Category Archives: Crime rate

2019 Mar. 20: Struggles of uplifting our townships.

by Nonkululeko “Sicka” Mthunzi Photos by Simphiwe Makhanya Everywhere I go and everything I do I never forget where I come from, Daveyton eVutta, ikasi lama kasi. I’m from East-Rand, the last township before you enter Mpumalanga. East-Rand is where … Continue reading

Posted in Black Queer Born Frees in SA townships, Crime, Crime rate, Daveyton township, Documenting realities of the townships, From Daveyton township with love, South African township, Townships, Uncategorized, Victim of hate crime, Violent crime | Leave a comment

2014 Oct. 13: Mother of the recently murdered lesbian demands justice

Text by Lerato Dumse Photos by Zanele Muholi  A suspect is due to appear in the Tsakane Magistrate Court today (October 14), in connection with the fatal stabbing of Phumzile Nkosi (27) on October 2, 2014.   Pastor Dlamini led … Continue reading

Posted in 'We live in fear', 20 Years of Democracy in SA, a black lesbian, Abantu, Acceptance, Activists, Addiction, African, African Queer Beauty, Alternative family, an LGBTI organisation, Anger, Another Approach Is Possible, Archived memories, Archiving Queer Her/Histories in SA, Art Activism, Articles, Articulation, Attention, Audience, Background, Beautiful, Beautiful faces, Beautiful people, Beauty, Before US, Before You, Begging, Being conscientized, Bereavement, Betrayal, Black bodies, Black Bodies of Silence, Black Lesbian, Black lesbian activism, Black Lesbian mother, Black lesbian murder, Black Lesbians, Black Queer Born Frees in South Africa, Bleeding, Body Politics, Brutal murders of black lesbians in SA, Brutality, Church is not the closet, Claiming, Claiming blackness, Claiming mainstream spaces, Coffin, Corruption, Court appearance, Creating awareness, Crime, Crime rate, Crimes, Daveyton Uthingo, EPOC lgbti, Evidence, Facilitation, Facilitators, Facing abuse and violation, Families and Friends, Family loss, Family support, Feelings, Friendships, Funeral, Gauteng, Gender articulation, Gender Based Violence (GBV)., Gender expression, Generations, Hate Crimes, Heroes of our struggle, Homosexuality, Honesty, Human Beings, Human rights, Humiliation, I can't do it ALONE, I was (T)here, I was here, I-N-K-A-N-Y-I-S-O, Inconsiderate, Independence, Johannesburg, Killer is another woman, Language, Legacies of Violence, Lerato Dumse, Lesbian Love Is Possible in South Africa, Mourning love, Songs of Freedom, South Africa, Stabbed to death, Tears, Tsakane, Violent crime, We Are You, We Care, We Love Photography, We Still Can with/out Resources, We were (t)here, What black lesbian youth wants, When home is a crime scene, When Love is a Human Right, young women, Young Women and Visual Activism, Youth, Youth voices | 4 Comments

2014 Oct. 7: Robbed while shooting

by Lerato Dumse A day meant to be filled with photography adventure which is historical educational turned bad, when three photographers were robbed of their camera, on  the 10th July 2014 in Soweto. Lindeka Qampi (45) facilitator, Thando Methane (17) … Continue reading

Posted in 2014 Cape Town Month of Photography, Aurora Girls High School, Broad day light, Captioned, Captured, Career, Caring citizens, Caring for our female youth, Case opened, Celebration, Characters, Citizenship, Claiming, Claiming mainstream spaces, Collaborations, Collective, Collectivism, Comments from the audience, Commitment, Committed, Community, Community based media, Community education, Community outreach, Community work, Conference, Confrontation, Connected souls, Connections, Consideration, Contributors, Conversation, Crea(c)tive senses, Creating awareness, Creative activist, Creative Writing, Crime, Crime rate, Crimes, Cry the Beloved Queer Mother of the Nation, Crying, Cultural activists, Culture, Culture of reading and writing, Delegation, Democracy, Details, Different positions, disappearance, Discussion, Family, Fear, Frightened, Intellectualism, lunged, Mine, More than 67 mins, Panic, Photography, Photography as a therapy, Poverty, Robbed, Robbery, Scared, Seeking help, Self defense, Self recognition, Sharing, Sharing knowledge, Sharing thoughts, Silent voices, Social responsibility, Society, Socio-economic, Solidarity, South African Visible Arts, South African Visual Activism, South African visual history through the eyes of young women, South African Youth, Soweto, Space, Spana is a slang which means to work, Speaking for ourselves, Statement, Style, Support, Supporting each other, Survivor, Teaching, Tears, Teenagers, Testimonies from Aurora photographers, Textualizing Our Own Lives, Thando Methane, Thugs, together, Together we can, Togetherness, Transcription, Translation, Undermined, Valerie Thomas, Visibility, Vision, Visual activism, Visual activism is a language, Visual Activist, Visual Arts, Visual democracy, Visual historical initiative, Visual history, Visual Language, Visual narratives, Visual Power, Visual sense, Visual Voices, Visualizing public spaces, We Are You, We Care, We love photographs, We Love Photography, We Still Can with/out Resources, We were (t)here, Woman, Womanhood, Women suffering, Women's power, Women's Work, Women; Voices; Writings; Education; Traditions; Struggles; Cultures, Words, Writing is a Right, Youth, Youth voices | 3 Comments

