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Minister Pallo Jordan on passing away of Professor Es’kia Mphahlele
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28 October 2008
Es’kia [Ezekiel] Mphahlele, doyen of African letters, passed away in
Lebowakgomo, Limpopo, on the evening of 27th October, 2008 at the ripe age of
eighty-eight.
Mphahlele was the illustrious author of two autobiographies, more than thirty
short stories, two verse plays and a fair number of poems.
“Add to these, two anthologies edited, essay collections, innumerable single
essays, addresses, awards and a Nobel Prize nomination for literature and what
emerges is to many the Dean of African Letters,” writes Peter Thuynsma, a
leading Mphahlele scholar, in Perspectives on South African English Literature
(1992: 221).
A self-made man, Mphahlele received a BA degree in 1949, followed in 1956 by a
BA Honours degree and in 1957 by an MA degree (with distinction). He studied for
his three degrees by correspondence with the University of South Africa. In
1968, he received his doctorate from the University of Denver in the USA.
Mphahlele was born in Marabastad, Pretoria, on December 17th 1919. His parents
sent him to Maupaneng, near Polokwane, to go and live with his paternal
grandmother. He came back to Marabastad to start school and received his high
school education at St. Peter’s College, Rossetenville. It was there that he
encountered personalities whose lives would run a close parallel to his.
From St. Peters Mphahlele went on to study at Adams College in Natal, where he
qualified as a teacher in 1940. He completed his matric, studying by
correspondence while he held down two jobs as a teacher and short-hand typist at
Ezenzeleni Institute for the Blind in Roodepoort, in 1942.
The 1940s were a decade of momentous change throughout the world. On the Rand,
where Mphahlele was, a group of youthful members of the ANC came together to
form the ANC Youth League. Dr A.B. Xuma at about the same time called together a
group of African opinion leaders and thinkers to draft an African response to
the Atlantic Charter, authored by Roosevelt and Churhill. With all these events
swirling around him Mphahlele’s passion remained education rather than politics,
however, and his talents were better suited to the classroom than the soapbox or
newsroom.
He took up the post of English and Afrikaans teacher at Orlando High School.
There, in the company of many freshly-minted from Fort Hare young teachers he
became active in the Transvaal African Teachers Associaion (TATA). The 1949
Eislen Commission on Native Education, inspired by Dr. H.F. Verwoerd, the
recently elected National Party’s Minister of Native Affairs, had recommended a
radically new system of Education for Africans. TATA, together with other
teachers’ organisations in the Cape, the Free State and Natal, took up the
cudgels to oppose it. For his participation in that agitation, in December 1952
Eskia Mphahlele, Isaac Matlare and Zephaniah Mothopeng were dismissed from their
posts and permanently banned from teaching.
Mphahlele returned briefly to Ezenzeleni as a secretary. In 1954 he left on his
to teach at Basutoland (later, Lesotho) High School in Maseru.
Returning to South Africa a year later, he found work with Drum magazine, where
at various stages he held the posts of political reporter, sub-editor and
fiction editor. Mphahlele was something of a misfit there and, yearning to
teach, he sought other outlets for his talent.
Responding to an appeal for teachers from Nigeria, Mphahlele left South Africa
in 1957 together with a number of other African teachers whom the apartheid
regime considered unemployable. The ANC requested him to represent it at the
first Pan-African conference to be held on African soil and hosted by Ghana in
1959.
It was in West Africa that he began to blossom as a literary figure. Having
broken out of the constraints of apartheid racism he was able to rub shoulders
with other African writers and intellectuals. He had a brief association with
Ulli Beier, a German Africanist whose literary journal, Black Orpheus, made a
huge impact amongst African writers in the English language.
Mphahlele launched his literary career with the publication of “Man Must Live”
in 1946. It was the second collection of short stories in English by an African
writer after Dark Testament by Peter Abrahams, who had been Mphahlele’s
classmate at St Peter’s.
