Mafika Gwala
Mafika Pascal Gwala (5 October 1946-5 September 2014) was a contemporary South African poet and editor, writing in English and Zulu.
Mafika Gwala was born and grew up in [Verulam] North of Durban, KwaZulu-Natal. He spent most of his adult life in Mpumalanga Township, west of Durban. He worked in a factory as a clerk, an industrial relations officer, a high school teacher and a guest university lecturer aside from writing and editing. He completed an MPhil in Politics from the University of Natal and was a researcher at Manchester University.[1]
Gwala was active in the struggle against Apartheid and a leading light of the 1970s Black Consciousness movement of which he says:
“ | We didn’t take Black Consciousness as a kind of Bible, it was just a trend, which was a necessary one because it meant bringing in what the white opposition [to apartheid] couldn’t bring into the struggle. So much was brought into the struggle through Black Consciousness.[1] | ” |
In 1982, Gwala published a book of Black Consciousness poetry in a collection called No More Lullabies.
His work is characterised by a rhythmic musicality he attributes to the Zulu language. In 1991 he edited and translated into English a collection of Zulu writing entitled Musho! Zulu Popular Praises.
Works
Poetry
- Jol'iinkomo. (1977)
- No More Lullabies. (1982)
Edited
- Black Review. (1973)
- Musho! Zulu Popular Praises. With Liz Gunner (Michigan State University, 1991) ISBN 0-87013-306-3
External links
- The jive poem
- Interview at Chimurenga Online
- Interview & poem at Mail & Guardian Online
References
- 1 2 Far from forgotten by Niren Tolsi (ZA@PLAY) October 6, 2006
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