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mardi 19 août 2014

Nat Nakasa reburial: South African writer's remains return


Sipho Masondo, nephew of exhumed South African journalist Nathaniel Nakasa, speaking during a memorial service for his uncle Nat Nakasa in the Broadway Presbyterian Church in New York, 16 August 2014 A memorial service was held for Nat Nakasa in New York on Saturday


The remains of renowned anti-apartheid journalist Nat Nakasa have been returned to South Africa from the US.
He was awarded a year's fellowship to study journalism at Harvard University in 1964 and took his own life a year later in New York at the age of 28.
The apartheid government had refused to give him a passport so he had left on an exit permit, which meant he was unable to go home.
"Nat would be very happy," his sister Gladys Maphumulo said.
Hero's welcome She attended the memorial service for Nakasa on Saturday in New York, a day after his remains were exhumed.

South African police carry the coffin containing the remains of anti-apartheid and former Drum magazine journalist Nat Nakasa at the King Shaka International airport on 19 August 2014 in Durban, South Africa Nat Nakasa is expected to be reburied in his birthplace of Chesterville in KwaZulu-Natal province next month

A member of the Umkhnto We Sizwe Military Veterans Association forms a guard of honour around the coffin containing the remains of anti-apartheid and former Drum magazine journalist Nat Nakasa in a marquee at the King Shaka International airport on 19 August 2014  - Durban, South Africa Further tributes were paid to Nat Nakasa after his coffin arrived at Durban's King Shaka International Airport
At the service, South Africa's Arts and Culture Minister Nathi Mthethwa said it was the closure of a "horrific chapter of our history".

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Analysis: Pumza Fihlani, BBC News, Johannesburg It is fitting that one of the country's most celebrated writers should return home as South Africans celebrate 20 years of freedom.
He once wrote: "I may shut up for some time because of fear. Yet even this will not make me feel ashamed. For I know that as long as the ideas remain unchanged within me, there will always be the possibility that, one day, I shall burst out and say everything that I wish to say - in a loud and thunderous voice."
The return of his remains is also a reminder of the many men and women who died in exile during apartheid, far from their families.
I imagine he would be as critical of today's social ills as he was of those in the 1960s. But I also imagine he would call on South Africans to celebrate the achievement that black people are now free to live where they want, work where they want and love who they want. South Africans hold him in high regard because he is a reminder of how far black people have come.

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Correspondents say there was a hero's welcome for the late writer at the airport in Durban.
A guard of honour made up of veterans from Umkhonto we Sizwe, the former military wing of the African National Congress, led the flag-draped coffin into a marquee, where further tributes were paid.
A campaign to have Nakasa's remains returned home began not long after the end of white minority rule in 1994.
"This is a proud moment for South African journalism and the nation as a whole that we have been able to give Nat his last wish, returning to the land of his birth and to rest eternally with his ancestors,'' the South African National Editors Forum said in a statement.

The headstone of writer and journalist Nathaniel Nakasa is seen at his grave at Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale, New York, the US - 11 August 2014 Nat Nakasa died in New York after jumping off a high rise building
Nakasa started his career in Durban, and later moved to Johannesburg where he worked for Drum magazine and other publications.
The late Nadine Gordimer knew Nakasa during his time in Johannesburg, and said he was a good talker and through his columns revealed a "a highly personal kind" of journalism which showed the daily reality of apartheid "for one man living through it".
His writing reflected the "gaiety of a serious man", said the Nobel Prize-winning author, who died in July.
"The truth is that he was a new kind of man in South Africa," she wrote in an essay published in a collection of her writing, Telling Times.
"He accepted without question and with easy dignity and natural pride his Africanness, and he took equally for granted that his identity as a man among men, a human among fellow humans, could not be legislated out of existence."

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