---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: matankana mothapo <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, Mar 17, 2010 at 10:34 AM
Subject: [CWU Media Release] CWU RESPONSE ON SINGING OF A SONG ‘DUBULA
AMABHUNU BY ANCYL PRESIDENT JULIUS MALEMA
To: [email protected]


*CWU RESPONSE ON SINGING OF A SONG ‘DUBULA AMABHUNU BY ANCYL PRESIDENT
JULIUS MALEMA*



*17 March 2010*



The Communication Workers Union (CWU) is disturbed by the ongoing
opportunism and grandstanding by the irritant group - AfriForum and certain
reactionary white elements as a result of a revolutionary song sung by
African National Congress Youth League (ANCYL) President Cde Julius Malema,
during a student Rally at the University of Johannesburg, Doornfontein
campus.



The equation of the song ‘*Dubula amaBhunu’* into hate speech or incitation
of racial violence is the worse form of political blackmail. For us struggle
songs form part of our heritage and tell a tale of what our kitchen mothers
and garden boy fathers went through under apartheid. Revolutionary songs
continue to keep the fire going in the community struggles of Balfour,
Diepsloot and students in lecture halls fighting for free education and
abolishment of Afrikaans as a medium of instruction at University of Free
State.



Liberation songs continue to be sung and inspire our people in the many
ongoing class struggles to deepen our struggle for a better life for all,
radical and faster delivery of services, and are sung in many of our
commemorative and celebratory occasions in honour of our struggle heroes and
those who paid the supreme price for us to be free.



These songs like *‘Uthi sixolele kanjani, amaBhunu abulala uChris Hani’,
‘uMshin Wam’, ‘Ilenja uBotha, kanye nalenja uMalan’*, are part of the
collective memory of our struggle, part of the collective culture of that
struggle, and they continue to play an important mobilisational tool role in
the ongoing worker and community struggles. Those who are opposed to the
song should be reminded of the profound statement by the late President of
the ANC Cde Oliver Tambo ‘*a country that forgets its history is doomed to
repeat it*’.



As CWU, we call on AfriForum and other like-minded disgruntled individuals
to drop their hate speech charge on the song by ANC YL President Malema. The
focus and debate should be centred on whether ‘*Die Stem*’ is still relevant
to be part of our National Anthem given its originality and the role it
played for allegiance during the apartheid days.



Contact:



*Matankana Mothapo*

*Communication Workers Union*

*National Spokesperson – 082 759 0900*



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-- 
Kind regards

Vincent Masoga
073 513 7705
083 406 9619
facebook.com/Masoga.

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