Modikwe Dikobe (pseudonym of Marks Rammitloa, born 1913, date of death is July 2005) was a South African novelist, poet, trade unionist and squatter leader in Johannesburg, in the 1940s. He wrote one book and one collection of poetry, whilst working as a hawker, clerk, domestic servant and night watchman.[1][2]

Early life

Dikobe was born in Mutse village, in north-central Transvaal. When he was young his mother went to Johannesburg to work and he lived with his grandmother, looking after goats. When he was nine he moved to Sophiatown in the city to be with his mother. Then they moved to a shack in Doornfontein.[3] He learnt to read and write, as well as being introduced to leftwing ideas, by the Communist Party’s Mayibuye night-schools in the 1930s.[4]

Activism

His first job was selling newspapers and this is how he met his future wife, Ruth. They married in 1936 and lived in Newclare and Sophiatown, before moving to the Alexandra township.[3] In the early 1940s, Dikobe began to organise tenants' movements and bus boycotts, alongside other people such as Schreiner Baduza and James Mpanza.[5]

Owing to the high rents, people began to squat in the veld. Dikobe joined them and became a squatter leader. He wrote for a newspaper called Inkululeko ('Freedom'). The police arrested Dikobe alongside many other people in 1960. He was quickly released, but forbidden from being associated with politics or trade unions. In 1963, he took a job as a nightwatchman and began to write his book The Marabi Dance about shackdwellers in Doornfontein. Dikobe then left his wife and moved to Seabe in (modern-day Mpumalanga) with another woman.[3]

Legacy

Literary historian Tim Couzens, editor of Dikobe's volume of poetry, Dispossessed, states that "Dikobe is unique in South African literature because he has been until recently [...] the only substantial writer who is, while writing, fairly strongly working class."[4]

Works

  • The Marabi Dance [novel] (1973)
  • The Dispossessed [poetry] (1983)

References

  1. South Africa’s mineral and industrial revolution
  2. Education, Equal (2016). Amagama Enkululeko! Words for Freedom: Writing Life Under Apartheid i. African Books Collective. ISBN 9781928346357.
  3. 1 2 3 "The great man they once called SKAAPIE". Learn and Teach Magazine. 7 August 2013. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
  4. 1 2 Staff (30 June 1995). "The bard of township culture". Mail & Guardian. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
  5. Stadler, A.W. (1979). "Birds in the Cornfield: Squatter Movements in Johannesbur" (PDF). Journal of Southern African Studies. 6 (1): 93–123. doi:10.1080/03057077908708008. hdl:10539/9876. Retrieved 7 May 2019.

Further reading

  • Bonner, P. "The Politics of Black Squatter Movements on the Rand, 1944–1952", Radical History Review, 1990.
  • "The bard of township culture", Mark Gevisser, Mail & Guardian, 1995.


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