a half years is being filled today. I have personally felt this void in being deprived what had become my regular dose of features, profiles, trends, developments and cutting edge journalism that Tribute Magazine carried in its publications.

I am certain it would not be far-fetched to compare the journalism of Tribute Magazine with the kind of journalism that seeks to affirm an African perspective that sees its mission as primarily being to build, develop, trumpet and take pride in the achievements of our communities.

As I have come to understand it, Tribute Magazine subscribes to the perspective that accentuates all the positive things about our society in general and black people in particular hence its original full title: ‘Tribute to Black Excellence’.

I would like to hazard a guess and even say that the kind of journalism that I had come to associate with the magazine could be called developmental journalism. It is a journalism that informs, empowers, probes, exposes, challenges, points the way and never shies away from trumpeting that which is good about our society.

Developmental journalism challenges the truism that “what bleeds leads, sex sells and horror stories boost circulation figures”. Sure truth must be told for the public has a right to know. We see the re-birth of Tribute heralding an era that says amid all the gossip and sleaze, there is room for a perspective that seeks to exalt good and admonish wrong.

At a time when our democracy is more robust than ever at a time when South Africa is experiencing unprecedented economic growth levels; at a time when we have been asked to host the greatest soccer spectacle in the whole world in 2010; at a time when Africa is rising from the ashes of colonialism and exploitation; at a time when the future of our children has never looked better and at a time when we stand challenged by poverty and disease, I missed the unmistakable voice of Tribute Magazine.

‘Tribute to Black Excellence’ could not have come at a better time when we celebrate democracy and women’s emancipation, exalt people with disabilities, cudgel for the poor and affirm the girl-child, we need to build our endeavours around heroines, heroes and icons with each embodying different facets of the burdens we have had to endure. ‘Tribute to Black Excellence’ looks best positioned to report on such icons.

We come from a history that sought to suppress anything positive standing to the credit of those oppressed. We look to the media to repair the fabric in that history by reporting what is good. We owe this to our children and generations to come.

But today, I have been offered solace in the knowledge that that voice is getting back onto the shelves and what more I have been given an opportunity to bear witness to this rebirth here tonight.

Let me conclude by thanking you once more for inviting me to be part of this exciting event in these exciting times of our lives, our country, our people and our continent of Africa.

In the words of the immortal Bob Marley, “may you live to fight many other days”. Like a teenager who has discovered that faded jeans can be worn with pride, may you likewise carry out your mission with pride.

I wish Tribute Magazine a successful re-launch and long rewarding future.

I thank you!

Issued by: Office of the Premier, North West Provincial Government
19 August 2006
   
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