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Friday, 6 January 2023

LANGA RUGBY

 

Rugby’s Field of Dreams in Langa

Vusa Rugby Academy in Langa is helping youngsters stay away from social ills with the game. Photo: Supplied

Vusa Rugby Academy in Langa is helping youngsters stay away from social ills with the game. Photo: Supplied

Published Mar 30, 2019

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There is an awakening happening every day in Langa – and it is as stimulating for the mind as it is heart-warming for the soul.

It happens at the Vusa Rugby Academy, where the Langa Stadium has been turned into the field of dreams.

Langa is a township whose people know hardship, know struggle and know gang violence. In 2017 the township was hard-hit by ‘Gurans’, which is a name given to a fight between two feuding gangs.

Youngsters were targeted and remain a target. The streets, at certain times of the day, scream danger. The destructive gang influence is an ongoing presence.

Vusa gives boys an escape from those streets where gang fame so often turns to shame. Vusa every year upskills 120 youngsters, aged nine to 13, from five primary schools in Langa.

These boys, instead of being vulnerable to the elements on the streets, are strengthened by a structured post-school rugby and education programme.

Vusa means to awaken - and that was exactly the intention of Bishops Prep’s Brendan Fogarty when he launched an Academy, whose mission statement was to change a life more than to exclusively improve a rugby skill.

Fogarty is the inspiration for the Vusa Academy but he attributes the success to Langa community leaders and the passion from within these leaders to invest time and energy in each boy.

The rewards are obvious because so many of the young boys who arrived as nine and 10 year-olds are still involved with rugby in Langa. As many as 12 former Vusa Academy players are playing for the local Busy Bee RFC under 18s.

It’s a statistic which delights Fogarty.

“To see the likes of Mahle Mgqoboka, Lingelihle Ndabaninzi, Mbongo Sophasa, Siyamanga Sam, Sanele Mdumata, Thabo Tyantsi, Yanga Wambi, Thembile Justice, Aphumelele Sithole, Anga Nobetbe, Likhona Jezile and Nzwana Manentsa revelling in the U-18s just makes it all so worthwhile,” says Fogarty. “And then there’s a player like Siviwe Kewana who is on a scholarship at SACS and plays for the U-16As.”

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Fogarty insists the rugby component is a snapshot of the true value of the Academy because education and the opportunity to change lives is fundamental to the motivation of the Vusa leadership.

Vusa is about creating opportunities for the boys. It’s about rugby and learning. For the group who train on the Monday, there’s a group in the Leap School classroom being tutored in Maths and English. On the Tuesday the respective groups trade places, and so it goes for Wednesday and Thursday.

The Fridays are traditionally about an activity outside of Langa and an emphasis is on social growth. Saturday is match day and Sunday is the only day the Academy isn’t operational.

Fogarty’s Bishops Prep is aligned closely with Vusa and learning opportunities take place in Langa and also at Bishops Prep. The essence of Vusa is to develop structures and people within the community. It’s about making a community proud of their community.

It’s about showing there is more to an environment than hardship, struggle and violence. Vusa is about excellence and reward. It is about change and reward.

Youngsters in action for for Vusa Rugby Academy. Photo: Supplied

Fogarty’s dream is to create hubs of excellence in communities where talent can be nurtured in a safe stimulating environment.

“From creche to tertiary and beyond Rise by lifting needs to be our mantra in South Africa,” says Fogarty, who believes no programme can succeed unless education is coupled to the sporting component.

He has experienced the transformation of those nine-year-old boys, who have prospered into fine young teenagers; youngsters who give back to the next generation of nine-year-olds through mentoring, example and presence at training sessions. “Vusa could not work if the community didn’t believe in it,” says Fogarty. ‘It’s an Academy that had to speak to the community and operationally be driven from within the community.”

The vision may have been his, but the execution of that vision is a collective. Corporate inclusion is non-negotiable because of the financial considerations. Investec Asset Management, KEPU Trading, and Shoprite are among the financial and product partners.