In the 1950’s, Mphahlele wrote a series of stories published in Drum. The Lesane
stories helped consolidate the short story tradition in South African literature
that stands among the best in the world. The Drum era produced, in quick
succession, Bessie Head, Arthur Maimane, Todd Matshikiza, James Matthews, Bloke
Modisane, Casey Motsisi, Lewis Nkosi, Richard Rive, and Can Themba.
The autobiographical Down Second Avenue (1957), Mphahlele’s crowning
achievement, has been translated into several foreign languages but not a single
African language indigenous to South Africa. It became the second in a
distinguished line of autobiographies by African authors from South Africa after
Abrahams’ Tell Freedom (1954) that included Road to Ghana by
Alfred Hutchinson, Chocolates for My Wife by Todd Matshikiza, Blame Me
on History by Bloke Modisane and Autobiography of an Unknown South
African by Naboth Mokgatle.
Mphahlele’s literary and academic career took off in exile. Two collections of
short stories followed Man Must Live. The Living and the Dead
appeared from West Africa in 1961. Six years later, he issued In Corner B
from East Africa. The contents of both collections of short stories are included
in The Unbroken Song (1986), which also contains some of Mphahlele’s
poems.
Turning to scholarship, in 1962 he published The African Image, based on
his MA thesis in which he provides a history of African literature in South
Africa, which he juxtaposes with an examination of the African character in
literature by writers of European ancestry. A second and revised edition
appeared twelve years later.
His engagement with literary and cultural production in the African Diaspora
finds expression in Voices in the Whirlwind and Other Essays (1972),
which examines African and African-American literature in relation to the
Western tradition.
His career as a novelist produced The Wanderers, a novel of exile
originally submitted as a dissertation for his PhD in creative writing.
The Wanderers was followed in 1979 by Chirundu, resulting from his
abortive attempt to establish residence in Zambia in 1968 and illustrating “the
tyranny of place” and how exile defeated him.
A second volume of his autobiography appeared in 1984 as Afrika My Music,
written in the convention of the memoir and depicting various people who have
been part of the author’s life. Written after his return from exile, it also
seems to rationalise his decision to return to South Africa at the height of
apartheid repression.
For a while Mphahlele worked with the Paris based Congress for Cultural Freedom,
organising conferences and workshops on education, literature, arts and culture.
He was instrumental in establishing the Chemchemi Creative Centre in Kenya and
the Mbari Club in Nigeria that became the hub of activity in African arts and
culture. During the mid 1960s the Congress for Cultural Freedom was exposed as a
CIA front organisation, employed to sow dissent amongst artists in the Soviet
Union and other east European countries. Its activities on the African continent
were probably as suspect. The journal, Encounter, published by this body,
swiftly lost credibility and has since disappeared.
In a career spawning sixty years, Mphahlele received many international awards,
among them: several honorary doctoral degrees and the Les Palmes Academiques
medal from the French government recognising his contribution to French
language and culture. In 1968, he was nominated for the Nobel Prize in
literature. In 1998 President Nelson Mandela awarded him the Order.
In 1957, Thuynsma writes, “he resolved to leave for a life in exile which led
him through residence in Nigeria, France, Kenya, Zambia, and a double sojourn in
the USA.”
Twenty years later, amidst much controversy, he returned to South Africa,
feeling defeated by exile and yearning for home. His return to South Africa
coincides with the last decade of the system that had sought so hard to destroy
him. He devoted himself to literature and cultural work, eschewing hard
politics.
Soft-spoken, humble, urbane, cosmopolitan, erudite and exuding ubuntu,
Es’kia Mphahlele embodied in his person and in his work what he described as
“the personification of the African paradox – detribalised, westernised but
still African”.
Mokgaga oa Makubela, Es’kia Mphahlele, has left us. May he go well.
For further information, call Sandile Memela, Spokesperson for the Ministry of
Arts & Culture at 082 800 3750 or Premi Appalraju, Media Liaison Officer at 082
903 6778.
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