South African Activist to Keynote Martin Luther King Jr. Events
Friday, December 8, 2000
A keynote speech by World Bank managing director Dr. Mamphela
Ramphele, a day of student-led events and a sermon by the former
U.S. ambassador to South Africa will highlight observances of the
Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. next month at Duke University.
The university's Jan. 12-15 celebration of the slain civil rights
leader's birthday will focus on South Africa and the "three R's" --
remembrance, reconciliation and restitution -- which have emerged
as the country has worked to come to terms with its apartheid
past.
Organizers of the 12th annual Duke commemoration have added a
subtitle to the events this year: "Without truth, no healing;
without forgiveness, no future." The phrase, which emerged from the
work of South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission, is
meant to serve as a motto for the university's ongoing efforts to
build community on campus and beyond.
The goal of this year's commemoration is to offer a fresh look at
race in America by looking at how South Africa is working to face
its own racially divided history, said Duke Divinity School Dean L.
Gregory Jones, who is chairman of the planning committee. The
series of events will address several recurring themes, including:
memory as a potential burden and source of healing; the promises
and perils of forgiveness and reconciliation; and the ongoing
debate about the appropriateness of offering economic restitution
or other reparations to victims of racial injustice.
Ramphele, 53, who was appointed as one of The World Bank's four
managing directors earlier this year, has faced those issues
throughout her life. She will offer a reflection during her 4 p.m.
address on Sunday, Jan. 14, in Duke Chapel.
While a medical student at the University of Natal in the late
1960s and early 1970s, Ramphele opposed apartheid and joined the
Black Consciousness Movement led by Steve Biko. She earned her
medical degree in 1972 and began work as a doctor, but was banned
by the white-dominated South African government in 1977 for her
political activism.
Forced to remain in the countryside for six years, she set up a
health clinic and worked with the rural poor -- a job that became
her life's work. Ramphele was four-months pregnant with Biko's
child when she learned of his murder in the custody of South
African police.
In an interview with the Australian Broadcasting Company earlier
this year, Ramphele reflected on those days.
"It was a very difficult time of my life," she said. "I guess if
one were to look at oneself as a piece of metal, I was really going
through the experience of a foundry. And one either comes out of
that searing heat as ash or you come out as steel, and I think I've
been strengthened by that pain."
Ramphele continued to care for rural poor during her banishment,
which was lifted in 1984. Afterward, she joined her country's
academic community, starting as a research fellow at the University
of Cape Town. She earned a Ph.D. in social anthropology in 1991
from the University of Cape Town, becoming known for her research
on life in the migrant workers' hostels and among township children
and adolescents, including the impact of AIDS.
In 1996, Ramphele was named vice chancellor of the University of
Cape Town, making her the first black woman to ever reach that post
-- equivalent to a U.S. college presidency -- in South
Africa.
A book version of Ramphele's doctoral thesis,
A Bed Called
Home: Life in the Migrant Labour Hostels of Cape Town
, was
published in 1993. She co-authored
Bounds of Possibility: The
Legacy of Steve Biko and Black Consciousness in 1992
and
co-edited
Uprooting Poverty: The South African Challenge
in 1989. Her autobiography,
Mamphela Ramphele -- A Life
,
was published in 1997.
In addition to Ramphele's talk on Jan. 14, the Rev. James A.
Joseph, U.S. ambassador to South Africa during Ramphele's tenure as
vice chancellor, will deliver a sermon during the regular Duke
Chapel service. Joseph joined the Duke faculty this fall and is now
splitting teaching duties between Duke's Sanford Institute of
Public Policy and the University of Cape Town.
Duke's commemoration weekend begins on Friday, Jan. 12, with a noon
candlelight vigil in Duke Chapel. That campus-wide event will be
followed at 1:30 p.m. with a panel discussion on King's legacy to
be held in the Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture.
The university has canceled all classes for Monday, Jan. 15, to
enable students to observe the holiday.
Students have scheduled a series of events for the day, including a
discussion with Ramphele, a cultural extravaganza luncheon, a panel
discussion on the history of Duke's role in the civil rights
movement and a film screening. A canned food drive organized by the
students to benefit the Alliance of AIDS Services -- Carolina will
be held at the Saturday, Jan. 13, men's basketball game against the
University of Virginia.
