Tuesday, 28 February 2017

Embrace the power of your story!!!


Ready to embrace the power of your story and turn it into a testimony? Adrian, The Champion, Starks and I will tell you how? Join us on the call, March 11 at 8:00 pm, as we share with you how we found the power in our stories and will guide you in doing the same.

Monday, 27 February 2017

Daily Sun

5 minutes ago
DEAD BROTHER PUSHES ISAAC TO GET JUSTICE!
    Isaac Chabalala says his dead brother comes to him every night. Photo by Samson Ratswana  ~ 
    “YOU know my killers and if I don’t get justice, you won’t sleep!”
    Isaac Chabalala claimed these were the words of his late brother, Steven Chabalala, who was stabbed and burnt in his shack in Atteridgeville.
    The 47-year-old from Maboloka in North West saidfor five years he has not slept properly.
    “I know who killed my brother but the police are not doing anything,” said Isaac.
    He claims that every night at midnight, Steven comes and fights.
    “Sometimes he comes, looks at me, shakes his head and spreads his arms. I don’t know what that means but he doesn’t look happy.”
    He added that his girlfriend thinks he is crazy. “Whenever she comes to sleep over and I talk to Steven, she thinks I am hallucinating,” he said.
    He said his brother is making his life hell.
    “I wake up tired because I don’t get enough sleep.
    “I can’t get a job and I am afraid my girlfriend will leave me.”
    Isaac said he went to see a sangoma but it didn’t end his suffering.
    Sangoma Sibongile Maluleka said Isaac must do a ritual to lay Steven’s spirit to rest but he must also make sure the police know who killed his brother.
    Police spokesman Captain Thomas Mofumadi said a case of arson was opened and the matter is still being investigated.

    Black History Month

    SOUTH AFRICA

    Essa Moosa: The struggle lawyer who was ‘everywhere’

