My dear
friends and fellow South Africans,
Last
Thursday, I was invited to attend the launch of the
Durban Alumni Chapter of the University of Fort Hare
where I gave a short address.
From modest
beginnings, many of my fellow alumni have become
successful, leaders in their fields, and, in some
cases, wealthy. The alumni of my generation provide
a linkage - a study in contrast - between the
generations, and straddle the gap between the
disadvantaged and empowered. This is why I was so
disappointed the attendance at the Durban Chapter
was so poor. I would have expected more of my fellow
African students to be there, and I was disappointed
that there was not one of my Indian brothers or
sisters there, who, like me, all benefited because
they went through Fort Hare.
I would, if I
may, share with you some of my reflections.
In those
salad days of my youth, we had our own language -
"Fort Harish" - with such words as "umlevo". I
remember "the 220 track"; which was the stretch of
ground to Elukhanyisweni, the then women students'
hostel. I remember the days of trips by our male
students across the Tyumie River. That is, to
Victoria Hospital, because of the "blue bottles with
white stoppers". That was the name male students
crafted to describe the nurses at the Victoria
Hospital, as they wore blue uniforms with white
berets when they were outside hospital.
Nurses were
also sometimes referred to as "City Lights". So you
will understand when we said that someone had been
struck by "Bacillus Citilitis" what had happened to
him!
Those were
days when the word "native" did not seem to have the
stigma it acquired later, as the official name of
our University was "the South African Native
College", the acronym of which as used by students
was "SANC". Fort Hare was a beacon of light, not
only for black students in this country. Fort Hare
drew students from the whole of Southern Africa and
even from Eastern Africa.
The
institution owes a great debt to the founding
missionaries of the Church of Scotland, particularly
Dr Alexander Kerr, its very first Principal. Were it
not for them, black South Africans would have been
denied university education altogether, just as was
the case for so many decades, as there were limited
faculties in Fort Hare University during our times.
Blacks were of course barred from studying at our
white universities.
It would be
wonderful if the alumni of this great institution, I
said, were inspired to have a strong alumni Chapter
in Durban. In KwaZulu-Natal, we were fortunate in
that the very first graduate of Fort Hare
University, Professor Zachariah Keodirelang Mathews,
"ZK" as he was affectionately called, was the first
Principal of Adams High School. He was also the
first President of NATU. So this great man left his
footprints on KZN I have always considered it one of
my greatest fortunes to have been his student. There
are many of his values which shaped my own. For
example, his words still ring in my ears even at my
age. He would always say to us: "There are two sides
to every issue." I hope I get that across in my
interventions in parliament and in my newsletters.
I have often
stressed the importance of alumni associations for
the overall success of a university such as Fort
Hare. Alumni associations provide much more than a
venue to recall old memories and meet old friends,
to compare notes and assess the damage that time has
inflicted on our respective appearances. Especially
in countries such as the United States, alumni
associations are the backbone of a university's
success. They provide the continuous financial
backing which enables a university to expand its
programmes beyond the limitations of the funding
provided for through public grants and tuition
fees.
Over and
above money, alumni associations provide a constant
flow of guidance for the development of a university
so as to maintain its connection with the rest of
society and its relevance within present and future
challenges. As people study at prestigious
universities, they move into prestigious positions
and, through their participation in the activities
of their alma mater, they continue to provide inputs
and assistance which feed into the education of the
new generation.
In this
sense, alumni associations are indeed the bridge of
continuity between various generations which ensures
that a university does not become an ivory tower of
learning and academic speculation which is no longer
tied to the needs, challenges and aspirations of our
society.
I am
surprised how the Boston University in the United
States keeps in touch with me, merely because the
University of Boston conferred a doctorate on me,
honoris causa. I regularly receive the University's
magazine. I was quite astounded when they even sent
me a beautiful chair with the crest of Boston
University.
I told my
fellow alumni last week that the new Chapter of the
Association of Alumni of Fort Hare needs to keep in
mind the broader parameters of our mission. The
framework of conviviality and entertainment must
also be utilized as an opportunity to continue to
contribute to the success of our university by
directing towards it financial resources which we
may raise on its behalf, as well as our constant
flow of attention and interest. Many of us, as I
mentioned earlier, have gained an enormous wealth of
knowledge and experience through our life's journey.
We should accept the responsibility of making
ourselves available to go back to our universities
in whatever capacity we can.
In other
countries, universities maintain a programme which
enables renowned alumni, or simply an alumni who has
some experience to share, to speak to or connect
with students to give them practical guidance in
what awaits them on the day after their graduation,
or merely to contribute to the dialogue within the
university on the relevant issues of society. I
regret that not enough of such efforts have taken
place in respect of our university and I hope that
the new Durban Chapter of our Alumni Association may
distinguish itself in bringing about a greater
measure of these types of exchanges. Fort Hare,
being the first black university in Southern and
Eastern Africa should, I think, blaze a trail for
all other predominantly black universities which
mushroomed long after it was established. There is
no reason why the Fort Hare Alumni Chapters should
not be the strongest of these.
