INTERNATIONAL SLAVERY DAY: 23 AUGUST 2000

22 AUGUST 2000

The Department of Education (DoE), through the United Nations Education, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) will be honouring the International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition on Wednesday, August 23, 2000.

However, there will be no public event organised by UNESCO or the DoE to celebrate this occasion. Instead, we would appreciate it if your publication or news agency could interview one of the people listed below. We suggest you contact the individuals directly to finalise arrangements with them.

BACKGROUND:

The General Conference of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) proclaimed the 23rd August of every year, International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition.

This date was chosen as a reminder to the fact that slaves were the principal agents of their own liberation.

The night of the 22nd and the morning of the 23rd August 1791, on the island of Santo Domingo (today Haiti and the Dominican Republic), saw the beginning of the uprising that would play a crucial role in the abolition of the transatlantic slave trade.

Unlike other human tragedies such as the Jewish Holocaust, the silence surrounding the tragedy of slavery and its attendant consequences, some of which are still felt now, is deafening. In recognition of this apparent amnesia relating to slavery, UNESCO set up an international project called the Slave Route project.

The aims of the project are:

This objectives would be achieved by:

Following the Great Trek, the Boers practised slavery in the old Transvaal.

In recognition of its involvement in the practice of slavery, Dr. Wally Serote was appointed to represent South Africa in the International Committee of the Slave Route Project. He in turn set up the South African chapter of the Slave Route Project in 1996.

The South African chapter of the Slave Route Project has similar objectives as the International project but it has elaborated the following other objectives which contextualize issues of slavery and their impact on present day initiatives of nation building:

The South African chapter of the Slave Route Project would like to use the 23rd of August 2000 to remind South Africa of its record of human rights abuse, and to call for an appreciation of the layers of oppression that have been practised on some of our compatriots but more significantly to challenge the nation to develop programs that can transform these scars of abuse into opportunities for healing and development.

For further details contact Dr. Botlhale Tema
Secretary General for the South African National Commission for UNESCO
Tel: (012) 312 5187
Fax: (012) 325 7284
Email: Tema.B@educ.pwv.gov.za

Khume Kangala
Communication Directorate: National Department of Education
Tel: (012) 312 5030
Fax: (012) 324 2110
Email: Kangala.k@educ.pwv.gov.za

DATE: AUGUST 21

ISSUED BY GOVERNMENT COMMUNICATIONS (GCIS) ON BEHALF OF THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION