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Thursday 22 December 2022

LANGA - COME SEE

A tour of Cape Town's Langa township

Before my 11-day guided tour of southern Africa, I'm emailed with a list of tour options in Cape Town. Which one would I like to do?

There's an afternoon of wine-tasting among the villas of Stellenbosch. There's a Harley Davidson tour of Cape Town, including Camps Bay beach where the models hang out. And there's a two-hour walking tour of a black township.

I hesitate over fine wines, fast motorbikes and models on beaches, before ticking the box marked 'Township'.

Langa township is 10 kilometres from the five-star hotels of Victoria and Alfred Wharf, and a million miles from the stuff that makes Cape Town one of the world's most beautiful cities. It's flat, a little bigger than Sydney's Centennial Parklands, and home to 80,000 people (the population of Launceston). It's bounded by a railway line, a busy freeway and a garbage transfer station.

Our small group of seven is greeted in the centre of Langa by resident Chippa Mngangwa. A friendly, open-faced chap with a ready smile, Chippa thanks us for visiting and tells us how to greet locals in the Xhosa language ('Mollo'). But his next statement sets me back a little.

"The people you meet during your holiday in Cape Town – all the security guards, the waiters, the maids – they live here, in a township. Each day they travel to your hotels and restaurants and earn between 250 to 300 Euros [A$400 to $485] a month. They work to survive."

Over decades of travelling in South Africa I've met lots of security guards, waiters and maids at hotels and restaurants. I try to make conversation, though the gulf between us is hard to bridge. And it suddenly strikes me: I've never got past polite chit-chat because I've never thought about their lives on a deeper level.

Our two-hour walk begins at some parklands where the grass and gum trees are wearied from Cape Town's drought. People with lots of time and nowhere to be walk with a languid gate. Cars occasionally rumble past, thudding with bass and driven by young men.

"Sixty per cent of South Africa lives in a township," says Chippa, "and only 50 per cent of those have jobs. Townships are hunting grounds for politicians. If you persuade 60 per cent of the population to vote for you, that will see you into power, perhaps even into the top job. But when politicians get power, they forget about townships."

Langa is one of the oldest of Cape Town's 13 townships, started in the 1920s as a camp for male dockworkers who it was feared would spread plague. It officially became a township under the Group Areas Act of 1948 – a pillar of Apartheid that ensured non-white Africans lived away from their workplaces, away from urban centres and far from white suburbs. Even today there is only one road in and one road out of Langa, a design legacy that ensured townships could be locked down.

Chippa talks as we walk. "Like any community, Langa has social stratification. We have areas of lower class and we have our own 'Beverley Hills'." We emerge into 'Beverly Hills', a street with bungalows of pale brick and kempt gardens. Blocks of medium density units are being built close by, with two-bedders starting at $30,000.

But around the corner, the urban scenery changes dramatically.

Upon entering a neighbourhood of shipping containers, clouds of small children blow up to Chippa. He dispenses high fives and hugs, before leading us to the door of one of the containers. The steel box is divided by a flimsy wall to create two 2mx3m dwellings. Four of us squeeze in: it contains a single mattress, a wooden seat, a fridge and an electric cooktop (a saucepan of boiling cabbage makes a familiar and glum smell). Chippa points to each in turn: "Bedroom, lounge, kitchen," he says. "This is home to six people. A mother and her five children live in here."

The mother sits outside while we inspect her dwelling. She tells me how her five children sleep on a mattress on the floor. "I have lived here since 2005." she says. "Twelve years."

One of our group puzzles for a moment. "Fourteen years," he says.

She looks up with wide eyes. "Fourteen?!" she breathes, shocked. "Ohhhh, too much."

The community has several schools but only 10 per cent can afford the fees. There's also a hospital and fee-paying clinics (many dedicated to sexual health). And a lot of churches.

As the mother re-occupies her shipping container, Chippa tells us that women run this community, driving the economy by selling stuff they make, grow and prepare. We cross into a rough quarter of shanties made from corrugated iron and black plastic sheeting. Two women are surrounded by stacks of recycled building timber which they use to make toxic-smelling fires: one woman singes all the hair from grinning sheeps' heads while the other uses plastic Steel-o to scrub the heads squeaky clean. It's a delicacy.

