"We just
received this evening the sad news of the passing
away of Professor Sam Moyo, former President of
CODESRIA. Sam was in India for a conference and
got caught up in a bad car accident and got seriously
injured. We've been getting regular updates about
his condition all day from our colleagues in Delhi.
Unfortunately he didn't survive the serious injuries
he sustained. May his soul rest in peace."
Sam was from a peasant background and rose to become
one of Zimbabwe's – and Africa's – most respected
intellectuals. You will all remember him from Hong
Kong and Chongqing/Chengdu:
Chongqing Chengdu video in commemoration of Vinod:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zJoDhMGTtkA&feature=youtu.be
At 10:30 in this wonderful video tribute to Vinod,
you find Sam, briefly expressing gratitude for the
experience. The skillful film-maker found him in
several other places which bring back such warm
memories.
At our Centre for Civil Society here in Durban,
Sam played such a wonderful role, especially since
he started visiting in 2012 and co-supervising our
PhD students in 2014. He was one of our Honorary
Professors, and there is some information about
his career here:
http://ccs.ukzn.ac.za/default.asp?10,86,8,164
It was the trip to Chongqing that allowed us to
arrange that position, one of many many reasons
I always look back four years, with such admiration
for our hosts.
I was last with Sam in Harare in August, at an excellent
talk he gave about Zimbabwe's agricultural sector:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q-Y6iBl3BOE
and this is a great explanation of his theory of
the tri-modal land structure in Africa:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p5–ZntJGh4
In June, he was awarded for his enormous contributions
to Marxian political economy at the World Association
for Political Economy conference in Johannesburg;
he was also made a vice-chairperson of that organisation.
For those interested, see a list of Google Scholar
citations of his most popular works and more YouTube
links (http://our-global-u.org/oguorg/en/?page_id=1161).
This is all very rough, just a chance to say that
we are losing an exceptionally important intellectual
and comrade this weekend, and we owe it to ourselves
and our tradition – and to all who struggle to fuse
knowledge and social progress, wherever we may be
– to keep reminding ourselves of Sam's legacy. And
his generosity of spirit. We will be posting further
memorial statements about his work and remarkable
life at http://ccs.ukzn.ac.za
this week.
November 23, 2015.
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