Other related campus events scheduled during the spring semester
include: a Friday, Jan. 19, performance by award-winning poet and
civil rights activist Amiri Baraka in Reynolds Theater; a Monday,
Jan. 29, lecture on "The Rhetoric and Reality of Reconciliation" by
University of Cape Town professor John deGruchy in York Chapel; and
an April 3 lecture by Alex Boraine, vice chairman of the South
African Truth and Reconciliation Commission, sponsored by the Duke
Divinity School and Duke's Kenan Institute for Ethics.
The following events, scheduled Jan. 12-15, are part of the 2001
Martin Luther King Jr. Commemoration Weekend at Duke. All events,
unless otherwise noted, are free and open to the public.
Friday, Jan. 12
Noon to 1 p.m. Candlelight Vigil Service:
Messages
will be offered by the Rev. Michael Battle, Rabbi Bruce Seltzer,
Imam Abdul-hafeez Waheed, Duke President Nannerl O. Keohane and
Duke Divinity School professor Peter Storey, an anti-apartheid
activist, former president of the South African Council of Churches
and one-time prison chaplain to Nelson Mandela. A "Service of
Lights" will conclude the vigil, which is for all Duke employees,
faculty and students. (In Duke Chapel.)
1:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. Student/Faculty Round Table
Discussion:
"A Threat to Justice Anywhere:
Discussing the Role of Reconciliation and Remembrance in a Global
Community."
Duke faculty to discuss the Rev. Martin Luther
King Jr.'s legacy. The scheduled participants are: Chouki El Hamel,
assistant professor of the practice, African &
African-American studies and history; Lee D. Baker, associate
professor, cultural anthropology; and graduate students Katherine
Lambert-Pennington and Elizabeth Shackleford. (In Mary Lou Williams
Center for Black Culture, room 02, West Union.)
3:30 p.m. Film: Screening of "Where the Truth
Lies,"
a South African documentary looking at a South
African police officer and the family of a man he killed.
Discussion and refreshments to follow. (In Mary Lou Williams Center
for Black Culture, room 02, West Union.)
Saturday, Jan. 13
3 p.m. Basketball Food Drive:
Food drive at men's
basketball game against University of Virginia. Food collected by
Duke students will be donated to the Alliance of AIDS Services --
Carolina. (At Cameron Indoor Stadium.)
7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Gospel Concert:
"Lift Every
Voice: A Gospel Concert." Featured groups to include United in
Praise, United Voices of Praise and Mighty Gospel Inspirations.
Readings by Duke students between song selections. (In Duke
Chapel.)
Sunday, Jan. 14
11 a.m. to noon. Duke Chapel Service:
Sermon by
Rev. James A. Joseph, former U.S. ambassador to South Africa and
now a professor in Duke's Sanford Institute for Public Policy and
leader-in-residence of the Hart Leadership Program. Music from
African Sanctus
, performed by the Duke Chapel Choir and
special guests the Shaw University Choir.
4 p.m. to 6 p.m. 12th Annual Service of Celebration and
Commemoration:
Dr. Mamphela Ramphele, managing director of
The World Bank and former president of the University of Cape Town,
will be the keynote speaker. (In Duke Chapel. Reception to follow
in Von Canon Hall, Bryan Center.)
Monday, Jan. 15
9 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. Breakfast and Conversation:
Dr. Mamphela Ramphele will meet with students. (In Mary Lou
Williams Center for Black Culture, room 02, West Union.)
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Youth Program:
Duke students, in
partnership with the Duke Big Brother/Big Sister program, West End
Community Center, St. James Baptist Church and other Durham
organizations, will host Durham children for a day of entertainment
and education. Children will do arts and crafts projects, learn
about Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and see the on-campus Cultural
Extravaganza. (At Duke's Community Service Center, East
Campus.)
1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Cultural Extravaganza and
Luncheon:
Performances and presentations by Duke student
groups, including Dance Black, United in Praise, DIYA Dancers and
others. (In Page Auditorium. A reception, including refreshments
and a performance by a children's choir, will follow in Von Canon
Hall, Bryan Center.)
4 p.m. to 5 p.m. Panel Discussion:
On Duke's role
in the civil rights movement. (In Von Canon Hall, Bryan
Center.)
7:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Performance:
Actors Ruby
Dee and Ossie Davis will perform In Other Words. (In Page
Auditorium.)
The following are related activities throughout the Spring 2001 semester.
-
-
Jan. 11: Pivotal Ideas in World Civilizations
Lecture.
