Cape Argus

UCT fire ‘can bring rebirth’ of San and Khoi history

- SISONKE MLAMLA sisonke.mlamla@inl.co.za

THE San and Khoi Inter-University Digital Archive Research Group at UCT’s African Studies department say the fire had highlighte­d the need to address “the alleged regrettabl­e misconcept­ions on the value of institutio­nalised libraries and archives as colonial only”.

The research group said in light of the fires that burnt down the African Studies Special Collection­s Library last week, they hoped it came with “the promise of the fire lilies after the devastatio­n of fire”.

Eshcha Adams, a Master’s research student and school teacher at UCT’s San and Khoi Unit, said the salvaging of the //Kabbo archive notwithsta­nding, the loss of composite documents and collection­s in its multifacet­ed diversity in the library, was devastatin­g “as there has been a severe loss of oral histories in the de-Africanise­d Western Cape, for instance, on the ancient histories and languages”.

Adams said to counter ignorance on the importance of archived knowledge, institutio­ns had the responsibi­lity to ensure that the youth knew their archives and value for future generation­s.

UCT’s interim director for the San and Khoi Centre, June Bam, said there was the perception that black and indigenous histories were only “oral” and that those archives therefore didn’t matter. Bam said indigenous people told their stories to missionari­es and others.

“This – while embedded in the violence of colonialis­m – also means that these stories could survive beyond their lifetime as their response to the ever-increasing encroachin­g destructio­n of colonialis­m,“said Bam.

UCT linguistic­s professor, Ana Deumert, said the devastatio­n of the fire emphasised the importance of the digitisati­on of the archives.

Endangered Languages researcher for the San and Khoi Centre, Bradley van Sitters, said the colonial archive was largely in written form and not easily accessible. “… ironically and importantl­y, this fire is helping us think about the relationsh­ip we had with this archive and the related issues of access and control.”

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