A poem about #SONA2017
Telling our stories in our own voices is essential to building a healthy democracy. It also ensures individual wellbeing. When we saddle our own story animals we are confidently in charge of our own destinies.
In 2014 when we launched The Journalist our founding partner was the University of the Free State. It has been a partnership that provides a platform for the vibrant voices of the student community as well as the academic staff in that province.
Now that our proof of concept phase is complete we are expanding our network of partnerships. And so, the Free State section of our website has been redesigned and renamed to reflect this growth.
In the /Xam language of the Bushman people of the Northern Cape Kau Kauru can be roughly translated as “making a noise with voices”. Or making our voices heard. Languages are considered to be extinct but the concepts and words we inherited live on.
What began in the Free State is now spreading across the nation. Regional issues that spark national debates and interest. A Kau Kauru storywheel. Each week the voices of our partners will be the spokes that keep this wheel rolling.
Our social network and page analytics suggest that it is the student community that drives The Journalist audience. That means we have been successful in what we set out to do – engaging the youth – and now it is time to grow.
Voices will continue to develop young journalists as with our previous Free State section. We complement formal journalism training with a platform for new writing, while senior journalists provide on the job training and mentorship.
In addition to the Free State, we now have partners in the Eastern Cape and KwaZulu Natal, with other regions coming on board soon.
If you or your institution would like to participate in The Journalist project please let us know. The Publisher Zubeida Jaffer, Writer In Residence at the University of the Free State, and Editor Leila Dougan would like to hear from you.
A poem about #SONA2017
Students speak out on SONA chaos
Cape Town filmmakers in search of their heritage
Private security has unrestricted access to students
How pastors are robbing their congregation and putting them in grave danger
Jane Duncan on the escalating violence on campuses
A survivor shares his story
“I am doing my job as a journalist”
UJ students on #FeesMustFall
Motivated to activism by Wikileaks expose
“Time flies when you are outside but it dies when you are on the inside.”
The testimony of the son of a farm worker
Process is about social justice
‘Look at me y’all. I am seething with rage!’
Itumeleng Modisane is an aspiring journalist from Bekkersdal who has no formal journalism training. He has approached The Journalist to help him learn writing skills so that he can one day work in the profession. I live in Ward 10, Ghana section, Bekkersdal location in the west of Johannesburg. Ward 10 forms part of the 16 wards that make up Westonaria local Municipality, which has an estimated population of about 47,000 residents. Ward 10 has a population of 7,739 people. In this ward, the...
UFS students speak out
UJ students debate merit of private security on campus
UFS students dialogue before official enquiry
“Challenge complicity in patriarchy”
Call for reconstitution into Free Education Movement
Journalist puts the system to the test
Can UFS ever be the same again?
SRC speaks on developments at UFS
Numerous visits to doctors, pastors, prophets and sangomas
The Journalist is a ground-breaking media project that provides history and context for key issues facing South African journalists. The Journalist is an independent, not for profit organisation working with the academic community and a range of credible online entities to make knowledge more accessible to the wider public. We don’t only tell you what happened. We help you understand why.
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