
The Hippo's Calf | Dr Panashe Chigumadzi on Radical Ubuntu and the Global Reparations Struggle
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Author, essayist, and rapporteur for the African Union's Committee of Experts on Reparations, Dr Panashe Chigumadzi joins Sibulele and Nalo in the Lift Club studio ahead of her 8th Annual Africa Day Lecture at Stellenbosch University on 27 May 2026.
The conversation moves from the Zulu dictum at the heart of her lecture — "akukho zinyane lemvubu ladliwa zingwenya kwacweba isiziba", meaning "it never happens that the hippo's calf is eaten by crocodiles and the pool remains still" — into a wide-ranging reclamation of Radical Ubuntu from the "Christianised Ubuntu" of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
Dr Chigumadzi unpacks her AU framework A Crime Does Not Rot, 1441 – Present, the Pan-African legal doctrine that helped shape the historic March 2026 UN resolution declaring the transatlantic slave trade the gravest crime against humanity.
She traces racialised chattel enslavement from the 1441 capture of Africans off the coast of present-day Mauritania, through the doctrine of partus sequitur ventrem — status follows the womb — to the migrant labour system and the apartheid bantustan, arguing that the same reproductive logic that built slavery still structures gender-based violence, family fracture, and inequality in South Africa today.
Along the way she talks about Stellenbosch's own entanglement in the history of slavery, why Britain paid more than 40% of its national treasury to enslavers in 1834, why French President Macron's recent gesture toward Haiti is a geopolitical move and not a moral one, and why reparations is fundamentally a question of cost imposition rather than moral persuasion.
The conversation closes with a deeply personal exchange on ancestry, displacement, and what it means to come into communion with one's culture as an adult — for any listener who has ever called themselves a "coconut" and wondered where to begin.
🎙️ Hosts: Sibulele (@bellz_sbuda) and Nalo (@grootlady____)
👤 Guest: Dr Panashe Chigumadzi
📅 Originally aired: Tuesday 26 May 2026 at 17:30
📻 Lift Club on MFM 92.6
#MFM926 #LiftClub #PanasheChigumadzi #Reparations #AfricaMonth 🐿️🇿🇦
The conversation moves from the Zulu dictum at the heart of her lecture — "akukho zinyane lemvubu ladliwa zingwenya kwacweba isiziba", meaning "it never happens that the hippo's calf is eaten by crocodiles and the pool remains still" — into a wide-ranging reclamation of Radical Ubuntu from the "Christianised Ubuntu" of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
Dr Chigumadzi unpacks her AU framework A Crime Does Not Rot, 1441 – Present, the Pan-African legal doctrine that helped shape the historic March 2026 UN resolution declaring the transatlantic slave trade the gravest crime against humanity.
She traces racialised chattel enslavement from the 1441 capture of Africans off the coast of present-day Mauritania, through the doctrine of partus sequitur ventrem — status follows the womb — to the migrant labour system and the apartheid bantustan, arguing that the same reproductive logic that built slavery still structures gender-based violence, family fracture, and inequality in South Africa today.
Along the way she talks about Stellenbosch's own entanglement in the history of slavery, why Britain paid more than 40% of its national treasury to enslavers in 1834, why French President Macron's recent gesture toward Haiti is a geopolitical move and not a moral one, and why reparations is fundamentally a question of cost imposition rather than moral persuasion.
The conversation closes with a deeply personal exchange on ancestry, displacement, and what it means to come into communion with one's culture as an adult — for any listener who has ever called themselves a "coconut" and wondered where to begin.
🎙️ Hosts: Sibulele (@bellz_sbuda) and Nalo (@grootlady____)
👤 Guest: Dr Panashe Chigumadzi
📅 Originally aired: Tuesday 26 May 2026 at 17:30
📻 Lift Club on MFM 92.6
#MFM926 #LiftClub #PanasheChigumadzi #Reparations #AfricaMonth 🐿️🇿🇦

