Dr Gloria Serobe appointed as TUT chancellor
The fourth chancellor has a particular passion for empowering black rural women
On 14 March 2024, Dr Gloria Tomatoe Serobe was appointed as the fourth chancellor of the Tshwane University of Technology (TUT). The investiture of Serobe was performed by the TUT Chair of Council, Ivan Ka-mbonane; the Vice-chancellor and Principal, Professor Tinyiko Maluleke; and the Registrar, Dr Michael Mushaathoni.
In her capacity as chancellor, Serobe has become the titular head of the institution. Her main role is to confer degrees, diplomas and certificates on all qualified TUT graduates. She also becomes the ambassador and the face of the institution.
The second child of Tamsanqa Mamfanya and Dorcas Ndaliso, Serobe (neé Ndaliso) was born in the township of Gugulethu, Cape Town. Her childhood years were shared between Cape Town and the Eastern Cape village of Centane, from where her family originated and where her mother and grandparents lived throughout her childhood.
She is the granddaughter of well-known Methodist preacher John Zamile Ndaliso and his wife Victoria Nofikile Ndaliso. Her grandparents had a strong and positive influence on her character — especially in terms of their belief in the transformative power of education.
Life in the rural village of Centane also left an indelible mark on Serobe’s outlook and approach to life. Her grandmother and her mother modelled for young Gloria a life built on self-reliance, perseverance and hard work. The two women ran small family businesses in Centane.
When an opportunity arose for the young Serobe to be among the first few girls to be admitted to the prestigious St John’s High School in Mthatha, she embraced the opportunity with both hands. She completed her Bcom at the University of Transkei. A few years later, she obtained a Fulbright Scholarship that took her to Rutgers University in New Jersey, where she completed an MBA. She has never looked back.
She worked as an accountant at Exxonmobil in the US for a few years before returning to South Africa, where she joined Munich Reinsurance and Premier Group. Later, she left the world of accounting and moved into the world of investment and merchant banking, where she gained corporate experience — especially in project finance, mergers and acquisitions.
She later leveraged her corporate experience when in 1994, she, together with Louisa Mojela, Nomhle Canca and Wendy Luhabe co-founded Women Investment Portfolio Holdings (WIPHOLD). It was the first private equity company founded by women in order to bring women, particularly black women, into the mainstream economy of the country.
Today Serobe is the CEO of Wipcapital financial services, a subsidiary of WIPHOLD. She is deliberate and intentional about the
economic empowerment of women, and has a particular passion for the economic inclusion of rural women.
Throughout her tremendous career of service, Serobe has remained a family woman. Nothing has made this aspect of her character more clearer than her 2023 book — An Ode to my Mother-in-law, Winnie Serobe. A Mentorship of Love and Honour — whose subject matter is as phenomenal as it is unusual.
In the foreword to the book, her husband Gaur Serobe confesses his initial doubts about the feasibility of a book about a mother-in-law, written by a daughter-inlaw: “I also did not think it would happen.
Sweet, but impossible. There didn’t seem to be a story there. They had not started a business together and built it into a multimillion rand company. They had not had a fractious relationship that might elicit tabloid-like interest. There had been no soaring triumph over illness or adversity. There had just been an ordinary love between two exceptional women; an ordinary bond between two women that I love deeply.”
If Serobe’s book is a testament to “an ordinary love between two exceptional women”, then her life is testament of the extraordinary love of an extraordinary woman — for village, city, country and people — and above all, her extraordinary love for her fellow black women.
For the Tshwane University of Technology, it is a tremendous honour to have a South African of the moral stature of Serobe as its chancellor at this time.
“It is an immense privilege for Council members, students, staff and alumni, that our time at this University overlaps with the tenure of someone as accomplished as Dr Gloria Serobe as Chancellor of the Tshwane University of Technology,” said Maluleke.