The Herald (South Africa)

LAND A HOT ISSUE AT BOOK LAUNCH

Government still needs to answer questions, says best seller’s author

- Siyabonga Sesant sesants@tisoblacks­tar.co.za

THE contentiou­s land question quickly became the hot topic of discussion at the Port Elizabeth launch last night of advocate Tembeka Ngcukaitob­i’s bestseller, The Land Is Ours. Colonial apartheid systems, the loss of black legal talent and, perhaps most importantl­y, the dispossess­ion of land to the detriment of black people, are some of the themes laid bare in the book.

Described as a well-researched book by political analyst and writer Mphutumi Ntabeni, The Land Is Ours traces the foundation­s of black legal resistance against loss of land in South Africa.

In his review, Ntabeni also called it “a historical search for the first black lawyers of South Africa … educated abroad, coming back home, and treated horribly by a racist system.”

In the end, Ntabeni wrote, due to being frustrated and discrimina­ted against, the talented lawyers became mostly lost to alcoholism, divorced and sometimes even abandoned by their own families.

Ngcukaitob­i said bookshops had at first refused to stock his book – of which only 3 000 copies were initially printed.

“[EFF leader] Julius Malema went to a store in Johannesbu­rg and he wanted to buy 10 copies and they didn’t have it,” Ngcukaitob­i said.

“When he asked around they told him the books were at the back.

“He then tweeted furiously that the white owners [of the bookstores] were hiding black stories deliberate­ly,” Ngcukaitob­i told a packed auditorium at the university’s north campus.

“Anyway, they [the printers] had to print more [copies] and now it’s been on the bestseller list for many weeks.”

Professor Nomalanga Mkhize, who was at the launch last night, encouraged the audience to read the book, so that what had happened would never be repeated.

“I want to talk about rescuing black talent, that is why I’m here,” Mkhize said.

“It’s why the sociology department is here. Having said that, we do need to interrogat­e our responses to the dispossess­ion of land.

“We are going to have to interrogat­e the nature of the politics that surround how we are going to deal with the land question.

“You can read the book for the details on how people fought, lawfully, looking at how to return black people’s stolen land – it’s detailed [in the book]”.

Mkhize said land expropriat­ion without compensati­on was inevitable.

“I think it’s inevitable that the land is going to be reoccupied by the masses.

“The only question is how the state will respond. And it’s not a theoretica­l question, it’s a question of whether we’ll have many more Marikanas or not,” she said.

Ngcukaitob­i agreed, saying that land invasions were nothing new.

“I’m not particular­ly obsessed with the so-called fear of land invasion,” he said.

“Land was invaded in this country in 1813, it was invaded again in 1913 [and again] invaded in 1955.

“In fact, the biggest land grab was in 1913 and they passed an act, saying 87% of the land belongs to whites, 13% to blacks.

“The point I’m trying to make is that we should stop thinking about grassroots struggles, that sometimes include occupation of vacant land, as in conflict with transforma­tion and democratic processes.

“They are sometimes not just inevitable outcomes, they are sometimes necessary to propel the path forward for revolution­ary changes.

“Nobody has the right to evict people because they’ve occupied land illegally [because] the law specifical­ly protects illegal occupiers of land and recognises that historical­ly, black people were pushed out, so only a court can tell you to leave.”

Mkhize said: “I’m suggesting that the real violence of the state will happen when we occupy historical­ly white areas.”

Ngcukaitob­i said the government still needed to answer some questions.

“The same state that says it’s going to give us land is evicting us from land we’re occupying.”

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 ?? Picture: EUGENE COETZEE ?? SIGN HERE: Advocate Tembeka Ngcukaitob­i’s book, ‘The Land is Ours’, was launched in Port Elizabeth last night. Lindi Coetzee was lucky to get her copy of the book autographe­d by the author
Picture: EUGENE COETZEE SIGN HERE: Advocate Tembeka Ngcukaitob­i’s book, ‘The Land is Ours’, was launched in Port Elizabeth last night. Lindi Coetzee was lucky to get her copy of the book autographe­d by the author

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