Gcina Mhlope - a short biography and bibliography of this KwaZulu-Natal author.
Born in
Hammarsdale, KwaZulu-Natal in
1960, Gcina Mhlope now lives in Johannesburg. Gcina
Mhlope has been writing and
performing on stage and screen for over 20 years. She
has written many
children's books as well as adult audience poetry, short
stories and plays.
She produced and performed on a CD for children with
Ladysmith Black Mambazo.
She has written music for the SABCTV series Gcina &
Friends where she
performed her own stories for television audiences.
In 2000 she released an award-winning storytelling CD
called Fudukazi's Magic
for German audiences. She has also written both story
and music in
collaboration with guitarist, Bheki Khoza, for the
Animated Tales of the
World TV series. In 2001 her CD and book of
Nozincwadi Mother of
Books was produced as part of her nationwide reading
road show to South
African rural schools. Her work has received awards from
BBC Africa Service for
Radio Drama, The Fringe First Award in the Edinburgh
Festival, the Josef
Jefferson Award in Chicago, and OBBIE in New York.
Gcina Mhlophe has received Honorary Doctorates from the
London Open University
as well as the University of Natal. This year sees the
publication of her book
and CD, African Mother Christmas by Maskew Miller
Longman, as well as the
re-publication of Love Child (now in English), and
Have You Seen
Zandile by University of Natal Press. Her work has
contributed to preserving
storytelling as a means of keeping history alive and has
encouraged South
African children to read.
Selected WorkPraise poem performed in 1989 in honour
of Nokukhanya Luthuli, widow of Chief Albert Luthuli -
past president of the ANC
in the '50s and Nobel Peace Prize winner in 1961
If the moon were to shine tonight
To light up my face and show off my proud form
With beads around my neck and shells in my hair
And a soft easy flowing dress with the colours of
Africa
If I were to stand on top of a hill
And raise my voice in praise
Of the women of my country
Who have worked throughout their lives
Not for themselves, but for the very life of all
Africans
Who would I sing my praises to?
I could quote all the names
Yes, but where do I begin?!
Do I begin with the ones
Who gave their lives
So that we others may live a better life
The Lilian Ngoyis, the Victoria Mxenges
The Ruth Firsts
Or the ones who have lost their men
To Robben Island and their children to exile
But carried on fighting
The MaMotsoaledis, the MaSisulus
The Winnie Mandelas?
Or maybe I would sing praises to
The ones who, have had the resilience
And cunning of a desert cobra
Priscilla Jana, Fatima Meer, Beauty Mkhize
Or the ones who turned deserts into green vegetable
gardens
From which our people can eat
Mamphela Ramphele, Ellen Kuzwayo
Or would the names of the women
Who marched, suffered solitary confinement
and house arrests
Helen Joseph, Amina Cachalia, Sonya Bunting, Dorothy
Nyembe,
Thoko Mngoma, Florence Matomela, Bertha Mkhize,
How many more names come to mind
As I remember the Defiance Campaign
The fights against Beer Halls that suck the strength of
our men
Building of alternative schools away from Bantu Education
And the fight against pass laws
Maybe, maybe, I would choose a name
Just one special name that spells out light
That of Mama Nokukhanya Luthuli
Maybe if I were to call out her name
From the top of the hill
While the moon is shining bright;
No-Ku-Kha-nya!
NO-KU-KHA-NYA!
Maybe my voice would be carried by the wind
To reach all the other women
Whose names are not often mentioned
The ones who sell oranges and potatoes
So their children can eat and learn
The ones who scrub floors and polish executive desktops
In towering office blocks
While the city sleeps
The ones who work in overcrowded hospitals
Saving lives, cleaning bullet wounds and delivering new
babies
And the ones who have given up
Their places of comfort and the protection of their skin
colour
Marian Sparg, Sheena Duncan,
Barbara Hogan, Jenny Schreiner.
And what of the women who are stranded in the homelands
With a baby in the belly and a baby on the back
While their men are sweating in the bowels of the earth?
May the lives of all these women
Be celebrated and made to shine
When I cry out Mama Nokukhanya's name
NO-KU-KHA-NYA! !
And we who are young, salute our mothers Who have given
us
The heritage of their Queendom!!!
From Women Writing Africa: the southern
region. Margaret Daymond et al. (eds).
Johannesburg:
Witwatersrand University Press, 2002. Bibliography1989. The Snake with Seven Heads. (Illustrated by
Hargreaves Ntukwana).
1990.
Have you Seen Zandile?.
1990. Queen of the Tortoises.
1992. The Singing Dog. (Illustrated by Erica Maritz
and Andries Maritz).
1999. Fudukazi's Magic.
2002. Love Child.
2004. African Mother Christmas
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