Bishops, UCT and African Impact share facilities and human skills. Capitec covers part of the academic programme. Regular attendance is essential to the Academy and no boy is ever turned away. Rugby isn’t the only consideration: the boy who may not have the best pass, may have the best academic mind.

It’s about promoting safety and comfort. It’s about giving a home to boys after school. It’s about them knowing that there is a life beyond the streets.

“The more the youngsters see the older boys succeed and create something magical, the greater the desire from each new youngster to be that older boy. Critically, it’s about them having an environment in which everything is done to make each boy a better human being.”

Several boys have been offered bursaries to traditional rugby-playing schools. It’s an inevitable consequence of any Academy, but the primary motivation for Vusa is to make rugby in Langa stronger and to keep the players in Langa. It is about building strength from within and not necessarily being a nursery for wealthier and more privileged schools.

It’s about giving those boys hope, as much as it is about opportunity.

Vusa recently thrilled at the Paarl Boys Primary’s rugby festival. The Langa Academy won 14 of their 16 matches in the U-11 and U-13 divisions. They were awarded the trophy for the most enterprising team and also the most attractive rugby played.

For all the boys, it was their first ever visit to a rugby festival in Paarl.

For Fogarty, it is only the start.

He wants to take them to Port Elizabeth later this year, along with Springbok captain and Vusa ambassador Siya Kolisi. He wants them to experience the cultural side of touring and playing rugby against schools from another province.

Mostly, he wants to show each boy what is possible when you dream big and work hard to make those dreams come true.

@mark_keohane

Independent on Saturday

LANGA RUGBY

A Cape Town township gets a great boost for its future rugby stars

rugby stars

The Vusa Rugby Academy in Langa is supported by Bishops and managed by the Bishops Prep Head of Rugby who aims to nurture and support all future rugby stars.

 

The Vusa Rugby Academy was established in 2002 to help children from disadvantaged backgrounds realise their rugby dreams and work on their talents. The Academy has worked in partnership with Bishops for years and the pairing has meant great success.

The programme is run from the Langa sports complex on a daily basis and children are able to come through and join in on the practices and life skills exercises. The boys focus on their academics before kitting up for rugby practice.

“The programme is run on a daily basis. Boys walk down from their respective schools to Langa stadium and from there will split up into our sporting group and our academic group. It’s a dual programme.” – Brendan Fogerty, Master in Charge of Rugby at Bishops and Vusa Coordinator

The programme not only uplifts the youth but also the adults from Langa.

“We employ about 15 young adults from the Langa community who are ex-rugby players or current rugby players who do the coaching.” – Brendan Fogerty

Since its founding, the programme has had the pleasure of seeing one of its own make the Springbok Rugby Squad. Children with an outstanding talent for rugby have the chance at a bursary to Bishops and each child is given the opportunity to see a brighter future.

Recently, 4 of the young boys from the programme were given the opportunity to be the Ball Boys for Ikey Tigers University of Cape Town opening Varsity Cup match against Wits.

Their 2017 achievements speak for themselves. Take a look below:

  • One of our top athletes took up a bursary for Grade 9 at SACS High School.
  • We have reached our target of fielding two teams per age group.
  • We have joined the Western Province League.
  • We have won 70% of our games.
  • Our programme has become a safe, caring home away from home for many children.

You can find out more about the Vusa Rugby Academy here.

 

Thursday, 5 January 2023

LANGA HOCKEY

Langa’s kids and their hockey ‘bats’

“There is no reason why Langa can’t have five players in the Olympic team in the next decade.” So says Langa Hockey Club coach John McInroy. But there were no Langa players on the field – or any South African players at all, for that matter (men or women, black or white) – when the Rio Olympics hockey tournament was played in August.

The South African Sports Confederation and Olympic Committee (Sascoc) has ruled that winning the African competition is not good enough (since 1993 the men’s hockey team has won seven out of seven and the women six out of six) and that the teams’ lack of representivity is a problem.

At the last big competition, the Commonwealth Games in Scotland in 2014, South Africa finished fifth and Lungile Tsolekile was the only black African in the men’s team – and the first to play international hockey for South Africa.