    • RYLAND FISHER
    •  
    • SOUTH AFRICA
    •  
      20 Reactions
    Essa Moosa, who had been diagnosed with cancer a while ago, passed away on Sunday. He had turned 81 on February 8. RYLAND FISHER pays tribute to the celebrated struggle lawyer.
    When my former colleague Mansoor Jaffer and I visited judge Essa Moosa at his house in Crawford last week, an old schoolfriend of Moosa asked us whether we were his sons. We replied: “Yes” because in many ways we were.
    Moosa had that effect on people. He was much more than a lawyer. He was also a comrade and friend to many people all over the Western Cape and South Africa.
    This was evident at his funeral service on Sunday afternoon. Moosa, who had been diagnosed with cancer a while ago, had passed away at 11:15 on Sunday. He had turned 81 on February 8.
    In keeping with Muslim tradition, his funeral was held on the same day. The funeral was set down for 16:00 but, from the minute word spread that he had passed away, hundreds of mourners made their way to 12 Rokeby Road, Crawford, an unassuming facebrick house that Moosa and his wife Fatima had called home for many decades.
    It was difficult to know who was there because there are no VIPs at Muslim funerals, just mourners, and one had to scour the crowds to see if you knew anyone.
    But those who were there represented the diversity that Moosa always embraced. They included former Finance Minister Trevor Manuel, former Premier and Ambassador Ebrahim Rasool and his former political nemesis Mcebisi Skhwatsha, who is now a deputy minister, another former Ambassador, Franklin Sonn, businessmen such as AK Peer, Anwah Nagia and Patrick Parring, ANC provincial leaders Faiz Jacobs and Cameron Dugmore, senior Roman Catholic priest, Father Peter John Pearson, senior members of the Hawks, with whom Moosa had worked closely in his later years, senior members of the police, and a host of lawyers who had worked with and for Moosa over the years, including Bash Wagley, now the Judge President of the Labour Court, Ebrahim Mohamed, now the National Consumer Commissioner, and Judge Vincent Saldanha, who has acted with Moosa on the Cape Bench.
    Outside the house, at the mosque and at the graveside, it was like a reunion of old comrades, many of whom had not seen each other for years.
    Moosa and former Justice Minister Dullah Omar were known as “the struggle lawyers”. Many comrades shared stories about how one of the first things they learnt in struggle was Essa Moosa’s number, with an instruction to “phone Essa” whenever they were in trouble.
    At the graveside at Mowbray Muslim cemetery, in the shadow of Table Mountain and right next to Groote Schuur Hospital, a former comrade from Paarl came up to Mohamed to thank him for helping him and other comrades from Paarl in the struggle years.
    My association with Moosa began in the early 1980s when I worked as a volunteer – and later full-time – with an anti-apartheid community newspaper called Grassroots. Moosa was our lawyer but also chaired the paper’s board. The paper was in trouble often but I suspect that Moosa did not make any money out of being involved with the paper. He did not get involved in community work in order to make money.
    Moosa was also involved in South newspaper, where I worked in the latter part of the 1980s. Like Grassroots,South was vehemently anti-apartheid, but tried to operate on a commercial basis.
    Our association continued over the years, mainly through Moosa trying to convince me to support various initiatives about which he felt passionate, including trying to get a pardon for Allan Boesak and garnering support for the cause of the Kurdish people, something that took up a lot of his free time in recent years. Moosa also spent some time on the board of the community radio station, Bush Radio.
    Gadija Vallie, who worked with E Moosa and Associates in various capacities and remained a close friend of Moosa, said after the funeral, as mourners ate mutton breyani and drank fizzy drinks, that a giant had fallen.
    I want to cry but I won’t, not here and now. I can’t believe that he is no longer around. He used to be everywhere.”
    Looking at Moosa’s CV, it was clear that he was everywhere.
    He started work as a bookkeeper at Woolworths after matriculating at Athlone High School in 1954. He began studying law at the University of Cape Town in 1957 and graduated in 1960. He then worked as a legal assistant at various firms before working for himself in District Six in 1966 until he was forcibly removed from the area in 1969, when it was declared white. Moosa tried to challenge the proclamation of District Six as a white area in court.
    He finally started his law firm, E Moosa and Associates, in Athlone in 1979. The firm inadvertently became involved in several high-profile and not so high-profile political cases throughout the 1980s. Most political activists in the Western Cape had some kind of association with the firm and with Moosa himself. The firm became known for their work with political detainees and human rights in general.
    At that time, Moosa was also involved in forming the National Association of Democratic Lawyers (Nadel) which sought to unite lawyers on the basis of their opposition to apartheid and not on the basis of race, which many other organisations did.
    In the late 1990s, after a short stint in the Department of Justice, Moosa was appointed a judge in the Cape Hight Court. His appointment was the first time that a lawyer, as opposed to an advocate, was appointed as a judge.
    After his retirement in 2011, Moosa was appointed to head up a unit that would investigate complaints against members of the Hawks, formally known as the Directorate for Priority Crimes Investigation.
    Moosa fell ill a few weeks ago and was discharged from hospital a week before he passed away. The doctors told his family that there was nothing more that they could do for him.
    Moosa was finally laid to rest at just after 18:00 on Sunday. A memorial service, of which details are still being finalised, will be held. DM
    Photo: Judge Essa Moosa (Ashraf Hendricks/GroundUp)

    Black History Month

    Image result for Martin Luther King, Jr.

    In early April 1968, shock waves reverberated around the world with the news that U.S. civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. had been assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee. A Baptist minister and founder of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), King had led the civil rights movement since the mid-1950s, using a combination of powerful words and non-violent tactics such as sit-ins, boycotts and protest marches (including the massive March on Washington in 1963) to fight segregation and achieve significant civil and voting rights advances for African Americans. His assassination led to an outpouring of anger among black Americans, as well as a period of national mourning that helped speed the way for an equal housing bill that would be the last significant legislative achievement of the civil rights era. 

