SA Coat of Arms 4.jpg

The Presidency, Pretoria, 1 March 2015

 

 

Remarks by President Jacob Zuma

 

at the repatriation ceremony of

 

Moses Kotane and J.B. Marks

 

and arrival of the remains in Pretoria

 

 

Members of the Kotane and Marks families,

Ministers, Premiers, Deputy Ministers, MECs and Executive Mayors,

The Leadership of the ANC, SACP and COSATU,

Excellency the Ambassador of the Russian Federation and all members of the
Diplomatic Corps,

Comrades and friends,

Fellow South Africans,

 

 

Receive my heartfelt greetings on this historic day in the history of our
country.

 

The last time I addressed the nation here at the Waterkloof Airforce Base
was when we gathered to send off our icon, Former President Nelson Mandela,
to Qunu where he would be finally laid to rest.

 

Today we meet during another historic occasion, sad but also joyous as we
receive the mortal remains of two giants who played a very key and integral
role in the liberation struggle of our country and who indeed formed part of
the generation that paved the way for Madiba and his generation to usher in
democracy and social justice.

 

Comrades Moses Kotane and John Beaver Marks, popularly known as J.B. Marks,
have finally come back home.

 

We are receiving their remains from Moscow, Russia which was for them like a
home away from home where they were cared for and treated warmly by the
friendly people of the former Soviet Union and now the Russian Federation.

 

We express our sincere gratitude to President Vladimir Putin and the
government of the Russian Federation for caring for our stalwarts in life
and in death.

 

Their tombstones at the cemetery which became their temporary home in Moscow
indicated the respect and the status that they were accorded in that
country, and further the cemented the strong historic ties between South
Africa and Russia.

 

The cooperation of the Russian Federation in our efforts to bring these two
giants of our struggle back to their land of birth, and the remarkable and
stately send-off yesterday when they left Russia will also forever be
remembered by the South African people as a gesture of true friendship.

 

Today we have brought them back home, to a free South Africa.

 

South Africa is today a democratic country based on the rule of law and
fundamental human rights, largely owing to the sacrifices made by Moses
Kotane, J.B. Marks and all other leaders as well as activists of their
generation.

 

We live in our country as free men, women and children, without the colour
of our skin determining our station in life, determining where we may work,
live or even be buried.  

 

Indeed it is no exaggeration to say that these two stalwarts were great
visionaries who were way ahead of their time in terms of understanding the
true meaning of non-racialism and that it would be the cornerstone of a
democratic South Africa.

 

In this year of the Freedom Charter and Unity in Action to advance Economic
Freedom, we declare that we are proud of the legacy of Comrade Marks and
Comrade Kotane.

 

Their homecoming is a beginning of a new chapter. It enables us to celebrate
their contribution, and to raise awareness amongst our people especially the
youth, of what these two great men did for this country.

 

Compatriots,

 

Although Comrades Marks and Kotane were unflinching members and leaders of
the African National Congress and the South African Communist Party, we must
as South Africans, across all political lines, celebrate their home-coming.

 

It is a major milestone drawing us nearer to finding closure to our painful
past as a nation.

 

This homecoming should remind us that we have achieved a lot in just a few
years, more especially the vision outlined in the Freedom Charter, that
South Africa belongs to all who live in it, black and white, and that no
government can justly claim authority, unless it was based on the will of
all the people.

 

This service should thus sharpen our resolve to deal decisively with the
legacy of apartheid and to fight against the demon of racism which rears its
ugly head from time to time in our society, and all other related
intolerances.

 

We must do everything within the bounds of possibility to deal decisively
with anything and everything that would undermine the gains of freedom and
democracy that came through so much pain and sacrifice.

 

Compatriots,

 

As I conclude, we would like to call on all South Africans to participate in
the programmes which will take place as part of the build up towards the
ultimate reburial ceremonies which will lay these icons of our struggle to
their final resting places.

 

Both these icons are from the North West province, and they will be reburied
in that province.

 

The reburial ceremony of Moses Kotane will take place on the fourteenth of
March in Pella. A week thereafter, we will attend the reburial ceremony of
JB Marks on the twenty second of March in Ventersdorp.

 

Usuku olubaluleke kakhulu impela lolu emlandweni wezwe lethu, nasemlandweni
wenkululeko yabantu nezwe laseNingizimu Afrika.

 

Abaholi bethu babuyile ekhaya emva kweminyaka eminingi bengcwatshe kude
eRussia, lapho bebephethwe kahle kakhulu uhulumeni nabantu baseRussia.

 

Sithi kubaholi bethu, namukelekile ekhaya, siyajabula kakhulu ukuthi
senizolala niphumule ekhaya eNingizimu Africa emuva kweminyaka eminingi
kangaka nahamba.

 

Compatriots and friends let me thank the Marks and Kotane families for
sharing these stalwarts with the people of South Africa. We thank them for
their resilience during trying times of persecution and separation from
their loved ones.

 

Mama Kotane you are 103 years old this year, the same age as the ANC.

 

You have waited long to see this day. We are glad that it has finally come
and that you have witnessed the return of the remains of your loved one.

 

Fellow South Africans, the words of the late Dr Yusuf Dadoo about J.B Marks
applies to both of these icons of our struggle when he said,

 

"In the life of every nation, there arise men who leave an indelible and
eternal stamp on the history of their peoples; men who are both products and
makers of history. And when they pass, they leave a vision of a new and
better life and the tools with which to win and build it".

 

We say welcome home to these two outstanding men who gave so much to this
country.

 

Welcome to a free and democratic South Africa. Your sacrifices, dedication,
commitment and hard work were not in vain.

 

I thank you.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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