Tenda Ratshitanga | |
---|---|
Born | Tendamudzimu Robert Ratshitanga 1940 |
Died | September 2010 | (aged 70)
Political party | African National Congress |
Relatives | Rashaka Ratshitanga (brother) |
Tendamudzimu Robert Ratshitanga (1940 – September 2010) was a South African activist, politician and writer, best known for his poetry in Tshivenda. Formerly an anti-apartheid activist in the Venda bantustan, he represented the African National Congress (ANC) in the National Assembly for a brief period after 1994 before joining the civil service. He was a local councillor in Vhembe when he died in 2010.
Ratshitanga was born in 1940 in Mulenzhe in the former Transvaal [1] and was the son of a Venda chief. [2] With his elder brother Rashaka Ratshitanga, [2] he was involved in anti-apartheid activism in the bantustan of Venda. [3]
He was arrested in early November 1983 and in March 1984 was convicted under the Terrorism Act for having assisted three anti-apartheid activists to evade arrest. [2] He was apparently offered a plea on a treason charge, which would have carried a lighter sentence, but argued that Venda did not exist as a state against which one could commit treason. [2] He served five years' imprisonment. [2]
According to Collins Chabane, Ratshitanga was a leading figure in establishing ANC branches in the Northern Transvaal after the ANC was unbanned in 1990. [3] [4] After the democratic transition, Ratshitanga served briefly in the National Assembly; [4] he was not initially elected in the 1994 general election, [5] but he was sworn in during the legislative term that followed, filling a casual vacancy. [6] He went on to work in the civil service, including as provincial head of the National Intelligence Agency in Limpopo, and as a local councillor in Thulamela Local Municipality and Vhembe District Municipality. [4] At the time of his death, he represented the ANC as the chief whip in the Vhembe council. [3] [4]
Ratshitanga published his first book of poetry, Vhungoho na Vivho ( Tshivenda for Truthfulness and Jealousy) in 1972, and several others afterwards, including an anthology, Tell Him, Mother, in 1976. [1] [2] Several of his poems were prescribed works in classes at public schools and the University of Venda from the 1980s onwards. [2] [3] [4] He also launched a newspaper, The Bugle, during apartheid. [4]
He was married to Christinah Ratshitanga and died in September 2010 at Tshilidzini Hospital after a short illness. [3] [4] President Jacob Zuma granted him an official provincial state funeral, and Minister Collins Chabane and Limpopo Premier Cassel Mathale provided eulogies. [3] [4]