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Date
: 17/09/2005
Source: Government Communication and Information System
Title: Netshitenzhe: University of Venda graduation ceremony
Speech by South African Government Spokesperson, Joel
Khathutshelo Netshitenzhe, at the University of Venda Graduation
Ceremony,
CAN THE NEW MIDDLE AND UPPER STRATA SUSTAIN THE CIVILISING MISSION
OF REVOLUTIONARY DEMOCRACY?
Mr Chancellor;
Chairperson and Members of Council;
Members of the Interim Management Team;
President of the Convocation;
Members of Senate and all Academic Staff;
President of the Students’ Representative Council and all
Students;
Distinguished Guests;
Parents, Sponsors and Graduandi;
Ladies and Gentlemen;
Two contradictory emotions have played themselves out since I was
informed of this singular honour to become part of the family of
the University of Venda, through the conferment of this Honorary
Ph.D Degree in Political Science.
I had sought with little success to decline the offer, which is an
attestation, my friends told me, of both the wisdom of age and
recognition of a contribution to South Africa’s body of
knowledge in the field of political science. On the other hand,
these court jesters as any genuine friends should be, told me that
such honour is accorded those who have little prospect of acquiring
a Doctorate through the normal route!
And so pride, on the one hand, and a sense of challenge once more
to burn the midnight oil, on the other, form the cocktail of
emotions with which I stand before you today.
Above everything else, I feel truly humbled because this honour
represents recognition of the diversity of tributaries through
which knowledge is acquired and dispensed. This depth of feeling is
made the more intense because the honour comes from a community in
which my own life evolved; fellow progenies of the soil that
spawned me.
In the final analysis, what persuaded me to redeem an offer beyond
my own achievements was a recognition that this is an honour to
Oliver Tambo, Yusuf Dadoo, Florence Mophosho, Chris Hani, Solomom
Mahlangu, Zweli Nyanda, George Ramudzuli, Nomkhosi Mini and many
others – the sages from whom we learnt the tools of analysis,
the practicians who taught us about seriousness of application in
whatever we do, the fighters whose bravery left us in wonder, and
the revolutionaries who taught us about humility of personal
conduct. If some of us do get noticed today, it is because we glow
in the reflection of their halo.
These heroes taught us about politics as a science and as an art;
that it is as much about concepts as it is about praxis; and that
ultimately, it enjoys respect and sometimes resentment because it
is about the real life of real people. They taught us that, in as
much as we suffered privations in the crucible of revolutionary
politics, ours was a mission of pride and joy, because we sought to
assert in a country of ignominy, a new civilisation of national
democracy.
That civilisation, as with any truly revolutionary change in the
evolution of human society, lies in the modernisation of the means
of production and a more humane management of social
relations.
Mr Chancellor Sir;
It is in this context that I wish to pose the question: are
today’s leaders in all fields of life capable of sustaining
the civilising mission of revolutionary democracy!
Centuries ago, great kingdoms adorned the hills and plains of the
Vhembe valley, representing a unique civilisation of
socio-political organisation, production and trade. Their prowess
and ingenuity are only now starting to be afforded the recognition
they deserve. But much of their essence remains a mystery still to
be fully explored. What we do know though is that Mapungubwe,
Thulamela and Dzata perished and with them a unique body of
knowledge lay in ruins.
To the extent that we know not fully how they rose and fell, to
that extent we are justified in being possessed with doubt about
whether the civilising mission of national democracy will
endure.
Here we are today in a journey that has drawn from the best in
human civilisation – liberty, non-racialism, non-sexism and
pursuit of shared economic growth – and we still wonder: what
is it that the masters of the foundries and other artisans, the
priests, the prophets and prophetesses, the generals, the poets and
the musicians crafted that made these civilisations so great!
Here we are, in an institution that has risen from the tombs of the
great settlements of old, and we still have to find answers to the
question: what is the complex of riddles that the citizens of these
kingdoms failed to unravel that led to their ruin!
I pose these questions to assert a simple truth: that any
civilisation contains within itself the possibility of its own
sustenance and advancement, as it does the seeds of its own
destruction. At the core of that destiny is the task of forging
intellectual capital – with the correct tools of
understanding social reality, the ingenuity that goes with
seriousness of application, the irreverence that lays bare the
truth in its splendid and repulsive self, and the intellectual
focus that breeds a confident humility.
Where is the system of knowledge-management that joins the
revolutionary intellectuals of modern-day South Africa to raise the
trajectory of civilisation to new heights? In what ways are
today’s artisans, priests, prophets and prophetesses,
generals, poets and musicians path-finders in a journey of
creation?
This then is the challenge to the emergent middle and upper strata
of a changing South Africa – to the intellectuals, the
manufacturers and the traders – today multiplied in number by
the attainment of freedom!
We may be justified in lamenting the pace of their propagation in
the social structure of the nation. But we do know that while black
ownership of ‘public companies’ was only 3,9% in 1997
it had grown to 9,4% in 2002. While there were only 14 Directors of
these companies in 1992, by 2002 the number stood at 438.
The rate of their expansion may be too slow for comfort; and it
should concern us that black professionals and middle managers grew
by a measly 3 percentage points between 1996 and 2001. But this is
a debate for another day. The point at issue is one about quality
rather than just quantity.
Are these artisans, manufacturers, traders, priests, prophets and
prophetesses, generals, poets and musicians committed actively to
change social relations in line with the civilising mission of
revolutionary democracy; or are they getting transformed by the
very system that they seek to change!. Are they the brains trust of
a new social order or have they succumbed to the intellectual
indolence that comes with glorification of material benefits!