2014 Sept. 22: The period pains of documenting hate crimes

Text by Lerato Dumse   I sat down for a reflection session with photographers Lindeka Qampi and Zanele Muholi a few days after they documented Gift Makau’s funeral. Muholi requested for the interview as a way of unloading and shedding … Continue reading

Posted in 'We live in fear', 20 Years of Democracy, Articles, Brutal murders of black lesbians in South Africa, Commitment, Committed, Communication strategies, Community, Community based media, Community education, Community Mobilizing, Community organizing, Community outreach, Community work, Compiled by Lerato Dumse and Fikile Mazambani, Complicated Lesbian Relationships, Conflicts, Confrontation, Connected souls, Connections, Consultation, Contests, Contributors, Conversation, Corrective rape, Corruption, Crea(c)tive senses, Creating awareness, Creative activist, Creative Writing, Creativity, Crime rate, Crimes, Cultural activists, Culture of reading and writing, Curative rapes, Delegation, Democracy, Department of Justice (DoJO, Description, Details, Disappointment, Discomfort, Discussion, Disebo Gift Makau (1990 - 2014), Documentation; Filming; Photography; Community, Documenting hate crimes, Documenting our own lives, Documenting realities of the townships, Education, Expression, Friends as perpetrators, Gender Equality, Heavy subject, Lerato Dumse in conversation with Lindeka Qampi and Zanele Muholi, New Task Team on hate crime launched by DoJ in April 2014, Reflection | Leave a comment

2014 Aug. 24: Queers Against hate crimes Mo(u)rning the loss of Disebo Gift Makau

photo by Zanele Muholi featuring Odidi Mfenyana       … work in progress!!!   Related articles 2014 Aug. 19: Makau family mourns the brutal murder of their beloved                  

Posted in 'We live in fear', Allies, Another Approach Is Possible, Archived memories, Archiving Queer Her/Histories in SA, Art Activism, Art Activism in South Africa, Art Edutainment, Art Is A Human Right, Art is Queer, Art Solidarity, Art Therapy, Articulation, Artists, Arts, Before US, Before You, Black bodies, Black Lesbian, Collective, Collectivism, Comfort, Comment, Comments from the audience, Commitment, Committed, Community, Community Mobilizing, Community organizing, Community outreach, Complicated Lesbian Relationships, Connected souls, Corrective rape, Crea(c)tive senses, Creating awareness, Creative activist, creative artist, Crime rate, Crimes, Crying, Curative rapes, Death, Different positions, Disappointment, Discomfort, Disebo Gift Makau (1990 - 2014), Documentation; Filming; Photography; Community, Documenting our own lives, Documenting realities of the townships, Education, Emotional support, Evidence, Experience, Exploration, Exposure, Expression, Facing abuse and violation, Facing You, Family, Family and Friends, Family support, Feelings, Female masculinity, Female Photographers, Gender distinction, Gender expression, Gender naming, God is with us, Homosexuality, Human Beings, Human body, Human rights, South Africa, South African townships, Stripped, Struggle Songs, Struggling, Tswana is a South African language, Victim of hate crime in Ventersdorp, We Care, We love photographs, We Love Photography, We Still Can with/out Resources, We were (t)here, When home is a crime scene, When Love is a Human Right, Where & Who is Justice?, Woman, Women loving women, Women suffering, Women who have sex with Women, Youth voices | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

2014 July 17: Ack B(L)ACK aches

Self portraits © Zanele Muholi 2014/07/17 Where:  My bedroom/ studio @ Cite Des Arts in Paris Camera used: Canon 60D with zoom lens EF-S 28 – 135mm lens (gold) on Manfrotto MKC3-H01 No artificial light. 19h47 17/07/2014   19h44 17/07/2014 … Continue reading

