2013 April 5: Short vigil for our late activists


Buhle Msibi
(1981 – 2006)

&

Busi Sigasa (1982 – 2007)

We will always honor you.
Your creativity will remain in our hearts.
Your spirits lives on.
You are both loved.

Image

10 members of Inkanyiso gathered on 05/04/2013 at Women’s Jail, Constitution Hill, Braamfontein, Johannesburg. It is where a night vigil was held to further remember the lives of late art activists Buhle Msibi & Busi Sigasa.
Photos by Zanele Muholi

Image

With much love and respect. Today, we are commemorating and celebrating you and we wish to do so on annual basis. Thanks for showing us the way that art is possible to bring change in our LGBTI advocacy in South Africa and beyond.

Siyabonga thina!!!

Posted in Activism, Allies, Archived memories, Art Activism in South Africa | Tagged | 6 Comments

2013 April 5: A loving visual memory is…

2013 April 5:   A loving visual memory is...

Marco Ntuli & the late Buhle Msibi (2005).
Photo by Zanele Muholi, captured with a Konica-Minolta 5.1 megapixels digital camera.
It was taken at the Forum for the Empowerment of Women (FEW) offices at Women’s Jail, Constitution Hill, Braamfontein, Johannesburg.

All that I’m left with is the photo of two beautiful human beings who were outspoken activists, artists, members of the organisation, always at the forefront of our SA feminist/ queer/ LGBTI movement.
Both Marco & Buhle shared their creative senses – spoken words with many of us and we embraced their talent.

They are featuring in Being MuM (2005), an unpublished documentary on motherhood and sexuality with 5 lesbian mothers that Zanele Muholi directed.
Marco is a survivor and Buhle never lived long enough to see this day.
Buhle died on the 1st April 2006 at Edenvale Hospital at the age of 25.
Tomorrow, on the 6th April 2013 will be commemorating the lives of Buhle Msibi and Busi Sigasa. 

Posted in Archived memories, Art Activism in South Africa, Art Solidarity, Articles, Before You, Black Lesbians, Black Lesbians & Allies Against Hate Crimes, Buhle Msibi, Creating awareness, Hate Crimes, Health, Marco Ntuli, Performance, Poetry, Queer poetics, South Africa, Victims, Visual history, Women; Voices; Writings; Education; Traditions; Struggles; Cultures, Zanele Muholi | 4 Comments

2013 April 4: Gender blind

by Thuthula Sodumo

I have always wondered what would happen if I was a human being, with no gender, no sexuality and no identity.

Just a human being that loved other humans and that’s it.

I wondered how it would be like if we all had one skin tone, one race and one voice…
And then I end up getting restless because it boring. The world would lose its chivalry and it would be just a blend space with nothing but uniform energies and useless beauty.

Then I go back to how the world is now, full of life…
Life. What quality of life?
Well that remains to be seen, but its life.

These thoughts come from many things that I am and those that I refuse. I am perhaps one of those that I am to learn about me, as a human being.

I went to a school where girls had their own hostel, we had boys yes but it wasn’t the same.

I have always admired a woman’s body at a very young age.

I also loved a man’s body but to me it left nothing to be admired.

I mean they didn’t have these bumpy bodies with curves and hourglass figures.
They didn’t have these asses that swayed and moved with time.

Their legs weren’t long and shiny, nourished and filled with drugs. They didn’t leave me in awe so yeah they were loveable but not admirable.

I remember the first time I grow breasts I knew someone would appreciate my body the way I did and that someone would be a woman, I wanted it to be a woman.

I longed to touch a fully developed breast and play with it, suckle on it like a new baby and squeeze it… It wasn’t sexual then, it was just a fascination with a woman’s anatomy.

I had my shenanigans in boarding school with the other girls, fooling around and all but it mean nothing to me, it wasn’t what I wanted, their bodies weren’t full, we’ve all hardly even reached puberty so it was just kids playing house no harm down.

