Mandla Langa - a short biography and bibliography of this KwaZulu-Natal author.
Mandla Langa (1950 - ) was born in
Durban, grew up in KwaMashu township, and studied for a
BA at the
University of Fort Hare. After being arrested in 1976, he
spent 101 days in
prison on a charge of trying to leave the country without
a permit. He was
sentenced, skipped bail, and went into exile in Botswana.
He has participated in various arts programmes and
conferences through
Africa and elsewhere, and has lived in Botswana, Lesotho,
Mozambique, Angola,
where he did MK military training, Zambia, Budapest and
London. In 1980 he
won the Drum story contest for 'The Dead Men Who
Lost Their Bones' and in
1991 he was awarded the Arts Council of Great Britain
Bursary for creative
writing, the first for a South African. He has held
various ANC posts
abroad, such as Cultural Representative in the UK and
Western Europe.
Recently he has been Vice-Chairperson of the successful
Africa95 Exhibition
in London, was a weekly columnist of the Sunday
Independent. He was the convenor of the Task Group on
Government Communications. His published work include
Tenderness of Blood (1987),
A Rainbow on a Paper Sky (1989), The Naked Song
and
Other Stories (1997) and The Memory of
Stones (2000). His musical
opera, Milestones, featured at the Standard Bank
Festival in Grahamstown in
June 1999. He has been the editor-at-large of
Leadership Magazine and the
Program Director for television at the SABC. He was the
Chairperson of the
Independent Broadcasting Authority from April 1999 to
June 2000. In July 2000 he was appointed as the Chairperson of
Independent
Communications Authority of South Africa (ICASA).
A former board member of the SABC, Mandla Langa sits on
the boards of the
Business and Arts South Africa (BASA), the Foundation for
Global Dialogue (FGD),
Horizon Strategies, Institute for the Advancement of
Journalism (IAJ) and
the Rhodes University School for Economic Journalism. He
is a trustee of the
Nation's Trust and the South African Screenwriters'
Laboratory (SCRAWL). He
also serves as the director to Contemporary African Music
and Arts (CAMA). Selected WorkFrom "Zizi" in The Naked Song
and other stories (1996)
On this wet Monday morning,
we queued at the bus rank. By the time we were inside, we
were soaked to
the skin. The interior of the bus was overwhelmed by
Jackson's cigar
smoke.
He was a thin Malawian, as black as tar. It seemed that he
smoked the
evil-smelling cigars to irritate the women who were on
their way to the
madams' kitchens. They were discouraged from opening the
windows because
the cold air carrying icy raindrops was more unbearable
than Jackson's
fumigation.
'These MaNyasa,' the women would hiss, 'coming here with
their strange
ways!'
MaNyasa was a derogatory term used for people who came
from Malawi. If
Jackson heard this, he did not let on. He puffed on, his
ebony face as
serene as a river. We certainly couldn't say anything to
him because
Jackson was our key to the shipyard construction company
to which we
were going.
The bus roared on, picking up passengers at every stop
until it was so
packed that breathing was difficult; an auntie dared slide
the window
open to let in respirable air. We passed the brace of
industrial
buildings near The Point; a few feet to the left rose the
grim greyness
of The Point prison, its walls as sturdy as a fortress. We
followed
Jackson out two stops farther up. He led us to a clearing
where a
barracks-style prefabricated building stood forlornly. He
knocked on the
door, took off his hat and went in.
'What do you think will happen?' I asked.
'We'll see,' Siza said. 'Just don't get nervous. Jackson
knows what he's
doing.'
'Water is seeping in through my shoes,' I
complained. 'Bugger the
water,' Siza said. He was nervous despite the show of
bravado.
A few minutes later, Jackson came out, followed by two
white men in hard
hats. One was big with a beer belly; his companion was as
thin as a
rake, but there was something about them, the way they
regarded each
other, which made them seem like brothers. The thin one
cleared his
throat. My father always cleared his throat before making
a long speech.
'My boys,' he said, 'I don't know what Jackson has been
telling you. Be
that as it may, we are here to work. I'm taking you to the
docks, we are
going to sweat there, make no mistake. You'll be paid
hourly. If you
work hard, we'll get along fine. If you don't, you'll soon
know why men
have given me a certain nickname.'
A white van with the company name stencilled on the side
panels pulled
up. We were waved into the back. Jackson sat in the cab
with the thin
white man and an African driver in bluedenim overalls. We
could see
traffic along Congella, the brownstone building of the
Electricity
Supply Commission, the smoke billowing from the twin
towers of the
Hulletts sugar company.
To the right, people were already queuing up to enter the
King Edward
VIII Hospital. We were headed for Mobeni.
'What is his nickname?' I asked.
'People call him Mlom'wengwenya - the mouth of the
crocodile.' Zizi
seemed to know everything.
'I wonder why he's got a name like that.'
'You'll have enough time to find out,' Siza said. 'In the
meantime why
don't you all shut up, maybe we can hear what they're
cooking up in
front.'
We pricked up our ears but could hear little above the
roar of the
traffic and the bone-rattling bumps as the wheels hit the
pot-holes.
Soon enough we were passing through Clairwood, the gum-
trees and wattles
paving the road, bougainvillaea and jasmine drooping in
the rain. Indian
and Coloured people milled about, some ducking the
downpour, throwing
themselves under bus shelters. Some schoolchildren in
uniform emerged
from the houses, satchels knocking against young, bobby-
soxed legs and
Bata shoes. The settlements were waking up.
We reached the industrial site at 6.45 a.m. Men were
already preparing
themselves for work, stripping off their ragged street
clothes to put on
even more ragged overalls. Sandblasting equipment began to
whirr; then a
powerfully built man, whose torso glistened with
perspiration and rain,
started the siren. It was one of the loudest sounds I had
ever heard. Bibliography1987. Tenderness of Blood.
1989. A Rainbow on a Paper Sky.
1997. The Naked Song and Other Stories.
2000. The Memory of Stones. - Durban -
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