On Monday I wrote a blog post about the statue of John Cecil
Rhodes at the University of Cape Town (UCT). Some students and staff wants it
removed.
These feelings have now spread to our university but not to
our campus. At Howard College Campus in Durban the statue of King George V has
been defaced. I read about on News 24. But it also came a message from the
University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN).
The Executive Director: Corporate Relations of the UKZN had
issued a communique and says amongst other things:
The University of KwaZulu-Natal is deeply saddened and disappointed by the group of protestors who chose not to raise their concerns regarding the King George V statue through the proper channels established within UKZN. The University supports the students’ rights to exercise lawful freedom of expression and encourages open debate and discussion …….. The University will convene an urgent naming committee meeting to review the status-quo of all statues on all our campuses.
The more I think about it, the more I understand that this
is a tough question. I don’t support the idea, that old statues must be
smashed. I think that a society needs to be aware of its history. At the same
time it is offensive that leaders, who were – even by the standards of that
time – oppressive, should be taking up the central stage, as in this case right
outside the main building of a university campus.
The idea to move rather than remove statues is a good one.
By doing this the community will admit that even those persons are part of the
history, but they will be given a less honourable space to occupy.
The question is: where does one find such a space?
John Cecil Rhodes has been compared to Hitler, Stalin, Khmer
Rouge’s Pol Pot and Idi Amin. Would any society want to have one of them as a
statue – anywhere?
It is a dilemma. I am glad that the university wants to
engage in debate and discussion.
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