More remarkable are Langa's 'micro-breweries'. A wonky line of rotten shacks sit with orange drums outside. These drums are filled with beer fermented from sorghum, maize powder and water.

We duck into one of the cramped, dark spaces where an older "mama" silently goes about her work, tending half a dozen older men squatting on benches. They're friendly, but slightly stupefied from hours of consuming the 2.5 per cent brew she serves in 5-litre tins.

"This is called a shebeen," says Chippa, now sitting before a five-litre tin of his own. "These were illegal, and women who couldn't get work as maids stayed in the townships and made beer."

The tin costs A$4 and is passed around for us to try. The first taste is of the metal – followed by the sour, room-temperature beer which smacks of smoke. "These women don't get the credit they deserve," he says as the dusty wind makes the plastic sheets crackle. "Selling beer to the community means some are able to send their kids to school."

I feel perfectly safe in the township, but Chippa says it's different after dark. "The community is very peaceful in the daytime. But we go from being the best community by day to the worst at night."

In 2014 Langa accounted for 55 per cent of murders in Cape Town. With only one police station, vigilante groups are left to mete out their own law. "Community justice is much more feared," says Chippa. "It's more like social control."

If townships are a modern construct, ancient African traditions survive. Young men reaching 18 are sent out into the bush for six weeks prior to ritual circumcision. "The pain of life will be nothing to the pain being experienced," says Chippa with the wry grin of a man who has been through it. Dowry is also a big part of matrimony and while bride price is no longer paid in cows, weddings come with stratospheric costs and many young couples are saddled with horrendous debt.

At the end of the tour we repair to Langa's community arts hub, the Guga S'thebe Arts & Culture Centre. where local artists and artisans are given the means to produce their work. I buy a colourful hand-painted mug – and then return to the Cape Town that I know.

I seek out the beautiful sixth-storey bar in The Silo hotel, a stellar industrial/boho space. Perched on a barstool upholstered with topaz-coloured leather, I place my hands on the cold stone bartop and feel slightly spun out.

Barman Pule Selogilwe pours me a chilled Cape Brewing Co. Beer and asks me what I've been doing with my day.

"I've been in a township," I say.

He's taken aback. "A township?" he says. "Which one?"

I tell him and it's like a door opens.

He tells me the name of his township, it's not so far from Langa. "I've taken all my white friends there," he says. "They get to sit in a shebeen, listen to an uncle telling a few stories… Did you visit a shebeen?"

The conversation quickly becomes one of mutuality and connection. We talk about the problems of townships, the changes, the lack of change. Then his shift behind the bar ends. "It's cool you visited," he says, shaking my hand. "It's important. If you've not been to a township, you've not been to half of South Africa."

TRIP NOTES

Max Anderson was a guest of Scenic

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traveller.com.au/south-africa

siviwetours.com/

TOUR

Siviwe Tours offer 2.5 hour tours of Langa with local guides. Costs $55 a person, including transfers from Cape Town.

The tour of Langa township is offered as part of an 11-day five-star overland tour of South Africa, Zimbabwe and Botswana, with Scenic. Costs $11,195 a person. Visit scenic.com.au/tours/southern-africa-discovery/8229

OK-RITE: LANGA & SURROUNDS STUFF

The other side of Cape Town

The Cape Town area is famous for beaches, wine tours and Table Mountain. But township tours might also be an interesting side trip for soccer fans heading to South Africa for the World Cup.
Image:  Travel Trip WCup Township Tourism
Tourist are seen at a curio shop in the township of Langa situated on the outskirts of Cape Town, South Africa. Nardus Engelbrecht / AP
/ Source: The Associated Press

The Cape Town area is famous for beaches, wine tours and Table Mountain, among other attractions. But on a recent morning, a group of tourists set out to experience something most visitors never see — the townships where black and mixed-race South Africans were warehoused under apartheid.

"We want to show them the other side of Cape Town with this township tour," said Samantha Mtinini from Camissa Travel & Marketing. The tours take visitors to homes, schools and markets in three townships where they meet children, vendors and other residents.

The tour does not sugarcoat reality: Mtinini says the townships remain impoverished and beset by crime. But the company advertises the tours as a way to create jobs, as well as a way for visitors to experience the humanity and culture of the people who live there.

