The Herald (South Africa)

Focus on Mandela’s legacy

Debate centred around book by Mandla Langa on presidenti­al years

- Herald Reporter

STEADY, measured and balanced – lauded poet, short story writer and novelist Mandla Langa took centre stage in a contentiou­s debate around the legacy of Nelson Mandela during the latest Herald/Canrad Community Dialogue held last night.

It was hosted at the Nelson Mandela University’s North Campus Conference Centre in associatio­n with the university’s Centre for the Advancemen­t of Non-Racialism and Democracy (Canrad).

The dialogue was founded on Langa’s new non-fiction work entitled Dare Not Linger: The Presidenti­al Years – Nelson Mandela and Mandla Langa.

Chaired by Herald deputy editor Nwabisa Makunga, the event, which attracted an audience of about 50 people, most of them students, saw literature lecturer Barrington Marais giving his input as the respondent for the dialogue.

The writer – who counts former Chief Justice Pius Langa and former ambassador to Russia Bheki Langa among his siblings – opened the session by reminding the audience that Mandela had been purposely selected to function as the “face of the struggle” against apartheid.

Revealing the theme of the event as “What is South Africa’s attitude towards its treasures” [meaning its people or groups who have made citizens proud of who they are], Langa went on to cite the various attitudes, commentary and debates which emerged in the wake of Winnie Mandela’s death as an important example.

Intimating that each individual was filled with potential greatness and that some had achieved good things while in the shadow of others, Langa remarked that “we need to find ways of claiming what was ours on our own terms. Some are just catapulted to greatness.

“We should look at what good is in ourselves,” he said.

He said the book had presented a challenge as it was a work of non-fiction and could have opened him to criticism “and lawyers”. He said the book focused solely on Mandela’s presidenti­al years and Mandela’s own writing – some of the around “70 000 words” he had contribute­d to the book, along with archives and other sources.

Having cited a portion of the work to the audience, Langa concluded the reading with wisdoms asserted by Mandela around the impractica­lities and ultimate futility of violence.

In the question-and-answer session, criticism was levelled at Mandela’s legacy, claiming that he had failed to address controvers­ial issues such as land and the demands for free education.

Another issue repeatedly raised was around the notion of the “rainbow” nation, with those raising the topic rubbishing its existence.

Two comments brought light relief to the discussion, the first of which was “The rumour that apartheid is dead, is a rumour” and the second, which reflected the demographi­cs and overall tone of the dialogue was: “There are no colonialis­ts here to help us decolonial­ise”.

 ?? Pictures: EUGENE COETZEE ?? WEIGHTY ISSUES: Author Mandla Langa, left, and literature lecturer Barrington Marais at the dialogue last night
Pictures: EUGENE COETZEE WEIGHTY ISSUES: Author Mandla Langa, left, and literature lecturer Barrington Marais at the dialogue last night
 ??  ?? SPEAKING OUT: Nkululo Mtyingizan­e voices his opinion
SPEAKING OUT: Nkululo Mtyingizan­e voices his opinion
 ??  ?? HAVING HIS SAY: Olwam Mnqwazi addresses the audience
HAVING HIS SAY: Olwam Mnqwazi addresses the audience
 ??  ?? MAKING A POINT: Taryn Isaacs de Vega contribute­s to the dialogue
MAKING A POINT: Taryn Isaacs de Vega contribute­s to the dialogue
 ??  ??

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