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Hi, my name is Lovemore Ndou, I'm a former three times world boxing champion in
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two weight classes. Currently I'm a solicitor. I'm a former graduate of the University of Wollongong.
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I was born during the apartheid era in South Africa, we were treated as savages in our own
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country and we couldn't even vote, you know we were banned from certain areas,
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surrounded by all these bad conditions. I was very angry about the whole apartheid system. I
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didn't start school until I was nine years of age like every other kid, you know, teenager,
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I felt I had needed to be a part of being a part of a gang that but eventually I was smart enough
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to realise that I think this is not right. If I don't change my ways, I will die young or end
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up in jail. So, you know, instead I focused on sports. I always thought boxing was, sport was
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going to be my ticket out of poverty. I wanted to be a world champion. And I recall, you know,
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when I was growing up in South Africa, you know, I used to tell people, you know, even some of my
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family members that I used to tell them, you know, someday, you know, you're going to be watching
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sitting at home and watching me on TV and I'll be fighting from Las Vegas. They used to laugh at me
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and I proved them wrong. They did end up watching me on TV. It was also not just fighting for me,
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it was fighting for my family. I needed a better future for my children. I always
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thought about life after boxing as well, you know, and it was through my boxing earnings that I was
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able to educate myself as well. You know, when I do things, I don't just want to do them halfway,
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you know, when I became a boxer, I didn't just want to be the local champion or the local amateur
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champion. You know, I wanted to become a world champion. And when I became a world champion, I
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didn't just want to win one world title and I won three world titles. So when I became a lawyer, you
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know, I didn't just want to be a lawyer. You know, I wanted to have my own law firm. And part of the
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reason is because I do a lot of pro bono work. You know, I, you know, particularly with indigenous
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people, you know, for me is giving back to the, you know, to the community. I had a great time and
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I studied at the University of Wollongong. And I would say that was one of the best experiences or,
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you know, one of the best courses I've ever taken, in particular, you know, having had Justice Bardon
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as my lecturer. Here you are, you’ve got someone who was a justice of the Supreme Court teaching
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you about the law, that’s the best thing. I want to know that's the best thing, you work hard,
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you know, and pursue your dreams, your dreams will eventually come true. And I'm an example
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of that. If I look where I am today and I'm one of the most educated sportsmen that ever lived,
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you know, all those boxing achievements, you know, and I always tell people, you know, they
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don't beat graduating with my university degrees. With your education, no one is ever going to take
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that away from you, you know, your degrees remain your degrees forever. No one is going to take that
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knowledge away from you. Your purpose is not just to serve yourself but to serve others as well.