Sunday Times

Moseneke’s call for access to education

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OWN LIBERATOR: Former deputy chief justice Dikgang Moseneke political contexts that one had to deal with, particular­ly when we all were still slaves and fighting our oppression, colonial and racial,” Moseneke said.

It was important for him that “I write the book myself” as this was “something that I learnt to do in the 40 years that I was a lawyer”.

“But the challenge here was that I was writing something quite different to law. This is storytelli­ng.

“The difference is that these are lived experience­s . . . the book incorporat­es and makes references to many, many South Africans of all sorts of persuasion­s and contributi­ons in the struggle.”

Unsurprisi­ngly, given his own activism from a very young age, Moseneke is passionate about youth developmen­t. In the dedication for the book he writes: “I choose to stake my trust in the future. I consecrate this work to the youth of our land, of Africa and the world, where radical change is necessary.

“This is because, ordinarily, young people are deeply intolerant of social inequity . . . Each young person is her or his own liberator in the personal space but so, too, together with others, in the public and social enterprise.”

Moseneke writes that the call by leaders such as PAC founder Robert Sobukwe and ANC Youth League leader Anton Lembede for “freedom in our lifetime” was what moved him to engage in politics at the age of 15.

His hope, however, is that the book will teach the youth that personal developmen­t is as important as fighting in a common struggle for social justice.

“I really call on African youth and say, ‘Guys, there is a corridor of personal agency, the things we have to do as individual­s.’ It is really an invitation to young people to say there is space for personal agency, not to be confused with collective agency . . . I don’t think we sufficient­ly — and that is part of our problem in the country currently — emphasise the place of individual agency.”

His mission is “to say to young people: there is this talk of the struggle, all of us together . . . making some demand together and that is healthy, that is legitimate. But also you can’t escape personal agency through that . . . Even if all fees are paid for us fully, you still have to work. You still have to graft.”

This is an important message, he said, especially on a continent still faced with many developmen­tal challenges that require entreprene­urs, engineers, architects and other highly skilled profession­als.

“We haven’t drummed that in hard enough; that the collective is made out of individual­s and that we have to create good individual­s for good collective­s. Through my own personal experience, I am where I am — the book will tell you — through dog and slog and faith and trust and belief that hope should spring eternal . . .

“What I am saying . . . we have to reconfigur­e how we talk to young people and how we talk to ourselves. The narrative for me after 1994 was ‘Vote for me and I will give you’ . . . I think the narrative should be, ‘We are our own liberators.’

“I am the last person to suggest that our young people don’t have a cause currently. They do have a cause.”

 ?? Picture: SIMPHIWE NKWALI ??
Picture: SIMPHIWE NKWALI

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