A Culture of Peaceful Protest
Why can’t we protest peacefully in our communities like we did, back in the days on our campuses when we used to sing “solidarity forever, we shall always fight for our rights.”
Why can’t we protest peacefully in our communities like we did, back in the days on our campuses when we used to sing “solidarity forever, we shall always fight for our rights.”
“There is only one strong, safe, and secure place for me; it’s in God alone and I love Him! He’s the one who gives me strength and skill for the battle.”
However, no matter how serious offences against us are including those of the penultimate colonialists, we should forgive but at the same time continue to demand for justice, equality and total emancipation for Africans all over the world.
Someone wrote, “sexual desire says, ‘I need it.’ “Pride says, ‘I deserve it,’ In combination their appeal is deadly. Pride appeals to the empty head, sexual enticement to the empty heart.”
We should not expect them to work full-time outside the home and full-time at home. We should lighten their loads wherever we can. We should be sensitive to their needs, and relate with them with courtesy, consideration, insight, and tact
I was unknowingly exposed to a student who tested positive for the COVID-19 virus. The student was in my office on the 24th of June to ask about my test he and his colleagues will be writing later that day
“As I look back on the life that I have lived, I would like to be remembered as a voice – a voice that focused on the authority of the Bible, the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the wonder of his substitutionary sacrifice and atonement for our sins.
As I think about all the money I spent from the salary for my training, and the fact that I had to pay back to my former employer all the salary paid while doing my PhD after resigning, I do not have any regrets and grudges
And all of those signs that you saw as a little child that said “white men,” “colored men,” “white women,” “colored women”—those signs are gone. And the only places you will see those signs today would be in a book, in a museum, on a video.
Mlangeni served 26 years and was released in 1989. He continued to participate in politics and, after 1994, was an MP until 2014. President Cyril Ramaphosa said this about him “The passing of Andrew Mekete Mlangeni signifies the end of a generational history