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Tuesday, 20 December 2022

LANGA BUSINESS

Langa Quarter Pilot Project to Boost Small Business Growth

The newly approved land use rights allow for small business opportunities, such as restaurants and guest houses, in the Langa Quarter Precinct.

City of Cape Town has informed residents of the good news that the proactive land use application was approved for the Langa Quarter Precinct. The newly approved land use rights allow for small business opportunities, such as restaurants and guest houses, in the Langa Quarter Precinct.

This milestone results from the successfully piloted approach by the City and a non-profit organisation, iKhaya le Langa, who proactively tried to widen the scope of permitted zoning scheme activities by applying for approvals on behalf of land owners in the precinct. This innovative approach will create enabling opportunities and could have far reaching implications for small business development and job creation.

The precinct is home to the Langa Quarter Initiative – a responsible tourism project driven by iKhaya le Langa. This organisation aims to offer tourists a mixture of jazz, heritage, arts, culture and food in one of the oldest suburbs in Cape Town.

‘Many of the small businesses envisioned as part of this responsible tourism initiative cannot be accommodated under the existing land use rights. The City recognises the potential of this initiative as well as the aspirations of a range of small businesses in the area. We therefore want to assist in addressing potential regulatory barriers as an incentive for these businesses to grow and for the area to further build on its attraction as a heritage-based tourism destination,’ said the City’s Mayoral Committee Member for Energy, Environmental and Spatial Planning, Councillor Johan van der Merwe.

‘As an opportunity city, we believe that this application will expand small business opportunities and drive job creation in the precinct. The link between land use rights and access to finance is often overlooked. Without land use clearance, you cannot obtain the relevant licences which are required for certain types of business loan.

‘Given the land use approval which is now in place, the businesses within the Langa Quarter have the potential to be fully legalised, which offers an opportunity for corporates to get involved with iKhaya le Langa’s Langa Quarter Initiative through enterprise development investment. This process, which aligns with the City’s densification policy, deepens our understanding of the potential that spatial planning has to inspire job creation and civic opportunity,’ said Councillor Van der Merwe.

Councillor Van der Merwe thanked the community for welcoming the initiative.

‘Without the community’s support, this would not have been possible. The City is making every effort to ensure that more job opportunities are being afforded, and with the Langa Quarter Precinct being legally compliant to permit heritage-based tourism, it will create employment opportunities, and in turn empower the community with new skills. This pilot is a sterling example of how vital it is for government to partner with the private and public sector to create an enabling environment for business growth and job creation. The City will continue to look for such opportunities and invest accordingly,’ said Councillor Van der Merwe.

 

 

 

INVEST CAPE TOWN - INVEST IN LANGA

THE SKY’S THE LIMIT FOR CLOUDY DELIVERIES

When 22-year-old Colin Mkosi launched a local home delivery service in Langa in February, he thought it would take at least a year to get the brand established in the community.

Fast-forward three months and Cloudy Deliveries is the most popular delivery service in Langa.

Residents request grocery and takeway deliveries via WhatsApp or a phone call, and the young delivery men, aged 16 to 19, deliver the goods directly to residents’ doorsteps for a flat rate of R9.

Between eight and 10 bicycles are dispatched for deliveries daily, from 10am and 6.30pm.

Mkosi never imagined that his business idea would take off during a global pandemic.

“The boys are reliable and committed, and that has ensured our continued growth,” says Mkosi.

Since lockdown, we’ve been quite busy – calls for deliveries suddenly spiked.  The boys could easily get between six and seven callouts a day.

The youngest team member, 12-year-old Olwethu, is the team’s bicycle mechanic. He ensures that the bikes are road worthy and ready for the boys to safely do their daily deliveries.

“We follow the health and safety guidelines quite strictly,” says Mkosi. “Each of the boys are given two masks and hand santiser, as well as information on how to protect themselves and our clients.”

Mkosi says the business has reached a point where restaurant and takeaway outlets call him to deliver food to their patrons.