    King Assassination: Background

    In the last years of his life, King faced mounting criticism from young African-American activists who favored a more confrontational approach to seeking change. These young radicals stuck closer to the ideals of the black nationalist leader Malcolm X (himself assassinated in 1965), who had condemned King’s advocacy of non-violence as “criminal” in the face of the continuing repression suffered by African Americans. As a result of this opposition, King sought to widen his appeal beyond his own race, speaking out publicly against the Vietnam War and working to form a coalition of poor Americans–black and white alike–to address such issues as poverty and unemployment.
    Did You Know?

    Among the witnesses at the scene of King's assassination was one of his closest aides, Jesse Jackson. Ordained as a minister soon after King's death, Jackson went on to form Operation PUSH (People United to Save Humanity) and the National Rainbow Coalition and to run twice for U.S. president, in 1984 and 1988.

    In the spring of 1968, while preparing for a planned march to Washington to lobby Congress on behalf of the poor, King and other SCLC members were called to Memphis, Tennessee to support a sanitation workers’ strike. On the night of April 3, King gave a speech at the Mason Temple Church in Memphis. In it he seemed to foreshadow his own untimely passing, or at least to strike a particularly reflective note, ending with these now-historic words: “I’ve seen the promised land. I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that we, as a people, will get to the promised land. And I’m happy tonight. I’m not worried about anything. I’m not fearing any man. Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord.”
    Assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.

    Just after 6 p.m. the following day, King was standing on the second-floor balcony of the Lorraine Motel, where he and associates were staying, when a sniper’s bullet struck him in the neck. He was rushed to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead about an hour later, at the age of 39.

    Shock and distress over the news of King’s death sparked rioting in more than 100 cities around the country, including burning and looting. Amid a wave of national mourning, President Lyndon B. Johnson urged Americans to “reject the blind violence” that had killed King, whom he called the “apostle of nonviolence.” He also called on Congress to speedily pass the civil rights legislation then entering the House of Representatives for debate, calling it a fitting legacy to King and his life’s work. On April 11, Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1968, also known as the Fair Housing Act.
    King Assassination: Seeking Justice

    On June 8, authorities apprehended the suspect in King’s murder, a small-time criminal named James Earl Ray, at London’s Heathrow Airport. Witnesses had seen him running from a boarding house near the Lorraine Motel carrying a bundle; prosecutors said he fired the fatal bullet from a bathroom in that building. Authorities found Ray’s fingerprints on the rifle used to kill King, a scope and a pair of binoculars. On March 10, 1969, Ray pleaded guilty to King’s murder and was sentenced to 99 years in prison. No testimony was heard in his trial. Shortly afterwards, however, Ray recanted his confession, claiming he was the victim of a conspiracy. Ray later found sympathy in an unlikely place: Members of King’s family, including his son Dexter, who publicly met with Ray in 1977 and began arguing for a reopening of his case. Though the U.S. government conducted several investigations into the trial–each time confirming Ray’s guilt as the sole assassin–controversy still surrounds the assassination. At the time of Ray’s death in 1998, King’s widow Coretta Scott King (who in the weeks after her husband’s death had courageously continued the campaign to aid the striking Memphis sanitation workers and carried on his mission of social change through non-violent means) publicly lamented that “America will never have the benefit of Mr. Ray’s trial, which would have produced new revelations about the assassination…as well as establish the facts concerning Mr. Ray’s innocence.”
    Impact of the King Assassination

    Though blacks and whites alike mourned King’s passing, the killing in some ways served to widen the rift between black and white Americans, as many blacks saw King’s assassination as a rejection of their vigorous pursuit of equality through the nonviolent resistance he had championed. His murder, like the killing of Malcolm X in 1965, radicalized many moderate African-American activists, fueling the growth of the Black Power movement and the Black Panther Party in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

    King has remained the most widely known African-American leader of his era, and the most public face of the civil rights movement, along with its most eloquent voice. A campaign to establish a national holiday in his honor began almost immediately after his death, and its proponents overcame significant opposition–critics pointed to FBI surveillance files suggesting King’s adultery and his influence by Communists–before President Ronald Reagan signed the King holiday bill into law in 1983. Construction is underway on a permanent memorial to King, to be located on the Mall in Washington, D.C., near the Lincoln Memorial–the site of King’s iconic “I Have a Dream” speech during the March on Washington in 1963.


