Speech by President Nelson Mandela during the opening ceremony of the Young Christian Workers World Council
Speech by President Nelson Mandela during the opening ceremony of the Young Christian Workers World Council
Oukasie, 26 November 1995
Dear Chairperson;
Delegates and friends,
It is indeed a great privilege for me to be present at the Official Opening
Ceremony of the YCW World Council. It is a special pleasure to associate myself
with the Young Christian Workers' long record of standing up against injustice
throughout the world, including South Africa.
You are all most welcome in South Africa, and we are honoured that you have
chosen our country as the venue for your meeting.
Your decision to hold your Council here in the small and poverty-stricken
community of Oukasie speaks louder than mere words. Once more you are
demonstrating in a practical way that a true commitment to justice demands more
than good intentions and fine speeches. It calls for a full association with
those who are struggling for justice.
Oukasie's long struggle for survival against some of the most vicious
onslaughts of the apartheid regime, is renowned. After every attack the
residents of Oukasie reorganised themselves and sustained their resistance to
forced removals.
As part of their struggle, the formed partnerships with Anti-Apartheid
organisations throughout the world. Oukasie became a symbol of the power of
community resistance assisted by international solidarity. Eventually the
apartheid regime retreated and the people of Oukasie were victorious.
I recall this history because it is speaks of everything that Young Christian
Workers stand for. One of the YCW's most important characteristics is that it
situates itself within the social realities of people, especially young workers,
and places strong emphasis on effective organisation.
Our decades of struggle, outside and inside prison, taught us that the most
important tool of resistance is proper organisation. No matter how unequal the
situation, if the people are committed and well organised then not even the most
vicious oppressor can hold them back forever. The people of South African
demonstrated that, and I want to thank YCW for your contribution to that
wonderful victory.
However, the fight against oppression and injustice did not end with the
establishment of our first democratic government. In many ways the struggle for
justice is today even more intense and challenging. We still carry many of the
rusty old chains of apartheid with us. Every now and then racism still lifts its
ugly head. The consequences of years of neglect and exploitation are evident
everywhere in the terrible poverty that most South Africans still experience.
Now that we have our political liberty we must also gain our socio-economic
liberty and freedom from hunger, ignorance and disease. This is a struggle for
reconstruction and delivery, and working together with communities to assist
them to help themselves to build a better life.
In this huge enterprise the experience of YCW will be very important. YCW was
founded with the specific aim that the Church should respond to the needs of
workers, but not as charity where the workers are passive recipients of aid.
Rather, the objective was the empowerment of young people from worker families
to unlock their own capacity and to empower themselves through proper
organisation.
YCW's emphasis on active participation of its members in developing plans to
change their lives has proved to have great potential for capacity-building
among our youth. It is common knowledge that YCW has made a significant
contribution to building the organs of civil society in South Africa, in
particular worker organisations. Many of the worker leaders it trained continue
to occupy positions of leadership in the trade union movement, in government, in
business and in wider civil society.
The youth of South Africa face serious problems because of the years of
deprivation, violence and interrupted education. Great courage and commitment
will be needed to overcome the obstacles and for our young people to fully enjoy
the benefits that our fledgling democracy holds for them.
Religious organisations, especially those which concentrate on the youth, can
help bring reconciliation to our country and help us build the Rainbow Nation
that most South Africans yearn for. Not so long ago our young people were
looking at each other over the barrels of guns. But today they are reaching out
to each other to build a common future. This demands emotional maturity and
moral strength, and I firmly believe that the various religions can help develop
these qualities.
All the major religions teach the importance of peace and reconciliation. But
they also insist that with reconciliation must come an end to injustice.
I refer to this challenge of genuine reconciliation because it is a political
and moral issue which will gain increasing prominence as our Truth and
Reconciliation Commission addresses its difficult task. I also mention it here
in Oukasie because of this community's history of suffering. The YCW's approach
has always been to acknowledge and challenge injustice, and then to build the
capacity of the oppressed to act in a constructive way that will bring an end to
injustice and create a better world for all of us.
The youth of South Africa made a crucial contribution to the struggle for
liberation, and I have no doubt in my mind that they have what it will take to
put the injustices of the past behind them. This will demand exactly the kind of
determination for organisation and self-development that YCW stands for. I urge
you to continue your work for the development and empowerment of the young
people who are members of YCW, and the youth of South Africa in general.
I have often said that South Africa's greatest assert is not our mineral
wealth, but our young people. The future of this country depends on you - the
young people sitting here. I have always had the greatest confidence that the
gains we have made for democracy and justice are safe in your hands; and that
you will build South Africa to fulfil its potential to become the great nation
that it ought to be.
May God bless the Young Christian Workers in the important work that you are
doing!
May you have a good stay in South Africa, and a very successful World Council
Thank you.




