According to Arundhati Roy, in part of a talk published on You Tube, 12 June 2013 when the struggle in South Africa ‘started ‘it was the Black consciousness (BC) people who were most powerful Continue reading
Category Archives: democratisation
Raymond Suttner: Understanding contemporary South Africa requires careful study
No matter how shocking the evidence of corruption in contemporary South Africa may be Continue reading
Zapiro cartoon on anniversary of Rivonia trial
Greg Marinovich on Farlam commission: obstacles in the way of arriving at truth on Marikana massacre
Raymond Suttner, Nelson Mandela as a model of manhood
Whereas earlier studies of gender concentrated on women, recent decades have seen a flourishing of literature on masculinities, Continue reading
Raymond Suttner, Why grieve over Mandela’s imminent passing?
I try to understand why I am so upset about Mandela’s imminent passing. Continue reading
Phumi Mtetwa, It is thanks to the bill of rights that the rainbow flag can fly proudly over the rainbow nation
Nic Dawes, Mandela:the long goodbye
Nelson Mandela. Short documentary done by Nelson Mandela Foundation
I think this film gives some sense of Mandela’s life Continue reading
Michael Neocosmos, ‘From Peoples’ Politics to State Politics: Aspects of National Liberation in South Africa’
An important article on the displacement of popular power and the UDF from the mid 1980s onwards. It is a chapter in Adebayo O. Olukoshi (ed), The Politics of Opposition in Contemporary Africa. Nordic Africa Institute. 1998.
The significance of the Agang launch
It is hard not to be impressed watching on television and now reading the speech of Dr Mamphela Ramphele at Agang’s launch.
How much weight to we place on a speech? Continue reading
Agang is not COPE
Inevitably commentators are comparing Agang with COPE (Justice Malala, today, Saturday on ENCA). Continue reading
Text of speech of Dr Mamphela Ramphele at launch of Agang
Text of speech of Dr Mamphela Ramphele at launch of Agang
I do not know whether this is word for word as she delivered it because she did not speak with notes
Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu endorses the formation of Agang
Agang presents meaningful alternative vision
What I found most impressive about Mamphela Ramphele’s speech launching Agang was its broad sweep, for the first time for very long, we heard someone give a ‘state of the nation’ and a sense that what is going on, terrible and systematic as it is, is not inevitable. We are not doomed to have monies stolen that could provide health care and education, brutality and violence need no longer be celebrated. The constant theme is that 20 years is too long to wait and in fact much of what could have been done to better the lives of the poor has been embezzled by public representatives and their friends. I do not myself know whether Agang will translate its message into electoral inroads, but one thing is clear, and that is that it does present an alternative that is meaningful. I personally do not see electoral reform as so significant a factor as Ramphele does, but that is a detail. The overall vision is if one thinks of it, the only political vision that we are now being offered. Agang is breaking the mould where politics is no longer about wealth, positions or point scoring. This launch was a very important political event, not because of numbers or what numbers may come to support Agang, but because it took the current shameful and shameless ANC head on and presented a meaningful alternative. It may change the shape of SA politics
Aninka Claassens, Imposed tribal boundaries lock democracy out
Tara Weinberg, Rural people remain in limbo waiting for CLaRA’s replacement
John Hoffman, Multiculturalism
Ch 1multiculturalismjohnhoffmanIntroduction 1Ch 2Ch 3Ch 4Ch 5
See entry on John Hoffman Transcendal Atheism for biographical details. To download these chapters, click on the link and then go to your download folder and click on the 5 chapters and introduction.
Raymond Suttner, entry on Joe Slovo, Dictionary of African Biography, 2012
Raymond Suttner, Popular Justice in South Africa today, June 1986 (Unpublished)
Note: there are two separate links to be clicked on, one for the text and the other for the endnotes
This was a seminar paper, prepared for the University of the Witwatersrand, in June 1986, just before I was rearrested for a further 27 months. Continue reading