South African Day of
Courageous Conversation: An inter-faith initiative
The Most Revd Dr Thabo Makgoba,
Anglican Archbishop of Cape
Town
Bishopscourt, 8 October
2015
Representatives
of the faith communities here present,
Leaders
of the mining sector, representing both workers and management,
Representatives
of government, who were invited here,
Members
of civil society,
Members
of the Steering Committee:
Thank
you all for being here today. I want to thank particularly those
involved in the mining sector for coming, and for allowing yourselves
to be vulnerable in taking these conversations forward. Why do I say
that, and why are we calling this a day of courageous conversation?
As many of you know, this is the South African step along a road
which began at the Vatican two years ago, when the Pontifical Council
for Justice and Peace hosted a Day of Reflection in September 2013.
It continued with an Ecumenical Day of Reflection at Lambeth Palace
in London, hosted by the Archbishop of Canterbury and the President
of the British Methodist Conference, and more recently another Day of
Reflection at the Vatican, which I was privileged to join.
Those
global-level meetings recognised that the dialogue they began needs
to take place at local level, within countries where mining is part
of the economic and social fabric of society. Here in South Africa,
we have expanded the conversation to include what I call an
inter-faith slant, reflecting the make-up of our particular society.
And the fact that this conversation takes place within the context of
South African society in 2015 also explains why it takes courage to
join it. For, as I said a few days ago, when we marched to Parliament
and the Presidency in a rally against corruption, too many of us have
been intimidated into silence by our current rulers. Leaders who
showed such courage in what I called the old struggle, the struggle
against apartheid, now punish those who would speak out against their
mismanagement of our country.
Why
am I, Thabo, involved in this initiative? Let me share with you an
anecdote. My father, as a self-supporting church minister, had to
find his own ways of taking care of his family. His way of doing it
was to go every month to a factory shop in Johannesburg, a shop
called Kitty Kit Hawkers' Factory Supplies, and to buy beautiful
clothing on credit. Then, starting around the 15th of every month, he
and a friend would drive west of Johannesburg through Carletonville,
Fochville, Potchefstroom, Stilfontein, Orkney and Klerksdorp,
stopping at each mine, dropping off stock and collecting deposits,
ending up at Lichtenburg. Every month, as they arrived at each mine
and opened their boot, the miners knew, “Makgoba and Dichabe are
here.” Then they would turn around and travel back to Johannesburg
after pay day to collect their money. But my father didn't complete
his last trip – he fell ill, he came home to Soweto and he died in
his bed. As the elder son, I was given the book in which his
customers were recorded, so I set off to collect what he was owed,
and I have never forgotten how touched the miners were when they
heard of his death, and their absolute honesty in settling up their
debts with me. They wanted me to continue the business, which of
course I didn't – but I did go back to the industry later after
earning my degree, and worked as a psychologist for TEBA at the Rand
Mutual Mine Hospital in Eloff Street Extension, where I was looking
after miners who had suffered spinal cord injuries.
So
I come to this meeting knowing that the church has been to some
degree involved in ministry to the mining industry. And we have
ecumenical bodies such as the National Religious Association for
Social Development, represented here, and the South African Council
of Churches, that has done urban and industrial mission. But one of
our objectives today is to acknowledge our shortcomings and our
failures, and I want to say that the churches have failed the mining
industry, both workers and managers. We have failed to take into
account how risky mining is economically, one year a market-based
success riding high on commodity prices, the next a business in
quicksand. We have failed to understand the aspirations of people who
want to earn R12,500 a month for working in conditions of extreme
heat on stopes lying kilometres down in the earth. We have failed to
understand the constraints on managers facing the relentless pressure
of meeting shareholders’ expectations for better results every
quarter, and who have to deal with resistance to social reforms from
engineers and line managers responsible for the safe conduct of
highly sophisticated and technically complex mining operations.
There
are times in our lives when we have to recognise that our past is
what it is, and we cannot change it. However, as I have said
previously to some of you, we can change the story we tell ourselves
about it, and by doing that, we can change the future. I want the
process we enter today to be one of lamentation, in the sense that
the Book of Lamentations in the Old Testament of the Christian bible
describes it. Generally held to have been written after the
destruction of Jerusalem by the Babylonians, the book expresses what
it means to experience suffering, but it goes further than that. In
the words of one of my favourite theologians, Denise Ackermann,
formerly of the universities of the Western Cape and of Stellenbosch:
Lamenting “...is a
refusal to settle for the way things are. It is reminding God that
the human situation is not as it should be and that God as the
partner in the covenant must act.” Lamentation
is not navel gazing; it is not only exposing your vulnerability, but
exposing it as a tool for leadership, because you can’t say let us
move forward together without acknowledging the failures of the past.
Today’s
process does not involve me prescribing what should be discussed.
Each of you must bring your own unique concerns and contributions to
this conversation, and what is of overriding importance is that each
one of us tries to put ourselves in the shoes of those with whom we
are in dialogue. We need to be able to contribute here from the
perspective of someone on the other side of an issue. But in the
spirit of being just one participant among you, let me bring you my
concerns, without suggesting they are any more valid or important
than each of yours.