I remember the older girls would make penises from paper then climb on top of the other and pretend to be fucking. It was fun but it left a huge question mark on my head. “how would it be like to touch a woman, a fully developed and experienced woman”

I didn’t know that the expectations of everyone was for a girl to marry a boy I thought it was okay to marry anyone you wanted to marry.. Seriously I wasn’t aware we were created to follow a system and that system didn’t give a fuck about out happiness or feelings… Follow it or be marginalised.

So I was gullible and naïve I guess. The day I realised that what I was longing for and unacceptable I prayed so hard for the feeling and the curiosity to go away, it was wrong.

As I got deeper into my repenting stage I had fought the demons a child my age should never fight, I was a sinner and God hated me, I needed to think how it would be like to touch a boy, a boys Dick then I would at least be a normal kid, I’d have something in common with other girls so maybe it would be acceptable.

When the feeling would come back I’d pray then I’d forget about it.

But I was also facing another dilemma of facing naked girls in the morning!

Big virgin porn star breasts, small perky tits, mild tennis balls, humongous watermelons, in the ass department it was the same, body types and silhouettes, pussy shapes, clitoris sizes, some too small to see and some puffy and erect and them some so big they scared me… Now that I’m older I can safely say. I was in Eden and so lucky to have learnt that much about women.

This all boils down to who and what I am. I am a pansexual woman, meaning I am gender blind, I date a human being then everything that follows really is a bonus. In my 22 years on earth I have never had a relationship with anyone.

Yes! I have lived my childhood fantasy of touching fully developed breasts and did more than that but I am yet to say “this is my girlfriend/boyfriend” or whatever best suites me.

There are a lot of issues surrounding that but the two main ones are I’m disabled and a very feminine straight looking lady.

Lol those two issues I swear will drive me to the nunnery. On a serious note though, being in a wheelchair and identify myself as pansexual have created a very haunting world for me.

I am constantly terrified to say. “by the way I’m pansexual” because lesbian women automatically thinks I’m saying ” by the way I’m screwing the whole world and you are next” they misunderstand it and aren’t open to hear me out.

The wheelchair part comes to play, because many people have already concluded in their minds when they see me being pushed or when I’m pushing myself that I must be the only person in the world that is suffering and therefore I am emotionally unstable and also they wouldn’t know how to approach me or what to say to me I am ignored by default, shut down and left to hang.

So mix the two together and think about how horny and lonely I get. $

The internet helped a bit but still the process of explaining myself is daunting.

I’ve had people genuinely interested in me as a person but the moment they hear I am a person with this and that they lose interest and I move right along.

You know some people are fucked up, they get your hopes high and BAM drop you.

Some would say “you are bisexual just admit it”
Some would say ” you are a lesbian”
…you are straight you just confused” really?
In this day and age we are still trying to fit people like puzzles?
Box them and sign “homosexual”.
“heterosexual”

Why can’t I say I’m a fruit loop and not have anyone deny it for me, why should I have to explain and not people going out there and understanding my sexuality. It is the most tiring thing ever. Especially when I tell a guy I’m pansexual and they go huh…I then calmly explain and they make it about sex not intimacy, not feelings, not anything that I love about my wide and long list of interests but sex… You’d swear I said. “bhuti your Dick isn’t the only thing that I enjoy sexually, I love pussy too”, the freak out like I am disease infested, explaining and learning at this point isn’t welcome I am called names mostly a whore.

If only people understood that sexuality is fluid… It flows, it moves..it isn’t one thing but many things.

For fucks sake there are people attracted to objects (objectumsexuals) are we going to deny them their right to love whatever they want to because we are to stuck up in the “mummy and daddy” system. It’s time now to accept that you do find “mummy and mummy”. .
“daddy and daddy” and sometime “mummy, mummy and daddy”

_______________________

About the author

Thuthula Sodumo is a 22 year old writer and art activist.
She lives in Eastern Cape, East London. Currently attending the University of South Africa (UNiSA), where she is completing her 3year in Public Admin. & Management.
She started writing at age 12.

