Ramaphosa honours Richard Maponya with state funeral
The president says the late businessman's name 'stands for excellence and inspires generations of South Africans'.
Dr Richard Maponya. Image: Soweto Urban
The presidency has announced that Dr Richard Maponya, who passed away at age 99 on Monday morning, will receive a Special Official Funeral.
Maponya will be buried on Tuesday 14 in Johannesburg.
In a statement, Ramaphosa notes that Maponya was “widely respected as the doyen of black business”.
“Dr Maponya was a founding member of the National African Federated Chamber of Commerce (NAFCOC) and chairman of the African Chamber of Commerce. He actively sought to capacitate nascent black businesses and variously lent his support to entrepreneurship ventures, particularly in Soweto,” the presidency says.
Ramaphosa has instructed that the national flag will fly at half-mast from Friday, January 10 until the evening of Maponya’s burial.
“While expressing condolences to the Maponya family and to friends and colleagues, President Ramaphosa said the Maponya name is a veritable institution in our public life, standing for excellence and inspiring generations of South Africans,” the presidency’s statement concludes.
President Ramaphosa honours Dr Maponya with Special Official Funeral. https://t.co/ysQfHGgS4o
— The Presidency 🇿🇦 (@PresidencyZA) January 9, 2020
Maponya died early on Monday morning after a short illness, days after his 99th birthday.
The Limpopo-born entrepreneur, often referred to as “the father of black retail”, co-developed Soweto’s Maponya Mall in 2007.
Family spokesperson Mandla Sibeko confirmed the news.
He was born in Thlabine, near Lenyenye, about 20km west of Tzaneen.
At the age of 24, when still a teacher, he took a job as a stock taker at a clothing maker and won a promotion for both himself and his white manager. In gratitude, the manager sold Maponya soiled clothing and offcuts, which he resold in Soweto.
With the capital, he attempted to open a clothing store in Soweto, but was blocked by the apartheid government’s refusal to grant him a licence – he was represented in the dispute by Oliver Tambo and Nelson Mandela.
Instead, in the early 1950s, Maponya and his wife Marina (a cousin of Nelson Mandela) established the Dube Hygienic Dairy, which employed a fleet of boys on bicycles to deliver milk to customers in Soweto who had no access to electricity or refrigeration. By the 1970s, the retail empire had grown to include several general stores, car dealerships and filling stations.
During the 1960s and 1970s, Maponya was a member of the Urban Bantu Council. He resigned in 1977, shortly after youth affiliated with the ANC requested that he do so, and shortly before the council offices were burnt to the ground.
(Compiled by Daniel Friedman)
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