Posted in "Scratching the surface", Another Approach Is Possible, Art Activism, Art is Queer, Art Solidarity, Art Therapy, Articles, Articles; South African Celebrities; Arts; 2013 Feather awards; Lerato Dumse; Song; Dance; Kelly Khumalo; Thembisile Ntaka; Brenda Mntambo; Recognition; Thami Kotlolo; Gays & Lesbians; 5th Feather, Before US, Black bodies, Black Bodies of Silence, Black skin whitelined, Black veil, Blackened, Brutal Killings of children, Captioned, Captured, Creating awareness, Creative Writing, Crime rate, Darkness, Dead-line, Education, Female being, Globa crisis, He(ART), He(Art)less, Hope, Human Beings, Human Equity and Art (Heart), Humiliation, Hurt, Hustling, Influenced, Knowledge, Laws and regulations, Legacies of Violence, Mourning, Muted, Ownership of the self, Peace, Photography, Politics, Politics of representation, Propaganda, Queercide, Racism, Rape(d), Self mutilation, Self portraits, tackling racism through art, Terms and conditions, Underground, Visual Language, Visual sense, When home is a crime scene, Women suffering, Xenophobia, zamumania | Leave a comment

2014 April 1: This is not April fool but our reality

  … A photo of the day by Zanele Muholi, featuring Maureen Velile Majola rehearsing ‘Sifela i Ayikho’ to be performed at Constanza Macras STUDIO 44, BERLIN on Sat. , 5th April 2014. More photos to be added later…

Posted in Crime rate, Moments in herstory, Privilege, Queer poetics, Queer Power, Textualizing Our Own Lives, We Are You, We Care, We Love Photography, We Still Can with/out Resources, We were (t)here, When Love is a Human Right, Women; Voices; Writings; Education; Traditions; Struggles; Cultures, Writing is a Right, Young talent, Zulu is a South African language | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

2013 Dec. 15: Photos from the funeral of the recently murdered lesbian in Ratanda

Who: Maleshwane Emely Radebe Identity: Black Lesbian Born : 25th Aug. 1977 Murdered on: 7th Dec. 2013 Buried on: 14th Dec. 2013 Buried Where : Ekuthuleni Graveyard, Ext. 23 Residence: Ratanda, Johannesburg. South Africa What: Sustained a stab wound and … Continue reading

Posted in Coffin carriers, Collaborations, Collective, Crime rate, Interpretation, Intervention, Isililo, Knowledge, Lesbian Love Is Possible in South Africa, Lessons learnt, Life, Life Stories, Love, Love is a human right, Memory, Mourning, Our lives in the picture, Penetrating mainstream spaces, Photo album, Power of the Voice, Public spaces, Queer visibility, Questioning, Questions & Answers, Readings, ReClaim Your Activism, Recognition, Scriptures, Sharing knowledge, Silent voices, South African struggle, South African townships, Speaking for ourselves, Survivor, Textualizing Our Own Lives, Visual history, Visual history is a Right not a luxury, Visual Power, Visualizing public spaces, We Are You, We Care, We Love Photography, We Still Can with/out Resources, We were (t)here, Where & Who is Justice?, Women's struggles, Women; Voices; Writings; Education; Traditions; Struggles; Cultures, Writing is a Right | Tagged | 28 Comments

2013 July 10: When brutally killed, Dudu was stripped every ounce of her dignity

by Thekwane Bongi Mpisholo Time                    :   7 am Day                       :  Sunday Date               … Continue reading

Posted in Another Approach Is Possible, Creating awareness, Creative Writing, Crime rate, Evidence, Family, Fear, Homosexuality, Hurt, Inkanyiso media, Records and histories, Visual history, We Are You, We Care, We Still Can with/out Resources, Where & Who is Justice?, Writing is a Right, Youth voices | Tagged , | 12 Comments

2013 June 6: Dangerous is not the Young Black Men in Daveyton

Portfolio II by Collen Mfazwe This visual project is about some  young black men who resides in Daveyton township where I come from. It is the beginning… I want to share with the viewers that not all black men are … Continue reading

Posted in Community, Creating awareness, Crime rate, Daveyton, Love, Our lives in the picture, Photo album, Portfolio, Portrait, Poverty, Relationships, Townships, Visual history is a Right not a luxury, We Care, We Still Can with/out Resources | Tagged | 5 Comments