The tours might also make an interesting side trip for soccer fans heading to South Africa for the World Cup, which kicks off June 11.

First of three stops on the tour was Langa, a black township where the visitors were greeted by preschool kids singing a welcome in Xhosa and English.

Langa is an area of shacks, schools, religious, sports and recreational and cultural buildings. Traditional healers also do business here, claiming to be able to cure just about everything, and to clear evil spirits from homes and create luck for relationships and business.

"We are born with spirits from ancestors," Major Ndaba of the Langa Herbal Chemist shop told the tourists. "People come to me for all sorts of problems like business success and evil spirits."

Just outside in the Joe Slovo shack settlement, Christopher Wanyoike awaited customers at his arts and crafts stall.

"My crafts are from all over Africa, from Kenya, Malawi, Zimbabwe, Tanzania among others," he said. He is among an army of Langa entrepreneurs, from fruit and vegetable hawkers, to cooks barbecuing meat al fresco to be served with umqombothi, frothy traditional African beer for about $2 (14 rand) a liter.

Next the tour moved to Bonteheuwel. The sprawling colored, or mixed-race, township was established after the forced removals in 1966 from an area known as District Six. District Six was a pocket of Cape Town where South Africans of different races lived together until the city council forced those who were not white to move far from their jobs and the economic hive of the city center.

Under apartheid, South Africans of mixed-race were more privileged than blacks, part of a divide-and-rule strategy to create tensions that linger to this day. Bonteheuwel, compared to Langa, boasted more sports fields and better schools with libraries and business centers.

Then it was on to Guguletu, another black township. There, tourists saw new shacks built after apartheid ended in 1994, during an influx of settlers from rural to urban areas.

Mtinini said that wherever space is available, people build shacks, including just in front of the Gugulethu Seven monument, which commemorates seven anti-apartheid activists killed by the security police in 1987.

Nearby, another monument commemorates Amy Biehl, an American Fulbright scholar killed in 1993 in Guguletu. Biehl, 26, who was white, was studying how women were contributing to change in South Africa. Her black assailants claimed the attack was part of the war on white rule.

Biehl's attackers were granted amnesty after confessing before South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission, set up to help the country cope with the legacy of apartheid.

Two of her attackers now work for a charity the Biehl family founded that has provided training in arts, sports and other areas to young South Africans.

NBC News

 

YEBO-YES

Renowned Langa restaurant bags Cape Town Tourism Board award

Buffet-style eatery owned by 22-year-old Mbasa Siyaka, Mzansi Restaurant has bagged the Cape Town Tourism Board Development Fund (BDF) award. The local gem has been visited by Bob Marley’s eldest son, Rohan Marley. Picture: Supplied

Buffet-style eatery owned by 22-year-old Mbasa Siyaka, Mzansi Restaurant has bagged the Cape Town Tourism Board Development Fund (BDF) award. The local gem has been visited by Bob Marley’s eldest son, Rohan Marley. Picture: Supplied

Published Dec 17, 2021

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CAPE TOWN - Mzansi Restaurant, a vibrant buffet-style eatery owned by 22-year-old Mbasa Siyaka, who is passionate about job creation, has bagged the Cape Town Tourism Board Development Fund (BDF) award.

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The annual awards established in 2014 aids small, medium and micro enterprises (SMMEs) with cash awards, mentoring and other business-boosting actions to develop their tourism businesses.

With the devastation of cancelled bookings owing to the Omicron variant and the red-listing of South Africa by other countries, Mzansi Restaurant said the award came at the right time.

The eatery, which offers a mix of Western and traditional African meals, lost all its international bookings for the festive season, becoming solely dependent on locals for support.

“With ease of lockdown restrictions, Mzansi Restaurant was hoping to be at the forefront of the recovery of Cape Town’s tourist industry. Before Covid-19, we operated about six days a week, were rated number one on TripAdvisor and employed around 16 people” said Siyaka.

The restaurant was opened at 45 Harlem Ave in 2008 and was the brainchild of the late grandmother of the Siyaka family.

She convinced her daughter Nomonde and her husband, Vukile, who were hosting a jazz club at the time, to focus on the bustling market of international clients coming in and out of Langa.

