Grocott's Mail

Madonsela inspires

- By SINESIPHO GOQWANA and ANELE MJEKULA

Outgoing Public Protector Advocate Thuli Madonsela sympathise­d with students who have embarked on nationwide protests calling for free education

Madonsela was the featured speaker at Kingswood College on Wednesday for the Neil Aggett Memorial Lecture, just hours after pledging R15 000 for needy students at an event in Durban, where she called for corporates to put their hands in their pockets to support education.

During the lecture, she touched on social injustice, poverty and the much talked about fees must fall protest. Madonsela encouraged people to involve themselves in finding solutions to the crisis facing tertiary institutio­ns. “If one of us would make a difference then with as little as R5 a person,” she said.

She said there are still people who do not go to school and young people who could never use a computer due to lack of funding.

“When they go to university, it will be the first time they touch a computer.” Madonsela expressed concern over the fact that there are still young Photo: Simone Ferreira people who will only have access to computers once they reach tertiary level. “They don’t have computers in this age where everything is internet related including knowing what assignment one is supposed to do for tomorrow. The university expects you to check it online,” she said.

“You hear people saying data must fall but many of them don’t even have access to that data because you don’t have access to the internet.”

Madonsela also revealed some of her personal experience­s with regards to challenges faced by students at tertiary institutio­ns. Madonsela told the packed hall that she was taken aback by a story that her daughter had told her two years ago regarding the hardships faced by some tertiary students. “I was horrified two years ago when my daughter moved from Varsity College to go and study at the University of Pretoria for the first time, when she literally discovered young people sleeping in labs and on bathroom floors and they hang around the university for months because they cannot afford registrati­on,” she said.

“These young people live on dry bread and water so that they could have an education”, Madonsela said.

“They have passed and got a place at university but they don’t have the means to move forward. Young people who have been allowed by the university to continue with education but finances have dried out and end up being excluded, hence we have the fees must fall protest.”

Madonsela said she even accommodat­ed the student who was staying in the bathroom in her house, but added that was not a sustainabl­e solution. “I asked her how do you do it, how do you keep your head high. She said to me Mama I can’t go home because the poverty back there is worse than sleeping in the bathroom,” Madonsela said.

Madonsela said as long as there is injustice somewhere, there will never be peace anywhere.

“In Zulu we have a saying that says indlala ibanga ulaka, poverty causes anger, are we surprised that there are angry people around us? Anger leads to rage and there is a fine line between rage and madness. I am not justifying people’s actions but sometimes those people just want to be heard,” she said.

Speaking about the challenges faced by ordinary South African citizens currently, Madonsela said people were angry because of the persisting challenges they continue to face.

“Today one of the things people are angry about are persisting inequaliti­es and persisting racism and racial disparitie­s which are exacerbate­d by other social justice concerns. So racism in a protest level is already structural inequality expressing itself in racial terms,” she said.

Madonsela said there needs to be a solution to abolishing the high levels of poverty faced mostly by black South Africans.

“Poverty has a black face and I am not saying there aren’t any poor white people nor am I saying the answer is more white poor people but I am saying the answer is we just need to end poverty. We can do that by finding out what the story is and do something about it, that is why young ones found the slogan outsourcin­g must fall,” she said.

As long as there is injustice somewhere, there will never be peace anywhere

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