 

Posted in Activism, Africa, Allies, Archived memories | Tagged | 7 Comments

2013 April 4: @25 Reminder

Remembering Busi Sigasa & Buhle Msibi. Artwork: Robert Munuku (2013)

Remembering Busi Sigasa & Buhle Msibi.
Artwork by Robert Munuku (2013)

Dear Friends,

Please note that this is a quick reminder for you to join us at the upcoming event. If you are an artist or activist or concerned citizen rather and willing to share your prose/poems/related narrative on human rights & visual – art activism come share with many.

Free entrance

Auditorium, Goethe-Institut, Johannesburg

DATE: 06.04.2013

Time: 12H00-18H00

Address: 119 Jan Smuts Ave.  Parkwood, Johannesburg 2193, South Africa
+27 11 442 3232

Further details on previous post

2013 March 8: Public Event announcement

Posted in Allies, Archived memories, Art Activism in South Africa, Art Solidarity, Arts, Before You, Black Lesbians, Black Lesbians & Allies Against Hate Crimes | Tagged | 4 Comments

2013 April 3: Time, love and pain

by Bathini Dambuza

A cold winter night, all alone in my room

I think of her, I think of me

Me and her the joy and headache of reality

The heartache of what is in front of me

Pain of love, joy and sorrows

The anxiety of tomorrow

The emotional ills of feeling hollow

My heart bleeds of uncertainty

Uncertainly of my life without her

Uncertainty of her life without me

Uncertainty of our lives without each other

Uncertainty of a life of remorse

Pain and suffering will ever see her again

Do I want to see her again?

Will I feel the same way I did

Do I need to trust the feeling

Is it a true feeling that one could rely on

Will it be the same way it was before

If it is, on what grounds do I need to trust it

How assured will I be that the feeling is mutual,

Well, I remain unanswered.

Love lost in the roaring war of emotional pain

Love lost in the treachery of mistrust

Love lost in the disillusionment of freedom

Freedom to be me!
I want to be free

I want to sail in the midst of this fantasy

Me, myself and I will be free

Free to see, free to speak

Free to taste, free to feel

Free of these guilt-ridden memories

But memories anger in time

As time makes, only time takes

Like my pain, our pain

Rid me of these shackles that bind me

Bind me to an existence I don’t know

Existence of fail to understand

An existence of living from others hand

This is it…the end!!!

End of time, it’s over!!!

© 2005

_____________________________________

About the author

Bathini Dambuza, moments captured at Tshidi Porota's birthday party on 2013.02.02Photo by Zanele Muholi

Bathini Dambuza, moments captured at Tshidi Porota’s birthday party on 2013.02.02
Photo by Zanele Muholi

Bathini Dambuza is a self-employed beautician and hairstylist.
She is an outspoken activist; artist; performer – acted with SAfroDykes.    Previously worked former as a Community Outreach officer at the Forum for the Empowerment of Women (FEW).
She also featuring in Raped For Who I Am (2006) by Lovinsa Kavuma.
In 2006 traveled with Chosen FEW to the Gay Games, Chicago, US.

Posted in Abantu, Africa, Art Solidarity, Before You, Career, Community Mobilizing, Uncategorized | Tagged | 15 Comments

2013 April 2: Of Hyperbole in Activism

I am the issue you set out to address,

But somewhere you lost me, this much you must confess

You used to desire, to bring about some change

But now you’ll discover that things remain the same.

 

You’re stuck on terminology, on jargon and verbosity

And I am overshadowed, by acronyms and policy

What happened to simplicity, you eloquently spoke,

Articulate in action, the barriers you broke.

 

What happened to the action in activism strategy?

It bonded with philosophy and soon become a theory

And workshop after workshop, our languages skills improve

But we are a movement and we should be on the move.