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Siyaka, who started as a car marshal, took over the reins in 2018 after his mother became chronically ill.

“The long-term goal is to employ another 16 employees from the area. Through mentorship also by the CTICC manager, I want to learn more and inspire other young people. Having been selected as one of the successful candidates for the Cape Town Tourism BDF programme serves as validation of the vision that was birthed by my grandmother.

“We wish to express our sincerest thanks to the Cape Town Tourism Board for not only providing Mzansi Restaurant with the much-needed support to propel our growth, but also for the realisation that SMMEs do not just need cash to grow. We also need an integrated approach that captures a wide but interdependent array of support,” he said.

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Cape Town Tourism chief executive officer Enver Duminy said: “As Cape Town Tourism, we have been working together with other sectors in trying our best to contain the negative impact of lockdown on the local economy and saving jobs that we have been steadily growing across Cape Town.”

The board’s chairperson, Brett Hendricks, said that providing support for local enterprises during this critical time was crucial.

“Our BDF initiative is something we hope will inspire other organisations to invest in supporting small businesses. SMMEs are where South Africa’s growth comes from, and we cannot rely solely on the government to fund and support them.”

Cape Times

LANGA 4 SURE

 

Home TravelCape Town & South Africa Langa rising. An inspiring visit to SA’s oldest township.

Langa rising. An inspiring visit to SA’s oldest township.

 

This is the original version of a story I wrote on LANGA that ran in the June 2019 issue of Khuluma inflight magazine  

Take the N2 

The N2 out of Cape Town takes you places. To tourist hotspots like Stellenbosch, Hermanus and Ceres to name a few, synonymous with wine farms, whale watching and cherry picking. That same highway also leads to Langa, South Africa’s oldest township, less heralded but holding its own with historical gravitas, a unique identity and a vibrant culture. Langa is a crucial part of the Mother City’s DNA. Welcome to it.

What is a township?

In the original South African apartheid context, townships refer to underdeveloped and racially segregated areas, reserved for ‘non-whites’. As things stand today, only a small minority  of township inhabitants hold down contractual jobs with annual incomes hovering around the R30,000 mark (about US$2100) and the unemployment rate continues to rise. In spite of decades of dispossession, indignity and daily challenges though, there are many parts of it Langa that are in the throes of rejuvenation and as an outsider, witnessing the transformation and the upbeat atmosphere first-hand is an absolute revelation.

iKhaya le Langa, 2 minutes from the Bhunga Avenue turn off

 

The Langa Quarter

It all begins 100 metres from Exit 12 on the N2, at a bright orange wall (above) that announces you’ve arrived in the Langa Quarter. One of the most exciting projects to take root in the suburb, the Langa Quarter constitutes a small slice of the township – 13 streets to be precise- that has been quietly evolving over the past ten years and has recently been proactively zoned for hospitality and tourism. Anyone visiting the Quarter is immediately struck by the visible difference, the result of a ‘cleaner, greener, safer’ campaign. The Quarter community realised long ago that the only way to promote tourism to the sector and attract and secure ongoing partnerships and investment was if the area looked good and felt secure. In a remarkably short space of time, the zone has become a place of sustainable enterprise and is hailed as yet  another valued asset in the Western Cape’s travel and tourism offering.

Tony Elvin

 

Who is behind the Langa Quarter?

The driving force behind the thriving precinct is Tony Elvin (pictured above), a British businessman of Jamaican descent with a passion for empowering young people and injecting hope into previously disenfranchised communities. An optimist and  serial change maker, he began working on the Quarter project in 2010 and launched it in December 2017. His track record is solid, having pursued social enterprise projects (SEP’s) around the world for two decades. The most well-known of these was Jamie Oliver’s Fifteen Foundation through which he established a string of eateries in London, Amsterdam, Melbourne and Cornwall  to up skill aspirant chefs and generate employment for graduates. Although this is what initially brought him to South Africa, it’s not what has kept him here. His defining moment presented itself in 2009 while he was mentoring a group of young men at his ‘swanky offices’, as he puts it,  in Heritage Square. They introduced him to Langa and the rest, as they say, is history.  “I did my research,” he explained, ”got to know the area, understand its history, culture and its people. That took me five years and once I had a handle on it, I moved  from my gated estate in Hout Bay into Langa and I haven’t looked back.”

