Wednesday, June 15, 2022

USA Africa Dialogue Series - ED‹SIGHT & LIGHT‹Re: Professor Paul Zeleza to Interview President Thabo Mbeki



Oloruntoyin, 
Wonderful. 
Paul's words and thoughts are always 
Informative and uplifting. 
Mbeki is in good hands. 
I look forward to attending. 

And for you, dear boy, 
The penetration/ extension/ depth and Force 
of your Message continues, 
Wave upon wave, 
As our Small boys, 
Do battle within the ever tightening  grip 
Of the coils of oligarchy verging ever closer to full-blown Tyranny. 

For them, they have long lost their way, 
Intellect and Ideology have vanished. 
They flounder on in a world of surging fears in 
Our current ever-deeper Crucibles of Uncertainty. 

We here in UK are feeling the rising heat as Boris and his bemused followers, 
fall fully back into those realms of "Savage Infancy” we know so well. 
 
Little do they know
--Nor in the Great Anguish of their current condition and status, can they. 

Even for the likes of you and me—and we know well those many Thousands, maybe Millions who share precisely in our viscera the acuteness of that heart pain of Descending Despair—; even we while feeling now the impact of these Life-Threatening Realities of which long ago we were made aware; this Era of Fear, Uncertainty/ of Desperation and Despair, was well on its way towards its Reality we are feeling, and indeed  most of the rest of this world's folk are feeling, with growing intensity now. 

Our advantage? 

We saw it coming. And the form and force with which it would manifest itself. 

And we saw, with the help of our modern See-ers like Johnny McMurtry, arguably our world's Greatest/ most Insightful/ impactful Social Philosopher of this our current era—recently and sadly derparted—the context out of which Great Light once again would emerge. Indeed that these Ephemera of Angsts, were but one of the many similar challenges with which we shall be faced, as oligarchs of the future are themselves increasingly forced to provide guidance on varying Emergent Restoration Paths. Indeed, those Rulers who see only Greed and Darkness now; their Successors will be our new/ evolved Great Carriers of Light. (See, Vickers, On Wings of Light, “Evolving African Governments That Work: Research, Development and Future Horizon”). 

I need not point to history, and to the modest but very clear Paths of Traverse that our various Africa Peoples have passed through in their often repeat Challenges with the Waves of Life Evolving. 

What has happened in life long past, we in the Modern World are now facing in the Realities of the present. 

And we have our guides.  And they include many of those who in past eras have provided the "Lode Star" guidance that has taken us on the short passage of the 10,000 years or so of "Socially Ordered Groups" that we extraordinary, brilliantly gifted creatures, have negotiated on the way to our current hard-trammeled present.

We do well to remember tis but a very brief photo-shot, in a continuum of millions that constitutes the passage of 4.6 billion years, that we are assured by our Astro-Physicists was the point of origin by whatever means, of our Planet we call Earth. 

When we tune in on Sunday, to the words and thoughts of President Mbeki, who for many difficult and turbulent years, was engaging battle with the hard-tightening coils of Life Realities in post-Mandela South Africa; and to the words and observations of Paul Zeleza, a "Professor of Human Light & World Living Realities" of which I have often spoken; we shall have the opportunity to discover much of what our current local and world Life Challenges offer, vibrant and a-fresh. 

All best, 

 Baba m


-------------------------------

Sent from my iPad


On 14/06/2022, 03:19, "Toyin Falola" <toyinfalola@austin.utexas.edu> wrote:

https://www.premiumtimesng.com/opinion/536790-thabo-mbeki-celebrating-80-years-of-impactful-living-by-toyin-falola.html

Thabo Mbeki: Celebrating 80 Years of Impactful Living

 

Toyin Falola

 

 

I was honoured to deliver the 12th Thabo Mbeki Africa Day Lecture on "The Africa Union at 20" a couple of weeks ago. In a few days, on June 19, 2022, President Thabo Mbeki will be our guest on an edition of The Toyin Falola Interviews. Interestingly, that will be a day after his 80th birthday. Among my friends and people I highly revere, President Thabo Mbeki will be the newest to join the Octogenarian Club. Not every human is privileged to witness eighty years on earth. Beyond witnessing, only a few people have had the opportunity to have experienced the kind of life Thabo Mbeki has enjoyed. And even fewer of that age range can claim to have had as many impacts and influence as the second President of South Africa has had, not only in his home country, South Africa but also on the African continent and the world at large.

In human societies, the idea of change is an often-romanticised concept. While we love the concept of change, especially if it is positive or neutral, we are not always openly receptive to it when it happens to us. We shy away from it and are sometimes all-attacking on the harbinger of change, especially if it involves someone we love and idolise. Just as high school students would give a hard time to a new teacher employed as a replacement for their retired favourite teacher is the way the people of a country would give a hard time to the successor of their favourite president and idol. President Thabo Mbeki was faced with a somewhat similar situation. Having succeeded South Africa's most-revered, idolised, and loved president, Nelson Mandela, anyone would be right to think that President Mbeki's administration would face huge criticisms and attacks. Truly, it faced criticisms and attacks, even from within the inner circles of the party. Nonetheless, his governance and significant contributions to the Pan-African state prove that a country may have more than one impactful hero and revered national in succession.

