The Faces and Phases of Inkosi Albert Luthuli: Reflections

Authors

Puleng Segalo, University of South Africa; Tinyiko Chauke, University of South Africa; Mfaniseni Wiseman Mbatha, University of Zululand; Sibangilizwe Maphosa, Midlands State University, Zimbabwe; Vitus Nanbigne, University of Cape Coast, Ghana; Rivonia Naidu, University of South Africa; Akhona Ndzuta, University of South Africa; Raymond Suttner, University of South Africa; Keaobaka Tsholo, University of Johannesburg; Siphamandla Zondi, University of Johannesburg

Keywords:

Human Rights, Struggle History, African Leadership

Synopsis

Inkosi Albert Luthuli had a long and distinguished career as a leader in the South African freedom struggle and occupies an important place in the country’s history as an advocate of Christian (liberation) theology. There is a growing field of knowledge creation exploring the relevance of his
leadership in people’s understanding of historical development in South Africa. Luthuli espoused the values and principles of Batho Pele through his moral and ethical leadership, serving as a transformative leader embedded in the philosophy of ubuntu.

Luthuli’s life, intellectual and religious philosophies and orientations need to be applied as a lens to comment on historical and contemporary socioeconomic and political issues in South Africa. It is crucial to approach Luthuli’s life in a holistic manner so that people can consider his multiple
identities and learn lessons relevant to their positions within society (as community leaders, religious leaders, political actors, scholars, social justice activists and above all as citizens). This will help them to understand the many layers of injustice and inequality plaguing South African society today.
Such an undertaking would require an effort to de-normalise multiple layers of power structures in cultivating knowledge, including racial, gender and epistemic barriers.

This book combines a set of 12 chapters by various contributors that offer insights into diverse aspects of Luthuli’s life, and his relevance for contemporary South Africa(ns).

Print Book: ISBN: 978-1-77615-194-3

E-book: e-ISBN: 978-1-77615-195-0

CONTENTS

About the Contributors vii

Foreword  - Prince Mangosuthu Buthelezi                                                               x

Preface - Raymond Suttner                                                                                     xii

CHAPTER 1

Inkosi Albert Luthuli, an Expanded Legacy: Book Overview                             1

Puleng Segalo and Tinyiko Chauke

CHAPTER 2

The Afterlife of Inkosi Albert Luthuli: Discourse, Memory and Legacy               18

Siphamandla Zondi and Keaobaka Tsholo

CHAPTER 3

Reflections of the Life of Inkosi Albert Luthuli in the Anti-Colonial Films of Africa 32

Vitus Nanbigne

CHAPTER 4

Disputing South African Cultural Diplomacy                                                         44

Akhona Ndzuta

CHAPTER 5 

Building Solidarities: A Tale of Two Fathers                                                         56

Rivonia Naidu

CHAPTER 6

The Transcending Judas Iscariot Episode: On Being a Black Woman in

Post-Apartheid South Africa                                                                                   70

Tinyiko Chauke

CHAPTER 7

On Inkosi Albert Luthuli, Land, Wellbeing and Identity                                        81

Puleng Segalo

CHAPTER 8                                                                                                            92

Landless and Homeless in South Africa: A Call for Social Justice in the Post-Apartheid Era

Mfaniseni Wiseman Mbatha

CHAPTER 9

Reflections on Inkosi Albert Luthuli and Black Liberation Theology:

In Conversation with Itumeleng Mosala                                                                103

Puleng Segalo

CHAPTER 10

Morena ke morena ka batho: Future Leaders and Transformative Leadership

in South Africa                                                                                                        113

Puleng Segalo and Wiseman Mbatha

CHAPTER 11                                                                                                          128

The Legacy of Chief Albert Luthuli’s Soft Power, Servant-Leadership and Pragmatic Leadership in the Struggle against Apartheid

Sibangilizwe Maphosa

CHAPTER 12

Editors in Conversation: Reflecting on the Journey                                             140

Puleng Segalo and Tinyiko Chauke

INDEX                                                                                                                          147

Author Biographies

Puleng Segalo, University of South Africa

Puleng Segalo is a professor of psychology currently holding the position of the Chief Albert Luthuli Research Chair at the University of South Africa (Unisa). Her areas of specialization include Community Psychology, Social Psychology and Gender and Feminism in Psychology. Her research work and publications cover a wide range of areas including gendered experiences of women in various aspects of life, Historical trauma, Critical Participatory Research Practices, and Visual Methodologies. She is an NRF rated scholar.

Tinyiko Chauke, University of South Africa

Tinyiko Chauke is a Postdoctoral Fellow in the Albert Luthuli Research Chair at the University of South Africa. She holds a Doctoral degree in Psychology from the University of South Africa. She approaches research using a social justice and an Afrikanist perspective that aims to challenge and disrupt the conventional scientific analysis of African communities. Her work draws on stories and personal narratives as valuable contributions to communities’ social constructions of identities and belonging. Her research interests include histories of feminist and gender studies in the African diaspora, gender transformation and justice, engaged scholarship in Higher education as a liberating act, Decolonial and finally Afrocentric research methodologies.

