第一吃瓜网

Start main page content

Madonsela biography raises thousands for students

-

Alumni show their support at networking event

Alumni and friends of Wits raised more than R10 000 for students in one hour on 5 October, thanks to the generosity of journalist and activist Thandeka Gqubule.

Thandeka Gqubule speaking at an alumni networking event on 5 October 2017

Gqubule donated the proceeds of sales of her book, 鈥淣o Longer Whispering to Power鈥, a biography of former Public Protector Thuli Madonsela, at a networking event held at the Wits Club on 5 October 2017.

At the invitation of the South Africa Student Solidarity Foundation for Education () and Wits鈥 Alumni Relations Office, Gqubule spoke about her time as a Wits student and about the state of South Africa now.

She read an extract from TE Lawrence鈥檚 鈥淪even Pillars of Wisdom鈥 to give an idea of the 鈥渢exture鈥 of Wits in the mid-1980s:

鈥淲e were wrought up with ideas inexpressible and vaporous, but to be fought for. We lived many lives in those whirling campaigns, never sparing ourselves: yet when we achieved and the new world dawned, the old men came out again and took our victory to remake in the likeness of the former world they knew. Youth could win, but had not learned to keep, and was pitiably weak against age. We stammered that we had worked for a new heaven and a new earth, and they thanked us kindly and made their peace.鈥

Gqubule鈥檚 question about what has happened in South Africa in recent years was: where did we go wrong as a generation?  鈥淲e failed to safeguard institutions because we disengaged. We failed to safeguard the values that we fell in love with at Wits. How we dropped the ball is still a marvel to me. We lost sight of South 第一吃瓜网s鈥 ability to proceed through multi-stakeholder dialogue.鈥  What she learnt from Advocate Madonsela鈥檚 story, she said, was that 鈥渟ometimes you survive the high seas only to drown in shallow waters鈥.

Civil society needs to get organised and engage, she said. 鈥淒ip your bucket where you are. Speak your truth. Defend the press. Use the judiciary. Here at Wits, Thuli and I learnt that the law can be used for social change.鈥

Gqubule read a passage from the book describing the great migration of game across the Mara River in East Africa. First there is a period of disquiet, then the animals, young and old, en masse, 鈥渢ake the treacherous river by storm鈥. This is a metaphor for what the people of South Africa must do, she urged.

SASSFE cofounder Terry Tselane

SASSFE co-founder and Wits alumnus Terry Tselane, who is deputy chairman of the Independent Electoral Commission, thanked Gqubule for supporting SASSFE and for leading the evening鈥檚 discussion. He said her book would encourage people to stand up and be counted, just as the 鈥淪ABC Eight鈥 had. These were the eight SABC journalists, including Gqubule, who were fired for speaking out against attempts to censor the news. Wits graduates were on the side of social justice and integrity, he said.

Gqubule said what she had learnt from the SABC Eight experience was to 鈥渋dentify your struggle鈥, focus on it, get organised, publicise it and 鈥渓itigate the hell out of the problem鈥.

After a discussion about education and the persistence of inequality in South Africa, she called on the audience to 鈥渃hange zipcode apartheid鈥.

SASSFE management committee member and former Wits SRC president Kenneth Creamer said that proceeds of the book would be helping to feed some of the students in need at Wits University.

See photos of the event .

To hear Thandeka Gqubule talk about Thuli Madonsela in an interview on 702, click .

To read another interview, click .

SASSFE management committee member Firoz Cachalia in discussion at the book  event

Advocate Xoli Maduna, Chairperson of the Thuli Madonsela Foundation

 

Share