Category Archives: Motala Heights Shembe Temple

Sunday Tribune: Heights of abuse, claim shack owners

These so-called ‘low cost houses’ will sell for R300 000 each….And Govender knows very well that the Temple was sacred ground. Everyone in the community knows that and when the funeral service was being held there for Bongo Dlamini Govender stood outside glaring at the people. He was on site when the Temple was being bulldozed.

Sunday Tribune – Herald Supplement

Developers say people were consulted

Mervyn Naidoo

MOTALA Heights shack dwellers near Pinetown are adamant they will not move and are prepared to die rather than be relocated.

The area they live in is being graded to build houses.

Residents, who say the neighbourhood reflects the Rainbow Nation, with various race groups living in harmony, are especially angry because a place of worship has been destroyed.

They accuse the eThekwini Municipality and the property developer of not respecting their constitutional rights and not consulting with them.

But the property developers say they have followed due process and worked with the municipality.

Tempers reached boiling point last week when graders were brought in to work on the land and bulldozed a 13-year-old Shembe worship site.

When residents saw the desecration, and questioned the driver of the grader, he referred them to local businessman Ricky Govender.

Shamitha Naidoo, chairwoman of Motala Heights A Branch, said this was not the first time a religious site had been disregarded.

“Last year there was a threat to destroy a Hindu temple in Mariannhill.

“(Deputy mayor) Logie Naidoo said there could be no demolition of religious buildings unless they were neglected. The temple was then saved from demolition. The Shembe Temple is sacred ground for the Shembe congregation and it must also be saved. No one has a right to just bulldoze another’s sacred place.”

Bheki Ngcobo, a local committee member of the Abahlali baseMjondolo Movement, a national organisation that looks after the plight of shack dwellers, said there had been no communication from the land owner or the municipality.

“If one looks at the constitution of this country, it is clear that there has to be some agreement and arrangements before people are relocated and religious sites interfered with.

Respect

“We have to wonder if we are citizens of this country or not. The municipality did not consult with us, but allows the rich to do as they please.

“Our rights as citizens are being violated. No respect has been shown for our place of worship. We are very disappointed.

“There are only two options left for us now. The first is to challenge the developer legally, but we don’t have millions so. We are prepared to die to prevent the development.

“We’ll make sure that no stone or cement comes into the area without proper consultation,” said Ngcobo.

“We were hoping that this land would be used for the building of low-cost houses, but it looks like it is going to be used for business,” Ngcobo said.

Govender says he doesn’t understand what all the fuss is about, because he is no longer the owner of the land. He had only been on site to find out what was happening.

Govender said he had sold the property to a Johannesburg developer, Mags Reddy.

“The allegations against me are false. I’ve recently sold the property to a developer at cost price, so the gap between low-cost and social houses can be closed. I made a deal with the developer when selling the property that he must build 160 low-cost houses,” Govender said.

“I was out of the country and as soon as I got back from Malawi I went straight to the site to see what was going on. I apologise if the place of worship was bulldozed.

“It didn’t resemble a church, there were just white stones on the ground. The guys may have made a mistake, but we don’t mind relocating the stones to a more appropriate place.

“The land in Motala Heights doesn’t belong to me, they are just targeting me for no reason.

Mags Reddy said lots 50 and 51 were privately owned and he intends building houses on them.

“I do property development around the country and we always follow all processes and protocols when it comes to property development. The land does not belong to the municipality,” said Reddy.

Couglan Pather, the municipality’s head of housing, was unavailable for comment at the time of going to press.

mervyn.naidoo@inl.co.za

On the Casual Bulldozing of a Shembe Temple in Durban

http://www.sacsis.org.za/site/article/606.1

On the Casual Bulldozing of a Shembe Temple in Durban

By Richard Pithouse

Whenever they find a reality that doesn’t suit them / they alter it with a bulldozer
– Mahmoud Darwish, A State of Siege, Ramallah, 2002.

Mahmoud Darwish, a poet who wrote, especially towards the end of his life, with a real confidence in what he called the butterfly’s burden, the social weight carried by delicate beauty, began his life in al-Birwa, a village in Galilee. He was seven years old when his family fled the Israeli military in 1948 and his life was spun between Moscow, Cairo, Beirut, Paris and Ramallah before he died in Houston in 2008.

In his wandering exile he was able to visit Casa de Isla Negra, the cherished home of the Chilean poet Pablo Neruda. In a poem about his visit to Neruda’s home he recounts his recollection, at Isla Negra, of a conversation with the Greek poet Yannis Ritsos in his home in Athens. He had asked Ritsos what poetry is and Ritsos had replied that it is the “inexplicable longing” that “makes a thing into a specter, and makes a specter into a thing. Yet it might explain our need to share public beauty.”

Here in South Africa the Constitution may declare that we are all, or least all of us with the appropriate papers, equally the public and equally entitled to find and share beauty as we see fit. But much of our shared life is dominated by business interests that appeal to markets rather than publics and not everyone is in the market for everything. This is not always a case of market logic rendering, as it often does, some people superfluous and therefore invisible. When the poor are out of the places to which they are supposed to keep, when a shack stands next to a suburban home or a poor child sits next to a richer child in a school, the mere presence of people without money can render them hyper-visible. People, with all their individual depth and complexity, are sometimes turned into objects onto which all kinds of contempt, fear and hate are projected.

One of the many places in our society where the fracturing in who counts as a full member of our national public and who does not is immediately visible is Motala Heights near Durban. Motala Heights is nestled into a valley between the factories on the outskirts of Pinetown and a steep hill that leads up to the expensive suburb of Kloof. Some of the people in the valley are poor and live in tin houses that they have built on rented land and some are middle class or wealthy and live in large suburban homes. There is also a shack settlement at the foot of the hill that leads up to Kloof.

