![]() ![]() What it comes down to is whether or not you value Daily Maverick. Think of us in terms of your daily cappuccino from your favourite coffee shop. We don’t dictate how much we’d like our readers to contribute.īUT maybe R200 of that R1,050 could go to the journalism that’s fighting for the country? Don’t get us wrong, we’re almost exclusively fuelled by coffee. After all, how much you value our work is subjective (and frankly, every amount helps). At R200, you get it back in Uber Eats and ride vouchers every month, but that’s just a suggestion. A little less than a week’s worth of cappuccinos. We can't survive on hope and our own determination. Our country is going to be considerably worse off if we don’t have a strong, sustainable news media. If you’re rejigging your budgets, and it comes to choosing between frothy milk and Daily Maverick, we hope you might reconsider that cappuccino. ![]() Programme for the funeral of #ANC deputy secretary general Jessie Duarte /o0ZbHjp6Yd Join Maverick Insider.įamily, friends and political leaders honour the memory. Mourners moments before Jessie Duarte is laid to rest on 17 July 2022. Ramaphosa designated Duarte’s funeral as a Special Official Funeral Category 2. Read in Daily Maverick : ANC’s Jessie Duarte has died Politics and activism Others who spoke at the ceremony included Duarte’s granddaughter Kirstin Whitley Duarte’s brother Zane Dangor, who was the family representative ANC Treasurer-General Paul Mashatile and Gauteng Premier David Makhura. When growing up in the township of Newclare, Johannesburg, Duarte was surrounded by a family that valued ideas and books, said Whitley. This was the root of the activism that would later lead her to become involved in the black consciousness movement. Gauteng Premier David Makhura ( left) stands beside Paul Mashatile in ANC scarf, second left) and Cyril Ramaphosa (third from left) as they join in the performance of the Islamic funeral prayer. “By 1979, she already played a leading role in the women’s movement under the mentorship of Mam’ Albertina Sisulu,” said Whitley.Īfter the ANC was unbanned in 1990, Duarte was among those at the forefront of rebuilding the party, serving as Nelson Mandela’s special assistant between 19. A woman wipes her eye as the convoy carrying Jessie Duarte’s body passes her, en route to the West Park Cemetery. “ learnt the politics of liberation from leaders like Mama Albertina Sisulu, Oom Beyers Naudé and Madiba,” said Ramaphosa. Qualities that she was to pass on to future generations of activists.” “From them she imbibed the qualities of revolutionary leadership - qualities that she was to demonstrate in every position she occupied. Passionate about non-racialism, Duarte was quick to remind her fellow ANC members when the party was failing to uphold this principle, said Makhura. President Cyril Ramaphosa leaves the Duarte residence en route to the West Park Cemetery. “As we talk about renewal, the work we do everywhere else, this fundamental question that Comrade Jessie would have wanted to be put in the forefront of everything we do. Non-racialism is something we must continue to fight for,” he said. Mashatile described Duarte as someone with whom there was “no surrender”, adding, “All of you who know her know, she fights. When she believes in an idea, she fights.” Bathabile Dlamini (right) and Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma leave Jessie Duarte’s Johannesburg house as they make their way to the West Park Cemetery. Said Ramaphosa: “As we worked with her, some of us got to realise the truism in the saying, ‘Dynamite comes in small packages’. ![]()
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