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Memory was his weapon

Memory is the Weapon
Memory is the Weapon

Johannesburg, 9 July 2026: The Apartheid Museum in partnership with the Don Mattera Legacy Foundation will unveil its Don Mattera Obituary Installation on Mandela Day – 18 July 2026. Don Mattera passed away on 18 July 2022 at the age of 85.

MEMORY WAS HIS WEAPON. CULTURE HIS RESISTANCE. FREEDOM HIS PROMISE.

Don Mattera was a towering figure in South African literature, journalism, and cultural life, whose voice captured the pain and resilience of a nation under apartheid.

Born Donato Francisco Mattera in Johannesburg’s Western Native Township, he was affectionately named Bra Don, Zinga, and Monnapula – the man who came with the rain. Later as a Muslim, he was known as Muhammad Omaruddin.

Mattera became celebrated as a poet and the Bard of Liberation in South Africa.

Shaped by a lineage that reflected South Africa before apartheid, Mattera’s Afro-Italian roots – Khoi-Xhosa, Tswana, and Neapolitan respectively – resisted simple definition. Apartheid sought to erase this complexity, reducing him to a racial category and a number. What it could not erase was memory, and resistance.

And then there was Sophiatown, a legendary, multi-racial suburb in Johannesburg. Established in 1899, it became one of the few places where Black South Africans could legally own land, and was demolished by the apartheid government in the late 1950s and early 1960s.

Growing up in Sophiatown, Mattera came of age amid music, debate, beauty, and violence. After surviving gang life, prison, and profound loss, words became his refuge. The destruction of Sophiatown marked a turning point, transforming personal grief into political awakening.

Influenced by Pan-Africanism and Black Consciousness, Mattera believed culture was a weapon of liberation. As a poet, journalist, and activist, husband and father, he used language as a form of resistance, chronicling the everyday lives of Black South Africans with lyricism, anger, and compassion.

His autobiography, Memory is the Weapon, remains a seminal account of life and loss under apartheid and the power of personal and collective memory.

Despite two banning orders spanning a continuous period of close to nine years, house arrest, and marginalisation, Mattera continued to write, mentor, and organise. His legacy endures through his words, his family, the Don Mattera Legacy Foundation, and the generations he shaped.

REMEMBER

Remember to call at my grave

When freedom finally

Walks the land

So that I may rise

To tread familiar paths

To see broken chains

Fallen prejudice

Forgotten injury

Pardoned pains.

 

And when my eyes have filled their sight

Do not run away for fright

If I crumble to dust again

It will only be the bliss

Of a long-awaited dream

That bids me rest

When freedom finally walks the land …

Don Mattera

The Don Mattera Obituary Installation opens on 18 July – Mandela Day – and will be on display at the Apartheid Museum until the end of 2027.

A partnership between the Apartheid Museum and the Don Mattera Legacy Foundation.


Press Contact:

Mantis Communications

Kerry Simpson

Tel: 079 438 3252

Email: kerry@mantiscomms.co.za