 

I am the issue, there are many just like me

And as you deliberate, I wait patiently

And slowly but surely the door closes on me

But frame work, plus action, plus passion is the key

_____________________________

About the author

Sam A.K.A Sam Poetical is a young LGBTI activist from Bulawayo, Zimbabwe who believes that artistic expression is the key to connecting issues to society and a great way to stimulate dialogue from personalization.

Posted in Abantu, Africa, Uncategorized | Tagged | 2 Comments

2013 April 1: Who are you to tell me who I am?

by Keba Sebetoane

On the 7th of March 2004 when I was seventeen years old I started hating all men.
It took one man for me to hate all man. I hated him so much. The only thing could I could think of was killing him. On that night I made a promise to myself that I’d never associate myself with any other man. I blamed myself. The thought of him on top of me unable to defend myself, made facing tomorrow impossible. I saw no hope and lost faith. My dreams were shattered, and the freedom to say “I am me” was lost.

Kingsley and I were friends, more like brother and sister. I was on my way from
Forum for the Empowerment of Women (FEW) offices, where I attended life-skills and computer training, when I first met him.  He introduced himself as a gay man, but not many people knew about his sexuality, so he said. He warned me not to tell anybody, especially his friends because he was not “out” to everyone. We’d spend most of our days together if I was not with my girlfriend or my other friends, and it would feel odd if a day passed without us seeing each other.

Kebarileng Sebetoane, Parktown, Johannesburg, (2012) Photo by Zanele Muholi

Kebarileng Sebetoane, Parktown, Johannesburg. (2012)
Photo by Zanele Muholi

One evening we went out to a “club” near his home. It was nice there because I met some of my friends from high school. I started dancing with other people and was really enjoying myself until suddenly his mood changed. He complained that I was spending too much time with other people and I didn’t want to upset him, so I sat with him. It got really late, and I had the only key for the house so I insisted on going home. It was a bit chilly and he went to get something warm to wear, we went to his place since it was close by. I went to the outside toilet and I thought he went to get a jacket. He was standing in front of the toilet. I was shocked to see him. He did not look happy, so I asked him what was wrong. He did not reply, but he went to his room and I followed him in the hope of finding out. That was the worst mistake I ever made.

I got a bit tense when he gave me the “you make me sick” look. He locked the door. I was really confused as he was swearing at me and saying he hated people who pretend. I then asked him what he was talking about. He was furious with the lesbian life I was living. He said I should stop taking other peoples girlfriends, and that I was beautiful and capable of getting myself a boyfriend. I got angry and started arguing back. He slapped me on the face, and warned me not to shout at him or I would regret it.
He said: “Tonight I’m going to change you, and from now on you are my girlfriend”.

I got angry and told him I knew my rights. I started to leave. He got up holding a screwdriver and threatened to stab me if I didn’t co-operate. I became quiet, trying to calm him down and think of a way to leave his place without anyone getting hurt. He ordered me to take off my clothes while he hit me with anything came across. No matter how hard I cried or how loud I screamed, he told me it wouldn’t help because he was not scared of anyone or anything. He punched me and I thought he was going to kill me if I fought back.

He raped me repeatedly for over an hour. I was quiet with tears streaming down my face. He continued to beat me even though he had succeeded. He kept asking me if I loved him and when I said no, then the beatings got worse. “You go about pretending you are attending classes in Jo’burg while you hook up with your Nigerian boyfriends, and then you come pretending to be something you are not,” he said.

A little after midnight he fell into a deep sleep. I dressed silently and left. I went straight home. I cried the whole night. I couldn’t sleep. My face was bruised. When my family asked what had happened I lied and said I was in a fight with a friend. His smell was all over my clothes and body, and it felt like he was still with me. I took a bath three times.

