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Archived Audio

Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela's Remarks
(Includes opening remarks by Steve Riskin)
Audio Only Audio Only · 15M Download*
Running Time - 54 min

Q&A; Session
(Moderated by Steve Riskin)
Audio Only Audio Only · 10M Download*
Running Time - 36 min

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Related Institute Resources

Publications

The South African Truth Commission: The Politics of Reconciliation
(U.S. Institute of Peace Press 2000)

Assorted Online Resources

Forgive and Forget: Rethinking Memory in Sierra Leone's Truth and Reconciliation Commission
(2004 Senior Fellow Project Report)

Youth in Violently Divided Societies
(2003 Senior Fellow Project Report)

Putting the Demons to Rest
(Archived Audio)

At Midnight, the Masks Come Off: Lessons from the South African Experience
(Archived Video)

Truth Commissions Digital Collection
(Library Digital Collection)

Trauma and Conflict Web Links
(Library Web Links)

Grant Program Roundtable

Forgiveness and South Africa's Truth & Reconciliation Commission
Making Public Spaces Intimate

a man sits next to a sign on a segrated beach in South Africa, 1982.
A South African sits near a sign marking a segregated beach in South Africa, 1982. (Courtesy UN)

Date:
Tuesday, September 21, 2004

Time:
9:30–11:00 AM

Location:
U.S. Institute of Peace
1200 17th St., NW
Washington, D.C.

Directions

 

 

As South Africa moves along the difficult road toward national reconciliation it continues a process, begun by South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), to confront the personal and societal trauma visited upon the country by its Apartheid past. To explore efforts to advance national reconciliation in South Africa, the Institute's Grant Program sponsored a special roundtable discussion on September 21, 2004 with award winning author and Institute grantee Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela.



Institute grantee Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela addresses the audience.

An associate professor of psychology at the University of Cape Town and a former member of the Human Rights Violations Committee of South Africa's TRC, Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela discussed the TRC's central themes of public acknowledgement, truth-telling, and accountability and elaborated on how the TRC approach enabled an empathic, human connection between victims and perpetrators. She also explored how, in public spaces, the interpersonal, empathic dynamic between victim and perpetrator can be extended to include broader audiences and communities. Moderated by Steven Riskin, a program officer in the Institute's Grant Program, the panel discussion was followed by questions from the floor.

 

Speakers

  • Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela
    Associate Professor of Psychology, University of Cape Town; Former Member, Human Rights Violations Committee, South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission; Author, A Human Being Died That Night: A South African Story of Forgiveness; and U.S. Institute of Peace Grantee

Moderator

  • Steve Riskin
    Grant Program, U.S. Institute of Peace

 

 


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