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Date
: 07/05/2005
Source: The Presidency
Title: Zuma: University of KwaZulu-Natal SRC awards ceremony
Address delivered by Deputy President Jacob Zuma at University of
KwaZulu-Natal SRC awards, Howard College, Durban
Honourable Vice Chancellor, Professor Makgoba,
Premier S'bu Ndebele,
MEC for Economic Affairs, Dr Zweli Mkhize,
Deans of Faculties and the entire academic community,
SRC President, SRC Members and Students, Distinguished
Guests,
It is a pleasure and a privilege to be a guest of the students and
members of the University of KwaZulu-Natal community during this
very special occasion.
I am humbled by such recognition made to me by the students of the
University of KwaZulu-Natal in the form of this important award. It
is indeed very encouraging and heart-warming to realise that the
modest contribution we have made in continuing to build a better
South Africa, a better Africa and a better world, is being noticed
and recognised.
These awards are made more meaningful by the fact that our work is
being recognised by the youth of our country, people who must carry
on with the task of nation building and creating a prosperous South
Africa.
We are in dire need of dedicated, patriotic and action-oriented
young intellectuals who will contribute to building the kind of
prosperous and successful society we envisage. This is a society
without poverty and underdevelopment, where men and women, girls
and boys live in dignity, with access to opportunities to make
their lives better and meaningful.
Some of these opportunities include access to education. There are
scores of children in rural South Africa who cannot afford to go to
school. I have come face to face with this hardship through the
Jacob Zuma RDP Education Trust Fund. We are approached by many
orphans each year in need of money to pay school or tertiary fees.
To date the Trust pays for the education of more than 3000 children
at primary school level, and many others at tertiary level.
This is the reality of poverty that we all need to be aware of and
find ways of assisting where we can. It is remarkable that as far
back as 1906, Africans were already seeking education despite
poverty and lack of resources, as they continue to do today. Former
ANC President and timeless intellectual Pixley ka Isaka Seme
captured the African's quest for education succinctly in his
article “The Regeneration of Africa”, published on 5
April 1906.
He said, and I quote "He has refused to camp forever on the borders
of the industrial world; having learned that knowledge is power, he
is educating his children. You find them in Edinburgh, in
Cambridge, and in the great schools of Germany. These return to
their country like arrows, to drive darkness from the land. I hold
that his industrial and educational initiative, and his untiring
devotion to these activities, must be regarded as positive
evidences of this process of his regeneration."
I am hopeful that this newly-merged institution whose birth we are
also celebrating this evening, will contribute in earnest to the
process of developing African scholarship within the context of the
African Renaissance, to promote access to education, socio-economic
development, political development and other key areas of
development.
I know that African rebirth is a subject that has been close to the
heart of Vice-Chancellor Makgoba for many years, and that we would
not be short of partners at this institution, in pursuing this
goal.
Our quest for development extends beyond the continent. As we spend
countless hours seeking peace in Burundi, Cote d'Ivoire, Democratic
Republic of the Congo and other countries, and working to ensure
the success of Africa's socio-economic blueprint, the New
Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD) and other programmes,
we are inspired by the wisdom and vision of our forebears such as
Pixley ka Isaka Seme.
In the article quoted earlier, "The Regeneration of Africa", he
outlined his optimism about the continent and I quote:
"The brighter day is rising upon Africa. Already I seem to see her
chains dissolved her desert plains red with harvest, her Abyssinia
and her Zululand the seats of science and religion, reflecting the
glory of the rising sun from the spires of their churches and
universities. Her Congo and her Gambia whitened with commerce, her
crowded cities sending forth the hum of business, and all her sons
employed in advancing the victories of peace - greater and more
abiding than the spoils of war".
When he uttered those words in 1906 Africans were in bondage and
had no power to act to change the continent. We now have that
power, and need to use it to build the type of country and
continent that our forebears dreamt about, but did not live to
see.
In this regard, our higher education institutions have a critical
role to play, to produce intellectuals and experts in various
fields who will be able to correctly analyse the challenges that
the country and continent face, and suggest workable
solutions.
I am therefore reminded of the notion of "organic intellectuals",
which Italian revolutionary intellectual Antonio Gramsci wrote a
lot about, particularly as it relates to the role of intellectuals
in bringing about socialist transformation.