I called Zanele Muholi, she was the only person I could relate to, and someone who’d come up with a way to deal with the mess I’d got myself into. I took a train and we met in town. We went to People Opposing Women Abuse (POWA) for counseling. We then went to Medico in Johanesburg for a medical examination and treatment. We didn’t get help as there neither nurses nor doctors on duty and they had no crime kits. They also said it was not possible for a doctor who is based in Johannesburg to testify in a case originating in Krugersdorp.

They offered me a slice of bread and a painkiller. Muholi organised a car and we drove to Leratong hospital in Kagiso. There was no doctor on duty and no crime kits at the crisis centre. While waiting for a doctor, the police came by to drop the crime kit. They said they were rushing to Magaliesberg to attend to another rape case.

The doctor came after three hours. I was examined and then he took the statement for the medical report. I told him the guy raped me because I was a lesbian. As soon as he heard that he stopped writing and posed questions regarding my sexuality.
He said: “Why are you a lesbian at this age?
Do you know it is against the constitution to make such a decision without the consent of a parent?
You are wearing a cross of Christ, did you know it is an abomination in the eyes of God to be lesbian?”
I asked him, “The guy raped me because he wanted to change me, are you saying that was a right thing to do?”
He didn’t answer me, but instead he scratched off the report and wrote, “There is no sign of forceful penetration because the girl had already broken her virginity and the blood stains in her eyes are due to constant rubbing, and might develop further if they are not treated”. Without a medical report I had a weakened case. The police arrived at nine o’clock that night. I opened a case and then went home, but could not stay long, as my safety was not guaranteed. I got a call around half past ten to inform me that the guy had been arrested and I’d be notified in advance about the case and court details.

I wanted to be away from Johannesburg, to ease my mind so I left for KwaZulu-Natal for a month. When I came back I heard that the guy had been released. I then called the sergeant who was handling the case. He told me the same thing: “They’ll notify you in advance”.

On the 28 August 2004 I saw my rapist, he approached me threatened to kill me. I felt cold, angry and very scared. I called the sergeant again, but this time I couldn’t get a hold of him. I went to the station. They couldn’t find the docket, and said it didn’t exist. I was failed medically, and the justice system proved its non-existence. South Africa is celebrating twelve years of democracy, but with written policies that are not implemented. We are told to cooperate and not take the law into our own hands. Others harm us and get away with it, we have no way of getting justice.

Will South Africa ever change to accommodate everyone?

Keba’s life story was first published in 
Reclaiming the L-word
Sapphos daughters out in Africa
 edited by Alleyn Diesel
ISBN 978-1-920397-28-9

About the author
Keba is a fierce young feminist and activist. She is one of the first black lesbians to speak out on the hate crime pandemic. She previously worked for FEW and performed with SAfroDykes. She also traveled with Chosen FEW to the 2006 Gay Games held in Chicago, US.

Posted in Africa, Archived memories | Tagged | 20 Comments

2013 April 1: Never a tear

The river is full but not a drop shall be lost,
The sight of my tears comes at too high a cost,
The tide clearly rises, but inspite of my pain,
My tears, they shall fall, never again.

The dam wall it rises and towers the scars,
It holds in the anguish- inside of these bars,
And keeps all the sorrow obscure from your sight,
But only the pillow will know of my plight.

And soak all the bitter in my vinegary tears,
The world calls it crying-expressing my fears,
As sun kisses sky at the break of the dawn,
The tide will have sunk at the break of the mourn.

Love me, care for me, rain on my head,
The love of a person can leave you for dead,
It keeps my eyes turned and makes the tide rise,
But never shall showers be seen from these eyes.

by Sam G Ndlovu

_____________________________

About the author

Sam A.K.A Sam Poetical is a young LGBTI activist from Bulawayo, Zimbabwe who believes that artistic expression is the key to connecting issues to society and a great way to stimulate dialogue from personalization.