His cousin, Thami Tsolekile, also played Test cricket and hockey at international level for his country and Owen Mvimbi from Southern Gauteng made his debut for the hockey Proteas in 2011.

Until this year, that was it in terms of black representation in the national squad.

The real deal

But how can hockey’s selectors be expected to select players of colour if most black youngsters prefer to hone their skills in football? That’s a question that is easily answered.

First, there’s a township club in Cape Town that’s in its seventh straight year of premier league hockey.

Second, the latest national men’s under-21 squad has eight players of colour, six of whom are black. Many of these young stars learnt their hockey at KwaZulu-Natal’s boys’ schools such as Michaelhouse, Maritzburg College and Kearsney, and there should be no doubting that the likes of Nqobile Ntuli (now at Stellenbosch University) and Tyson Dlungwana are the real deal.

Langa Hockey Club first team
Township talent: The Langa Hockey Club first team celebrate their first win of the season.

Several of these players have already made their senior Proteas debut because, as in 2000 when Sascoc last ruled against hockey’s participation in the Olympics, there have been many resignations and “unavailables” in senior hockey ranks. Playing club hockey in the Netherlands or Britain becomes much more attractive for local players when the prospect of playing in the Olympics is no longer in sight.

As it happens, there are no Langa players in the South African men’s under-21 team, which is a bit of a surprise considering the club plays in Cape Town’s fiercely competitive eight-team Grand Challenge league. (Stellenbosch University won the league this year; Langa came seventh.)

Langa first won promotion to the Grand Challenge in 1998, the young players having first been exposed to hockey sticks in 1987 before playing their first match in the third division in 1991.

The age profile of the current top players at the pioneering club just happens not to coincide with under-21 selection this year, but Western Province selected 10 Langa juniors this season and the older group has several ex-Western Province and South Africa players. This includes both Tsolekiles and player-coach McInroy, who has played 45 Tests for South Africa.

The club runs two senior teams and has two junior girls’ and three junior boys’ teams. A mini-hockey session is run for all-comers on Fridays on the AstroTurf, which was laid by the City of Cape Town in 2014.

Township hockey thrives

How did a township club comprising mostly isiXhosa speakers come to be a centre of excellence for hockey, a sport supposedly foreign to black people?

The catalyst was the late Bob Woolmer, who worked for the Western Province Hockey Union before he became a famous cricket coach. A very good hockey player himself, Woolmer one day delivered a boot-load of hockey sticks to a group of keen young boys. Like every youngster in Langa, they knew all about cricket so the hockey implements came to be called – and are called to this day – “hockey bats”.

Very quickly they were playing morning hockey for their schools and men’s league hockey on Saturday afternoons. Between 1991 and 1998 they moved steadily up the leagues. A turbulent time followed, which culminated in the club disbanding in protest at perceived unfair treatment by the hockey authorities.

Langa Hockey Club in training

Then sports minister Ngconde Balfour resolved the issues and, for the first time, the Langa Hockey Club were given access to their own patch of grass in the Langa Stadium, having practised for years in the in-goal area of a rugby field. After 2003, the University of Cape Town and then Bishops allowed Langa the use of their AstroTurfs.

By 2008 Langa’s team was again in good shape, but the club declined an offer to be “jump-promoted” in that year, having finished third in the second league. In 2009 they drew just one game and won the other 14 to regain their Grand Challenge status in style.

The first game of the 2010 season was “probably the greatest game I have ever been involved in”, says McInroy. Previously unbeaten provincial and national champions Stellenbosch University were outplayed, and Langa has been competitive in the Grand Challenge ever since.

Mthuthu Msizi played for South Africa at under-16 and under-18 level (with McInroy) and was coach of the first XI from 2013 to 2015. He now works for the Western Cape sports and recreation department, and is enjoying watching others take up the reins and coach the juniors.

He says he learnt a lot during the past five years “when we were up against it” in terms of resources. The players came to realise that “we have the strength of mind to compete”.

