Loading...

An Ode to Mbulelo Vizikhungo Mzamane (1948-2014)

An Ode to Mbulelo Vizikhungo Mzamane (1948-2014)

2024 marks a decade since your fatal departure to the ancestral realm.

‘Colloquial speak’ categorizes us as part of Generation X / Gen X (1965-1980).Absurdity of the latter category is undeniable as you were born in the politically charged year of 1948, while I was born in I980. We experienced Apartheid differently.

It is a matter of public record, that by then, you had already penned your first classic Mzala: The Stories of Mbulelo Mzamane (1980). It did not escape some of us, that the latter was published with the anti-Apartheid publisher Ravan Press. This was consistent with your stance, as an anti-apartheid scholar activist.

Shortly thereafter you followed up with My Cousin Comes to Jo'burg (1981) and The Children of Soweto: A Trilogy (1982). The latter remains a critical contribution to discourse capturing how families in Soweto experienced the ‘1976 Student Uprising’.

Post your sojourn of exile, uppermost in mind amongst your vast feats include your tenure as the first Vice-Chancellor and Rector of Fort Hare University (UFH) in 1994 and later your directorship of the Center for African Literary Studies (CALS) at University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN).

As President Cyril Ramaphosa announced the 30th Anniversary of South Africa’s Democracy in his January 8th Address, I curiously wondered what that meant to South Africans who were not privileged to have known your works? Thought must be spared here specifically to the Millennials (1981-1996) and Gen Z (1997-2012).

Lala ngoxolo Songo, Msimango, Dumakazi, Thabizolo! Uyibekil’ induk’ ebandla! Camagu!

Dr. Tshepo Mvulane Moloi
Ali Mazrui Center for Higher Education Studies (AMCHES)
University of Johannesburg

Your Review

RATING

1122 VIEWS
0 Likes

Share To

Dr. Tshepo Mvulane Moloi

Dr. Tshepo Mvulane Moloi

Dr. Tshepo Mvulane Moloi, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Johannesburg Institute of Advanced Study (JIAS), University of Johannesburg.

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
KROTOA: A Marginalized Pioneering South African Heroine

KROTOA: A Marginalized Pioneering South African Heroine

If existing records are accurate, 2024 arguably marks a seminal 350 years since Krotoa (1643-1674) transitioned to the ancestral realm. After attending an inaugural workshop on the "Histories of Universities in South Africa" hosted at Stellenbosch University (SU), led by Prof. Salim Badat in March 2023, I reflected on why the formerly named RW Wilcocks Building was renamed in honor of Krotoa.

Book Review: Zwelethu-Our Land

Book Review: Zwelethu-Our Land

Explicably Zwelethu was Mr Seroke’s nickname (p.64), inspired from his affiliation to the Pan African Congress (PAC) of Azania’s ‘rallying open palm salute’ Izwe lethu.

Banyamulenge on Genocide Watch

Banyamulenge on Genocide Watch

The aftermath of the most recent upsurge of violence, targeting the Banyamulenge people since 2017, is worth attention. Violence initially stretched from the villages of Minembwe upto Bibokoboko.

comments
Go to TOP