In 2006 the eThekwini Municipality tried to send in their men with guns to eradicate the shack settlement. When Bheki Ngcobo told them that their actions were illegal in terms of the Constitution he was tear-gassed and beaten to the ground. But, in the end, the squatters stopped the City’s illegal eviction. The law is not everything but it is also not nothing. At the time the squatters were convinced that the eviction had been directed by a local landlord and businessman, Ricky Govender, and claimed that the municipal demolition team had been drinking in his pub before they set off up the hill to eradicate a community. There is no doubt that some municipal officials and police officers speak as if Govender, who boasts of connections to Jacob Zuma, has some sort of extra-legal authority over the whole community. Govender’s plans to force out the poor in order to develop Motala Heights for private profit clearly carry a lot more weight than the demand of its poor residents that the state support them in building a community for all the residents of the area.

Govender has been trying, for some years now, to evict some of the people in the tin houses. They are often old and poor. Some have lived in their homes for as long as forty-five years. Like the municipality, he has failed because his attempted evictions have been illegal. This is public knowledge. Allegations that he has dumped dangerous industrial waste right outside activists’ homes, threatened to have activist Shamita Naidoo killed for R50 and to bulldoze people’s homes have been reported in the local press. Newspapers have also reported that Govender has been interdicted in the Durban High Court from evicting people without a court order, from assaulting and harassing his tenants and from bulldozing their homes. In 2007 The Mercury reported that Govender had threatened to kill one of their photographers. Yet the state has made no visible move to ensure that Govender and the residents of the shacks and the tin houses should all live under the obligations and protections of the Constitution. Money and political connections appear to have bought Govender a degree of immunity.

Last month the squatters’ claimed that, after years of struggle, the Municipality finally sent a team to fix up the dirt road leading into the settlement. They say that Govender instructed the team to stop work and redirected them to his pub where the gravel was used for his own private maintenance work. On Friday last week a bulldozer shuddered up the hill adjacent to the shack settlement, went straight to the Shembe temple and obliterated it. There was no warning of what was about to happen. The driver of the bulldozer referred residents to his boss who referred them to Ricky Govender. The temple had been there since 1997 and has been used for worship every Saturday since then.

In A State of Siege, a poem written amidst the Second Intifada, Mahmoud Darwish wrote that “Whenever they find a reality that doesn’t suit them / they alter it with a bulldozer.” Palestine has endured a unique horror since 1948 but the arrogance of unrestrained power bulldozes all kinds of inconvenient realities across space and time. A few days after the American backed military coup against the elected Chilean government of Salvador Allende on 11 September 1973, Isla Negra, Pablo Neruda’s home, was ransacked by soldiers who burnt his books in the garden. “Look around,” he famously said to them, “there’s only one thing of danger for you here—poetry.”

After the 1913 Land Act, Sol Plaatjie wrote of the “roving pariahs” torn from their rural homes and unwelcome in the cities and we have, of course, our own body of poetry against the bulldozing of inconvenient realities. In 1948, Modikwe Dikobe, trade unionist, novelist and secretary of the Alexandra squatters’ resistance movement in Johannesburg, wrote in Shantytown Removal of being left “unfeathered,” “wingless” and “dumbfounded” in a “ruin” that once housed “a thousand souls / With its own administration.”

The bulldozing of inconvenient realities is not just a strand in the story of our past. Almost a hundred years after the Land Act millions of roving pariahs remain in the shack settlements on the edges of our towns and cities. They are often shunted around at the point of guns wielded by the state and private power. There are plenty of sixteen year olds who have never lived a day under apartheid but who have seen their homes, communities and, in Motala Heights, their temple, treated as nothing but an aberration to be bulldozed from the landscape.

When people put on their white robes and walk up a hill to pray in a temple under a tree they are reaching towards the sacred, bringing body and spirit together. This is one way of making poetry, of honouring the butterfly’s burden.

In Motala Heights we could say to the police, to Ricky Govender, to the eThekwini Municipality, to the headmaster of the local school “Look around—there’s only one thing of danger for you here—people.” But saying that will count for nothing if enough forces cannot be marshalled to defend the public good and push the logic of private profit into its place.

Sowetan: Outrage over desecration of temple

http://www.sowetanlive.co.za/news/2011/01/18/outrage-over-desecration-of-temple

Outrage over desecration of temple

Jan 18, 2011 | Corrinne Louw

SHEMBE worshippers living in the Motala Heights Informal Settlement in Pinetown, just outside Durban, are furious at the demolition of their temple

Lindokuhle Magwaza, of the Motala Heights Shembe congregation, said their temple had been a place of worship for the past 13 years and that destroying this sacred ground was a devastating act for the religious residents of the community.

Residents of the Motala Heights Informal Settlement, which is affiliated to Abahlali BasemJondolo, said in a statement that they were fearful that the temple demolition would lead to their homes also being destroyed.

The residents claim that the demolition has left them with broken water and drainage pipes and cut off electricity connections.

Shamita Naidoo, chairperson of the Motala Heights B branch that lies adjacent to destroyed Shembe Temple, said Hindu worshippers were successful in stopping the demolition of a Hindu Temple in Mariannhill last year.

“Logie Naidoo (Durban’s deputy mayor) said that there can be no demolition of any religious building unless it is neglected,” Shamita said.

“That Temple was then saved from demolition. The Shembe Temple is sacred ground for the Shembe congregation and it must also be saved.”

The residents allege that the demolition was orchestrated by land owner Ricky Govender, who locked horns with Motala Heights residents amid claims of intimidation and harassment.

In 2008 three residents from Motala Heights were granted an order in the Durban high court against Govender, instructing his employees or relatives to refrain from threatening or assaulting them.

The Shembe worshippers said they would be taking the matter to the elders of the church.