I dare assert, in the conjecture that attaches the riddles of
Mapungubwe, Thulamela and Dzata that an intelligentsia that
hypnotises itself gazing at its navels breeds inertia and
stagnation in a civilisation, and commits the crime of
precipitating its steady but certain decline.
And so in today’s South Africa, Mr Chancellor, we slowly
acquire the instruments to reshape production and trade; and yet
confine our intellectual horizons to maintaining the configuration
of a capitalism inherited from the robber-baron culture of the
erstwhile colonial masters.
We stand at the pinnacle of political power but draw pride merely
at managing macroeconomic realities in a manner that seeks to
perpetuate rather than improve what we inherited. We evince the
syndrome of models on a catwalk – satisfied with ourselves
only when the supposed connoisseurs applaud.
How do we otherwise explain our inability to shape a manufacturing
sector that takes advantage of the profound shifts in class
structure brought about by freedom and people-centred development,
let alone cutting edge technology that combines advanced
manufacturing and objectives of sustainable development?
Facts tell us the tale of the buying power of black communities
growing apace, a consequence of improving living standards that
derives from the attainment of democracy. And yet we adopt an
attitude that laments growth driven by consumer demand, and fail to
see the systemic shift in social structure that will endure for
many years to come.
For instance: at best we fail appropriately to expand capacity to
manufacture large quantities of white goods of the lower middle
strata, electronics and furniture in line with growing aggregate
demand; and at worst we continue to run down such capacity. At best
we accord unproductive shareholding the rank of ultimate status
symbol; and at worst we scoff at productive activity even when new
mega-projects cry out for a variety of inputs such as cement and
other supplies, as well as project management, engineering,
artisanship and other skills.
I dare surmise, drawing on the cursory knowledge of the dynamics of
Mapungubwe, Thulamela and Dzata, that sustaining and advancing a
civilisation depends on propensity to assert the intellectual
authority of that civilisation, and at the same time having the
courage to question its internal logic. Pride and satisfaction
among intellectuals are of value only if they contain within
themselves the sense of self-doubt that impels a search for new and
improved ways of doing things.
Indeed, the emergent middle and upper strata of a democratic South
Africa are challenged to lift themselves above what they have
inherited, in lifestyle and frame of reference.
Having invaded the living spaces where under apartheid black angels
feared to tread, we tend to adopt the culture of conspicuous
consumption, such that keeping up with the Mukwevho's takes
precedence over a steady progression on the social ladder. As such,
drawn to living above our means, we fall prey to the temptation to
accumulate prized possessions, by fair means or foul.
This is not a plea to resurrect a mystical African vhuthu (ubuntu)
which would otherwise represent glorification of conduct that
belongs to an outmoded social system. But we have to tackle the
battle of frames of reference in which social conduct is informed
by the avarice and self-centredness of sections of European and
North American societies.
Should we allow, like the intellectuals of Mapungubwe, Thulamela
and Dzata, a situation to develop such that the children of our
children are only able to wonder at what impelled the generations
before them to do what they did? Where is the African writer who
has put down on paper the experiences of Robben Island or Barbeton
Prison or Soweto or Gugulethu or Congoa in Tanzania or Katenge and
Kashito in Angola! Where is the African producer who has put
together a film that lays bare the rationale, the emotions and the
contradictions of revolutionary struggle!
Instead, we still debate, without shame, whether the nation’s
flag should adorn public school-yards and receive due recognition
by pupils and teachers alike! We resort to sophistry, to explain a
history curriculum that, we are told, is meant to encourage debate;
but which in actual practice avoids value judgements on this
civilising mission of revolutionary democracy! And we encourage
children to devalue artisanship and fear entrepreneurship,
believing that qualifications of status are those that render us
employable by others!
In other words, Mr Chancellor, we have to ask ourselves whether we
have gone far enough in avoiding the pitfalls that may have beset
the civilisations of Mapungubwe, Thulamela and Dzata!
If the artisans, the priests, the prophets and prophetesses, the
generals, the poets and the musicians of the current age do not
assert the values of the civilising mission of the new South
Africa, they shall, as possibly happened in African civilisations
of yore, be consumed by petty jealousies that lead individuals in
positions of power to subvert a whole social edifice; the ethnic
and sub-ethnic chauvinism that pits citizen against citizen; and
the indolence of mind that befalls an intelligentsia possessed by
the comforts of political and economic power. And, steadily but
surely, the national democratic project will lose its way.
This then is the challenge for today’s graduandi as you go
out into the wider world, an appeal to the intelligentsia of a
changing South Africa: you must let those who sit in the hallowed
chambers of political and economic power, as well as the media and
other institutions of ideology, hear your voices asking difficult
questions.
Let your irreverence fill them with uncertainty enough to set their
minds to creative work. Save their brains from intellectual
atrophy.
And, as the community of UNIVEN debates the possibility of renaming
this institution after Mapungubwe – and indeed if you dare
take such a decision – ensure that your creative zeal, your
rebellious search for the truth, and your irreverent application to
complex social issues earn this institution this sacred name.
Thus, future generations will not marvel at the ruins of a
civilisation that failed to sustain itself; but enjoy the beauty of
a revolution that continually redeems its tryst with destiny.
Thank you.
Issued by: Government Communication and Information System
17 September 2005