Julia Mavimbela

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Julia Nompi Mavimbela (20 December 1917[1] – 16 July 2000[2]) was a schoolteacher and community leader in South Africa. When public schools were closed because of the 1976 Soweto uprising, Mavimbela taught schoolchildren in Soweto how to garden and how to read. Mavimbela later co-founded Women for Peace, an organization for women of all races to work for democracy in South Africa. In 1981 she joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and served in local church leadership.

Education and marriage

Mavimbela was chief monitor in college, where she oversaw the care of 300 girls. After obtaining her teaching certificate, she studied for two years, specializing in kindergarten teaching. At a school in Boxburg, she became the first woman principal.[3]: 142  After Mavimbela's mother died, she married John Mavimbela, one of the founders of the Black Chamber of Commerce in Soweto, and helped her husband run a butcher shop in Eastern Native Township. On June 9, 1955, John was killed while driving home from work when his car was hit by an oncoming vehicle, leaving her widowed with her several children.[4] The police blamed John for the accident, even though the head-on collision occurred on his side of the road, because they said that Blacks were careless drivers.[3]: 143 

Career

In the late 1980s Mavimbela was working as a school teacher at a Catholic School in South Africa.[5] In the late 1970s Mavimbela had worked as a social worker.[6]

Community leadership

Community gardening

After the Soweto uprising in 1976, public schools were closed for two years. Mavimbela gathered local school children and taught them how to read while creating community gardens with them.[7] The group was called "Junior Gumboots" after the black boots that miners wear.[8] When gardening with the students in Soweto, Mavimbela told them, "Let us dig the soil of bitterness, throw in a seed, show love, and see what fruits will grow. Love will not come without forgiving others. Where there was a bloodstain, a beautiful flower must grow."[4]

Women for Peace

Mavimbela co-founded Women for Peace, a group for all races that aimed to have a peaceful transition to true democracy in South Africa.[9] From 1984–1986, Mavimbela was co-president with Denise Valente.[8] Women for Peace supported initiatives important to women. The group asked storekeepers to indicate that powdered milk products should not be fed to infants and asked that school teachers be paid more money. Women for Peace also petitioned for making common-law marriages easier to obtain and for the Matrimonial Property Act, which allows a widow to have her deceased husband's property instead of the eldest son.[10] They also petitioned for integrated playgrounds and prison reform.[11]

Mavimbela was a vice president of the group National Women of South Africa, and president of the Transvaal Region of the National Council of African Women.[9]

Membership in LDS Church

Mavimbela joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in 1981. She has since served as a Relief Society president and a public affairs director in the church.[12] In 1985 when the Johannesburg South Africa Temple was dedicated Mavimbela was among the first temple workers in it.[13]

In 1989 Mavimbela was a speaker at BYU's women's conference.

LDS Church video Lives of Service.[2][16]

In 1991 Mavimbela served as an LDS public affairs missionary for the Africa area with Mary Mostert as her companion. In this position they contacted many leading politicians with information on the US constitution during the time South Africa was formulating the structure of its post-Apartheid government.[17]

Works

  • Mavimbela, Julia (1990). "I Speak from My Heart: The Story of A Black South African Woman". In Cornwall, Marie; Howe, Susan (eds.). In Women of Wisdom and Knowledge. Salt Lake City:
    OCLC 20828527
    .

See also

References

  1. ^ Florence, Giles H. Jr. (April 1990), "Julia Mavimbela: Sowing Seeds in Soweto", Ensign
  2. ^ a b "Obituaries: Julia Nompi Mavimbela", Church News, 12 August 2000
  3. ^ .
  4. ^ a b Boothe, Randall (4 February 2003). "Seasons of Choice". Brigham Young University.
  5. ^ Deseret News article on Mavimbela, March 21, 1989
  6. ^ Janet Lewvine, Inside Apartheid: One Woman's Struggle in South Africa
  7. ^ Mostert, Mary (11 November 1996). "Julia Mavimbela - Common Sense at the World Food Summit". Banner of Liberty (bannerofliberty.com). Archived from the original on 30 October 2006. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help) Reprint from Michael Reagan's Monthly Monitor
  8. ^ a b "S. African Schoolteacher Will Speak at BYU Women's Conference April 6". DeseretNews.com. 21 March 1989. Retrieved 20 April 2017.
  9. ^ a b "South African women's council elects LDS as its vice president", Church News, 23 November 1991
  10. .
  11. ^ Allen, James B. (Spring 1992). "On Becoming a Universal Church: Some Historical Perspectives" (PDF). Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought. 25 (1): 13–36. Retrieved 20 April 2017.
  12. ^ LeBaron, Dale (March 1995), "Julia Mavimbela", Liahona
  13. ^ "Break the Soil of Bitterness". churchofjesuschrist.org. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. 26 January 2017. Retrieved 20 April 2017.
  14. ^ Deseret News 1989
  15. .
  16. ^ Dockstader, Julie A. (17 August 1991), "Video tells story of Church in Africa", Church News
  17. ^ Mary Mostert A Hunger for Liberty Leads to the Declaration of Independence (Provo, Utah: CTR Publishing, 2004) p. 220-221

See also

External links