“For me, it’s just incredibly rewarding to see the community embrace the service,” says the final year law student at the University of the Western Cape (UWC).

“If all goes well, I’m hoping to finish my studies this year and fully concentrate on the business.”

Mkosi describes law as one of his many passions. “I’ve used elements of what I have learned and applied it to the business, so it has definitely helped.”

Mkosi hopes to grow the business beyond Langa in the future. But for now, he is focused on “serving the people of Langa to the best of my ability”.

“The next step is take the business model online, enabling people to book orders and pay directly through our platform.”

To book a delivery with Cloudy Deliveries, call or send a WhatsApp message to 074 882 0306.

 

Video by Multimedia LIVE

Monday, 19 December 2022

LANGA EMPOWERMENT

BCF launch massive parent training programme in Langa

20 January 2020

Pastor Eric Malangabi training parents at his church April 2019

BCF proudly announce a partnership with the SAGA Charitable Trust UK which will enable the training of 45 pastors in the Langa Township 8 km from the Cape Town city centre.

These pastors are expected to train an estimated 2,400 parents thus benefiting at least 6,000 children.

Training of pastors in Langa begins on the 15th February.

When a similar programme was conducted in townships near Sasolburg, the SAPS commander reported that callouts to family and gender based violence declined by more than 50% for more than two years.  IT CAN BE DONE!!

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 The Billion Child Foundation

LANGA IN YOUTH FARMING

 

Langa youth invited to join food farming project

Published Jun 9, 2021

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THE Naledi Foundation is inviting young people between the ages of 16 and 25 from Langa, who have an interest in farming and agriculture, to be part of the foundation's agricultural and entrepreneurial initiative, the Ubutyebi Agriculture Project.

The initiative is a three-month project where young people are to start their own garden, urban poultry farm and flowerbed, and grow it to a level where it can deliver nutritious produce.

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Participants will be taught farming techniques, agri-business, agri-processing and life skills that will equip them to navigate the contemporary agricultural landscape and economy.

“Naledi Foundation will provide each project participant with garden packs or poultry resources to kick-start their garden or urban farm.

The foundation has invited even those who live in homes with limited spaces such as back rooms, flats and hostels, and the project team and facilitators will use creative and innovative ways for them to have their own gardens, such as vertical gardening,” said the foundation.

Khayelitsha-based farmer Ncumisa Mkabile said initiatives like the Ubutyebi Agriculture Project were a step in the right direction in ensuring that farming becomes a trend for young people and food security.

The “spinach queen” said: “Ubutyebi is a good initiative because we hardly have such initiatives in the townships. Young people should take part in projects like these so they can learn to grow their own at a young age. People also need to understand that growing your own food is a way of making living cheaper and healthier.”

At the end of the three months of gardening and farming, a panel of judges will adjudicate which of the project's gardens or poultry farms or flowerbeds are the best three and winners will be awarded cash prizes of R2 500, R1 500, and R1 000 consecutively.

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Any young person interested in taking part in the initiative is requested to send their contact details to naledikids@gmail.com or send a message to Naledi Foundation's Facebook page.

HEITA BRA LOUIS HEITA

In Langa with Louis Moholo-Moholo

Free Jazz drummer Louis Moholo-Moholo comes home to Langa township in Cape Town, carrying the spirit of his generation.

Louis Moholo Moholo in Langa, Cape Town (LeMad Photo).

“We love you, we love you, you don’t have to love us, we love you…” drummer Louis Moholo-Moholo enthused during a series of concerts at Guga S’thebe Arts Centre in Langa (Cape Town) earlier in 2018.