I am pleased that the SRC appreciates this concept. Gramsci
categorises intellectuals into two: traditional and organic
intellectuals, thereby introducing a definition of intellectuals
that extends to working among the masses.
There are a number of lessons that we can learn from Gramsci as we
work towards building a new society today. Chief among those
lessons is the need to use the knowledge and skills we gain, for
the betterment of society.
This is important for us in our country to remember. Without
ensuring that many people gain from the skills and knowledge
produced by our higher education institutions, we will not reach
our goals of eradicating poverty and bridging the gap between the
rich and poor and of ensuring sufficient economic growth that will
ensure that more households can put food on the table.
The running thread in the writings of Gramsci is the fact that
theory is a means to practice. He sought to create working class
intellectuals who were actively participating in practical life,
and he wrote in 1971 and I quote:" the mode of being the new
intellectual can no longer consist in eloquence but in active
participation in practical life, as constructor, organiser,
permanent persuader, and not just a simple orator".
I think what we can learn from Gramsci is that it is not enough for
us to understand and comment on the challenges facing our country,
but that we should use our skills and knowledge to contribute
solutions.
These should be solutions that are informed by a strong African
consciousness and supported by time-honoured African value systems
and ways of doing things. The solutions we propose to our
challenges would be sustainable if they are informed by this
understanding of the African environment we work and live in.
This is the challenge I would like to leave with our young
intellectuals this evening. Let us all strive to become organic
intellectuals, who will participate actively in finding solutions
to the challenges facing our country, Africa and the world,
informed by the understanding of the objective conditions in this
African country of ours.
Allow me programme director, before I conclude, to congratulate
fellow award recipients.
I also extend my appreciation to the SRC and the student body as a
whole. Tonight's occasion indicates the extent and level of
socio-political consciousness among the students.
It is heartening to realise that through this award, the students
recognise the contribution made in the field of piece in the
country and especially in KwaZulu-Natal. It is our political
maturity that thought us that you can actually sit down and
negotiate with your opponent or even your enemy and resolve
conflict and political violence.
It is an established fact that in the history of society conflict
and violence, mainly political violence, does occur emanating from
a variety of disagreements that emerge amongst people. But the
reality is that at the end engagement and negotiations have to
happen whether there is a stalemate or one side defeated. It is at
that point where political maturity distinguishes individuals,
groups, political parties and nations.
It is that political maturity that allowed us to sit down with the
apartheid government to reach a negotiated settlement. It also
enabled us to negotiate piece in KwaZulu-Natal. The experience that
we acquired, while negotiating piece in our country, has also
enabled us to assist our sisters and brothers in other parts of
Africa who are still engulfed by the scourge of violence, some
involving massacres, genocides and ethnic cleansing. Our
intervention in those parts of Africa is bearing fruit.
This is what we recognise and appreciate in what our students have
done in coming up with this particular award. This will certainly
go a long way as a contribution to Africa's course and will
encourage many to make the necessary input for our commitment for
Africa to be at piece with itself and eradicate underdevelopment in
its entirety.
We also recognise and thank the Vice-Chancellor and the academic
staff, for taking the university in the right direction. Continue
with your good work, and produce many more organic intellectuals
who will take our country to greater heights!
Let me in conclusion leave you with the words of one of our
foremost organic intellectuals, former ANC President Chief Albert
Luthuli. In a Nobel lecture delivered at Oslo University on 11
December 1961, entitled Africa and Freedom, he said and I
quote:
"This is Africa's age - the dawn of her fulfilment, yes the moment
when she must grapple with destiny to reach the summits of
sublimity saying - ours was a fight for noble values and worthy
ends, and not for lands and the enslavement of man. Africa is a
vital subject matter in the world of today, a focal point of world
interest and concern. Could it not be that history has delayed her
rebirth for a purpose?
"The situation confronts her with inescapable challenges, but more
importantly with opportunities for service to herself and mankind.
She evades the challenges and neglects the opportunities to her
shame, if not her doom. How she sees her destiny is a more vital
and rewarding quest than bemoaning her past with its humiliations
and sufferings".