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A SCRIBBLER'S FAREWELL By Asithandile Gxumisa

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To the few and faithful friends who have consistently devoured the many articles I have written over the last three years for their enjoyment and edification, I owe these last and parting words as I intend by the close of this year to draw the curtains on this lowly and short-lived career of scribbling. At the start, what drew me to this challenging and elevating activity were an abiding personal interest in public affairs and a patriotic desire to contribute in what little way I could to conversations aimed ideally at confronting the troubles and remedying the wrongs that threaten the welfare of our Republic. Be it on the subject of political leadership, or be it on the question of the socio-economic future of the country, or on those metaphysical themes of ethics and religion, I have always stood firmly on behalf of voices long banished from the marketplace of ideas by the near-unanimous judgement of the apostles of the reigning Liberal Order.   Truly, I harbour no grudges again...

GONE TO THE DOGS? By Asithandile Gxumisa

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  From an old and retired village located in an obscure and tranquil corner of South Africa, I have caught wind of a rumour as disconcerting as it is praevalent, to wit: ‘South Africa has gone to the dogs”. Tidings of a gloomy and melancholic turn, and this rumour happens precisely to be of that kind, are such as customarily feed my deep and imperishable pessimism. Yet a part of me, that of a patriot deeply and infinitely in love with everything South African, refuses on this peculiar occasion to gobble up this dreadful and saddening news. Now I do not for one moment doubt, for we are credibly informed, that the fortune of all sublunary Kingdoms and Republics will come to naught eventually, on that great and dolorific Day when the heavens will pass away with a roar and when all souls will marvel at the sign of the Son of Man; but I should like to believe, from purely patriotic motives, that South Africa’s star is auspicious enough to guide her through the troubles and convulsions o...

JACOB ZUMA’S SENTENCE: A CAUSE FOR JOY? By Asithandile Gxumisa

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A curious rumour is doing the rounds in my village that the democratic Republic of South Africa has overnight become an oasis of joys. The things that seem to enkindle the delight of my countrymen of late – from the paternalistic care that Cyril Ramaphosa has so convincingly affected for their general wellness to suffering their country to be run like the personal laboratory of Abdool-Carrim – are something of a phenomenon. Of these things the most recent is the condign misfortune of a Jacob Zuma who has been convicted by our highest court of an “egregious” and “aggravated” contempt of court and condemned to an imprisonment term of just over a year. An African proverb – which may not be translated into the English tongue without robbing it of the essence of its meaning – wisely cautions against the discourteous indiscretion of laughing at another man’s wound. Indeed, I say it is nothing short of astonishing that Jacob Zuma’s conviction and imprisonment should send the generality of m...

BEYOND THE REPUBLIC By Asithandile Gxumisa

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N ot long before the shades of night engulfed the Roman world, men still believed that Rome, the queen of cities, was the Eternal City, almost with the confidence of Etruscan haruspices. Among such men, born about the time when the frontiers of Constantius' dominions were groaning under the feet of hostile barbarians, was Augustine whose illustrious name survived the obscurity of his death and whose fame immortalized the lowly bishopric of Hippo Regius. However, as the great Empire became increasingly a sanguinary scene of misfortunes, of immiseration, and of perpetual intestine convulsions, Augustine was eventually prevailed upon to look elsewhere for permanence. Then there came the fateful event that staggered all Romans out of their romantic dream, that dissolved their pride like butter in a flame, and impelled them headlong into despair: after almost eight centuries of freedom from the ravages of a foreign invasion, in 410 A.D., the Salarian Gates were thrown open and savage G...

EXEMPLARS AT HOWARD: THREE MEN AND TWO WOMEN By Asithandile Gxumisa

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One glorious day two Crabs left their home to take a stroll on the warm sand. "Child," remarked the mother carpingly, "you are walking very ungracefully. You should accustom yourself to walking straight forward without twisting from side to side. "Pray mother," retorted the young one, "do but set the example yourself, and I will follow you."  Example is the best precept : in these aphoristic words did Aesop, to whom this old fable is attributed, express the lesson to be learned from it. As it was with the little Crab, so it is with Men: we live by example. Precepts, however excellent, will not avail much so long as they are not embodied in actual Men. Nowadays splendid precepts abound like peacock butterflies in Spring, but Men to exemplify them are scarcer than rainfall on the Chilean desert of Atacama. It is for this reason that I deem myself to have been so fortunate to have stumbled upon men and women of admirable example at the University ...