iKhaya le Langa, the heart of the Langa Quarter

 

Ikhaya Le Langa, the nucleus of the Langa Quarter

iKhaya Le Langa (above), meaning the ‘house of the sun’ in isiXhosa, is the nucleus of the Quarter, located on the corner of Ndabeni and Rubusana streets. It has successfully cemented itself as a multifunctional business incubator, providing the lifeline between the precinct, the travel industry and residents. Housed within the building, a repurposed primary school, are offices, an Airbnb booking desk, the Sun Diner, a gallery and a retail space selling locally produced craft. iKhaya Le Langa operates an Inter-community Tourism Agency branded ‘Visit Langa’ that promotes dignified exchanges between locals and tourists and ‘that does tourism in a township’ as opposed to ‘township tourism’, often viewed by locals as a derogatory term likened to ‘poverty tourism.’  The centre also provides educational and entrepreneurial workshops, hospitality industry training, art classes for children and adults, and the Ambassador Skills Development programme geared towards the unemployed of all ages who are given a chance to learn job readiness and get a leg up on  the work ladder.

L-R Asekho Mjojeli, Linam Sibinda & Vusumzi Ndlazi

 

The Langa Quarter Ambassadors

Local entrepreneur Asekho Mjojeli (above, far left) has been with iKhaya le Langa since 2013 and is the face of Young, Gifted and Black (YG&B) the coffee shop that operates daily from a bright lumo green container, the go-to spot for locals. The talented 26 year old makes a mean cappuccino and is training others to do the same as he spreads the gospel of the good brew.

Artist, tour guide and mentor

Tozamile Mpanu (above, in his art studio at iKhaya Le Langa), 35, joined the iKhaya Le Langa fold in 2017, attracted by the buzz and keen to throw his weight behind the tourism side of things. An African art specialist and the centre’s artist-in-residence, he is one of the iKhaya’s accredited tour guides who regularly conducts walkabouts and more recently, cycle tours through the Quarter and other interesting parts of the township. Clearly passionate about the place, he relishes sharing his knowledge of the many buildings, prominent streets and memorials that preserve the townships incredible backstory.

 

Harlem Avenue – steeped in history

Harlem Avenue (above) is one of the most interesting thoroughfares in the Quarter and is where the pilot program began in 2009. At one end is a row of small houses- some marked with commemorative plaques- that once belonged to South African icons who made their mark in politics, music, medicine, professional sport and academia. There are 28 heroes honoured here, like the Struggle activist Chris Hani, musician Victor Ntoni, cricketer Thami Tsolekile, and Hamilton Naki, lab assistant to the late Chris Barnard, the cardiac surgeon who performed the world’s first heart transplant. Farther down are the ruins of the Special Quarters, ridiculously undersized rooms once built to house migrant workers, and as you continue along there’s a jazz club and shebeen  (informal bar) called Fanie’s Place, and Mzansi, a popular restaurant for tourists. Washington Street, one of the main arteries that runs through Langa, leads past a number of significant places.

Memorials and mouments

Like Guga Sthebe (above), marked by a bright yellow exterior, is another crucial resource centre with a focus on Arts & Culture. On the same route, dotted along the pavements, are colourful mosaic plinths, each with a different theme and a written explanation related to township history.

Reminders of the Struggle

At the Washington Circle, opposite the taxi rank, is the cylindrically shaped memorial (above) that was installed in 2010 in honour of those who lost their lives in the violent anti-Pass Law protests that took place in 1960, the same day as the brutal Sharpeville Massacre in Johannesburg. It’s a sobering reminder of the suffering that the majority of South Africans endured before Nelson Mandela came to power.

Homestays and Airbnb

Surrounding ikhaya le Langa 18 homes that make up the 40 bed Langa Quarter Homestay Hotel (LQHH) cluster, run by female hosts who rent out their houses to tourists and curate immersive experiences that make a refreshing change from cookie-cutter type tours.  Personal stories are shared in an intimate setting and unpack the backstories to life during the Apartheid era, township heritage and introduce aspects of family culture and traditional cuisine. All of this fits tightly into the global traveller trend towards ‘going and doing’, whereby tourists increasingly opt for conscious, sustainable travel experiences that provide deeper meaning.

