Address by the Minister of Arts and Culture, Paul Mashatile, on the occasion of the Wreath Laying Ceremony of OR and Adelaide Tambo and the Official opening of the OR Tambo Narrative Center

Programme Director, MMC Tshongweni
Members of the Tambo family
Ministers and Deputy Ministers here present
Members of Parliament and the Provincial Legislatures
The Executive Mayor of the Ekurhuleni Metro Municipality, Councilor Mondli Gungubele and other Mayors here present
Members of the Mayoral Committees and other Councilors here present
Honoured guests
Ladies and gentlemen
Comrades and friends

Thank you for inviting us to this important event; once more to pay tribute to Comrade President OR Tambo and his beloved wife, our mother and comrade, Mama Adelaide Tambo.

This event, organized as part of OR Tambo Month celebrations, is a fitting tribute to the proud legacy of OR and Adelaide Tambo.

This is a legacy of selfless and dedicated service to the people of South Africa and indeed to all of humanity.

OR and Adelaide Tambo belonged to that generation of freedom fighters who dedicated all their lives towards the goal of a united, non racial, non sexist, democratic and prosperous South Africa, that belongs to all who live in it black and white; a South Africa that is at peace with itself and the world.

This vision of the kind of society we seek to build found expression in the words of OR when he said; “It is our responsibility to break down barriers of division and create a country where there will be neither whites nor blacks, just South Africans free and united in diversity.

These profound words are today the basis of our democratic and progressive Constitution.

Furthermore these words continue to guide the process of reconciliation, social cohesion, nation building, national healing as well as reconstruction and development in our country.

Programme director it is this proud legacy that OR and Adelaide Tambo together with their generation of freedom fighters have left for us.

We therefore take this opportunity to congratulate the Ekhuruleni Metro Municipality for the work they are doing to preserve the legacy of OR and Adelaide Tambo.

This work is in line with initiatives by the Department of Arts and Culture to honour the heroes and heroines of our struggle for national liberation, among them OR Tambo.

As indicated recently by President Zuma we will establish an interpretative centre at the Garden of Remembrance in Nkantolo, the birth place of OR.

This work is expected to begin in April next year.

Next month, will begin with the construction of a statue of OR, the rehabilitation of the Garden of Remembrance and declare the graves at the Garden of Remembrance as a national heritage site.

In January next year, we will begin with the upgrade of the house at which OR was born and turn into a museum, depicting his life and times.

We have also begun discussions with the Department of Public Works to construct a road linking Nkantolo and Bizana.

The Holly Cross Church in Ngquza Hill, where OR was baptised and was a member will also be declared a heritage site.

In September next year, we will have finalized the processes of declaring the graves of OR and Adelaide Tambo, here in Wadevile, as a national heritage site.

Programme director, most of the work we are doing in Nkantolo and many other parts of the country will form part of the national liberation heritage route project.

Through this project, we will document and tell the stories of sites and individuals that are of significance to our struggle for national liberation.

The OR Tambo Narrative Center, that we are today officially opening, is an important addition to the work we are doing to honour the heroes and heroines of our liberation struggle. We take this opportunity to call on other municipalities to work with us to preserve our country’s liberation heritage as part of our broader cultural heritage.

In particular, municipalities must prioritise investment in the preservation of their local heritage.

Municipalities must do this not only to promote reconciliation, social cohesion and healing at local level, but also to take advantage of the benefits of heritage preservation as a catalyst for local economic development and job creation.

Fellow South Africans, let us continue to draw lessons and inspiration from the lives of OR and Adelaide Tambo.

In particular as directed by OR himself let us work together to “break down barriers of division and create a country where there will be neither whites nor blacks, just South Africans free and united in diversity.

Long live the Spirit of OR Tambo.

Thank you.

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