Drawing in the locals

One of the junior stars who might go to a future Olympics is little Litha Kraai, who plays as a nine-year-old in the under-14 team (and the under-11s). His older brother Zenani is another bright star who has already earned provincial colours.

The club has taken a new approach to selling the game to the residents of Langa. The stadium itself is located in the western end of Langa, “eLokshin”, so on Friday members run with their hockey sticks through other parts of Langa: the Zones, New Flats, Flats and Settlers. (Because McInroy is involved, the Langa Hockey Run is also a Red Sock Friday run as part of the social movement he founded, but that’s another story.)

For Msizi, the key thing about the Langa Hockey Club is that it is “by Langa guys, for Langa guys”, although all the members acknowledge the partnerships and support of Nolands (an auditing firm) and the Leap Science and Maths School.

Photographer Phumzile Malotana, who promotes the club on social media, says: “It is not only about bringing fans to games. We also want people to contribute whatever they can – a lunch or transport for juniors.”

Langa Hockey Club will soon celebrate its 30th birthday. When Langa Cricket Club turned 25, Woolmer wrote that “real development is to see … the once young boys now running their own ship successfully”. The Langa Hockey Club has the wind in its sails, set fair for some of its members to be Olympians in Tokyo in 2020.

Langa hockey
Lwando Mafungwa, Zenani Kraai and Sethu Ntshinga have all represented Western Province at hockey — and they are talented cricketers as well.

 

 Mail & Guardian



Wednesday, 4 January 2023

LANGA GETTING HOTTER

From Fresnaye to Langa, expat tells ‘tale of two cities’

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At first glance, Jason Woolf seems like any other 27-year-old American expat enjoying everything Cape Town has to offer. That is, until he starts speaking in fluent Xhosa, or when he describes living in the shack he built for part of the year that he spent in the sprawling township of Khayelitsha.

“I lived in Khayelitsha for a year, in 2014 and 2015. For part of that time, I lived in a house in Ilitha Park. Then I had to move, so I was hosted by the family of a friend’s girlfriend in Makhaza. But after a time, it got a little crowded, so I built a shack onto the side of their house to live in,” he explains.

“Living in a shack was fine – you can actually make it quite nice. I put rhino board inside, and painted it lime green. You don’t really feel like you’re in a shack, it’s just a small room really. If you have the heater on at night it stays warm enough. And I wasn’t hanging out there all day, so it was nothing major.”

Woolf holds dual American South African citizenship: “My sister was born in 1990, my parents migrated to Boston, Massachusetts in 1991, and I was born in 1993. I grew up in a suburb called Dartmouth south of Boston.” He studied at New York University at the Gallatin School of Individualized Study, with a focus on social entrepreneurship and cultural revitalisation. He would also spend summers with his grandparents in Cape Town, and got to know that in many ways, it’s a tale of two cities, with the extremely affluent and the impoverished living side by side.

After graduating, Woolf moved to South Africa to work full-time on his non-profit foundation, Umbiyozo (‘celebration’ in Xhosa). He started it in 2011 as a high school student after seeing how local township youth would form dance troupes and perform in public spaces across the city.

His decision to live in Khayelitsha was motivated by a desire to get closer to the people he wanted to work with and understand their reality. He aimed to incentivise youth to participate in these community-based troupes, hoping to help prevent gangsterism, drug usage, teenage pregnancy, social isolation, and disempowerment. With a background in music, endless energy and enthusiasm, and the ability to interact with people from all walks of life, Woolf was perfectly placed to do this work.

On a tiny budget, he made a DVD capturing the performances of 14 independent dance troupes, allowing participants to sell the DVDs to tourists for a greater profit than they would get by performing on the streets. He also organised large-scale events and a yearly dance competition. After giving it his all, he eventually had to close the foundation, but it inspired his next venture: Side by Side Experiences, which provides meaningful tours, experiences, and interactions for tourists in the townships. With this in mind, he decided to move to Langa township for a year as a way to further immerse himself in the environment.

Before he made the move, he was staying in the upmarket suburb of Fresnaye on the Atlantic Seaboard. On social media and with clever use of technology such as Google Earth, he has shown the short distance but vast difference between the two locations.

