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Mthuli ka Shezi

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Name
  
Mthuli Shezi

Role
  
Playwright

Education
  
University of Zululand



Assassinated
  
December 1972, Germiston, South Africa

Similar
  
Thamsanga Mnyele, Victoria Mxenge, Benjamin Moloise

Mthuli ka shezi


Mthuli ka Shezi (1947 - 1972) was a South African playwright and political activist. He was a student activist when he attended the University of Zululand, and in 1972 he was elected the first vice president of the Black People's Convention. His writing reflected the struggle of recovering African identity in colonial and post-colonial societies, a topic which reflects his involvement in Steve Biko's Black Consciousness Movement as well as the influence of Frantz Fanon.

Contents

In December 1972, Shezi was pushed in front of a moving train at Germiston station (and thus killed) after coming to the defense of African women being drenched with water by a white station cleaner. He posthumously received the Order of Luthuli for his "political leadership, outstanding contribution to the performing arts, and activism against apartheid"

He became a symbol for the struggle of black South Africans against the apartheid regime.

Quote

"I am black/ Black like my mother/ Black like the sufferers/ Black like the continent" - from the play Shanti published in 1972

References

Mthuli ka Shezi Wikipedia