Posted in Africa, Bulawayo, revolution, Sam Ndlovu, Zimbabwe | Tagged | 3 Comments

2013 March 31: I Stand Corrected in Soweto

by Lesego Tlhwale

The long awaited theatre play I Stand Corrected that has been said to showcase the corrective rape pandemic in South Africa opened at the Soweto Theatre on the 28 of March 2013, a day that commemorates the death of Nokuthula Radebe.

Radebe’s body was found in an abandoned building in Everest Tokoza, Ekurhuleni two years ago on the 28 March 2011 with her pants down and her face covered with a plastic and had been strangled with her shoelaces on the neck, again another brutal killing of a young lesbian woman.

For the LGBTI community, the day was very significant as it reminded some of us of the brutality that black lesbians in the townships go through for being openly gay.

It was quite disappointed that the performers did not mention anything about the death of Radebe, even though they indicated in their pamphlets that they had some interaction with Forum for the Empowerment of Women (FEW). I would assume that FEW might have mentioned something to them about the importance of the day in relation to LGBTI history as they are the organisation that has been monitoring the case of Radebe and they even had a commemoration event the day before the opening of I Stand Corrected.

Maureen Majola, a member of Inkanyiso, had to stand up and remind everyone who attended the opening about the significance of the 28th of March and enlightened those who did not know what happened.

Mamela & Mojisola sharing the kiss during I Stand Corrected performance. Photo by Zanele Muholi (28.03.2013)

Mamela & Mojisola sharing the kiss during I Stand Corrected performance.
Photo by Zanele Muholi (28.03.2013)

The two acts show was a collaboration between South African multi-award winning choreographer, dancer Mamela Nyamza and British actor, playwright, director and producer Mojisola Adebayo.

The two talented artists came together to put a piece that addresses social-ills experienced by black lesbians in South Africa. Also, because of the artistic talent and the thought provoking script, the play has since been nominated for five awards in London only, “I don’t know how many awards they won from those nominations”, said Remo Chipatiso, Head of Projects and Partnerships Team at British Council, Johannesburg.

sleeping_6112

Mamela Nyamza explained that, “the story was inspired by a host of challenges informed by extreme prejudices and discrimination daily faced by the LGBTI community both in Africa and in the Diaspora (Black people living outside Africa), and the hope and triumphs of this community in the midst of these extreme challenges”.

Nyamza further said that,in South Africa, we have a glorious Constitution that protects everyone, including people with different sexual orientation; however, we have seen so much hate crimes in the Black Townships and In England, for instance; the politicians are still debating to legalise gay marriage, as it is still not legal. Therefore, as artists, we are trying to recall the power of ART to CHANGE social ills, just like during APARTHEID the best way to speak about the challenges the country faced then was through ART”.

The kind of activism used by these artists was very unique and I felt that as LGBTI activists in South Africa we can learn a thing or two from it. Such initiative moves away from the traditional activism we are used too; such as marching the streets and hoping to be heard by the communities we live in.
Nyamza said that, “there are so many ways to do advocacy for a good cause and there are different kinds of activists who have the same goal of changing the world for the better”.

She elaborated her statement above by saying that, “academics do their activism through writing books, holding academic workshops, and attending topical and progressive conferences. Then, there are performing artists (theatre, dance, movies, etc.), who uses their trade of tools to advocate for a good cause.  Then there are photographers who will have to trot all over the show to get that perfect picture to convey his/her message”.

The Soweto theatre during the course of the I stand corrected play also hosted an exhibition by Zanele Muholi called MO(U)RNING. The exhibition was recently featured at the Walker Street Gallery & Art Centre in Australia.

British Council in partnership with Arts Cape funded Mojisola Adeboyo to bring her script to life.

In a statement British Council said that, “I stand corrected was supported, not only for its artistic excellence, but its relevance to human rights, South Africa and it’s direct link to our diversity policy and commitment”.

Productions such as I stand corrected are a must in South Africa and I have no doubt in my mind that we have talented artists with a wealth of knowledge who can create theatre plays, films and documentary about LGBTI issues. However, the lack of funding from our own country and less interest shown by the Department of Art and Culture to support initiatives that address social issues, seem to be the biggest challenge and a setback for our artists.