Mfaniseni Wiseman Mbatha, University of Zululand

Mfaniseni Wiseman Mbatha is currently doing his PhD in the Department of Development Studies at the University of Zululand. He worked as a researcher in the Chief Albert Luthuli Research Chair at the University of South Africa. His research interest revolves around rural development, rural agriculture, food security, local economic development, rural migration, women empowerment and community engagement.

Sibangilizwe Maphosa, Midlands State University, Zimbabwe

Sibangilizwe Maphosa currently works as a Lecturer in the Department of Applied Psychology at Midlands State University, Gweru, Zimbabwe. He teaches and supervises dissertations at both undergraduate and post graduate levels. He is a Faculty of Social Sciences Committee member for Quality Assurance for Teaching and Learning. He specializes in Community Psychology, Health Psychology and Research Psychology. He is also a part time Lecturer in the Faculty of Medicine in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Sciences. His primary interests are in reconciliation, constructions and experiences of trauma and trauma recovery. His work also focuses on understanding violence, peacemaking and peacebuilding, trauma in context, victim empowerment and trauma support.

Vitus Nanbigne, University of Cape Coast, Ghana

Vitus Nanbigne is a lecturer in Film Studies at the Department of Theatre and Film Studies of the University of Cape Coast, in Ghana. He teaches Film History, Film Theory, Screenwriting, and Film Production, with a particular interest in discourses around African Cinema. He is a graduate of the Ghana Institute of Journalism and the National Film and Television Institute, where he obtained Diplomas in Journalism and Film Directing respectively. He also holds an MPhil and a PhD in Media and Film Studies from the University of Bergen, Norway. His doctoral thesis focused on a conception of national cinema in Ghana. Dr. Nanbigne’s research interests also cover aspects of theatre and communication studies. He was the Head of his department from 2015 to 2018, a co-editor of Asemka, a journal published by the Faculty of Arts, University of Cape Coast, and the Chairman of the Faculty of Arts Public Lecture Series for eight years. He is currently on the Editorial Boards of Journal of African Cinemas, Kente- Cape Coast Journal of Literature and the Arts, and THE PARNASSUS, University of Uyo Journal of Cultural Research.

Rivonia Naidu, University of South Africa

Rivonia Naidu is a communications professional with a multifaceted skill-set that includes a passion for writing, editing, photography and content creation, specifically for digital media. She has 15 years of experience in mainstream news media and large organisations, including the higher education landscape. She is a holder of an Honours Degree in Gender Studies and a MA degree in Communication Science of which her dissertation was focused on aspects of South African history, apartheid, colonisation, decolonisation, and feminism.

Akhona Ndzuta, University of South Africa

Akhona Ndzuta is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Chief Albert Luthuli Research Chair, which is at the University of South Africa (UNISA). She researches cultural management and public policy as they relate to South African music. Her focal areas are the labour conditions of South African music practitioners, music and cultural diplomacy, cultural entrepreneurship, and South African cultural policy foundations and processes. Over the past decade, she has taught courses in musicology, ethnomusicology, arts administration, and other cultural studies modules at various universities. She holds a PhD from The Ohio State University and was a contributing editor to the 2021 book Culture and Liberation Struggle in South Africa: From Colonialism to Post-Apartheid.

Raymond Suttner, University of South Africa

Raymond Suttner is an Emeritus Professor at UNISA.  He holds BA, LLB, LLM degrees from the University of Cape Town and an inter-disciplinary PhD from the University of the Witwatersrand, in sociology, history and political studies.  He has published extensively on Chief Luthuli as well as a range of other topics.  His books include The ANC underground, Recovering democracy in South Africa and Inside Apartheid’s Prison, 2 ed, 2017.   He has taught or held research positions at numerous universities.  He is a former political prisoner, spending over 11 years in prison or house arrest for public and underground activities.

Keaobaka Tsholo, University of Johannesburg

Keaobaka Tsholo is a junior researcher at the Institute of Pan-African Conversation & Thought at the University of Johannesburg. He is also a research freelancer, translator, and Academic YouTuber (5 Past History with Keaobaka Tsholo). His research interests include governance, apartheid transition, and liberation movements. He holds a BSoc in Political Science & International Relations (Cum Laude), Hons in International Relations (Research obtained Cum Laude). Mr Tsholo is currently pursuing an M.A. in History with a focus on Bophuthatswana’s participation in the Transitional Negotiation Processes focusing on Bantustans and Decolonisation from 1990-1994.

Siphamandla Zondi, University of Johannesburg

Siphamandla Zondi is with the Department of Politics and International Relations and the Institute for Pan-African Thought & Conversation at the University of Johannesburg, South Africa. He chairs the South African BRICS Think Tank. His latest edited book entitled African Voices in search a Decolonial Turn was published in 2021 by HSRC Press. He is editor of the International Journal of African Renaissance Studies, African Journal of Political Science, and the Journal of BRICS Studies. His research interests are connected by his focus on decolonising knowledge, being and power. 

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Sepia photo in the veld of kneeling Albert Luthuli in a white shirt, hand on chin, with yellow capital letters for main book title, and white lettering above and below. The 2 editors' names are below in small yellow & outlined lettering.

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June 14, 2024

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