This
story on BBC Magazine brings to light a woman who has been too long forgotten even
in her homeland, but at last Nokutela Mdima Dube
is getting the attention and credit she deserves for the work she did
on behalf of her nation.
As
the first wife of John Dube,
the founder of what would become the African National Congress, she
is every bit as important in the development of modern South Africa
as her husband and the men who came after him like Nelson Mandela.
Nokutela
was born in 1873 in Inanda, Kwa-Zulu Natal, and educated at the
Inanda Seminary, founded by the American Board of Missions in 1869. Inanda also has
links to Mohandas Gandhi and is located in the beautiful Valley of a Thousand Hills.
Inanda early buildings, www.ulwazi.org |
Teachers at the Seminary who would have known Nokutela, www.ulwazi.org |
After
teaching at the Seminary herself for several years, Nokutela travelled to
the United States where she received further training at the Union
Missionary Training Institute in Brooklyn, New York, specialising in
Home Economics and Music. Together
with her husband she authored A Zulu Song Book published in 1911 and
helped to popularise the national song of Africa, Nkosi Sikelel’iAfrika
The
couple received no local support for their work in helping with
African education, so they travelled many times to the United Sates
to gather finances for their projects, modelled on those of Booker T.Washington, founder of the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. While her husband John
would speak about his plans to lift up his people, Nokutela would
dazzle audiences with her amazing singing voice that included click
songs and piano playing.
Sadly,
her private life turned sour because she remained childless at a time when it was considered a shame for an African woman to be unable to
have children. Her husband took a second wife with whom he had several.
Nokutela died of a kidney complaint aged 44 in 1917 and was buried in an
umarked grave in Johannesburg under a number and the
derogatory term of “Christian Kaffir”. In 2013 her grave was fully restored.
Professor
Cherif Keita is an academic involved in giving Nokutela her rightful
place in history and he has made a TV documentary about her. He says:
Nokutela’s courage, self-sacrifice and leadership were a great source of inspiration to many in her lifetime … an extraordinary African woman and pioneer, whose name, because of a cruel irony of biology (she could not bear children) and injustice of human history (colonialism/apartheid and the patriarchal system was so dominant at the time), was wiped out of our collective memory.
Click here to see the moving trailer to Professor Keita’s documentary, and below is the poem by the South African author Don Mattera that he mentions in this article about Dube and Mandela and that is also relevant to Nokutela.
Remember
Remember to call at my grave
When freedom finally
Walks the land
So that I may rise
To tread familiar paths
To see broken chains
Fallen prejudice
Forgotten injury
Pardoned pains.
And when my eyes have filled their sight
Do not run away from fright
If I crumble to dust again.
It will only be the bliss
Of a long-awaited dream
That bids me rest
When freedom finally walks the land.
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