He considered staying in a shipping container, but eventually moved into a newly-built hostel called Zone 17, a space created by two Langa entrepreneurs with the aim of desegregating Cape Town. It has ten rooms, and he is currently the only resident. He recently hosted a COVID-19-safe braai and housewarming event, hoping to put the place on the map and bring together people from South Africa’s different communities.

While COVID-19 has thrown him a few curveballs, Woolf is continuing with his walking tours in Langa. “Walking tours are important ways to reduce ‘poverty tourism’. They allow for interaction, and they slow tourists down to really experience the environment,” he explains. He chose Langa because it’s well-suited to walking tours, is closer to town, “and I‘ve met some amazing movers and shakers that I felt I could really partner with”.

Woolf is also focusing on content creation, using his social media channels to “bridge gaps and start interesting conversations”. He hopes to open up dialogue between sectors of society and highlight organisations and entrepreneurs involved in fascinating and meaningful projects.

He says he feels safe in the community – people are warm, welcoming, and look out for each other. He felt the same when he lived in Khayelitsha. “People cooked meals for me, welcomed me into their homes, and gave me an intimate window into their life. They helped me with anything I needed, talked through their problems with me, and were eager to teach me the language. Kids were so eager to interact, and I enjoyed little moments, like jokes when buying street food. Those moments really lift the spirit.”

What he loves most about South Africa is “the spirit of the people. It’s a complicated country, but people generally seem accepting of one another. The ‘default’ relationship one of kindness and cordial behaviour, unlike other places where the default is ‘stranger culture’ and ‘Why you talking to me?’, that attitude of ‘stay in your lane, mind your own business’. Here, people like chatting and there’s a feeling that you can make friends with a stranger, which isn’t a feeling you get in places like the United States (US), by and large.

“Then there is the extremely precious exquisite natural environment. And it feels like there’s a meaningful national project of trying to become ‘a people’. Everyone has their own unique relationship to that nation-building project. It’s intriguing to see how diverse people approach that project and respond to it.

“The only reason I would possibly go back to US is if I have children and it feels like they may get better opportunities there. But if I had a child today, I would prefer to raise it in South Africa than the US. Their development would be more holistic here than in the US.”

Finally, he says, “We need to recognise that as a Jewish people, we don’t exist in isolation. We’re inextricably linked to the fates of others in our country and the world. We need to build bridges to have a collective future where we all thrive. We can start at home, in our own backyard. Spend some time in a township, and see with your own eyes the way things are, rather than what the media might be telling you. Be brave enough to step in, find someone who can make you feel welcome, and do yourself that service of learning and unlearning. It’s hugely important for this country.”

Follow Jason on Instagram: @volofu

SOUTH AFRICAN JEWISH REPORT

LANGA CLASSIC

SAMA’s: Life time achievement awards for Langa’s legendry musicians

Image: South African Music Awards (SAMAs)

Joe Nina, Jimmy Dludlu and McCoy Mrubata, born in Langa in the Mother City, are set to receive Lifetime Achievement Awards this weekend at the 28th Annual South African Music Awards at Sun City.

Three legendary South African musicians, Joe Nina, Jimmy Dludlu and McCoy Mrubata, born in Langa in the Mother City, are set to receive Lifetime Achievement Awards this weekend at Sun City during the 28th Annual South African Music Awards.


The Recording Industry of South Africa, RISA, says the award recognises those who have significantly contributed to the development, upliftment, and advancement of the local music industry over at least 20 years.

RISA says a panel of over 120 judges have adjudicated the dozens of categories this year.

Acclaimed house DJ, Black Coffee, will be presented with the International Achievement Award in recognition of his international music career and setting a gold standard of excellence.

Sunday night’s festivities will be hosted by Nandi Madida and Lawrence Maleka.

The glittering celebration of music excellence will be broadcast live on SABC One at eight o’clock.