Brian Chesky and the Airbnb endorsement

In 2017, nine Langa Quarter Homestay Hotel entrepreneurs were also introduced to Airbnb, a huge boost on many levels, and a vote of confidence in the Langa Quarter and the quest to make individuals financially independent.  Brian Chesky, the co-Founder and CEO of Airbnb, flew in to personally endorse the group and welcome them to the booking platform.

Everyone benefits through local Enterprise

Other residents also reap the rewards of the staycations by partnering with LQHH to supply services such as laundry, food and beauty treatments such as hair braiding and manicures. Elvin himself leads an Airbnb Experience that includes performances by locals that includes a traditional meal at one of the Langa Quarter restaurants, and a service at one of the area’s oldest churches. Although it’s mostly internationals booking tours and spending quality time in the Quarter, Tony is bullish about the long term prospects and believes it’s only a matter of time before Mother City slickers follow suit and spend more time in the area.

Tozamile at the mural he painted on Bitterhout Street that won him the 2019 ULTRA street art and graffiti competition

 

Events in Langa

Many are already drawn to Langa through different events such as Open Streets, Rocktober at Maragana Park and Black Cellar Club’s BLACC Fest X, the premium wine and spirits festival that took place for the first time in 2018 and pulled a savvy crowd of connoisseurs from Langa and surrounds. ULTRA – Uplifting Langa Through Reachable Art – is an annual street art and graffiti competition that attracts dozens of artists who emblazon seventeen panels along the 134 metre vibracrete wall that runs down Bitterhout Street, one of the roads that border iKhaya Le Langa. This year the winning piece was done by Tozamile (pictured above), a pulsating rendition of life in Langa.

Abdullah Tan holds a plate of amagwinya (vetkoek) at Ayanda Spaza shop

 

Langa deserves attention and no visit to the Mother City is complete without it. Take the Bhunga Avenue off-ramp and see for yourself. The suburb of the sun is waiting.

For info about walking and cycle tours that start at iKhaya Le Langa, Airbnb bookings and more, visit www.ikhayalelanga.co.za / bookings@visitlanga.co.za.

For assistance in curating your Cape Town trip, contact alessia@luxecapetown.africa

COME TO LANGA FOR A TOUR - AND CHANGE YOUR LIFE

 19 Sep 2018| South Africa 

Should you take a Township Tour in Cape Town? 

Our Langa Township Tour in Cape Town explored a side of the city few visitors see. But is slum tourism an indulgence for tourists or does it serve a greater purpose?

At only 1.5 kilometres square, Langa is one of the smallest townships in the city. Ten years ago it was home to 50,000 people, but like many townships, it has grown rapidly as job opportunities in the city draw workers and families from the surrounding countryside. There are now about 80,000 people in Langa and the township is struggling to cope.

In recent years, entrepreneurial souls – knowing wealthy westerners are engaged by their poverty – have introduced tours to townships such as Langa. While there a many great things to do in Cape Town, we were drawn to exploring this other side to the city, but were unsure if it was the right thing to do.

Should we be inspecting other people’s poverty and misfortune? Are we helping this township or making their situation worse?

Booking your trip via the links on this page (or on our book page) will earn us a small commission, at no extra cost to you. Thanks for your support – Paul & Mark.

Langa Township Tour in Cape Town

END OF APARTHEID AND NEW RIGHTS FOR BLACK CITIZENS

We park outside a shop on the edge of Langa, just off junction 12 of the N2. Being the only white people, our guide spots us quickly and rushes up to welcome us warmly. His name is Nathi and he is keen to begin this Langa Township Tour; to show us his town, his friends and his family.

Walking down a narrow dusty alleyway, we enter a small shack and are introduced to Shadrack, or ‘Shooter’ to his friends. But he also goes by the name MacGyver, thanks to his ingenuity in building every inch of his wooden and sheet metal home which we are sitting in now. The shack is small but homely and pristinely clean. There are pictures all over the walls, not only of his family but also the people who have visited him over the years. An empty bottle of Johnny Walker Gold Label stands on a shelf. His face, of an indeterminate age, is lit up by a broken blender he has converted into a lamp, as he regales us with the story of his life and his township.

