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Epainette Mbeki

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Nationality
  
South African

Name
  
Epainette Mbeki


Role
  
Thabo Mbeki's mother

Epainette Mbeki yafricawpcontentuploads201406adscdjpg

Full Name
  
Nomaka Epainette Moerane

Born
  
16 February 1916 (
1916-02-16
)
Mount Fletcher, Cape Province

Known for
  
Anti apartheid activism

Died
  
June 7, 2014, East London, South Africa

Spouse
  
Govan Mbeki (m. 1940–2001)

Children
  
Thabo Mbeki, Moeletsi Mbeki

Similar People
  

Grandchildren
  
Monwabise Kwanda Mbeki

The country mourns struggle veteran epainette mbeki


Nomaka Epainette Mbeki, née Moerane (16 February 1916 – 7 June 2014), commonly known as "MaMbeki", was the mother of former South African president Thabo Mbeki and widow of political activist Govan Mbeki. She lived in Ngcingwane, a rural hamlet near Dutywa, one of South Africa's poorest municipalities. She was known for her auspicious relatives and, more importantly to her, her endeavours to improve the residents' quality of life. Gillian Rennie, in an award-winning profile, quoted a co-worker as saying, "She is not like other retired people, getting a pension and saying, 'Let me play golf and fish a bit.' The old lady is a humble person."

Contents

Epainette Mbeki iafricacom Thabo Mbeki39s mother dies

Epainette mbeki awarded honourary doctrate


Life

Epainette Mbeki Epainette Mbeki I39d vote for EFF if I was still young

Born at Mount Fletcher in the Drakensberg, she grew up in humble environs, the sixth of seven children. Early every morning before school, she would chase birds from her father's sorghum fields before returning after school for further bird-chasing. She was educated at Lovedale School before qualifying as a teacher at Adams College near Durban.

Community work

Epainette Mbeki CONDOLENCES CONTINUE TO POUR IN FOR MAMBEKI39S DEATH

Mbeki was the brains behind the Khanyisa beadwork project, which has sustained the art of traditional African beadwork and provided livelihoods for 24 Ngcingwanean women. She was involved with the Linda Mbeki Hospice, which operates from the former Mbeki home in Mbewuleni, and was founded to commemorate the life of her daughter, who died in 2005. Mbeki also established the Nomaka Mbeki Technical Senior Secondary School and owned the Goodwill Trading Store, whose cash-counting and bookkeeping she did herself.

Sesotho-speaking and traditionalist, Mbeki placed great importance on education. Although it has been suggested, not least by Stofile (to whom Mbeki gave her religion), that she venture into politics, she has never been especially enamoured with the idea. "I wouldn't do as a member of parliament. You have to live with the people; you have to move among the people, to know their conditions [...]. Premier Makhenkesi says, 'I think you should belong to my government.' I say, 'No, that's not proper because, when I get there, I'll be as dull as you people. I'll be just as dull.'" Her son, Thabo, attributed much of his political success to the wisdom of his mother, but she disagreed: "I wouldn't call it wisdom; it's an attitude, the attitude of self-last. He should forget about the ego and listen to the next man. That's really what he must do. I think he has managed; I think he has managed."

Awards and recognition

Mbeki won the Community Builder of the Year award (for which she had to go "all the way to Johannesburg"), a NAFCOC founder member award, a Transkei chamber stalwart award, the King Cetshwayo African Image Award, and the Eastern Cape arts and culture award for Khanyisa, given her by Arnold Stofile. She was also awarded the Order of the Baobab in 2006.

References

Epainette Mbeki Wikipedia


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