The series, titled SONKEUplift the People—came in three-parts: each an outdoor concert at the Guga S’thebe amphitheater. A mark of respect for a musician who during his decades overseas helped first collaboratively establish the Blue Notes as “a school” then become a pivotal figure in the free jazz movement. SONKE (meaning together) sought to allow Louis (aka Bra Tebs, or Bra Louis, or Ntate Louis or Mr Moholo-Moholo depending on your positionality) the room to shine on his home turf while also allowing Langa locals to hear and celebrate a home-grown icon in action. Now, more than ten years since he returned from exile (“It’s a motherfucker,” he memorably said) and pushing 80 years of age, Bra Louis remains hyper-charged and hungry to play; that is, when musicians and concert organizers have the stamina to work with him.

In the last 12 months, including the SONKE shows, Louis has performed half a dozen times at Guga S’thebe. Recently, Moholo-Moholo performed here as part of Sipholeni Sonke, a concert and film project from students of Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT). Also featuring students and mentors from the Winston Mankunku Ngozi Jazz Foundation (based in Gugulethu), Sipholeni Sonke (we heal/chill together) aims to portray a narrative of the ongoing cultural work(ers) using music as a uniting force within communities in Langa and Gugulethu. The student film-makers from CPUT are fundraising for their venture until July 19th.

In early June, Moholo-Moholo was acknowledged in concert and conversation by The Centre for Humanities Research at the University of the Western Cape. The focus from UWC picked up and extends an academic interest tweaked in 2016 by the Louis Moholo-Moholo Legacy Project, an eclectic program arranged by the Centre for African Studies at University of Cape Town. For all the merits and importance of these initiatives, it remains to be seen how the legacies of Louis Moholo-Moholo and the Blue Notes will enter the curriculum and be taught or acknowledged on an ongoing basis.

The SONKE concerts were without an institutional agenda. Running three consecutive weekends through late January into February, Bra Louis was given space to be celebrated and enjoy himself for more than just a one-off gig.

“KwaLanga kumnandi…” goes the song. “In Langa it’s nice.” And yes, the lokshin closest to Cape Town’s leafy (and still mostly white) suburbs and city center possesses a certain appealing energy. It feels different to denser, more populated areas of the Cape Flats. It’s a feeling hard to put into words, or perhaps just into English. And so, as the song goes: “KwaLanga kumnandi…”

Regarded as the second oldest township countrywide, in Langa the cultural history runs deep. But what of the study, the books or theses published on this? Where is this knowledge shared?

With much of Langa’s musical history still unwritten and/or disseminated into public consciousness, stories mostly remain in conversation(s) with elders, including Louis, or Mpumi Moholo (his wife), Pallo Jordan, or other less high-profile age mates. Once such tale is of Sigcawu Street, where, in the 1950s, so the story goes, in that street alone there were 80 or more gifted musicians active; Louis Moholo was one (then drumming with The Chordettes) another was Christopher “Colombus” Ngcukana (father to Duke, Ezra and Fitzroy).

Perhaps it’s an overly nostalgic view but then, a spirit, the spirit of togetherness, seemed lit. And now? Where is such spirited togetherness, the jam sessions, the hub/clubs, where is the jazz in Langa now?

At the first and third of the SONKE concerts Louis sat with a small band of musicians chosen from his generation-crossing contact book. On keys, Mr Mervyn Africa, a comrade from time together in London. Fellow Langa resident Fancy Galada sang. Bassist Brydon Bolton continued as one of Louis’ regular Cape Town collaborators. Then for the frontline, two shows featured saxophonist Abraham Mennen, with reinforcement coming in the third concert from Langa-born elder Duke Norman (tenor sax) and trumpeter Mandisi Dyantyis.

Each of those shows offered its own magic and memories. In the first gig (taking place the week Bra Hugh passed), Fancy Galada pushed her voice through extended, marauding versions of “Dikeledi,” “The Tag” and “Yakhal’inkomo.” Blowing adeptly, Abraham Mennon managed to tenderly express much-loved melodies while also finding room to let loose, at times removing the mouth piece of his horn to generate all manner of squeaks and shrieks. And then, in the third concert not only did Mandisi Dyantyis’ playing bring additional warmth and extra dimension to the ensemble but Louis’ own understated crooning vocals repeatedly came to the fore: “Yes baby. No baby. Yes baby!”

