Each morning, miners line up to travel underground into the shafts at Sibanye-Stillwater, while Mandla Mngadi braces himself for another demanding shift. As an on-setter underground, he carries workers and equipment into the depths of the mine and safely back up again. It is a heavy and risky responsibility that he takes seriously.
But Mngadi’s vision stretches beyond the cage he operates. For him, education is the true engine of transformation. And in his journey as both a veteran mineworker and aNational Union of Mineworkers (NUM)leader, he has seen first-hand how initiatives like the NUM-established JB Marks Education Trust Fund and its introduction of Adult Basic Education and Training (Abet) programmes have lit a path from illiteracy to empowerment.
“Education is a mineworker’s dream. People who came into the mining industry illiterate got an opportunity to join the Abet programmes. They started to learn how to write, how to read, and then they started to speak English,” Mngadi recalls.
Read Full Article on The Sowetan
[paywall]
That first step opened doors, he says. Literacy gave workers dignity, confidence, and the ability to navigate beyond the shafts. In the past, mines were places known for illiteracy.
Before 1987, many miners could not even sign their names. The introduction of Abet that year was a turning point. Abet laid the foundation, but the real transformation came with the JB Marks Education Trust Fund in the 1990s.
Mngadi sees a direct link. Abet equipped workers with literacy, JB Marks-funded bursaries gave mineworkers’ children the opportunity to further their studies and obtain degrees. “Education can change the life of an ordinary mineworker to be a mine boss,” he explains.
He’s seen colleagues who started as general workers rise to become engineering managers. This was once unimaginable for mining families. For Mngadi, this isn’t just individual achievement.
“When you are a black child, you don’t look after only yourself, but the entire family. Education lifts the whole household.” Education can change the life of an ordinary mineworker to be a mine boss Mngadi credits visionary NUM leaders like former deputy president Kgalema Motlanthe and mineral & petroleum resources minister Gwede Mantashe with laying down the track for this journey. The duo recognised that the mineworkers’ fight was not only about wages and decent employment, but about dignity and future opportunities. Their decision to establish JB Marks still changes lives three decades later.
[/paywall]