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Date
: 24/02/05
Source: The Presidency
Title: Zuma: Memorial service of late Mr Raymond Mhlaba
Address by Deputy President Jacob Zuma at the Memorial Service of
the late Mr Raymond Mhlaba, St Alban’s Cathedral,
Pretoria
24 February 2005
The Mhlaba Family, Ministers and Deputy Ministers, The Rev Prof
Barney Pityana, Dean of St Alban’s Cathedral Anglican Diocese
of Pretoria, MECs, MPs and MPLs, The Dean of the Diplomatic Corps
and all diplomats, The Executive Mayor of Tshwane, Friends and
Comrades, Ladies and Gentlemen,
We have come together this evening not to shed tears, but to
celebrate the heroic and selfless life of a valiant warrior, who
fought till the end for the liberation of this country.
Cde Raymond Mhlaba was born in 1920, eight years after the
formation of the African National Congress, and a year later the
Communist Party of South Africa later known as the SACP was formed.
It is therefore not surprising that he had a natural fighting
spirit and determination to achieve freedom and justice in his
lifetime.
The ANC and SACP in particular were to shape and influence his
political and personal life and his world view, and his life became
synonymous with these two organisations.
Oom Ray first came into contact with politics through the trade
union movement which he joined while he was a laundry worker in
Port Elizabeth in 1942.
From an early age he understood the relationship and ideological
connection between the workers movement and the liberation movement
hence, he joined the Communist Party in 1943 and the ANC a year
later in 1944.
Oom Ray was an embodiment of the revolutionary ANC-SACP Alliance
and the progressive labour movement, while he was in prison and
after his release.
He belonged to three different components of the liberation
simultaneously - the ANC, SACP and the trade union movement, yet
there was never any contradiction or conflict. Instead, this
enriched all three organisations. He emphasised and understood the
need for unity of purpose and action among the different components
of our Alliance.
He led by example, distinguishing himself as a selfless, courageous
and dedicated cadre of the movement, when he became the first ANC
member to be arrested during the Defiance Campaign for disobeying
unjust apartheid laws through peaceful protest.
This combination of courage and mass mobilisation skills propelled
him to play an even greater role in the liberation movement,
throughout the 1950’s and beyond, displaying his unflinching
commitment and dedication to the vision of the ANC and the
SACP.
When the ANC adopted the armed struggle, Cde Raymond Mhlaba was
among the first group of uMkhonto we Sizwe cadres to cross the
borders to receive military training in China, together with Wilton
Mkwayi, Joe Gqabi, Steve Naidoo, Patrick Mthembu and Andrew
Mlangeni.
When Nelson Mandela was captured, Oom Ray took over the leadership
of Umkhonto We Sizwe and became its commander, until his own arrest
at Lilliesleaf Farm in Rivonia in 1963.
On Robben Island, he was part of the High Organ of the ANC where
ANC leaders played an instrumental role in nurturing young ANC
cadres, and ensured that they were properly schooled in ANC history
and traditions. Robben Island was thus turned into another site of
struggle.
It was correct and proper that the African National Congress
National Executive Committee bestowed on Oom Ray its highest honour
Isithwalandwe/Seaparankoe in 1992, whilst the SACP honoured him
with the Moses Kotane Award.
This shows how highly valued Oom Ray was to the liberation
movement, which he had served with outstanding dedication until his
last day.
After the landmark 1994 elections, Oom Ray joined government as
Premier of the Eastern Cape Province, a challenging deployment, as
he faced the task of building one united provincial administration
out of a territory that had been left in a monumental mess by the
apartheid regime.
Having served his country in such a distinguished manner
internally, it was only appropriate that he be sent to represent us
outside the country. He was deployed as South Africa’s High
Commissioner to Uganda in 1997 until 2001, also accredited to
Rwanda.
Oom Ray served our country in Uganda and Rwanda during a most
difficult time, as the region was still recovering from the
inexplicable genocide in Rwanda, in which about a million people
were mercilessly murdered by militias.
His was indeed a life well-lived, and a struggle well-fought, and
he has left us many lessons. His life story confirms that the
masses are the makers of history. He came from amongst the
downtrodden workers of our country to make a lasting contribution
to the liberation struggle.
His life confirms that ours was not an elitist struggle, but a
struggle that was led and directed by the ordinary masses of our
country, whom we must continue to serve with distinction, as their
servants in government.
He departs in the year in which we mark 50 years of the Freedom
Charter. He died satisfied that we are on course and are still
committed to meeting the minimum demands of our people as stated in
the Charter.
He left us a legacy of struggle, dedication and commitment, and
lessons in patriotism, unity and nation building, which we must
nurture and protect.
Ladies and gentlemen, let us pay tribute to a stalwart of our
struggle and a revolutionary who gave us a lifetime of commitment
and dedication to the ideals of freedom, liberty and democracy. His
loyalty to these ideals and a non-racial society were always
unquestionable.
We pay homage to a man who served our country and people with
distinction in many capacities. We are bidding farewell to a hero
and veteran of our struggle.
We are saluting a revolutionary, a true patriot, a fearless freedom
fighter, a commander, a champion of the working class, a trade
unionist, a socialist and a colossus who had committed and
dedicated his entire life to the struggle for a better South Africa
and a better world.
We are dipping our banners in honour of a soldier who comes from a
generation of leaders who rose above their oppressors, becoming
victors even in their own captivity.
It remains incomprehensible to many, how after being incarcerated
for so many decades, Oom Ray and his comrades emerged from prison
with no bitterness, only seeking to make South Africa a peaceful,
prosperous home for all its inhabitants and future
generations.
Our country is blessed with precious minerals such as gold and
diamonds. But the most precious asset that brought us freedom and
democracy, remains the outstanding leadership qualities of people
such as Nelson Mandela, Raymond Mhlaba, Govan Mbeki, Oliver Tambo,
Elias Motsoaledi, Andrew Mlangeni, Wilton Mkwayi, Walter Sisulu and
many others.
Oom Ray epitomised the leadership qualities of this generation
– humility, selflessness dedication and loyalty.
Ladies and gentlemen, the passing on of Oom Ray forces us to come
to terms with the reality that the distinguished generation that
led our struggle so courageously, is in fact mortal.
We must accept that we will at some point have to face life and
work without their guiding hands, experience and wisdom.
We dare not fail in our mission to build the united, prosperous
South Africa that they fought so hard for, and sacrificed so much
for. To do that would be to dishonour their memory.
They say soldiers do not die; they fall, leaving their spears to be
picked up by combat ready comrades to continue the battle. Let us
continue the struggle for a better South Africa, in memory of Oom
Ray.
On behalf of Government, I would like to extend our deepest
condolences to the Mhlaba family. Lalani ngenxeba, silahlekelwe
sonke. May you find solace in the fact that the nation shares your
anguish.
We have lost a leader of unequalled commitment, who will always
occupy a special place among millions of the people of our
country.
Sithi Hamba Kahle Ndobe!
Uyibekile induku ebandla.
Issued by: The Presidency
24 February 2005