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Samuel Edward Krune Mqhayi (1875–1945) was born in the Eastern
Cape. He was educated formally at Lovedale, but absorbed the
traditions of his people under his grandfather's uncle Nzanzana in
rural Centane. Under the patronage of Walter Benson Rubusana, he
taught in and near East London, and at Lovedale, and helped to edit
two local newspapers, Izwi labantu and Imvo zabantsundu before
retiring to devote himself to social upliftment schemes, to writing
and translating. Prominent in literary, educational and political
circles, Mqhayi was familiar with many of the leading African
intellectuals of the previous generation. S E K. Mqhayi is one of
the figures in the history of South African literature, yet his
achievement is not fully appreciated because he wrote only in
isiXhosa. He was the greatest of all isiXhosa praise poets, whose
concern with all the people of South Africa earned him the title
Imbongi yesizwe jikelele, `The poet of the whole nation’. A few
of his published works are among the most popular in the isiXhosa
language, yet many more are out of print, obscure, unpublished or
lost. Abantu Besizwe, The nation’s people, the first new volume
of Mqhayi’s writing to appear in over sixty years, is the
twenty-third volume in Wits University Press’s African Treasury
Series. It contains sixty-nine historical and biographical essays
contributed to newspapers between 1902 and 1944 as originally
published, with facing English translations. The essays, many of
them enhanced by Mqhayi’s incomparable poetry, present South
African personalities and events ranging from the early nineteenth
to the mid twentieth century, recording climactic battles and
intimate conversations, the growth of national movements and the
lives of lifelong friends. Here you will find Mqhayi's humane and
incisive portraits of men and women, royalty and commoners, the
great and the obscure, black and white, isiXhosa, isiZulu, Sesotho
and Setswana. This collection of largely unrecognised material will
necessitate a reassessment of the history of the isiXhosa-speaking
peoples, establish Mqhayi's reputation as a significant South
African historian, and confirm his status as a major South African
author.
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Inzuzo (Paperback)
S.E.K. Mqhayi
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R180
R135
Discovery Miles 1 350
Save R45 (25%)
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Le nto ililifa yinto ezala izigigaba zoburhalarhume, izenzo
ebezingalindelekanga kubantu abasondele kulo kanye. Liyingozi
kulowo litsoliswe kuye. Libang'inzondo, umona, ububhada inkohlakalo
embi kwabo baphosene nalo nabalizungulayo. Ngeliphandle uDelihlazo
uzimisele ukubulala uZodwa nabo bonke abamthintelayo ngenxa yokuba
ezungula ichele lelifa. This gripping novel shows how dangerous it
can be to inherite money. Greed can make people resort to all kinds
of acts, including murder. Read more to find out how Zodwa is saved
from a brutal murder.
"I'm laying a charge!" Which of the twins -Babini or Wele - should
inherit the homestead when their father dies? This classic tale of
a court case among the Xhosa in precolonial times shows how the law
and justice were applied with wisdom and consultation, and the
importance of social values in these rulings.
Mqhayi dreams of the reunification of the Xhosa people under the
leadership of Don Jadu, a high principled black statesman, in his
utopian view of what it takes to create a great nation.
Sekulithuba elinobom kufuneka ukuba ibekho incwadana elolu hlobo,
yokufundisa izifihlelo kwintsapho efunda kwizikolo zemini.
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