Attending several of the services commemorating the life of the
late Richard Maponya these past few days has been an eye-opener. In often
moving tributes, representatives from business, local communities, politics,
religion and academia recalled how Ntate Richard Maponya changed their lives
for the better during his 99 years.
Though much was said, there were four recurring themes –
family, respect for others, hard work and entrepreneurship. Maponya exemplified
bringing them all together in one life, lived with a purpose. He himself worked
until the day he died.
But at another level, the services revealed many of the ambiguities
and contradictions in our society which are hard to reconcile and how politics
invades even the most intimate moments in a nation’s life. The comparative
absence of white faces also reminded me, if I needed reminding, of the deep
racial cleavages still dividing our society.
Maponya, a South African and more pointedly a black business
titan, was accorded the unprecedented honour of a state funeral which took
place at the UJ Soweto Campus. It is convenient for the governing party to
lionise one of its own to deflect attention from its long history of racist, anti-business
rhetoric, summed up in the epithet ‘white monopoly capital’.