Firstly,
I come here today suggesting that we might best be placed to think
about how we could work together on mine health and safety issues.
There may well be other areas that we could partner on, but this
might be the one tangible area we need to reflect on. You in the
mining houses have mastered this area and you have reduced
fatalities, but we in the churches have the injured in our
communities, as well as those who contract HIV and Aids or TB while
working on the mines. Churches pour a lot of energy, time and money
in this area. Your experience in mine health and safety will find
fertile hearts in the churches.
Secondly,
perhaps we should look at our records, as the mining industry and our
response as the faith community, on environmental degradation. I have
just returned from the Diocese of Matlosane, which encompasses the
area around Klerksdorp, and while I was there, the bishop of that
diocese took me around, showing me where the environment is being
rehabilitated. Looking as those long pipes carrying slush across
virgin land, I had to wonder: how safe and secure is that process?
What are the risks of spillage, which apart from polluting the earth,
could introduce dangerous levels of pollution to the Vaal River
catchment area. I know that this is something the mines give a lot of
attention to; but we in the church have been remiss in not getting
ourselves involved in the process. As a result we are not in a
position to make any responsible judgement about whether the mines
are truly meeting their responsibilities. Also on the environment,
our church has recently decided to consider disinvesting from the
fossil fuel industry, so we would urge the industry to explore to its
maximum potential the possibility of solar and other renewable
energy.
Thirdly,
let me raise the issue of social cohesion. There has been renewed
attention in recent days, notably after Thomas Piketty’s Mandela
lecture, to the enormous disparities in wealth not only in our
society but across the globe. The difference between our situation in
South Africa and that in more economically developed countries is
that, like no other issue we face, this one has the potential to blow
our country apart. There is an urgent need for all of us – whether
different companies in the industry or different groups in the faith
community – to stop working in silos in the contexts within which
we operate. Within the industry, mining companies need to join as a
collective and raise the bar, especially in the areas of housing,
health, schools and poverty alleviation. We acknowledge gratefully
that millions have already been poured into these areas by
yourselves, and there are complexities to deal with, but might it not
work to pour resources into a common fund dedicated for your
collective action?
I
have gone over my prescribed time, so let me make two further
suggestions very briefly.
Addressing
labour: Labour, is it not time that we rethink the “class warfare”
approach developed in the conditions of 19th century Europe, and look
at “co-determination” models of working jointly with management?
This does not mean that unions lose their right to bargain, but it
can involve, for example, the separate representation of workers on
management or supervisory boards of companies, such as is practised
in a number of European countries.
And
addressing management here, is it not time to look at the huge
disparity between executive pay and that of workers? I know that the
amount of money that limiting executive pay would release for an
average worker is negligible, but didn’t Nelson Mandela demonstrate
to us the enormous power of symbolic action? And in case you think
these are the ramblings of an idealistic archbishop, let me quote a
man who spent a decade at the centre of the American financial
system: William McDonough, formerly president of the Federal Reserve
Bank of New York, and a deputy to Fed chairman Alan Greenspan in the
1990s. He has quoted Matthew's Gospel on loving our neighbour in
suggesting, that there ought to be, and I quote him, “economic and
moral limitations on the gaps created by the market-driven reward
system”. Speaking in 2002 at Trinity Church Wall Street in New
York, he said of the disparity between executive pay and that of the
average American worker that “it is hard to find somebody more
convinced than I of the superiority of the American economic system,
but I can find nothing in economic theory that justifies this
development.”
(http://www.ny.frb.org/newsevents/speeches/2002/mcd020911.html)
To
end these introductory words, my prayer for today is that each of you
here will feel that this is a safe space, one in which you can speak
your mind honestly, one in which we will listen to and really hear
one another, instead of speaking past each other. Instead of focusing
on micro, mine-specific issues, let’s look at macro, global issues,
pursuing the common good as opposed to narrow self-interest.
I
also pray that these conversations won’t just be a talk-shop; that
we will take tangible, implementable decisions to act; not only that,
but that we will expand such conversations not only in the mining
sector but for all wealth creators in our economy. Again as I have
said before in similar settings, it’s time for us to turn to each
other, not on each other. What is important is not where we start,
but where we finish.
So
welcome to Bishopscourt, home and office to bishops and archbishops
of Cape Town since 1848, a home where President Mandela spent his
first night after being released from prison, and addressed the
nation and the world from the very lawn on which you are seated. As
some of you will know, this property was once an estate owned by Jan
van Riebeeck, the Dutch settler who came here in the 17th
century to establish a refreshment station for passing ships.
Scattered on the hill behind us are the remains of a hedge of wild
almond trees which the Dutch East India Company planted to keep the
likes of me out of their settlement. As late as 1986, when Desmond
Tutu came to live here, he had to do so in defiance of the Group
Areas Act. So the very place in which we meet is a testimony that
transformation can happen after years of oppression.
Thank you very much for keeping us informed.
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