The second SONKE concert offered a duet format akin to that which Louis has explored through the years with Cecil Taylor, Irene Schweizer, Keith Tippett and scores of piano players. A baby grand piano was wheeled onto the stage and Hilton Schilder, the chosen pianist, invited to express himself opposite Louis.

Moving in and out of intense improvised exchanges, glimpses of recognisable melodies fleetingly revealed themselves (including Schilder’s composition “Birsigstrasse 90” and John Coltrane’s “Naima”). Throughout both sets the two colourful artists shone; Hilton in a grey cape wagging its tail in the gusting wind, Louis working his kit wearing a signature porkpie hat. Following the interval, looking all the more epic after sunset, Hilton prepared the piano with the chain worn around his neck placed under the bonnet. Thereafter (until its removal) notes rushed in a sharper key, an act of experimentation illustrating the type of creative thought and bravery Moholo-Moholo still relishes from musicians he takes the stage with. Tuning into each other, channelling circles and cycles of sounds, under a starry sky the wind blew and these two hip kings played.

“Working with Louis Moholo I find I do a lot of things I wouldn’t get into with anybody else.” The pianist Stan Tracey told Melody Maker in 1973. Forty-five years later, in the liner notes for Moholo-Moholo’s latest album release Uplift the People (Ogun Records, 2018), bandmates Alexander Hawkins, Jason Yarde, John Edwards and Shabaka Hutchings similarly express their appreciation for how Bra Louis musically provokes them.

Gigs in London (the Moholo’s home away from home for half a century) still come Louis’ way. He’s due back there in October for an improv festival. Up in that metropole, the force Moholo and fellow Blue Notes [study guide here: with Johnny Dyani] brought with them, shaking the scene on their arrival in the mid-1960s continues to affect generations of musicians.

Back in the early 1970s, Louis briefly returned to South Africa, then under Apartheid’s heavy manners. Moments of his visits to Langa were documented, in part with an audio recording by Ian Bruce Huntley from Langa Town Hall. There Moholo played alongside a group of musicians including Winston Mankunku Ngozi and a young Ezra Ngcukana. Listening back to that concert, a thunderous Brotherhood of Breath-like storm stacked with a dozen or so musicians laying down lines and loops of melodies on top of or within each other’s playing, it makes me wonder if such intensity is carried by ensembles playing in the Cape, or elsewhere in South Africa today.

Photos by Basil Breakey also allow us to look at Moholo’s 1972 trip home. Two shots in particular are striking. In Langa Stadium, Louis Moholo is at the drums surrounded by a standing crowd, looking on. Shoulders high, biceps bulging, he wears a waistcoat over a vest adorned with a star. Mouth open and eyes wide he is staring at whoever the musicians with him at this moment are. Above all the figures is a clear sky, grey in one image, white in the other, blown out in Breakey’s image. Those two photos were partial inspiration for the SONKE concerts. Visions of the music (back) in Langa. Back outside. In the open air, where the music, the vibrations may travel up and outwards, in and across the township. Sounds that cannot be contained. Sounds that are free. Free(d) jazz.

A few weeks after the SONKE shows, Louis Moholo-Moholo performed as a headline act at the 2018 Cape Town International Jazz Festival, a gala the promoters annually subtitle “Africa’s Greatest Gathering” and colloquially referred to as The Jazz. Year on year conversations locally bemoan how the festival overemphasizes styles of music/musicians unrecognizable as being jazz artists, be it jazz as a history, a mode or method of music making. That history, and feelings—these  ways of playing and performing (on the edge, in the present)—have been embodied by Moholo-Moholo for almost all his life. To play under an open sky in his home, Langa, feels right, it felt right. And as he often says in his still hip way: right on.