This is now
more important than ever. Our youth often lacks a
sense of mission and purpose and is confronting
difficulties beyond many people's capacity to cope
or understand. A university education, no matter how
successful, is no longer tied to the possibility of
securing a job or a career. Learning how to find a
job is becoming a subject of intense study which a
university itself cannot provide. It is the
responsibility of concerned alumni to enable young
students coming out of our alma maters to find jobs,
and we should engage new classes of graduates in
orientation programmes which may direct them towards
job opportunities or the steps necessary to acquire
the additional required practical training which may
eventually enable them to find a job.
In this
respect, I have always felt that it would be
important for all the alumni who are themselves
employers to adopt a policy of preference in respect
of job applicants trained in our own alma mater.
However, the
assistance to the youth in finding jobs must come
long before they graduate and almost even before
they enrol at our university. Practical orientation
classes held by people with business and social
experience should be given to our youth almost as
soon as they matriculate, so as to make them
appreciate the dynamics of the job market and the
relationship between training and their life's
journey.
It is
important that in education everyone follows his own
personal bliss, talents and vocation, but only up to
a point. Many of us have had the vocation to study
history of art, literature, poetry or philosophy,
but realized that no matter how important to one's
own human development and overall formation, these
disciplines do not necessarily provide marketable
skills which employers require. It is an unpleasant
reality that those of us who studied the Humanities
are often disadvantaged in the job market when
compared with those who studied the sciences.
Our country
is in desperate need of people with mathematical
skills and a scientific background. Science and
technology is where the future lies and we must
place emphasis on the importance of the youth
embracing not only the discipline, but a love for
science and technology. However, I more than many
others know well the importance of universities as
the incubators not only of the professional skills
of the future, but also the ideas, dreams and
aspirations of the future.
This is
particularly relevant for our university, which has
played an historical and unparalleled role in
shaping the political consciousness of several
generations of political leaders in our entire
sub-continent. As anywhere else in the world, new
ideas - and indeed revolutions - must continue to
germinate out of university campuses. It is
important that we accept that each new generation
has the inalienable right to bring about a massive
measure of change.
When I was at
Fort Hare we conceived a dream which seemed
impossible to realize. That was the dream of freedom
from racism and oppression within our lifetime. Many
of us have lived to see the dream become a reality
beyond our greatest hopes. That lesson must not be
forgotten.
Our
university must continue to bear the legacy of the
optimism of dreams which come true and the courage
to dream of that which now seems unattainable and
beyond the realm of the feasible.
It is not
only the right, but I would say it is almost the
historical duty of new generations to look upon the
achievements of their forefathers, and the creed
that no matter how much we succeeded in bringing
about the realization of our dreams, what was done
is just not good enough and the present status of
affairs is unacceptable and despicable.
Thinking with
the heart of a 20 year old young student, which
still beats strong in my chest, I cannot help
thinking that the world we live in is a terrible
place which awaits a radical reform to finally
redress the terrible injustice which juxtaposes
human beings and human beings and detracts from the
equal dignity and inherent worth of all God's
creatures. The dream of social justice is by far a
greater dream than the dream of freedom from
oppression which our generation held and
relentlessly pursued.
While I am
proud that we achieved our dream of political
emancipation of our people and brought about freedom
in our country, there are many evils that pain me. I
feel that our dream is not completely fulfilled when
I see how we are still confronted with so much
poverty, so much corruption, HIV/Aids and so much
crime. While our dream of freedom was realized, it
is still a dream not yet fully fulfilled.
This is the
challenge which the present generation faces. It is
a dream which I know the present generation may have
a chance to see materialize, when some of us are no
more. As a Believer, I would like to make a
confession today. I am often worried by the words of
our Saviour and King, Jesus Christ, when He
responded to some of His disciples. When a woman in
Bethany poured expensive perfume over Christ's head,
His disciples complained about what they saw as a
waste of money. In Matthew 26 verses 10 and 11, He
responded: "Why are you bothering this woman? She
has done a beautiful thing to me. The poor you will
always have with you, but you will not always have
me."
If one looks
at the history of mankind, one can clearly see how
technological development, new dimensions of
learning and knowledge and the overall growth of
society have gone hand in hand with increasing
freedom and better conditions of life for all. We
hope that the technological society of the future
and the great technological developments awaiting us
may continue to bring about greater social justice
in the wake of the transformation which they impose
within each one of our lives and the whole of
society.
I ended with
the hope that our university will become the seed
bed of future scientists and mathematicians, as it
was of politicians and leaders when history needed
them most.
Yours
sincerely,
Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi, MP
Contact: Jon Cayzer, 084 555-7144.