Archive | January, 2012

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Ulwazi Schools Project in Umbumbulu

Posted on 26 January 2012 by Ulwazi Web Editor

Today we went out to Sibusisiwe High School to launch the second phase of the Ulwazi Schools Project, run in collaboration with the Goethe Institut.

The kids were excited and eager to learn, the computers were connected to the Internet and Mabusi, our mentor, was ready to share her knowledge. I’m sure this school will be as successfull as the previous two!

 

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COMMUNITY MEMORIES TO BE SHOWCASED AT KZN ECO-MUSEUM

Posted on 23 January 2012 by Betsie

The culmination of a three-year research project run by the Sinomlando Centre – a research and community development centre attached to UKZN’s School of Religion, Philosophy and Classics – and local NGO Mpophomeni Tourism Experience (ZMTE), was one of the highlights of the pre-launch of the Zulu Mpophomeni Eco-Museum on 12 December.

The Sinomlando Centre presented two volumes of interview transcripts relating to the history of Mpophomeni which will be showcased soon at the Mpophomeni Eco-Museum in Montrose House. The project was funded by the National Lottery.

Interviews were conducted by community members trained in oral history by the Sinomlando Centre.  The two volumes of interviews represent a massive amount of information on the history of the township: 310 pages in English and 210 pages in isiZulu.

Sinomlando is isiZulu for ‘we have a history’. The mission of the Sinomlando Centre is to build capacity in oral history and memory work in people and communities.

Established in the vicinity of Howick in the late 1960s, Mpophomeni paid a heavy price as a result of the civil war between the UDF and Inkatha in the 1980s and 1990s. Hundreds of residents lost their jobs after a strike at the nearby Sarmcol factory in 1985.

A delegation from Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) in the United States, attended a week-long oral history workshop facilitated by the Sinomlando Centre in Pietermaritzburg, was present at the launch. They gained valuable insights for an oral history project they intend to conduct with former members of the civil rights movement; mostly African American activists, in the state of Virginia. The delegation included Henry L Marsh III, a member of the American Senate and a former civil rights activist himself.

Also present at the event were representatives of the Department of Arts and Culture and the Umgeni Municipality as well as community members and foreign visitors.

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New look for the Ulwazi Programme

New look for the Ulwazi Programme

Posted on 17 January 2012 by Ulwazi Web Editor

Its a new year and the Ulwazi Programme has a brand-new look, thanks to the designers over at the Communication Factory.  The past few months have seen some major changes on the Ulwazi server as all our software was updated and the new design was implemented.  Using warm yellows and reds, the new design connects more closely to the content in on our database and to the people who use our website.

And we think it looks really great!  What are your thoughts?

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