Langa Township Tour in Cape Town

Shooter was a police officer during apartheid, a system of institutionalised racial segregation that existed in South Africa from 1948 to 1994. This institutionalised racial segregation legalised state oppression of black and coloured peoples by a white minority. As a black officer, he was not permitted to arrest white criminals, and was subordinate to white officers, even of lower rank. He was not only distrusted by white colleagues, but also by black citizens, for whom the police were the physical embodiment of an oppressive government and its unjust laws. He left the force, in 1993 just as the apartheid era laws were coming to an end.

We ask him what has changed most in the township in his lifetime. He doesn’t describe houses going up, or infrastructure being built. He doesn’t talk about development or integration. Instead, he basks in his rights. “Twenty-five years ago, I got my legal rights. The right to go where I want, when I want. The right not to be stopped for no reason. The right not to be arrested for forgetting ID papers. I became a free man. This is what has changed the most, and it is everything”.

He explains, that as democracy came to black citizens in South Africa, the government ceased to be his enemy. It got out of the way of him building his own future. And the police force became the police service. It went from using force to subjugate the townships to providing a service to support their citizens in their quest for a better life.

langa township tour cape town6

THE WORKERS OF CAPE TOWN BUILD THEIR LIVES

And building better lives is exactly what the people of Langa are doing. Every morning they get up and head into the city to be restaurant servers, office and factory workers, drivers and builders. They head into the suburbs to be gardeners, cooks and cleaners. Cape Town is built and run on the back of the people of Langa and townships like it.

Yet many also earn their living in the township itself. Two women, with the street as their office, are brewing beer in large plastic barrels in a cramped, smoky alley between self-built tin sheds. Their brew is bubbling away. It is only 1.5 to 2% alcohol, but if you drink enough, Nathi explains with a grin, it works just the same. Round the corner, a small factory with two kilns produces hand-painted ceramics that are shipped to European and American Universities.

Three women, clad completely in black, stand in a pile of broken charred wood and building offcuts. Their faces, illuminated by light brown fire resistant paint, loom out of the darkness. They are selling firewood and sheep’s heads. Sheep’s heads are a delicacy here and served to the older generation as a sign of respect. Cheeks, eye sockets, and tongue are the choicest parts. But sheep are few and demand is high, so they ship the heads in from New Zealand.

Next on our Langa Township Tour, we cross a car washing business. They can clean a couple of hundred cars in a day, and in three days can make more than workers heading into town. It’s a profitable business. Nathi says he has tried to explain to them the value of saving, of putting money aside each week, for a rainy day. But his words of advice do not always find a receptive ear.

He is saving though. He has a girlfriend and in order to get married, he must present a dowry to his future wife’s family. Eight to twelve cows is customary. But just like sheep, there are few cows in the city, so money has taken its place. A cow is 5,000 Rand, so marriage costs about 50,000 Rand (US $3,500). A significant outlay on a low daily wage.

But some have made a success of their freedoms, worked hard and saved. Nathi takes us up to the ‘Beverley Hills’ of Langa. Locals that have made it and want to remain in Langa’s tight community of friends and family live here. Houses made of concrete, with running water and electricity. This is where locals dreams have come true.

Langa Township Tour in Cape Town

EXTREME POVERTY & GOVERNMENT HELP

But for everyone that lives in Beverley Hills there are hundreds living in poverty. We round another bend on our Langa Township Tour and are faced with 6 shipping containers. Sunk into the dirt in a small plot of unclaimed land. Each shipping container houses two families, often up to 12 people. Conditions are cramped and dark. There is barely room for each person to sleep. In winter they are cold and in summer baking. The stuffy air often forces people out of their homes and onto the street.

A woman is outside, perched on a low small stool, washing clothes in a bucket. Another is making her way to the toilet block a couple of hundred metres away, where 100 people share 5 toilets. But while these shipping containers are incredibly basic they are still home. Inside they are spotlessly clean. The ubiquitous satellite dish, bolted onto the shipping container, provides entertainment for the family and the outside is decorated with cool modern graffiti.

