Embrace and support young leaders

STATING THEIR CASE: Former Wits Student Representative Council president Mcebo Dlamini addresses students over #FeesMustFall matters at the height of the movement. Reflection is needed on the role and place of young leaders, and their guidance as we mark Youth Day, says the writer. Picture: Simone Kley

STATING THEIR CASE: Former Wits Student Representative Council president Mcebo Dlamini addresses students over #FeesMustFall matters at the height of the movement. Reflection is needed on the role and place of young leaders, and their guidance as we mark Youth Day, says the writer. Picture: Simone Kley

Published Jun 14, 2017

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Those in the know will tell

you that leaders are born and not made.

At South African schools and universities the phrases Learner Representative Council (LRC), Student Representative Council (SRC), prefect and head prefect resonate with many.

Young people, often considered to be natural born leaders, are usually given a platform by their peers to lead them and be their voice.

These titles given at school are said to groom these young ones for future leadership.

Alas, this very responsibility reminds me of the exact one Tsietsi Mashinini, Mbuyisa Makhubu, Khotso Seatlholo and many young leaders were given by their peers 41 years ago.

In a campaign seen as sheer defiance, these firebrand leaders did not wait to consult their elders but, instead, took to the streets and challenged authority when they could no longer keep quiet.

Sure enough, that was 1976.

And yes, some may argue times have changed.

But in the fast-paced era of 2017, the truth is that nothing has changed.

In fact, what the last five years have proved more than anything is the old adage: “The more

things change, the more they stay the same.”

The exact eagerness students back then had to correct the

system remains fixated in the

hearts and minds of today’s young leaders.

As we celebrate yet another June 16 it is perhaps an opportune time

to reflect on where our young leaders fall.

While we commemorate the bravery of leaders and the youth of yesteryear, we, as a country, need to introspect and ask questions such as: does the cause of our

youth and their leaders only end in the streets through activism as

seen in the #FeesMustFall

movement?

We also need to probe further and establish if our young leaders are truly needed by a government that purports to be inclusive?

We ought to dig deep to find out if programmes geared at today’s youth are not just mere PR exercises by those in power?

Ours is to see whether young leaders, at the behest of this country’s youth population, are able to cut through the thickness of the state’s bureaucracy and corruption while clamouring for resources and exhaustively fighting their own demons such as youth unemployment and poverty.

Student activist and one of the country’s emerging female leaders Busisiwe Seabe recently noted something profound.

Speaking at Soweto’s Morris Isaacson school, she boldly uttered the following words in IsiXhosa: “Bazali nisilebele.”

To loosely translate this into English: “Parents you have forgotten us.”

Seabe, who was born in 1994 and what some call a “born free”, pointed out that elders and leaders of today, while struggling to fix a country in crisis, have post-apartheid forgotten to pass the “visionary baton” to the youth.

As a result, she said, there is now a void and a large disconnect between young people, young leaders, their elders and older leaders on what an ideal South Africa

should be for this generation

and those to come, the Azania, she says, they have fought so hard for.

While Seabe forms part of Generation Y - the same generation some have written off as undisciplined, too radical, lacking in moral fibre and one only concerned about “turning up”, she and many others who share her ideals and have become the game changers of our time are no different from the Mashininis of the past.

Young leaders in 1976 left the classroom and unfortunately, their cause ended on the streets.

But I ask yet again: do we let history repeat itself?

Do we let the mandate of today’s youth and leaders end on the streets or do they have a platform in a democratic and non-discriminatory SA to

represent their peers and influence decision-making at government level?

I’m talking of a platform in which they will sit with the president of this country and discuss pertinent youth matters and not only be called to round table discussions at the Union Buildings when the country burns and students have grown weary of empty promises.

It is certainly unfortunate that political youth organisations and student organisations such as the Congress of South African Students that were premised on being

the voice of the youth find themselves sucked into the web of political turmoil instead of being

proactive.

More disheartening is the lack of mentorship by the older leaders.

Instead of equipping these young ones, they have grown somewhat tired and in the process have become self-absorbed.

Ask any youth in this country what they want and they will not hesitate to tell you their primary concern is to live better lives,

find meaningful jobs in order to actively contribute to this country’s economy.

As schools elect SRCs and LRCs, let us be mindful of today’s young leaders.

Let us embrace them, support them and integrate them in all

we do.

Let us remember that they were not just made but were born to lead and restless leaders are dangerous leaders.

Amandla!

Mokati is Content Editor: Development, in Independent Media’s Politics and Development Unit

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