    Black History Month

     Image result for martin luther king jr

     Article Apr 1, 2015
    5 facts about the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.

    By Joe Carter

    This Saturday marks the forty-seventh anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. Here are five facts you should know about the killing of the civil rights leader in Memphis, Tennessee.

    1. The killing of King in 1968 was the second attempt on his life. A decade before he was assassinated, King was nearly stabbed to death in Harlem when a mentally ill African-American woman who believed he was conspiring against her with communists, stabbed him in the chest with a letter opener. He underwent emergency surgery, and remained hospitalized for several weeks but made a full recovery. The doctor who performed the operation said, “Had Dr. King sneezed or coughed the weapon would have penetrated the aorta. . . . He was just a sneeze away from death”

    2. On April 4, 1968, King was assassinated by the #277 man on the FBI's Most Wanted Fugitives list. In 1967, James Earl Ray escaped from the Missouri State Penitentiary by hiding in a truck transporting bread from the prison bakery. On the day of the assassination Ray took a room in boarding house that had a view to the motel. King and his entourage frequently stayed at the Lorraine Motel while staying in Memphis.

    3. King was on the balcony of the motel when he was shot. He was hit by a .30-06 caliber rifle bullet that entered his right jaw, traveled through his neck, severing his spinal cord, and stopped in his shoulder blade. Civil rights leader Ralph Abernathy cradled King’s head while Marrell McCollough, an undercover Memphis police officer, used a towel to stop the flow of blood. King was taken to St. Joseph's where doctors attempted emergency surgery before pronouncing him dead at 7:05 p.m. He was 39 years old.

    4. News of King’s assassination prompted major outbreaks of looting, arson, and violence, resulting in death and major property damage in more than 100 American cities. Altogether, 43 men and women were killed, approximately 3,500 were injured, and 27,000 were arrested. Not until over 58,000 National Guardsmen and army troops joined local state and police forces did the uprisings cease. As historian Peter B. Levy says, “during Holy Week 1968, the United States experienced its greatest wave of social unrest since the Civil War.”

    5. After a two-month long, international manhunt, Ray was captured on June 8, 1968 at London's Heathrow Airport. On March 10, 1969, Ray pleaded guilty to King’s murder and was sentenced to 99 years in Brushy Mountain State Penitentiary. No testimony was heard in his trial. Ray later recanted his confession and claimed he was the victim of a conspiracy. Members of King’s family, including his son Dexter, publicly met with Ray in 1977 and began arguing for a reopening of his case. (The government investigations concluded Ray was the lone assassin). Later that same year Ray became the #351 on the FBI's Most Wanted Fugitives list after he and six other convicts escaped from the prison. He was recaptured three days later and given another year in prison, bringing his sentence to 100 years.

     SOURCE: The Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission

    Friday, 24 February 2017

    Daily Sun

    6 hours ago
    WOMEN CAN’T GET ENOUGHOF ZWELI!
    Actor Zweli Dube plays the role of Advocate Pule Mapetla on Muvhango. Both he and Pule are skilled at melting women’s hearts.  ~ 
    ON and off the screen, Zweli Dube (33) is a charmer.
    On screen he plays the role of Pule Mapetla, a bright young lawyer who wins court cases on Muvhango.
    Off screen, Zweli from Mmakau in Tshwane, wins women’s hearts with his well-toned, muscular body.
    “Pule is a smooth talker. He is known for his good skills in court,”
    said Zweli.
    Zweli describes himself as ambitious, determined and energetic.
    He said he doesn’t need any special preparation to portray
    a character.
    “Everything just comes naturally.
    “Nothing feels better than portraying a character as though it is who you are.”
    Zweli was Mzansi’s Sexiest Male for 2017.
    “It is overwhelming to be voted the sexiest man in the country.”
    Zweli travelled to Australia, China and Hong Kong as part of The Lion King show.
    “My love for art inspired me to do my best.”
    His role models are his mum and Denzel Washington.
    “My mum has always been my personal coach. She guides me and is a ray of sunshine. I got my style and fashion sense from her.”
    His message to his fans is to be themselves at all times.
    “Never let someone’s opinion determine your destiny. Respect your talents and be grateful you have them.”

