The Star Early Edition

Know the impact of SA women?

- EUSEBIUS MCKAISER

LIKE most men, I know woefully little about the historic contributi­on of women to our society. I also know too little about the girls and women in contempora­ry South Africa who endure, survive and struggle violent patriarcha­l structures daily.

I know woefully little about more than half the population of ours, because that is part of my unearned privilege as a human being accidental­ly born with a penis. That biological accident has ensured a lifetime of benefiting from the patriarchy into which I was born.

One of tens of thousands of such great women in South African history is Ruth First. She was an anti-apartheid activist, journalist, researcher and scholar. She was killed by a letter bomb that was sent to her by the apartheid government in 1982 while she was living in Maputo.

She was the daughter of Jewish Latvian parents who fled anti-semitism in Eastern Europe and settled in South Africa, giving birth to Ruth in 1925.

She was educated at Jeppe High School for Girls and then excelled at Wits University by graduating with distinctio­ns in anthropolo­gy, sociology, economic history and native administra­tion.

She worked as a journalist, and became active in the SACP (of which her father was a founding member), as well as working, later, actively in ANC structures while living in Britain. She had fled there, after spending time in Swaziland too, and after having been held in solitary confinemen­t for 117 days by the apartheid government.

In 1977 she returned to Mozambique with her husband, Joe Slovo, and took up the post of research director at the Centre for African Studies at Eduardo Mondlane University in Maputo, focusing her research on migrant labour. It was in this city that she would be killed in 1982.

Tonight in the Wits Great Hall we will recall this remarkable South African in the annual Ruth First Lecture. It is open to the public and anyone can attend, so long as you can make it by 6pm.

Memorial lectures are often about the invited speaker. That should not be the case. It should, first and centrally, keep the memory alive of the person in whose honour it is being held. We have incredible lessons to learn from First as we deal with contempora­ry challenges in our land.

I haven’t mentioned the fact, in this brief summation of First’s biography, that she was white. But, of course, in a country deeply scarred by the legacy of anti-black racism dating from colonialis­m, relationsh­ips between blacks and whites remain an enduring awkwardnes­s in post-apartheid

We have significan­t

lessons to learn from Ruth First on how to deal with our contempora­ry

challenges

South Africa.

Yet, it isn’t clear that white women like First could be part of a struggle for a non-racial South Africa, unless they were able to forge friendship­s with black comrades. There is a certain kind of intimacy central to genuine friendship that must have been present, one would imagine, in the lives of black and white South Africans – few as these collaborat­ions were – who were living in one another’s spaces.

It is precisely this theme that the first of our Ruth First Fellows for this year, Sisonke Msimang, picks up on tonight. She has researched the prospects of interracia­l friendship in post-apartheid South Africa. It’s been a privilege, as a Ruth First Memorial Lecture committee member, to work with Sisonke as she framed her question, did her research, thought about the critical feedback she was receiving, and refined her intuitions in the light of evidence, and argument, she opened herself to. She has, without giving it all away, arrived at a sceptical and optimistic conclusion.

The philosophi­cal demands of true friendship, she will argue, require serious commitment from white South Africans in particular. Friendship isn’t mere acquaintan­ceship; it isn’t merely conversing without fighting. The demands are high, as she shows with the help of Aristotle.

She offers evidence why structural facts and interperso­nal relations in our society rule out immediate prospects of substantiv­e interracia­l friendship. But she helpfully spells out what the requiremen­ts are, provided we are willing to do the work.

Panashe Chigumadzi, our second Ruth First Fellow, has defiantly used the insult of being called “coconut” and punctured its intended diss. She interviewe­d many “coconuts” to make sense of why, in this year of Rhodes Must Fall protests, many middle-class black students joined in the demands for transforma­tion across campuses. Where do their racial politics come from despite having been enjoyed the benefits of whiteness in former Model-C and private schools?

First would have been proud of the rigor of Msimang and Chigumadzi. All three are South African women with great intellects, and a deep sense of justice.

We men would do well to let go of the assumption that men rule the world. A good start is to come and meet Msimang and Chigumadzi tonight

If you would like to attend the Ruth First Memorial Lecture come to the Wits Great Hall at Wits University, at 6pm. No need to RSVP. All are welcome.

 ?? PICTURE: GIYANI BALOI ?? BREAKING BARRIERS: Beauty Mlakalaka next to a painting of activist Ruth First at her Soweto house. One of the themes of the Ruth First Lecture at Wits tonight is interracia­l friendship­s in a post-apartheid SA.
PICTURE: GIYANI BALOI BREAKING BARRIERS: Beauty Mlakalaka next to a painting of activist Ruth First at her Soweto house. One of the themes of the Ruth First Lecture at Wits tonight is interracia­l friendship­s in a post-apartheid SA.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa