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    Senegal’s top opposition leader Sonko vows to help win March 24 election

    Senegal president sacks PM Sonko, dissolves government after months of friction

    Morocco’s King pardons Senegal fans convicted on hooliganism charges

    Benin’s President Talon thanks army leaders for “remaining loyal” in face of attempted coup

    Benin’s Talon bids farewell ahead of Wadagni inauguration, Sunday

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    Nigeria busts meth cartel in largest seizure, arrests kingpin

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    Sierra Leone receives first group of West African deportees from US

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    Rwanda tightens border controls over deadly Ebola outbreak in DR Congo

    Nigeria arrests ex-power minister Mamman after 75-year graft sentence

    Nigeria arrests ex-power minister Mamman after 75-year graft sentence

    Ethiopia says Ghebreyesus, WHO chief has links to rebellious Tigrayan forces

    WHO says 139 suspected Ebola deaths in Congo outbreak, numbers expected to rise

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    Five Years After the Coup in Mali: Are Stability and Growth Within Reach?

    The Political Economy of Insecurity in Mali: Armed Groups, Resources, and State Fragility

    Ghana to evacuate 300 citizens from South Africa after xenophobic attacks

    Xenophobic Violence and Human Security in South Africa: Causes and Consequences

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    Inside an African lab that helped crack the hantavirus outbreak

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    Agriculture in Africa: science and research cannot have an impact without investments and good policies

    Mali’s junta creates a new ministerial-level post to oversee the mining sector

    African Mineral Resources: The Controversial Link to US Health Deals

    Ghana curbs offshore investments to protect cedi, boost stability

    Ghana’s mining law attempts to eradicate speculation, but leaves communities in limbo: insights from a lithium case study

    East African Community’s expansion has triggered financial difficulties: why solutions come with risks

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    Nigeria’s new election laws leaves gaps: Here are 5 reforms for free, fair, and credible elections

    Nigeria’s new election laws leaves gaps: Here are 5 reforms for free, fair, and credible elections

    Impact of Kenya’s long-overdue new infrastructure fund may be limited by design problems

    Impact of Kenya’s long-overdue new infrastructure fund may be limited by design problems

  • Studies
    Pensions for Botswana’s elderly are expanding, but care services are lacking—study follows 20 years

    Pensions for Botswana’s elderly are expanding, but care services are lacking—study follows 20 years

    60 new cosmic structures have been discovered by South Africa’s MeerKAT telescope, which is mapping previously unseen gaps between galaxies

    60 new cosmic structures have been discovered by South Africa’s MeerKAT telescope, which is mapping previously unseen gaps between galaxies

    Benin government says armed forces foil coup attempt

    Coup contagion? A rash of African power grabs suggests copycats are taking note of others’ success

    One in three South Africans have never heard of AI: what this means for policy

    One in three South Africans have never heard of AI: what this means for policy

    Social Media as a Catalyst for the Spread of Dangerous Wealth Ritual Myths

    Social Media as a Catalyst for the Spread of Dangerous Wealth Ritual Myths

    Overcoming Education Barriers for Young Mothers in Sub-Saharan Africa

    Overcoming Education Barriers for Young Mothers in Sub-Saharan Africa

    Youth Empowerment Through Vocational Training in Rural Sub-Saharan Africa

    Youth Empowerment Through Vocational Training in Rural Sub-Saharan Africa

    Manufacturers in Ghana and Nigeria claim that although corruption damages businesses, digital technologies provide a chance to combat it

    Manufacturers in Ghana and Nigeria claim that although corruption damages businesses, digital technologies provide a chance to combat it

    Environmental Threats and Conservation Efforts in Namibia

    Environmental Threats and Conservation Efforts in Namibia

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    Eduardo Mondlane (1920-1969): Mozambican Revolutionary and Anthropologist

    Eduardo Mondlane (1920-1969): Mozambican Revolutionary and Anthropologist

    William Tubman (1895-1971): Liberian politician and longest-serving president in the country’s history

    William Tubman (1895-1971): Liberian politician and longest-serving president in the country’s history

    Abebe Bikila (1932-1973): Ethiopian marathoner and first black African to win an Olympic medal

    Abebe Bikila (1932-1973): Ethiopian marathoner and first black African to win an Olympic medal

    W. E. B. Du Bois (1868-1963): Sociologist, historian, and Pan-Africanist civil rights activist

    W. E. B. Du Bois (1868-1963): Sociologist, historian, and Pan-Africanist civil rights activist

    Frantz Fanon (1925-1961): Psychiatrist and political philosopher

    Frantz Fanon (1925-1961): Psychiatrist and political philosopher

    Percy Lavon Julian (1899-1975): African American researcher and chemist

    Percy Lavon Julian (1899-1975): African American researcher and chemist

    Harriet Tubman (Araminta Ross, 1822-1913): American abolitionist and social activist

    Harriet Tubman (Araminta Ross, 1822-1913): American abolitionist and social activist

    Dorothy Vaughan (1910-2008): African American mathematician and human computer

    Dorothy Vaughan (1910-2008): African American mathematician and human computer

    George Washington Carver (1864-1943): African American agricultural scientist and inventor

    George Washington Carver (1864-1943): African American agricultural scientist and inventor

  • History
    Laas Geel, Somalia

    Laas Geel, Somalia

    Lakes Of Ounianga, Chad

    Lakes Of Ounianga, Chad

    Nok Caves, Togo

    Nok Caves, Togo

    The Land of Punt (modern Somalia, Eritrea, Ethiopia, or eastern Sudan)

    The Land of Punt (modern Somalia, Eritrea, Ethiopia, or eastern Sudan)

    Avenue of the Baobabs, Madagascar

    Avenue of the Baobabs, Madagascar

    Lopé-Okanda (Gabon)

    Lopé-Okanda (Gabon)

    The Sudd wetland

    The Sudd wetland

    Khami Ruins (Zimbabwe), the capital of the Torwa state

    Khami Ruins (Zimbabwe), the capital of the Torwa state

    Royal Palace, Porto-Novo, Republic of Benin

    Royal Palace, Porto-Novo, Republic of Benin

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Qiraat Africa
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Zakes Mda: The South African Literary Maverick

September 16, 2024
Zakes Mda: The South African Literary Maverick

Zakes Mda. (Photo: Gallo Images / Tammy Booyzen)

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Zakes Mda is the pen name of Zanemvula Kizito Gatyeni Mda, a novelist, poet and playwright. He was born in Herschel, Eastern Cape, South Africa, in 1948 to Rose Nompumelelo, a nurse, and Ashbey Peter Solomzi Mda, a school teacher, who later became a lawyer. His father was a founding member and later became the President of the African National Congress Youth League (ANCYL) in 1947.

Although he spent his early childhood in Soweto (where he knew political figures such as Walter and Albertina Sisulu, Oliver Tambo and Nelson Mandela) he had to finish his education in Lesotho where his father went into exile since 1963. This change of setting also meant a change of language for Mda: from isiXhosa to Sesotho. Consequently, Mda preferred to write his first plays in English. Zakes Mda has become one of South Africa’s most beloved writers. After decades as a successful playwright, he launched his career as a novelist with Ways of Dying in 1995.

Racial segregation existed in South Africa before the establishment of apartheid. Still, the formal legality of apartheid meant that prescribed race categories assigned at birth affected people’s access to education, economic opportunities, and social mobility. Under apartheid, ‘White’ South Africans, the country’s ethnic minority, enjoyed the lion’s share of political power and resources, creating a disparity between the categories of race formally recognized under the system. Because of the importance of race in South Africa under apartheid, Zakes Mda and his family received few opportunities for social or economic mobility. Still, they persevered.

His first play, We Shall Sing for the Fatherland, won the first Amstel Playwright of the Year Award in 1978, a feat he repeated the following year. He worked as a bank clerk, a teacher and in marketing before the publication of We Shall Sing for the Fatherland and Other Plays in 1980 enabled him to be admitted to the Ohio University for a three-year Master’s degree in theatre. He completed a Masters Degree in Theatre at Ohio University, after which he obtained a Master of Arts Degree in Mass Communication. By 1984 his plays were performed in the USSR, the USA, and Scotland as well as in various parts of southern Africa.

Mda then returned to Lesotho, first working with the Lesotho National Broadcasting Corporation Television Project and then as a lecturer in the Department of English at the University of Lesotho. Between 1985 and 1992 he was director of the Theatre-For-Development Project at the university and founded the Marotholi Travelling Theatre. Together with his students he travelled to villages in remote mountain regions working with local people in creating theatre around their everyday concerns. This work of writing theatre “from the inside” was the theme of his doctoral thesis, the Ph.D degree being conferred on him by the University of Cape Town in 1989. In the early nineties Mda spent much of his time overseas, he was writer-in-residence at the University of Durham (1991), research fellow at Yale University. He returned for one year to South Africa as Visiting Professor at the School of Dramatic Art at the University of the Witwatersrand. He is presently Professor of Creative Writing at Ohio University.

He has published 22 books, ten of which are novels and the rest collections of plays, poetry and a monograph on the theory and practice of theater-for-development. His plays have been awarded numerous prizes. The Plays of Zakes Mda (1990) has been translated into South Africa’s eleven official languages. Mda has won a number of awards in South Africa, the USA and Italy, including the Amstel Playwright of the Year Award, the Commonwealth Writers Prize for Africa, the M-Net Prize, the Sunday Times Literary Prize, the Zora Neale Hurston/Richard Wright Legacy Award and the American Library Association Notable Book.

His novel Cion, set in southeast Ohio, was nominated for the NAACP Image Award. His memoir titled Sometimes there is a Void: Memoirs of an Outsider was published by Penguin Books in 2011 and Farrar Straus and Giroux in 2012 and was the New York Times Notable Book for 2012. He has won the Amstel Merit Award for We Shall Sing for the Fatherland (1978), The Amstel Playwright of the Year Award for The Hill (1979), the Christina Crawford Award (of the then American Theater Association) for The Road (1984), and the Olive Schreiner Prize (Drama) of the English Academy of South Africa for The Nun’s Romantic Story (1996). He is a Patron of the Market Theatre, Johannesburg. In April 2014, the South African Government conferred the Order of Ikhamanga, in Bronze, on Zanemvula Kizito Gatyeni “Zakes” Mda, for his excellent contribution in the field of literature that has put South African stories on the world stage.

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Selected Quotes from Zakes Mda

“My plays have been translated into all of the official languages of South Africa except Afrikaans.”

“Our elders say that an elephant does not find its own trunk heavy.”

“The blinded frogs will live peacefully because now they won’t be bothered by the bright rays of the sun. They won’t have to run from danger, because they won’t see it. They will therefore be safe since danger only catches those who run away from it.” – From “The Whale Caller.”

“Death lives with us everyday. Indeed our ways of dying are our ways of living. Or should I say our ways of living are our ways of dying?” ― From the “Ways of Dying.”

Source: Qiraat Africa
Tags: Eastern CapeHerschelSouth AfricaZakes MdaZanemvula Kizito Gatyeni Mda

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