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National Assembly: 17th September 2009
Mr Speaker,
Our heritage and ideals, our moral code and
standards - the values we live by and pass onto our children - are
magnified or diminished by how freely we exchange ideas and
feelings. So, on Heritage Day, we sing freedom's song. In the
stirring words of Abraham Lincoln: "Our defence is in the
preservation of the spirit which prizes liberty as a heritage of all
men, in all lands, everywhere. Destroy this spirit and you have
planted the seeds of despotism around your own doors".
We, in this House, by common cause, are here
because we believe that public service is a force for change. We, as
the people's servants, hearken to the voice of our heritage and
ancestors. I rise to speak for my heritage. Following the
post-Anglo-Zulu War partition of the Zulu Kingdom and the 1913 Land
Act, which deprived the majority of Zulus of their ancestral land,
my nation desperately needed change.
But was it to be revolutionary or evolutionary
change? How was a young aspiring Zulu politician, like me, to help
transform living conditions and restore national dignity without
eroding traditional values? I wished to see my nation prosper and
coexist peacefully with other peoples. This is my heritage!
At the same time, I did not wish to see the
resentment of the colonial era based on race transformed into envy
fuelled by material advancement of the few at the expense of many. I
viewed my people, the Zulus, as individuals and members of strong
self-reliant communities, not as political troops in a class
struggle. This is my heritage!
We are also mindful today that there is
insufficient regard for South Africa's diverse linguistic and
cultural heritage which traces its roots to the Dutch and British
immigrants - white Africans - who first graced the shores of the
Cape hundreds of years ago. The legacy of the Van der Merwes and the
Mulders is my heritage, too!
With this thought in mind, I would like to recall
an anecdote of what happened when I attended the national celebration of
Women's Day in Vryheid in the Zululand District last month. I was
invited by the Honourable Minister of Women, Youth, Children and
People with Disabilities, Mrs Noluthando Mayende-Sibiya, jointly
with the Premier of KwaZulu Natal, the Honourable Dr Zweli Mkhize.
The Guest of Honour and Guest Speaker was His Excellency Mr J.G.
Zuma, President of the Republic.
This event starkly confronted me with the question
of whether we are truly the Rainbow Nation that we market ourselves
to be. I am not going to raise the argument about whether the notion
of a Rainbow Nation is right or not. I wish we were a Rainbow
Nation, but my own view is that we are, rather, a great nation
because of our dazzling multi-cultural nation: one that is more
comparable to a delectable bowl of salad!
We are rich because we are all Africans in the
sense which was so elegantly stated by His Excellency President
Thabo Mbeki in his memorable evocation "I am an African!" We are
rich because of our diverse cultures. We own all these cultures as
our own, whether we are Africans of different ethnic groups, or
English or Afrikaans, or Coloured or Indian. And yet, in all the
last fifteen years, I have attended all these functions - so-called
national events - I have been struck by the fact that not one of
them has been representative of all our people. Only Africans
attended the function in Vryheid, for example. Less than ten whites
were present. I saw two Indians, who were officials. There was not a
single coloured present.
So, I asked myself, "Where is this Rainbow
Nation?" Is it the fault of us, the African majority? Maybe we have
not opened our arms wide enough to embrace the other race groups,
particularly minorities. I do not know. I am groping around in the
dark searching for the answer. It could be that the minority groups,
so far, have not accepted that we are one nation. It could be that
they simply do not feel safe in the midst of the majority. We look in a
mirror dimly, but after fifteen years, we must come face to face
with this brutal question.
So I boldly assert today Mr Speaker the truth that
the best way to build a united South Africa is by cherishing and
respecting all its constituent parts. Yes, South Africa is one
country and it is building one nation, but its future will only be
secured if all its constituent traditions are respected. One way to
approach the process of building an authentic national consensus is
with an open mind and with honesty.
The case for freedom, the case for our
constitutional principles the case for our heritage has to be made
anew in each generation. The work of freedom is never done! We are
also mindful this week especially that South Africa should be free
to recognise our diverse religious heritage, and doing that is not
the same as creating a government-sponsored religion. Our diversity
is also reflected in the glory of creation. It is written in the
narrative, too, of South Africa's ecology. As we approach
Copenhagen, we are mindful, as custodians of this fragile land that
is the honour that you take with you, but the heritage you leave
behind.
I thank you.
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