But, truth is, to put on shows like SONKE takes a lot. Crews have to come together and organize such occasions, money is tight, people are busy, infrastructure seems to be built elsewhere. Without government support forthcoming it takes individuals, collectives, friends helping each other to get things happening. So what else to do but keep on? Do we not owe it to the elders around us? Right on…

When the sun sets, alakutshon’ilanga, will we have listened (and learnt) all that the elders around us had to share? Asimameleni sonke. Let us listen together. Sibeni sonke. Sisonke.

About the Author

Ben Verghese is a writer, researcher and primary school teacher based in Cape Town and (South) London.

AFRICA IS A COUNTRY

Langa STUFF

Langa set to become art and tourism destination

Artist Thulani Fesi has just launched an art gallery in the township, his next step is to create a design and technology centre for the youth in Langa and across Cape Town

By Mthuthuzeli Ntseku | December 4, 2019 | Travel Leisure

A dream to turn Langa into an art destination and tourism hub is becoming a reality for one young artist following the opening of an art gallery in the township.

But the vision Thulani Fesi, 32, has for the recently launched 16 On Lerotholi art gallery extends beyond simply showcasing up-and-coming black artists and encouraging school pupils to participate in the arts world.

“The drive is turn Langa into an art destination to impact on the growing township tourism market and to make tourism inclusive to the community, while creating a beneficial ripple effect and entrepreneurship and to empower others,” he said.

The dream is “to create a design and technology centre for the youth in Langa and across Cape Town, from all backgrounds... as we address the growing needs and concerns for the future”.

Works and a mural, inset, by artist Thulani Fesi. Picture: Supplied

Fesi said that in partnership with the Masakhe Foundation, he planned, through art, technology, tourism and entrepreneurship, to have a strong economic development impact in Langa.

He said the 16 On Lerotholi art gallery was a concept that had been in the pipeline for the past three years, and “we had to save up a lot of money to fund this”.

Fesi is also one of the movers behind the Walking Art Gallery, which has seen portraits and murals appear on building walls around Langa over the past five years.

The idea was conceptualised in collaboration with his childhood friend, Skhumbuzo Vabaza.

“We decided to beautify the walls of Langa through street art, adding colours and narrating a new positive energy, and art speaks those volumes.

“Skhumbuzo’s style and use of colour is just amazing and we ventured into telling stories through walls,” Fesi said.

The plan is to turn Langa into the “most graffitied area” in Cape Town, with beautiful murals and stories and images.

Fesi said he was seeking to create an art destination in Langa because the township had always had a strong artistic contribution to make, whether with music, acting or art.

“We’ve been inspired by the achievements and unique stories that have resonated across South Africa, Africa as a continent, or the world.”

Works and a mural, inset, by artist Thulani Fesi. Picture: Supplied

Feature Image: Supplied

 

 Condé Nast House & Garden

 

Langa Rising

Citadel Partnership with Bishops boys raise R400 000 in one night towards Langa Orphanage

In a successful charity auction hosted by Citadel, Bishops Boys under the mentorship of SA Rugby Captain and Head of Philanthropy at Citadel, Jean de Villiers, raised R400 000 towards the construction of a new building for The Vuka Nomtobhoyi Orphanage and Educare Centre in Langa Township, Cape Town.

The Orphanage cares for 25 children permanently and up to 40 over weekends. The Vuka Nomtobhoyi Orphanage and Educare Centre relies entirely on volunteers and the generosity of donors to house and feed the children.

Caption: Josh Macdonald, Luke Carter, Jean de Villiers, Pablo Slaven, Odwa Futshane and Deen Fortune

“I would like to congratulate these outstanding young men who did not take ‘no’ for an answer and are doing everything in their power to ensure that the orphanage gets a permanent home, as well as the equipment it needs to continue supporting the many children in the area,” said Jean de Villiers, Head of Philanthropy at Citadel. De Villiers made a comical auctioneer who successfully auctioned off each of the 11 unique auction items for a fine price.