According to the school, this can be either enrolling in the postgraduate diploma in management practice or Henley's international master of business administration programme, depending on the level of their previous academic qualifications.

"When we established this scholarship, we did so with two aims in mind," says Henley Africa dean and director professor Jon Foster-Pedley. "Firstly, we wanted to honour an icon of South African journalism, the trailblazing journalist, editor and all-around polymath Solomon Tshekiso Plaatje."

"Our second aim was to make the best contribution we could to the development and sustainability of the South African media, which had played a critical role in the uncovering of the state capture saga," adds Foster-Pedley.

"The work of a handful of determined and courageous journalists, supported by their editors and publishers set in progress a chain of events that continues to reverberate today, bolstered by even more revelations of both the roots of this catastrophe and the ever-increasing extent of its toxic bloom," says Foster-Pedley.

"It was the great Unites States playwright Arthur Miller who famously said that a good newspaper is a nation talking to itself. This has become even more crucial in a world increasingly polarised by populism, muzzling a diversity of voices through a pandemic of propaganda, cancel culture and fake news," Foster-Pedley adds.

The best way to address this, he says, was to help develop a flourishing, diverse and economically viable media ecosystem able to withstand external pressures. The reality was that the media space, in South Africa primarily, was one of plummeting revenues, audience disengagement and massive disruption.

"Plaatje experienced exactly this in his lifetime. He was a pioneer, opening newspapers and then having to see them close because they were not financially viable in the markets in which he was trying to operate. He never gave up though, and we are much richer today for his efforts, more than 90 years after his death," says Foster-Pedley.

"The scholarships are an opportunity for media professionals and leaders to take some time out of their hectic lives and open their minds to the possibilities of what might be. They will meet with a wide range of other students most in fields that are foreign to journalists, but all these students will be there for one overarching reason: to learn the tools to become the builders of businesses that will build Africa, or in their case, media businesses," adds Foster-Pedley.

"A sustainable media is economically viable — one that can resist the brain drain of talent, invest in new media platforms and keep the nation talking to itself. This is the entire purpose of this scholarship,"  Foster-Pedley says.

The inaugural winners of the scholarship are Daily Maverick investigative journalist Pauli van Wyk and the deputy editor of the Sowetan Thabiso Thakali, who are both busy with their MBA degrees.

Thakali is a double winner, having first completed his PG Dip before making history by winning the scholarship a second time to allow him to pursue his MBA.

Other Plaatje scholars include:
  • freelance digital media journalist Adam Oxford
  • Carte Blanche journalist Macfarlane Moleli
  • SABC head of digital content Nontobeko Magala, and
  • freelance journalist Andries Sibanyoni.

Individuals that are leading contributors in the media's voice for truth and would like to apply to be considered for the Henley Africa Sol Plaatje scholarship are encouraged to contact scholarships@Henleysa.ac.za before Tuesday, 28 February.

For more information, visit www.henleysa.ac.za. You can also follow Henley Business School Africa on Facebook, Twitter or on Instagram.