    Daily Sun

    29 minutes ago
    COUNCILLOR GAVE AWAY MY RDP!
    Sihle Zondi lost his RDP after former ward councillor, Eunice Majola, accused him of renting the house to a foreigner.  ~ 
    WHEN Sihle Zondi was given an RDP house suitable for his disability in 2008, he was over the moon.
    But today he is stuck in a transit camp called Jika Joe, where no one is willing to even help him get to the toilet.
    A distraught Sihle (52) blamed his former councillor for this sad state of affairs.
    He told Daily Sun he was given the RDP in Cinderella Park outside Pietermaritzburg back in 2008 when its owner could not be located.
    All things went well until last January, when he had to go to hospital for an operation.
    Sihle said since he lived alone he asked someone to stay in his RDP while he was in hospital for the whole month.
    When he was discharged in February and arrived back home, however, he found that someone else had moved in!
    “An unknown woman now lives in my house.
    “She told me the councillor gave her the RDP and that the person I had left in the house had moved out.”
    He said he went to his councillor, Eunice Majola, who told him there was nothing she could do and accused him of renting his RDP to a foreigner.
    “She then said I would have to stay in the transit camp while I wait for another RDP,” Sihle said.
    And that is where poor Sihle has been since February last year.
    “No one is willing to help me. It’s hard to go to the toilet in my wheelchair. This place is not suitable for people with disabilities,” he said.
    Majola said she was aware of the matter.
    “I did not steal the RDP. I was informed that Sihle was renting the house out and would not be returning,” said Majola.
    She said she then decided to give the house to another needy family.
    Msunduzi’s mayor, Themba Njilo, said they would help Sihle and asked for his patience while they find him a suitable house.

    Daily Sun

    3 hours ago
    STUN GRENADES FIRED!
    Police helicopters hover overhead during protests in Pretoria. Photo by Nation Nyoka/News24  ~ 
    COPS and people marching against immigrants were locked in a tense standoff in the Pretoria CBD this morning, with stun grenades going off near the Department of Home Affairs building.
    A police helicopter hovered overhead and public order police officers weaved through the large crowd.
    At one point, the group tried to push past the police.
    Many in the crowd carried sticks, rods and other items.
    One man said: "The foreigners have real guns. They are selling drugs and prostitution and the municipality is helping them. They must leave."
    Some foreign nationals faced the group, shouting at them.
    A group calling itself the Mamelodi Concerned Residents is leading the march to the Department of Home Affairs in protest against immigrants in South Africa.
    Law enforcement officers will be deployed along the route and at venues where memorandums will be handed over, the cops have said.
    Earlier on Friday morning, protesters blocked several streets in Atteridgeville, preventing residents from going to work and school.
    Rocks were thrown and tyres were burnt.
    Officials later cleared the debris so that traffic could flow freely.
    Police spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Lungelo Dlamini said the police could not confirm whether or not the protest was related to the march.
    No injuries were reported and no arrests have been made.
    "Looting of a truck was reported. We are still waiting to confirm," said Dlamini.
    Tshwane metro police spokesman Superintendent Isaac Mahamba said they had received reports of several shops being looted, but also had yet to confirm the incidents.

    http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/News/stun-grenades-fired-near-pretoria-home-affairs-amid-tense-standoff-20170224

    Black History Month

    Image may contain: 1 person, text

     SOURCE: Descendants that scattered & lost their way.