My dear
friends and fellow South Africans,
The death of Inkosi NJ Ngubane
prompts me to a broader reflection on the history
and future of the IFP, and its role in South Africa.
NJ Ngubane embodied within his persona all that is
and has been good and noble within Inkatha. He was a
man of immense integrity, courage, loyalty,
dedication to work, sense of duty and spirit of
service.
These qualities emerged in the
service which he rendered his community as their
traditional leader, when he was a Minister in my
Cabinet in the erstwhile KwaZulu Government, when he
was a Minister in the province of KwaZulu Natal and
throughout his service as a Member of the Provincial
Legislature.
As the Leader of Inkatha, I have
tried not only to promote ideas and policies within
my Party, but also a special and specific sense of
morality and certain values, which I felt ought to
be the hallmark of our Party. It is unusual for
political parties to require not only ideological
adhesion to policies, but also to personal values.
Yet I always felt that private and public life
cannot be separated and leadership requires both the
right ideas and the right personal values.
In this sense, Inkosi Ngubane was
really the final example of what I would like
Inkatha members to be. Stressing, as I do, personal
values such as integrity and morality is neither an
exclusively moral matter nor a personal
idiosyncrasy. Our country is sinking in a flood of
corruption, absenteeism, dereliction of duty,
inefficiency, lawlessness and criminality. If we
could eliminate these problems, all the other
problems our country is now struggling with would
take care of themselves.
The fact is that in many years of
struggle we have placed great emphasis on creating a
new South Africa, which we have achieved, but not
all parties have placed the same emphasis on
creating new South Africans, as I have done
throughout my life. Forging new South Africans
hinges on creating general appreciation for the
values which Inkosi NJ Ngubane so naturally and
spontaneously expressed in everything he did.
A party does not belong to its
past, but to its future. People do not vote for a
party or for its leaders on account of what they did
in the past, but because of what they expect that
party and its leaders to do, achieve and deliver in
the future. I am deeply aware of that.
Nonetheless, I wish to pause to
reflect on the Inkatha of years past, because I feel
that its leaders have provided an example of
personal dedication and rectitude which is relevant
in shaping and inspiring the new generation of
leaders of the Inkatha Freedom Party.
When I selected leaders to become
part of my Cabinet in the erstwhile KwaZulu
Government, I looked for true leadership, integrity
and dedication.
I concerned myself with choosing
good men and women who were such both in their
public and private spheres of life. I ran a
government which excelled above any other government
established in the self-governing territories and in
the TBVC states, in spite of my government having
been the one most egregiously underfunded as
compared with all others, on account of my rejection
of the grand scheme of Apartheid.
My results were not my own alone,
for mine was indeed a collegial government with
ministers of the stature of Prince GL Zulu, Dr LPHM
Mtshali, Dr Madida, Dr BS Ngubane, Inkosi S Gumede,
Inkosi NJ Ngubane, Mr VB Ndlovu and many others.
Many of them are now gone. It is
important that we let their memory live on, because
their example has immense value not only for the IFP
and its future, but for the whole of South Africa.
No two generations are alike. I am
deeply aware that a new generation of IFP leaders is
now emerging out of a milieu which has not known the
horror and repression of Apartheid. This new
generation, to which the future belongs, has in
itself an extraordinary and positive capacity for
transformation and renewal, on which our country
must rely.
As young people, they did not
suffer the personal oppression of Apartheid's
humiliations, racial discrimination and practices
which constantly put them down. In many respects,
because new and until now unprecedented horizons
have been opened for them, they know better and are
stronger than their parents. At a younger age they
have already received much greater exposure than
their elders did and are empowered in their
knowledge by the reach of computers, the Internet
and the world of instant communications.
They are the avant garde of a
cultural revolution in the making, which neither I
nor anyone else ought to make the mistake of
ignoring or fearing.
However, those of us who bear the
weight of the many lessons of life, which only age
and experience can teach, have the responsibility of
assisting this revolution to succeed rather than
fail.
For this reason we must make sure
that this generation doesn't throw the baby out with
the bath water, and remains rooted in those personal
values which were as much the hallmark of politics
within the IFP in the past as they must remain its
hallmark in the future, failing which the IFP has no
role to play in South Africa.
Policies may change, but the
values of humility, integrity, dedication, courage
and a sense of duty remain at the foundation of
anything this Party stands for. If they were ever to
be abandoned, I hope that our Party may be dissolved
and re-established under another name, so that my
life's commitment, that of my colleagues and the
experience of NJ Ngubane may be shielded from any
such corruption of spirit and practice.
I am confident in the future,
because I know that at all levels of the IFP the
personal values I am describing have in fact been
percolating through for many decades. Even when I am
gone, as Inkosi Ngubane now is, I hope that the IFP
will continue to carry these values into the
politics of South Africa. For without such values,
no country can succeed and any republic is bound to
fail.
Yours in the Service of Our
Nation,
Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi MP