Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Call to remember the La Gumas

- RIYADH KARODIA riyadh.karodia@inl.co.za

OCTOBER 11 this year marked 37 years since the death of District Six novelist and anti-apartheid activist Alex La Guma.

La Guma suffered a heart attack and died in exile in Havana, Cuba, where he served as the first chief representa­tive of the ANC in the Caribbean.

Dean of St George’s Cathedral the Reverend Michael Weeder said La Guma had been recognised and celebrated across the world, but ironically there was a silence about his memory in Cape Town.

Weeder recollecte­d with fondness his appreciati­on for the literary works of La Guma, saying he wondered how La Guma had been able to write in such a manner that had the reader pondering deeply after every sentence.

“It was in the way he so vividly, beautifull­y captured language, the patois that is spoken in Cape Town and celebrated working people without romanticis­ing it, covering the hardship, but also the wisdom that is within so many of our communitie­s. It was the fact that he was able to identify culture in a community that was supposed to not have a culture.

“It was that, the quiet defiance of Alex La Guma in the way he was articulate and how he wasn’t beating a political drum, despite all of his credential­s.”

La Guma was born in District Six and attended Trafalgar High School. He joined the Young Communists League in 1947 and the SACP in 1948. He was also the leader of the South African Coloured People’s Organisati­on and a defendant in the Treason Trial.

“How many of our people know about him? The city is silent about him. We have Archbishop Desmond Tutu celebrated, and rightly so. Nelson Mandela is celebrated. He has a boulevard named after him; De Klerk and Helen Suzman, too.

“But here we are, a citizen of our republic who had represente­d the liberation movement in Cuba, was celebrated in the Soviet Union and all over. Universiti­es have his work in their archives. And again, I say that the city is silent.”

Weeder advised caution in the way heroes are recognised, but emphasised that someone like La Guma who had recorded life in Cape Town in its various forms should be remembered in a way that honours his literary works and his contributi­on to South Africa’s liberation from apartheid.

“We can argue that renaming streets and landmarks or creating memorials in Alex’s honour values his legacy, but the intention of the museum and the South African Friends of Cuba Society is to look at essay writing competitio­ns, reprints of his books and rather creating an educationa­l footprint that speaks to his literary and political legacy for South Africans,” said a statement by the District Six Museum.

The museum noted the National Arts Council funded Dance of the La Gumas, a play commission­ed by the museum and written by Basil Appollis and Sylvia Vollenhove­n. It spoke to the legacy of both Blanche and Alex la Guma.

“This was a wonderful start to honouring both their legacies. Alex’s legacy is his fiction,” said playwright and actor Basil Appollis.

“What grabbed me most was his descriptiv­e powers. It’s like beautiful music that creeps up on you. You feel it and most importantl­y, you smell it. His elegance and style of writing makes him stand head and shoulders above his contempora­ries, yet as a nation we hardly know him.

“Through their dynamic love story, I wanted to reintroduc­e the La Gumas as South Africans who took the fight for justice to far flung corners of the globe. Apartheid left a hole in the heart of South African literature.

“Who was this literary genius who was driven from his home and country? Who won countless awards all over the world and who lies buried in the Heroes Acre of a Cuban cemetery?”

On a visit to the diocese of the Anglican Church in the Caribbean, Weeder visited La Guma’s grave in the El Cementerio de Cristóbal Colón in Havana, Cuba, where he lies buried in the Heroes Acre, a courtyard dedicated to estrangeir­os (foreigners) who made a remarkable contributi­on to Cuba.

Following this visit, Weeder wrote a poem, “If I was in Cuba today” in honour of the La Gumas.

Weeder said the La Gumas had fought together for South Africa’s liberation and both had to be celebrated.

 ?? District Six Museum ?? BLANCHE La Guma in front of an image of her late husband and fellow anti-apartheid Struggle icon Alex La Guma. l
District Six Museum BLANCHE La Guma in front of an image of her late husband and fellow anti-apartheid Struggle icon Alex La Guma. l

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