N Dlamini Zuma: International Day of Non-Violence

Address by Foreign Affairs Minister Dr Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma
on the First International Day of Non-Violence, United Nations Headquarters,
New York

2 October 2007

Your Excellency, Ban ki-Moon, Secretary-General of the United Nations
Your Excellency Dr Rose Asha Migiro, Deputy Secretary-General of the United
Nations
Your Excellency, Sonia Gandhi, Leader of the Indian National Congress
Your Excellencies, Ambassadors and permanent representatives to the United
Nations
Distinguished guests
Ladies and gentlemen

It is with great honour and humility that South Africa is participating in
this solemn occasion marking the First International Day of Non-violence. We
are proud to claim Mahatma Gandhi as our own because it is in our country where
he developed and fashioned Satyagraha as a tool of liberation.

A cruel and despicable act of racism in 1893, in which a young barrister was
thrown off a train from Pietermaritzburg, simply because of the colour of his
skin, produced the Mahatma Gandhi that the entire world today claim as theirs.
Indeed as history teaches us heroes are not born but are products of their own
conditions.

His philosophy of non-violence characterised many of the struggles waged by
our people against the system of apartheid. Consequently, for many years our
people resorted to the non-violent forms of opposition to apartheid as a weapon
of struggle.

As late Oliver Tambo, President of the African National Congress noted "The
story of this dignified, disciplined and peaceful campaign of Satyagraha is
well known. It won many friends for the African cause in South Africa and
abroad and served to focus the attention of influential sectors of world
opinion on the South African political scene".

Returning to the country of his birthplace, India, Gandhi continued to use
the philosophy of non-violence. As he himself noted "I wanted to acquaint India
with the method I tried in South Africa and I desired to test in India to the
extent to which its application might be possible".

He continued to be an inspiration among the people of our country long after
his departure. He was aptly described by Nelson Mandela as a "sacred warrior
whose philosophy contributed in no small measure to bringing about the peaceful
transformation in South Africa and in healing the destructive human divisions
that has been spawned by the abhorrent practice of apartheid."

Faced with current global challenges we must necessarily pause and ask the
question, what is the relevance of Gandhi's philosophy in addressing current
challenges facing humanity today?

We want to assert that Gandhi's philosophy is as relevant today in
addressing current challenges facing humanity today including poverty and
under-development, as it was yesterday. We therefore agree with Louis Skweyiya,
a South African Constitutional Court Judge, that Gandhi is a "universal man,
timeless in impact, as relevant today, as he was yesterday, as he will be
tomorrow".

Accordingly, Mahatma Gandhi would have encouraged all of us to resolve all
conflicts through peaceful and non-violent means as has been proven that
violence simply leads to counter violence. Gandhi, to whom we owe our presence
here today, would have warned against the resort to attacks on unarmed and
defenceless civilian populations including women and children to advance
whatever political objectives.

In paying tribute to Gandhi today, we thus communicate the unequivocal
message that unless nations of the world, communities and indeed the United
Nations family claim Satyagraha as their own, peace will most certainly
continue to elude us with dire consequences for all humanity.

Addressing current challenges of poverty and under-development most likely
Gandhi would certainly have lamented the fact that the most poor nations of the
world will not be able to attain the targets set during the Millennium Summit
of 2000 to among others half poverty by 2015 but would have wanted to use the
abundant resources that exist in the world to attain the Millennium Development
Goal (MDGs) and empower the poor.

Gandhi, we would want to believe, would have echoed President Mbeki's view,
that "although the concepts of freedom, justice and equality are globally
accepted and fully embraced by the United Nations, this global organisation has
not itself transformed and designed the necessary institutions of governance
consistent with the noble ideas that drive modern democratic societies".

Accordingly, all of us should not be satisfied with a United Nations system
that reflects mainly the will of powerful nations of the world and like Martin
Luther King Junior declares "we will not be satisfied until justice rolls down
like water and righteousness like a mighty stream".

Let me conclude by going back to the Declaration of International Conference
on Peace, Non-violence and Empowerment 2007 in New Delhi "to pursue truth, to
privilege peace and reject violence in all our activities, to respect diverse
viewpoints, and to practice the philosophy of non-violence to win over the
forces of violence and injustice through tolerance, empathy and love.

I thank you

Enquiries:
Ronnie Mamoepa
Cell: 082 990 4853

Issued by: Department of Foreign Affairs
2 October 2007

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