Zanele Dlamini Mbeki Explained

Zanele Dlamini Mbeki
Birth Name:Zanele Dlamini
Birth Date:1938 11, df=yes
Birth Place:Alexandra, Gauteng, South Africa
Profession:Social worker
Term Label1:In role
Term Start1:14 June 1999
Term End1:24 September 2008
Preceded1:Graça Machel
Office2:First Lady of African Union
Term Start2:9 July 2002
Term End2:10 July 2003
President2:Thabo Mbeki
Preceded2:position established
Succeeded2:Marcelina Rafael Chissano
Children:Dlammini

Zanele Mbeki OMSS (née Dlamini; born 18 November 1938) is a feminist South African social worker who founded the Women's Development Bank. She is also a former first lady of South Africa.

Early life and education

Zanele Dlamini was born in 1938 in Alexandra, South Africa, where her father was a Methodist priest and her mother a dressmaker.[1] She has five sisters.[2]

Zanele was a boarder at the Catholic Inkamana Academy in KwaZulu-Natal, before studying to be a social worker at the University of the Witwatersrand.[2]

After working for three years for Anglo American plc as a case worker in Zambia, she moved to London and completed a diploma in social policy and administration at the London School of Economics in 1968.[2] She later won a scholarship to do her PhD on the position of African women under apartheid at Brandeis University in the United States, although before completing it, she left the United States to marry Thabo Mbeki.[1] [2] [3]

Career

While in London, Mbeki worked as a psychiatric social worker at Guy's Hospital, and at the Marlborough Day Hospital.[2]

After her marriage, she worked for the International University Education Fund in Lusaka, Zambia. She resigned in 1980,[4] shortly before it was closed down after the exposure of her boss, Craig Williamson, as a South African spy.[3] She was also elected to the ANC's Women's League and edited the Voice of Women.[2] [3] She lectured at the University of Zambia for two years and then worked for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Nairobi.[1] [3]

When they returned to South Africa in 1990, Mbeki founded the Women's Development Bank, which offers microfinance to poor South African women.[1] While her husband was campaigning, she rarely appeared with him and refused to grant interviews.[5] When her husband became President in 1999, she became First Lady of South Africa. She is a feminist and an advocate for women's rights.[6] In July 2003, she convened the South African Women in Dialogue, designed to enable women to participate fully in the country's development.[7]

Personal life

Mbeki met Thabo Mbeki while studying at the University of London and they were married in a registry office in London on 23 November 1974, followed by a religious ceremony at the home of her older sister Edith, Farnham Castle in Surrey.[1] [2] [3] He had to receive permission from the ANC to marry and reportedly told Adelaide Tambo "if Papa [Oliver Tambo] doesn't allow me to marry Zanele, I'll never, ever marry again. And I'll never ask again. I love only one person and there is only one person I want to make my life with, and that is Zanele."[8] The couple have no children and have often lived apart.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The one who brings Thabo peace. Staff Reporter. Mail and Guardian. 11 June 1999. 30 October 2016.
  2. Web site: Two presidents and a first lady. 22 June 2012. 30 October 2016. Joburg.org.
  3. Book: Gevisser, Mark. A Legacy of Liberation: Thabo Mbeki and the Future of the South African Dream. 2009. Macmillan. registration.
  4. Book: Sellström, Tor. Sweden and National Liberation in Southern Africa, Volume 2, Solidarity and assistance 1970-1994. Nordiska Afrikainstitutet. 2002. 9789171064486. 578. PDF.
  5. Web site: A First Lady Debuts With Reluctance. 19 June 1999. 30 October 2016. Los Angeles Times. Dean E.. Murphy.
  6. Web site: Women's liberation. Zanele. Dhlamini (Mbeki. South African History Online. SAHO).
  7. Book: Vetten, Lisa. 147. Essays on the Evolution of the Post-Apartheid State: Legacies, Reforms and Prospects. Mcebisi Ndletyana. The Simulacrum of Equality? Engendering the Post94 South African State. 2015. Real African Publishers. 9781920655853.
  8. Book: Abrams, Dennis. 79. Thabo Mbeki. 2007. Infobase Publishing. 9781438104751.