I am humbled to receive Sharpeville Survivor Ntate Tswakai Ngale’s endorsement of the DA
6 May 2019
Almost 60 years ago, thousands of South Africans peacefully assembled outside of the police station here in Sharpeville in a brave and principled protest against the unjust “pass laws” – which rendered black South Africans second-class citizens due to the nothing but the colour of their skin.
On that day, 69 brave South Africans made the ultimate sacrifice as they were killed by the Apartheid state police force. These are our heroes because of their bravery and courage. In the face of injustice, thousands of people refused to accept the status quo and chose to courageously fight for change.
Today I am humbled to visit Ntate Tswakai Ngale, who himself could just as easily have been one of the 69 people who lost their lives, but that day, fate decided it was not his day to make that sacrifice. Ntate Ngale – today a father of 5 and a grandfather to 8 – was one of the brave South Africans who took to these streets in the Sharpeville protests, to fight for a better tomorrow.
In his youth, Ntate Ngale was a member of the band called “Sharpeville Sing stars”, which used to actively raise funds for the ANC through their performances during the 1950s and 1960s. Ngale - who was the band’s saxophonist – today struggles to reconcile that ANC with today’s ANC that has forgotten and rejected many of those who fought so hard for our democracy.