Film Screening: Robert Sobukwe: A great soul
Date: 18 March 2022
Time: 17:00-19:00
Venue: Javett-UP Auditorium
The story of the life of a remarkable man who helped inspire and liberate a nation.
Robert Mangaliso Sobukwe was a leading figure in South Africa's history, and the film by auteur Mickey Madoda Dube breaks the mystifying silence around his extraordinary contribution to shaping not only South Africa but also the thinking across the continent and the diaspora.
Robert Sobukwe demonstrated integrity, courage, honesty, humanity and authentic leadership, qualities that resonate today. Sobukwe's decisive action on 21 March 1960 led to the massacre of Sharpeville, where police fired on unarmed peaceful protesters and shot many of them in the back. Sobukwe gave Pan Africanism new life, paving the way for the emergence of Steve Biko and the student uprising of 16 June 1976.
Sobukwe's iconic status led to a special session of the UN, and he was Prisoner No one on Robben Island. The apartheid government passed a particular statute, the Sobukwe Clause, to keep his ideas from the rest of the world. Now his voice can be heard - decades after he made his mark as one of the world's greatest liberators and South African leaders.”