Langa Township Tour in Cape Town

Shooter’s shack is also on unclaimed land, down a dark narrow alleyway, surrounded by more than a hundred other tightly packed buildings of wood and scrap metal. With three tiny rooms, his is the largest in the area. But he too has no running water and has to share his neighbour’s electricity.

Shooter, and many others were forced to move to their temporary self-built homes when the government decided to upgrade their government accommodation. But that temporary move was in 2007. Eleven years later Shooter, and many like him, are still waiting to return.

I ask him how much longer he will have to wait. He shrugs. I ask him if he finds it frustrating. “Yes, of course”, he replies, “but Rome was not built in a day. I have my rights, I am a free man. I can be patient and in the meantime I will build my own life.”

But as a tourist on a Langa Township Tour, it’s not the intangible improvement in rights that strikes you. It is the destitute poverty and squalor that lingers in parts of the township. There is obvious pride in Langa, yet hundreds live in temporary shacks and shipping containers with no running water and few facilities. It feels less like the government has got out of the way to allow people to build their lives, and more like it has abandoned them to their own devices. Exploring parts of Langa, it appears Rome is not getting built at all.

Langa Township Tour in Cape Town

SLUM TOURISM & POVERTY PORN

Wandering the streets on our Langa Township Tour with Nathi, there is one awkward moment. A drunken man walks up to us, slurring words in his local Xhosa language. It’s unclear what he is saying, but it looks like he wants money. Nathi tells us to ignore him, but the drunk man is persistent.

It’s at this point that we first appreciate what tourism means to Langa, and to Nathi. He’s very quick to intervene, stepping between us and the drunk man, to ensure we don’t feel intimidated. He gets the help of 3 local women, who appearing from nowhere, whisk our drunk friend away.

Nathi explains that Langa’s tight-knit community can exert powerful peer pressure. Drugs and violence are not common here. But drinking alcohol is legal and more socially acceptable. In a township with not much else to do, drinking cheap beer is a favourite social past time.

But the encounter with the drunk man forces us to ask ourselves: should we be on a township tour in Cape Town in the first place? Are we welcome or are we simply indulging our curiosity? Are we making things better or worse? But Nathi thinks tourists help. For years people in Langa associated the white man with police and oppression. Tourism has changed that. They see a different white man. One that engages with them, is curious to discover about their lives in a peaceful and polite manner. And one that leaves a tip.

Langa Township Tour in Cape Town

THE VALUE OF A LANGA TOWNSHIP TOUR IN CAPE TOWN

As a tourist, taking a township tour in Cape Town, it is hard to see how much the rights of the people here have changed from 25 years ago. But walking around the houses and through the slums of sheet metal, past the library, the police station, the arts centre and the shipping containers, it is easy to see the good and the bad. People trying to make their lives better and communities trying to build a better future. But while no doubt things are improving, you are still struck by the poverty and squalor of much of the living conditions.

As a tourist, if you spend 5 days in Cape Town and just sip cocktails on the front at Camps Bay, eat in the restaurants of the V&A harbour and taste wine in the vineyards of Constantia then you have barely seen Cape Town at all. For many of the workers who have built this amazing city, live in areas that you never venture and in conditions you never see.

A township tour in Cape Town opened our eyes to how the vast majority of its citizens actually live; taught us to think more deeply how politics can affect people’s lives; and hopefully helped build better trust between the black and white communities of this city.

Langa Township Tour in Cape Town

BOOK YOUR LANGA TOUR 

This half-day Langa Township Tour includes District 6, Langa and Gugulethu. Pick up can be arranged from the city centre or Atlantic seaboard hotels including Camps Bay.  The tour lasts 3 hours.

HOW TO HELP  

If you are interested in helping some of the poorest people in the world live better lives, we highly recommend you explore GiveWell. GiveWell assesses which charities are the most effective at improving people’s lives for every US$ (£ or EUR) donated. Travelling the world regularly inspires us to help those that are less well off than ourselves and we donate to GiveWell recommended charities every year.

WHERE NEXT?

As one of our favourite places to visit for winter sun, great hiking and incredible wildlife opportunities, we’ve been to South Africa several times. Here’s some more reading you might find useful.

ALL SOUTH AFRICA GUIDES