Nyamza mentioned in our interview that she struggles as a South African artist to get funding for her work here at home, and that she survives on international funding.

I think many artists and NGO’s in South Africa would attest to Nyamza’s statement as they might be going through the same thing.

One example of an NGO that is struggling with funding is Out In Africa (OIA) an organisation that showcases queer films and documentaries came out publicly and said that without funding, the Annual South African Gay & Lesbian Film Festival they host runs a threat of coming to an end.

The organisation that is now surviving through donations and the my MySchool MyVillage MyPlanet fundraising initiative by Woolworths wrote on their website that, “Asinamali (we don’t have cash) OIA’s in trouble (this may be the last Fest for a while), the country’s in trouble, Police and thieves in the street, scaring the nation with their guns and ammunition (Lee Scratch Perry), the abuse of women, the targeting of black lesbians, what is the government doing with our tax money? NGOs, that do their work, are foundering for lack of funding. So, who’s going to fix it? We must. Get up, stand up, stand up for your rights (Bob Marley)”.

Like OIA said, I think it’s time LGBTI Organisations stand up and take ownership, fundraise for their selves and stop waiting on funding that is non-existence.  While they sit around waiting for that funding, our black lesbian sisters are being raped and murdered because our grief is not heard by the outside society.

I Stand Corrected showcased at the Soweto theatre on the 28 March 2013 – 30 March 2013.
The last day of performance had two shows at 14h00 and 19h30.


Previous articles by Lesego Tlhwale

2013 March 24: Recognition of LGBTI Activist should be a culture

and

2013 March 16: Dangerous love


and

2013 Feb. 12: A dildo is not a man; it’s a fantastic toy…



and

2013 Mar.1: Definitely NOT “Gaysbian”

Posted in Africa, Archived memories, Art Activism in South Africa, Articles, Arts, Black Lesbians, Collaborations, Community Mobilizing, Connections, Creating awareness, Documentation; Filming; Photography; Community, Exposure, Expression, Feminist Art, Life Stories, Networking, Performance, Relationships, Uncategorized, Visual history | Tagged | 4 Comments

2013 March 30: Imfihlo yesiphambano

Imfihlo yesiphambano

Lesi siphambano siyi mfihlo esobala

Sithi sisobala siyindida ecacile

Sithi sicacile kanti siyesinda silula

Abasithatha ngeqiniso likaqiniso

Abalahlekelani neqiniso lika ntanyiso

Abakwesweli ukukhanya bha kwaso

Abayigqizi qakala imiswazi yezwe

Ezabo izindlebe zishukwa ze zizwe

Imfihlo yaso isekuuphambaneni kwaso

Amandla aso asekuhlanganeni kwaso

Sihlanganisa amandla obuntu Akuso

Ehlanganisa nenzulu yobunkulunkulu

ObuhlanganA buveze amandla ezulu

Inzulu yezulu yokwazana naye

Ubunzulu obuqeda uqhekeko ngokuqhumana

Ubunzulu obuvala ukukloloda kwenqhondo

Immfihlo yaso isekuhlukaniseni

Inzika yaso isekuhlukaneni

Inzuzo yokuqonda nokuqondana

Kwenhliziyo kamoya yomaqondana

Ethotshiswe ngokwamukela yena

Owalenga kuso leso siphambano

Ngaye kuyolethwa olwampela ubumbano

Ngaso siyozuza iphakade laphakade

__________________________

About the author

My name is Londiwe Precious Mduli, I was born in King Edward hospital.

On the 18 of September 1993 I’m a lesbian. I currently live by myself because my mother and father passed away and my eldest brother is in prison.
I left school in grade11 because of circumstances untold.
I work at a hair salon to make ends meet.

Posted in Abantu, Africa, Before You, Family, Homosexuality | Tagged | 2 Comments