Ebrahim Moosa, visiting associate professor of
religion at Stanford University, author of the forthcoming book
Al-Ghazali of Tus: Life and Thought
, former director of
the Center for Contemporary Islam at the University of Cape Town in
South Africa and a leading figure in his country's Islamic
movement. Part of an ongoing lecture series sponsored by the E.L.
Wiegand Foundation and the Duke Department of Religion. (8 p.m. in
Von Canon Hall, Bryan Center.)
-
Jan. 16: SAFE (Students, Administrators and Faculty for
Equality)
on Campus Kick-Off Celebration. Duke SAFE on
Campus members, Duke President Nannerl O. Keohane and the Duke Blue
Devil will "celebrate a campus climate that is open, safe and
accepting for all members of the Duke community." Remarks to be
made by Keohane, Duke University Police Chief Clarence Birkhead,
Duke Vice President of Institutional Equity Sally Dickson, faculty
from the campus and hospital, as well as members of the SAFE on
Campus advisory board. (Noon - 1 p.m. at room 201, Flowers
Building, and on steps of Duke Chapel.)
-
Jan. 19: Poetry and Music.
Amiri Baraka with
Blue Ark. Baraka, formerly known as LeRoi Jones, is the former
chairman of the Congress of Afrikan People, a Guggenheim Fellowship
recipient and winner of the Pen-Faulkner Poetry Award, the Langston
Hughes medal and the Obie Award for Best American Play. (9 p.m. in
Reynolds Theater, Bryan Center.)
-
Jan. 29. Lecture.
University of Cape Town
professor John deGruchy will discuss "The Rhetoric and Reality of
Reconciliation." Sponsored by the Duke Divinity School. (4 p.m. in
York Chapel.)
-
Feb. 2-17. John Hope Franklin Center for
Interdisciplinary and International Studies Opening
Celebration.
Events running throughout two-week period,
including a grand opening and dedication, exhibition of
African-American art from John Hope Franklin's private collection,
poetry reading by Yvette Christianse, the Anthony Joseph Drexel
Biddle Jr. Lecture on International Studies to be delivered by
former U.S. ambassador to South Africa James A. Joseph and
symposium on race and reconciliation.
-
Feb. 13. Samuel DuBois Cook Society Annual
Dinner.
Lecture by Sheila Sisulu, South African ambassador
to the United States. (Time TBA, Freeman Center for Jewish
Life.)
-
Feb. 22. Pivotal Ideas in World Civilizations
Lecture.
Vine Deloria, a Native American activist, author
of
Custer Died for Your Sins
, and professor of history,
law, political science at the University of Colorado-Boulder. He is
also a former executive director of the National Congress of
American Indians and a member of the National Office for Rights of
the Indigent. Sponsored by the E.L. Wiegand Foundation and the Duke
Department of Religion. (8 p.m. in Page Auditorium.)
-
March 7. Pivotal Ideas in World Civilizations
Performance.
Patricia Williams, a law professor at
Columbia University, and Oliver Lake, a poet and musician, will
present
SKIN
, a performance examining issues around race
and law. Sponsored by the E.L. Wiegand Foundation and the Duke
Department of Religion. (8 p.m. in Reynolds Theater, Bryan Center.
Tickets to this free performance will be required; for more
information call 660-3500.)
-
March. Panel and Question-and-Answer Session.
A panel of scholars representing different communities of color
will discuss "The Impact of the Civil Rights Movement on Different
Communities of Color." Sponsored by Duke's Office of Intercultural
Affairs. (Exact date, time and location TBA.)
-
April 3. Lecture.
Alex Boraine, vice
chairman of the South African Truth and Reconciliation
Commission.
Sponsored by the Duke Divinity School and
Duke's Kenan Institute for Ethics. (Time and location TBA.)
-
April 27-29. Third National Conference on Moral
Education in a Diverse Society.
A gathering of university
and K-12 educators to explore the goals of moral education in the
21st century. Conference themes are: fostering civic renewal;
teaching integrity and responsibility; finding common ground;
honoring differences; learning lessons from the history of moral
education; and overcoming digital/class/race and other divides. The
conference is sponsored by Duke's Kenan Institute for Ethics and
organizations at N.C. Central University, Shaw University and N.C.
State University. (For more information, see
http://kenan.ethics.duke.edu
.)
For more information, contact: Blake Dickinson | (919) 668-6114 | blake.dickinson@duke.edu
