Chairperson’s report
Appendix 1: ProgrammeIFPAARSA CAPACITY BUILDING WORKSHOPS HELD AT THE REEF HOTEL MARSHALLTOWN, JOHANNESBURG5 -6th AUGUST 2011
|
Chaired by Bradley Daniels | ||
Time |
Activity |
Presented by |
15h00 – 18h30 |
Arrival and Registration |
All |
19h00-19h15 |
Welcome |
Raj Govender |
19h15 -19h25 |
Self Introduction |
Alumni |
19h25-19h30 |
Introduction of Guest Speaker |
Bradley Daniels |
19h30 -20h30 |
Keynote Address |
Prof Farid Esack |
20h30 – 20h35 |
Notices & Vote of Thanks |
Siphelo Ngcwangu |
20h35 -22h00 |
Refreshments & Entertainment (Marimba Dance) |
Session 1 Chaired by Lebo Sello & Phinah Kodisang | ||
Time |
Activity |
Presented by |
07h00 -08h00 |
Breakfast |
All |
08h00 – 08h30 |
Registration |
All |
08h30 -08h35 |
Welcome |
Raj Govender |
08h35 -09h20 |
Review of History, Programmes, Progress and Future |
Aaron Ramodumo |
09h20 – 09h30 |
Resource Manual Preview |
Edith Phaswana |
09h30 -10h15 |
Development not Charity |
Andile Mngxitama |
10h15 -10h30 |
TEA BREAK | |
10h30 -11h15 |
Writing for Publication |
Meiya Nthoesane |
11h15 -12h00 |
Using Social Media for Civil Activism |
Carina Van Rooyen & Ingrid Marais |
12h00 – 12h45 |
Working with Non-Profit Organization: Issues of Legislation |
Ricardo Wyngaard |
12h45 – 14h00 |
GROUP PHOTO SESSION AND LUNCH |
Session 2 Facilitated by Meiya Nthoesane | ||
Time |
Activity |
Presented by |
14h00 – 14h10 |
Debriefing : Preparation for Plenary |
Teboho Thebehae |
14h10 -15h45 |
Plenary Session |
All |
15h45 – 16h00 |
TEA BREAK | |
16h30 – 17h30 |
Feedback and Discussions |
All |
17h30 -18h00 |
Regional Leadership Elections |
All |
18h00 -18h30 |
Vote of Thanks and Closure |
Newly Elected Chair |
We would like to know the extent to which this workshop has met your expectations. Summary of your responses will be shared with the presenter. Please tick in your response using either a pen or pencil and return it to the organisers.
|
Strongly agree |
Agree |
disagree |
Strongly disagree |
Not applicable |
The presentation/workshop was at an appropriate level |
|
|
|
|
|
The presentation/workshop support the development of skills needed for social justice leaders |
|
|
|
|
|
I could make links between presentation/workshop and the social justice activities that I aim to do |
|
|
|
|
|
Time allocated to presenters were reasonable |
|
|
|
|
|
I feel I have gained professional skills needed for social justice leaders |
|
|
|
|
|
The presentation/workshop helped me reflect upon my own commitment to social justice |
|
|
|
|
|
I could recommend the presentation/workshop to others |
|
|
|
|
|
The presenter is knowledgeable about the subject |
|
|
|
|
|
The presenter presented materials in an organised way |
|
|
|
|
|
Appropriate audiovisuals were used during the presentation |
|
|
|
|
|
Overall, the content of the workshop was useful |
|
|
|
|
|
He completed the Darsi Nizami, the traditional Islamic theological studies program, in madrasahs in Karachi, Pakistan, where he studied for eight years. (He never says when exactly because he has issues with ageing.) He completed his PhD at the University of Birmingham and subsequently dabbled in Biblical Hermeneutics at the Philosophische Theologische Hochschule, Sankt Georgen in Frankfurt-am-Main. This dabbling was abandoned when an offer came up to teach at the University of the Western Cape.
He is the author of seven books. co-editor of two and editor of one. These earn him a tidy sum in royalties in addition to his income at UJ. (And Pravin Gordhan does know about it!). His On Being a Muslim: Finding a Religious Path in the World Today is out in seven languages and his Introduction to the Qur’an in three. His Qur’an, Liberation & Pluralism: An Islamic Perspective of Interreligious Solidarity Against Oppression, remains the foundational text of Islamic liberation theology and contemporary Qur’anic hermeneutics. His current field of scholarly interest is Jews in the Qur’an, and Islam and AIDS. Recently he co-edited Islam and AIDS – Between Scorn, Pity and Justice with Sarah Chiddy. He has published more than 60 scholarly articles and delivered more than 300 presentations on Islam, Gender, Liberation Theology, Inter-faith Relations, Religion & Identity, Religion and Disease, and on Qur'anic Hermeneutics.
His life, work and scholarship have been the subject of articles, academic theses and TV documentaries including the BBC and Dutch TV. When he last counted – in a frequent moment of vanity – he had visited 107 countries and lectured in about sixty. (So much for someone who says that he is committed to environmental justice.) Despite all of this travelling and his contribution to Islamic scholarship internationally, he insists, and his students - if they know what is good for them - will testify, he is not merely a Visiting Professor at UJ.
Formerly a Commissioner for Gender Equality, appointed by then President Nelson Mandela, he has taught at UWC, the University of Amsterdam, Hamburg, Heidelberg and Paderborn in Germany, Gadjah Mada Universitas in Indonesia, Union Theological Seminary in New York and at the International Islamic University in Islamabad. A former Distinguished Mason Professor at the College of William & Mary in Virginia, he also occupied a University Professorship in Ethics, Religion and Society at Xavier University in Ohio. After five years of teaching in the United States, he was ready to head back home when money and ego moved him to accept a joint appointment for two years at Harvard University between the Divinity School and the Faculty of Arts and Sciences as the William Henry Bloomberg Professor. While at Harvard, he also had another fancy title that he is somewhat embarrassed to mention in progressive company: “The Prince Al-Waleed Bin Talal Professor in Contemporary Islam”.
A veteran of the struggle against Apartheid and in the inter-religious solidarity movement for justice and peace and that struggle, he played a leading role in the United Democratic Front, the Call of Islam, the Organisation of People Against Sexism and the World Conference on Religion & Peace.
In addition to his academic pursuits, he continues his activism through various HIV, development and environmental justice boards on which he serves in South Africa and internationally. He struggles to live and understand the meaning of faith as well as an alternative liberatory vision in a world savaged by the Empire and the often dehumanizing responses to it by its subjects and victims.
GAUTENG REGION WORKSHOP - PHOTOS