MunicipalNews

Statue of women’s rights champion Bertha Gxowa unveiled

Women’s champion honoured with statue.

The metro’s executive mayor, Clr Mondli Gungubele, together with the Premier of Gauteng, David Makhura, unveiled a life-size statue of Bertha Gxowa, in honour of her selfless contribution to the transformation of the country, particularly women, on Wednesday.

Scores of women from all over the country converged on the Ke-Ditselana Cultural Village, in Katlehong, to honour the struggle stalwart’s life.

Gxowa died at the age of 76 years, in 2010.

A bronze statue of Mama Bertha, as she was affectionately known, raising a triumphant right hand in a clenched fist salute, which symbolises her solidarity with the courageous women of 1956, now stands at the cultural village, as a constant reminder to the women of today to carry the baton of fighting for complete liberation of women and children.

“The only way in which the future can make sense is when its foundation, which is history, is properly organised and documented.

“Unveiling this statue is a symbol of recording our authentic history,” said Gungubele during the unveiling ceremony.

As the nation observes the month of August as Women’s Month, Gxowa is remembered as a philanthropic figure who championed women’s agendas politically and socially.

In fact, she was one of the key figures in the organisation of the historic march to the Union Buildings, which ultimately led to the emancipation of women from the bondage of the apartheid regime.

Gauteng Premier David Makhura (left) unveils the statue of Bertha Gxowa, along with Ekurhuleni’s executive mayor, Clr Mondli Gungubele, at the Ke-Ditselana Cultural Village, in Katlehong, on Wednesday.
Gauteng Premier David Makhura (left) unveils the statue of Bertha Gxowa, along with Ekurhuleni’s executive mayor, Clr Mondli Gungubele, at the Ke-Ditselana Cultural Village, in Katlehong, on Wednesday.

“She was part of all the major historical campaigns in our history, from the Defiance Campaign of Unjust Laws in 1952, the formation of the Federation of South African Women in 1954 and the adoption of the Freedom Charter in 1955, to the staging of the historic Women’s March to the Union Buildings in 1956 and the 1957 Treason Trial,” said President Jacob Zuma at her funeral in 2010.

Gauteng MEC for Sport, Arts and Culture Molebatsi Bopape said: “It is our responsibility as women to play our role in the community, not just in the kitchen, but by being at the centre of the economy; that’s the ideal Mama Bertha fought for.”

Gxowa was born and bred in the old Germiston Location and died in November, 2010.

Her gravesite, in the Thomas Titus Nkobi Memorial Park, in Elspark, was declared a Heritage Site by the Provincial Heritage Resource Authority of Gauteng, in 2014.

 

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