Sunday, 5 April 2020

Hygienic products are on demand



By: Onalenna Jantjie

Madidimalo Sasebula is the founder and Manager of Kathu industrial and chemical supplies based in Northern Cape Kathu at Kameeldoring Plein shopping center (checkers). Hailing from Limpopo Musina, her company is fast becoming known as the go to supplier for guest houses, Kathu solar park, Rooisand Beltong, Boitsweletso cleaning services, Lohatla SA defence force and households around the area. Kathu industrial and chemical supply was established in 2017. Speaking on why she decided to start her company Madidimalo said; “I decided to start the cleaning and chemical business after noticing the unhygienic conditions that people in this area are subjected to. In some of these areas people still use pit toilets.



Some areas have insufficient water,” she said while adding that she wanted to improve the lives of community members by supplying households with cleaning materials, industrial chemical, tools, brush ware, Sundry, floor care, tissue papers and PPE. As a newly established business, Madidimalo says it’s imperative to have an accountant and to refrain from using business money for personal needs. “It’s not easy running this company because I am also running a consulting company on the side, so my staff makes life easier for me. We buy and transport the products from Pretoria,” she said. “I am in the process of manufacturing my own chemicals and we have already bought the machine and underwent training to do the mixture ourselves. We are trained by Entrepreneur Resource warehouse based in Gauteng,” she stated.




Former mine worker turned award winning author


By: Onalenna Jantjie

Kabelo Duncan Kgatea is an award winning author who writes captivating and enthralling stories in Setswana. As a motswana elderly person in the church, his style of writing is aligned with the gospel doctrines and truthfulness of Setswana proverbs. He has more than 20 unpublished books written in Setswana. “Setswana is my identity, my dignity and my pride hence my dream is to preserve Setswana and be remembered as a lover of my language,” said Kgatea. He describes himself as a nation builder who loves South Africans and children. Hailing from Madibogo village in the Motsitlane section in the North West province, Kgatea was born on the 31 January 1961.He is a descendant of the Bakwena tribe of king Sechele son of king Motswasele of the great Batswana nation. He currently resides in Rusternburg with his wife Caroline. And they were blessed with three children.

“I was born in a family and community of story tellers. My own parents were great story tellers. We used to sit around the fire at night and listen to elders telling stories. When I became a teenager I could also repeat the same stories to my peers and they would be very impressed by my story telling technique and in the absence of elders they would ask me to repeat stories again and again. In 1979 I joined the mining industry and I happened to stay at the mine hostel with a colleague who could not read or write. One of the old men asked me to write him a letter to his wife. And when the wife wrote back, he asked me to read the letter to him. He was impressed with my writing and reading skills and he referred more colleagues to me and I became the hostel writer,” explains Kgatea. However, Kgatea says he needed more than just talent to polish his creative writing skills.

“After discovering my creative writing talent I realized that my level of education was too low, my grammar and spelling was very poor so I decided to do a correspondence course with Damelin correspondent college and Lyceum college to obtain my (JC) Junior and senior certificates. I have also done a Comprehensive Writing Course with The Writing School in Durban, South Africa. A Diploma in Business Communication with Stanford College, Basic Principle of Public Relations with PROVOX (PRISA),Public Relations Writing with PROVOX (PRISA), Journalism and Media Studies with INTEC college. I also believe that my membership to writer’s organizations, attending local and international writers’ conferences, book fairs and writers festivals has prepared me better,” he said.

Once he had equipped himself with knowledge Kgatea says he was able to write as broadly as he could. As part of my assignments at the Writing School of South Africa I managed to write 14 radio dramas for Radio Setswana (South African Broadcasting corporation) SABC and two for Radio Mmabatho (Bophuthatswana broadcasting corporation) BBC respectively. In 2000 my first Setswana novel (Njeng manong fa ke sule) won the Sanlam Prize for youth Literature and the MNET Book prize in 2001. Because of that achievement the head of corporate communications at Anglo Platinum mines, the late Mike Mtakati convinced human resource department to take me from underground to communications department. I was appointed as an assistant communications officer in Rustenburg. The company paid for both my Basic to Public Relations Writing courses and I was appointed as a communications officer and the Setswana editor of one of our in-house newspapers called Morongwa which was published in English, Setswana and Isixhosa.

However, the journey to getting published hasn’t been without any challenges. “My challenge as an author was to find a publisher who could pay good royalties. Publishing houses in South Africa pay 10-15% royalties and you cannot make a living from your God given writing talent. When you go the self publishing route, traditional publishers become gatekeeper. That is why I worked at the mines for 37 years to be self-reliant. It is also the reason why so many African writers are now writing in English and other colonial languages for the broader market,” he explains.

On a lighter note, Kgatea says his favourite author is the late Tshekisho Solomon Plaatje. “Without any formal education he managed to be the first and best South African to be a journalist, author, researcher, politician, interpreter who believed so much in his people and his language enough to translate the work by the great William Shakespeare into Setswana. He is not only the first Motswana to write an English novel he also collected over 200 Setswana Proverbs. I am highly inspired by his selfless life. And my second favourite author is Sabata-Mpho Mokae for following in the footsteps of the great Sol Plaatje,” he said.

All my novels are outstanding. They are from my heart to my people, but this one is the best seller. Leba seipone is a novel with self-acceptance as its main theme. It is the story of MotswaGauteng (The one from Johannesburg) who is born of a white man and a black woman. He was brought up by his grandparents in a village where he was constantly mocked because of the colour of his skin, the people in the village consider him inferior to themselves. To them he was not black enough to call himself Motswana.

His grandmother however comforts him by encouraging him to look into the mirror and to accept, honour and respect the person who he sees reflecting therein. In that way she encouraged him to believe in himself. When the main character went in search of his identity, he met coloured people who also rejected him because he could not speak their language.

When he met white people to them he was not white enough to be a white man. When things become difficult for Motswagauteng he would take out a piece of a mirror look at it and recall his grandmother’s words of wisdom. “Only be the person that you see in the mirror.” or “Leba seipone, o rate, o tlotle le go amogela mosimane yo o mmonang mo go sona gore batho ba tle ba mo rate, ba mo tlotle le go mo amogela.”

This book deepens the understanding of the hurt one may experience when not accepted by others in society because of factors not under his control. However, in the end it is only through self-acceptance and self-esteem that one can live with honour. The book is nationally prescribed for grade 12 and is also used at the University of North West.

Where are your books sold?

To get my first five prize winning Setswana novels contact:

The book distributor at: orders@onthedot.co.za or get ebook at www.tafelberpublishers.com

For my latest novel contact the publisher at: segachris@gmail.com cell: 083 575 0277

Awards

Sanlam Prize for youth Literature: (silver (2000)- Njeng Manong fa ke sule

M-Net prize: Sotho category (2001) Njeng Manong fa ke sule

Sanlam Prize for Youth literature (2002) – Leba Seipone

M-net literary award (2006) Ntshware ka letsogo

Sanlam Prize for Youth Literature: silver (2008) – monwana wa bosupa.

PANSALB 2009 Setswana Multilingualism Nation building writer of the year

South African literary award 2009

List of Titles written by Kgatea

Prose

2000 Njeng manong fa ke sule: Tafelberg

2002 Leba Seipone, Tafelberg

2006 Ntshware ka letsogo, Tafelberg

2008 Monwana wa bosupa, Tafelberg

2012 Mmudubudu, Tafelberg

2003 Re tswa Ga Lowe (poetry) Stimela publishers

2003 Di sa itsangeng (drama) Stimela publishers