Thabo Mbeki is a full-blooded Pan-Africanist. He was born into the African National Congress, the South African political party that has been solely responsible for producing the country's presidents since independence. President Mbeki's father was a vocal and influential member of the African National Congress, and young Thabo spent his childhood learning the party's values, ideals, culture, and norms. As he grew older, he became more familiar with the ideals and struggles of the party. Being a member of the most notable party opposing the apartheid government and its system in the country, Thabo Mbeki had a first-hand experience of what his people were made to go through. He saw how his people were considered anti-people, dangerous, and dissenting in their home country! Thus, from an early age, Mbeki learned to associate with his people, identify himself with them, and join them in fighting for their cause.

The African National Congress can never forget Mbeki's strategic and diplomatic roles in shaping the party's social proof and acceptability. Mbeki's activism as a party member was on an intellectual and diplomatic front. He championed the intellectual battle against the apartheid government with other countries worldwide. Thanks to Mbeki and his contributions to the party, the injustices of the apartheid government got more international media coverage, drawing the attention of other nations to the plights of the indigenous South Africans and the need to put an end to the apartheid system in the country. Using his skills and experience, Mbeki was one of the African National Congress' bulwarks, pre-and post-1990.

Although President Mbeki spent his early adult life at a university in England, he returned home in time to witness the lifting of the ban on the activist African National Congress party. Furthermore, he continued to commit more of his time and energy to the party, which saw him rise through the ranks, becoming the Deputy President of the African National Congress Party in 1994. Thus, it was not a surprise when he emerged as South Africa's first Deputy President to Nelson Mandela. In his capacity as Deputy President, Thabo Mbeki was not a ceremonial office holder like the average Vice or Deputy President. He was both Deputy President and Prime Minister, seeing to the day-to-day of the South African government. If the Mandela-led South African government were a company, Mandela would have been the Chief Executive Officer or Board Chairman, and Thabo Mbeki the Chief Operations Officer. Such was his involvement in the government of his predecessor.

President Mbeki helped institutionalise some memorable policies during the Mandela government, which he continued to uphold during his governance. He played a participatory and important role in the first post-apartheid government, resulting in his appointment as the President of the African National Congress in 1997. His emergence as the president of the country's most influential political party also meant his eventual nomination as the unopposed presidential candidate of the party. President Mbeki became the second President of South Africa in 1999, with Jacob Zuma as his Deputy. As President, Mbeki proved that his election to power was not a waste. He deployed strategies that helped the South African economy grow and become a fertile ground for home-based and foreign investors. Undeniably, one of the best governments, if not the best, that South Africa has ever witnessed was that of Mbeki. There was a drastic drop in the nation's debt and budget deficit, and President Mbeki also championed economic growth—not through unrealistic leaps and bounds but consistent and growth-focused measures.

During his time in government, Mbeki proved his Pan-African spirit to the core. He further developed and supported the Black Economic Programme, and some of his policies were considered socio-democratic because they were citizen-focused. However, no human is without enemies, and no one is perfect. Even within his innermost circle, Mbeki had his fair share of hatred, hostility, and conspiracy. Although he was the most qualified to lead the country, and he made several propositions and introduced life-improving policies, internal crises in his party that were fundamentally about his deviation from so-called extremist socialist views led to his removal from the position of the party president.

President Mbeki also had a rough time with Jacob Zuma, who was supposed to be his Deputy and right-hand man. Zuma, who became the country's fourth president, had corruption  cases and clues that he was involved in shady business in government. As a principled man, Mbeki would have none of that. Things escalated to the extent that Mbeki removed Zuma from office and replaced him with Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, South Africa's first female Deputy President. The choice of a female replacement for Jacob Zuma proves that Thabo Mbeki is a leader who ranks competence, skills, and experience above biases like ethnicity and gender. His choice of Ngcuka as his Deputy opened the door for the participation of more women in high-ranking political positions in the country, seeing as the next Deputy President was also female.

Mbeki's replacement of Jacob Zuma further aggravated the issues that his party leaders had with him. As a result, his second term in office was cut short because they pressured him to resign. Anyone who has followed the turn of things in South Africa will agree that forcing Mbeki to resign was a mistake.

Mbeki is a Pan-Africanist committed to the revival of Africa without looking back, despite a forceful and bad outing from governance. He has contributed to democracy and Pan-Africanism through thought-provoking lectures and books. Also, Mbeki was instrumental to South Africa's swift rise to become one of Africa's most recognised states, as he championed several Africa-facing policies at a continental level. His other contributions to the continent and the world include the Thabo Mbeki Foundation, the Thabo Mbeki School, and the Thabo Mbeki Presidential Library. Through these, Mbeki furthers his beliefs in and advocacy for an African renaissance. No human is infallible. President Mbeki's government had its downsides; however, casting our reminiscent thoughts about South Africa during Mbeki's tenure reveals nothing short of a strategic economic and political foundation and expansion.

For all the good he has done, the kind of life he has led, his convictions, and his Pan-Africanism, I felicitate President Thabo Mbeki on the occasion of his 80th year on earth! Please join us for a conversation with President Thabo Mvuyelwa Mbeki

 

Sunday, June 19, 2022

5:00 PM South Africa

4:00 PM Nigeria

3:00 PM GMT

10:00 AM Austin CST

 

Register and Watch:

https://www.tfinterviews.com/post/thabo-mbeki


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