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04 May 2022 | Story Nonsindiso Qwabe | Photo Ian Van Straaten
Honorary doctorates
Former Deputy Chief Justice Dikgang Moseneke and Ms Winnie Byanyima, the Executive Director of UNAIDS and an Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations.

The University of the Free State conferred six honorary doctorates during its April 2022 graduation ceremonies. Two of these were conferred at the Qwaqwa Campus ceremonies on 29 and 30 April to Justice Dikgang Moseneke, Deputy Chief Justice of South Africa and justice of the Constitutional Court of South Africa, and Ms Winnie Byanyima, the Executive Director of UNAIDS and an Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations.

A champion for social justice, Byanyima was honoured with a Doctor of Letters (DLitt [h.c.]) during the afternoon session on 30 April. Elected for three terms and serving for eleven years in parliament, Ms Byanyima led Uganda’s first parliamentary women’s caucus, championing ground-breaking gender equality provisions in the county’s 1995 post-conflict constitution. She is also significantly involved in efforts to end the Aids epidemic in Africa.

Addressing graduates during her acceptance speech, Byanyima said it was education that enabled her to leave her small rural village in Uganda to serve on national and global platforms.

“But that power that education has given me never makes me proud in itself. It makes me responsible for what I must do to uplift others, to make this world equal and just. My pride is in what I am able to do with others in order to make the world more just. The qualifications are mere tools to achieve a purpose.”

Byanyima challenged students to be proud South Africans who embrace and serve the continent. Go out there, knowing that we have one history as a continent, and we have one destiny as a continent. And serve your continent and make the most of it.

“Across the continent and across the world, South Africa has been a beacon for movements that are joined up, resisting racial inequality, embracing gender equality, and embracing equality for LGBTQ people. It is these inclusions that make a world free. So, continue to be that beacon – as a country and as a student and alumni community. Challenge stigmatisation, challenge criminalisation. Use the power that your education has given you. Use it to demand
accountability and rights for yourselves and for others.”

UFS a crucible for formation of young people

Likewise, Justice Moseneke was anchored on hard work, dedication, and honesty and fidelity being the driving tools for making society better. Justice Moseneke received a Doctor of Laws (LLD [h.c.]) during the afternoon session on 29 April. He was recognised for his vast contribution to the legal fraternity over the past 40 years. This is his 14th honorary doctorate. 

“We may not desecrate these high and noble aspirations at the altar of power, greed, and self-importance.  We have to create that idealised just and equal society, and national treasures like the University of the Free State sit at the heart of that historic project.”

Justice Moseneke said the UFS remained an indispensable crucible for the formation of young people, and therefore of the future.

“The most powerful tool for transforming society is excellent education and training.  It is a lie that mere numbers and populism will make our world better. Those who are bent on changing society need exact and appropriate skills to accomplish that – not bombast. It is right to bemoan a difficult past.  But it is even better to harness past anguish in the service of a progressive future.

Icon8_ YouTube Watch recording of the Graduation ceremony below:



News Archive

Sesotho dictionary to be published
2008-04-15

 
Mr Motsamai Motsapi,  editor-in-chief.

A comprehensive bilingual Sesotho dictionary will be published in the 2008/2009 financial year, thanks to the efforts of the Sesiu sa Sesotho National Lexicography Unit hosted by the University of the Free State (UFS). ”Sesiu” is a Sesotho word meaning ”a reservoir for storing grains”.

According to the Editor-in-Chief of the Sesiu sa Sesotho National Lexicography Unit, Mr Motsamai Motsapi, the unit intends to continuously develop and modernize the Sesotho language so that its speakers are empowered to express themselves through Sesotho without any impediments, in all spheres of life.

The unit is one of the 11 nationally established Pan South African Language Board (PanSALB) structures representing South Africa’s 11 official languages.

Their main objective is to preserve and record the various indigenous languages by compiling user-friendly, comprehensive monolingual dictionaries and other lexicographic products, and to develop and promote these languages in all spheres of life.

The Minister of Arts and Culture, Dr Pallo Jordan, has lamented the fact that it is virtually impossible to find a bookstore in any of the country’s shopping malls that distributes literature in the indigenous African languages.

The minister said the capacity to both write and read in one’s home language gives real meaning to freedom of expression.

Therefore the publication of this Sesotho dictionary should be seen in the context of the development of the indigenous languages, as encapsulated in both the minister’s vision and that of the Sesiu sa Sesotho National Lexicography Unit.

The pending publication of this dictionary is the culmination of years of hard work invested in this project by the Sesiu sa Sesotho National Lexicography Unit.

“I believe that slowly but surely we have made some strides, as we have produced a Sesotho translation dictionary draft in 2006 covering letters A to Z. We have also built a considerable Sesotho corpus. But we still have a mammoth task ahead of us, because the work of compiling a dictionary does not end”, said Mr Motsapi.

“All Sesotho speakers should be involved, as the language belongs to the speech communities, and not to certain individuals”, he added.

He said given the reality that the UFS is situated in a predominantly Sesotho-speaking province and is part of its general community, it will always benefit the university to be part of the efforts of the South African nation to address the past by ensuring the development of the Sesotho language.

The unit is located in the African Languages Department of the Faculty of the Humanities at the UFS, and collaborates closely with the Language Research and Development Centre (LRDC) at the UFS to further the development of the Sesotho language. It is funded by PanSALB.

Media Release
Issued by: Mangaliso Radebe
Assistant Director: Media Liaison
Tel: 051 401 2828
Cell: 078 460 3320
E-mail: radebemt.stg@ufs.ac.za  
15 April 2008
 

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