SABC NEWS

LANGA RENEWAL

Written by

Relocation of Langa families on Prasa rail will cost more than R15 million

Siyahlala informal settlement residents erected shacks on Prasa railway lines. Picture: Supplied

Siyahlala informal settlement residents erected shacks on Prasa railway lines. Picture: Supplied

Published Jul 28, 2022

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BeyondWords

Cape Town - The entire process of relocating Siyahlala informal settlement residents that encroached on Prasa railway lines to a 27 hectare piece of land just outside Philippi will cost more than R15 million.

According to Transport Minister Fikile Mbalula, the government was reaping the fruits of the former Prasa management that had “dropped the ball” and failed to act when the first few shacks were erected.

About a thousand people erected shacks in the Langa railway line in 2019 after the Central Line corridor was temporarily closed due to extensive vandalism and theft.

Last year the Western Cape High Court granted Prasa an order to relocate the families to suitable land, saying that residents should have houses and basic services.

The Housing Development Agency (HDA) is leading the relocation project.

“There were no leaders in Prasa, people said they were working but when I came here it could not be pointed out what was being done. We paid billions of rand to security companies that were irregularly appointed. I f we had security agencies and management that were running this railway in Western Cape we would not be here today. So this is the price we are paying. However, we have since made strides and worked hard together with different stakeholders, including the City and province, to see the progress that we have made,” said Mbalula.

He was speaking at the Philippi site on Tuesday where he was joined by officials from different spheres, and Siyahlala community leaders as the Cape Town to Langa via Pinelands, and Langa to Bellville via Sarepta lines were reopened.

Transport Minister Fikile Mbalula. Picture:Phando Jikelo/African News Agency (ANA)

This forms part of phase 1 of the Central Line recovery programme.

Prasa board chairperson Leonard Ramatlakane said that since a limited train service would be operating, the informal settlement had been fenced off for safety.

Siyahlala informal settlement committee chairperson, Mxoleleni Ngwetyana, said they were pleased with the site and happy to be moved there.

Human settlements mayco member Malusi Booi said that the land had been purchased through the HDA, and they were confident it would be ready by the November deadline.

“The Langa families are part of phase one, and a portion of the Bekela Philippi families will join here. The families will relocate with their structures because of budget constraints, however there is a discussion to upgrade the structures and use alternative building technology. The second phase is moving the rest of the Bekela people and the ones in Khayelitsha to Macassar, but negotiations are still ongoing.”

Cape Times

LANGA ON SCREEN

A Local TV series about a young woman in Langa wins at international film festival

Langa

An uplifting drama set in the world of competitive boxing, telling the story of Bee Sondlo, a young black woman from Langa in Cape Town, has won an award!

 

Community Media Trust’s (CMT) drama series, JAB, won the award for best TV series at the Zanzibar International Film Festival on 15 July.

JAB is a 13-episode woman’s boxing drama series produced by CMT that was broadcast weekly on SABC1 from February to April 2016.

It is an uplifting drama set in the world of competitive boxing. It tells the story of Bee Sondlo, a young black woman from Langa in Cape Town. Bee is a 19-year-old living with her nurse mother, Gladys, and her disabled brother, Mandla.

Living in a crime-ridden community infested with drugs and gangsterism, Bee’s dedication to boxing is her only consolation. The threat of losing her home due to financial issues forces Bee to grow a thick skin, leaving her no other option but to fight for money. She surprises everyone with her skill and ferocity, sparking an unlikely journey to the top in the dangerous world of professional fighting.

JAB was written by the late Paul Ian Johnson in 2008 and produced by Lucilla Blankenberg and Meesha Aboo, and co-directed by Blankenberg and Laddie Bosch.

This is CMT’s first win in this category. It competed against 20 finalists from all over the world, including some of South Africa’s most popular TV series, such as iNumber Number, Umlilo and Hard Copy.

“The category was very tough as were up against other top international TV series,” said Blankenberg.

She added that CMT is proud to have won the award.

The next project that CMT is working on is a comedy/drama for SABC2 titled The Riviera. It is set during the state of emergency in 1989 in Lotus River on the Cape Flats, through the eyes of a 12-year-old girl.