Dubai Telegraph - Homemade library builds bookish community in S.Africa's Soweto

EUR -
AED 3.866721
AFN 72.029188
ALL 98.712614
AMD 411.093415
ANG 1.902173
AOA 960.099291
ARS 1060.367779
AUD 1.625101
AWG 1.897565
AZN 1.79379
BAM 1.96341
BBD 2.13096
BDT 126.118842
BGN 1.956098
BHD 0.396849
BIF 3117.985438
BMD 1.05274
BND 1.421108
BOB 7.293304
BRL 6.131373
BSD 1.055391
BTN 88.963827
BWP 14.39881
BYN 3.453988
BYR 20633.713106
BZD 2.127446
CAD 1.479743
CDF 3022.41813
CHF 0.92937
CLF 0.037241
CLP 1027.811696
CNY 7.61142
CNH 7.640506
COP 4636.058458
CRC 539.295454
CUC 1.05274
CUP 27.897622
CVE 110.694055
CZK 25.296323
DJF 187.938457
DKK 7.459245
DOP 63.627226
DZD 140.712401
EGP 52.269513
ERN 15.791107
ETB 132.073623
FJD 2.391037
FKP 0.830946
GBP 0.834771
GEL 2.874011
GGP 0.830946
GHS 16.570227
GIP 0.830946
GMD 74.744913
GNF 9094.24968
GTQ 8.145573
GYD 220.805852
HKD 8.192084
HNL 26.693465
HRK 7.50947
HTG 138.518218
HUF 411.987346
IDR 16703.938226
ILS 3.846424
IMP 0.830946
INR 88.874613
IQD 1382.558854
IRR 44307.209878
ISK 144.709549
JEP 0.830946
JMD 166.655965
JOD 0.746708
JPY 159.342706
KES 136.326685
KGS 91.39283
KHR 4236.460936
KMF 493.682437
KPW 947.466019
KRW 1467.451785
KWD 0.32377
KYD 0.879509
KZT 526.982606
LAK 23095.519166
LBP 94512.534405
LKR 307.341267
LRD 189.444294
LSL 19.097322
LTL 3.108469
LVL 0.636792
LYD 5.164016
MAD 10.580009
MDL 19.28776
MGA 4928.101521
MKD 61.530351
MMK 3419.259964
MNT 3577.212042
MOP 8.45979
MRU 41.979111
MUR 49.183812
MVR 16.26502
MWK 1830.093516
MXN 21.799423
MYR 4.676801
MZN 67.252665
NAD 19.097322
NGN 1776.510048
NIO 38.840548
NOK 11.693731
NPR 142.341722
NZD 1.788174
OMR 0.4053
PAB 1.055396
PEN 3.982637
PGK 4.254491
PHP 61.84532
PKR 293.247339
PLN 4.312081
PYG 8235.92277
QAR 3.848115
RON 4.977885
RSD 117.00899
RUB 116.98192
RWF 1454.136291
SAR 3.955406
SBD 8.833114
SCR 13.836098
SDG 633.227205
SEK 11.523024
SGD 1.413622
SHP 0.830946
SLE 23.894359
SLL 22075.446159
SOS 603.137786
SRD 37.272322
STD 21789.602143
SVC 9.234794
SYP 2645.04185
SZL 19.103044
THB 36.323231
TJS 11.277111
TMT 3.695119
TND 3.335127
TOP 2.465623
TRY 36.474721
TTD 7.175814
TWD 34.203641
TZS 2784.498641
UAH 43.85147
UGX 3910.155922
USD 1.05274
UYU 44.974322
UZS 13524.421203
VES 49.16164
VND 26723.816694
VUV 124.983463
WST 2.938821
XAF 658.509409
XAG 0.034503
XAU 0.000397
XCD 2.845084
XDR 0.807329
XOF 658.509409
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.106213
ZAR 19.104871
ZMK 9475.929173
ZMW 29.102804
ZWL 338.982
  • RBGPF

    60.1000

    60.1

    +100%

  • JRI

    -0.1300

    13.24

    -0.98%

  • CMSC

    -0.1600

    24.57

    -0.65%

  • BCC

    -4.0900

    148.41

    -2.76%

  • BCE

    -0.3900

    26.63

    -1.46%

  • RIO

    -0.9500

    62.03

    -1.53%

  • CMSD

    -0.1500

    24.43

    -0.61%

  • SCS

    -0.1800

    13.54

    -1.33%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    6.78

    -0.29%

  • NGG

    -0.4300

    62.83

    -0.68%

  • RELX

    0.2400

    46.81

    +0.51%

  • GSK

    -0.1300

    34.02

    -0.38%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    8.86

    -0.56%

  • BTI

    0.3800

    37.71

    +1.01%

  • BP

    -0.3600

    28.96

    -1.24%

  • AZN

    -0.0400

    66.36

    -0.06%

Homemade library builds bookish community in S.Africa's Soweto
Homemade library builds bookish community in S.Africa's Soweto / Photo: EMMANUEL CROSET - AFP

Homemade library builds bookish community in S.Africa's Soweto

Behind an unmarked gate, on a residential street in South Africa's Soweto township, Thami Mazibuko makes his way down a corridor and up a stairwell, all lined with books.

Text size:

Here in his childhood home, the 36-year-old has turned the upper level into a bookstore and library, seeded with 30 of his own books, now overflowing with hundreds of donations.

The slender man's face lights up as he rummages through the stacks to find some of the most popular reads -- currently Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart and Sol Plaatje's Mhudi, the first novel in English by a black South African.

"Books, they put you in other people's shoes," Mazibuko told AFP. "I want people to visit here, and be transported into other communities."

As a child, he can't remember having any books in his home.

After he finished school, he left Soweto and moved into the formerly white suburbs of Johannesburg, staying with relatives who were artists, with a home full of books.

He developed an insatiable appetite for reading, even bring books into the reggae club where he liked to listen to music.

When he decided to move back home, he brought his growing personal collection with him.

"Readers who do not have access to books, your old aunties, they are like 'you have books! Can I borrow one?'" he recalled. "And I am like, okay aunty it's fine."

So began the Soweto Book Cafe, officially founded in 2018.

Now, he sells books to those with enough money to buy them. And he offers a membership fee of 50 rand ($3.50) a year for people who want to borrow books -- though in reality, he loans them to almost anyone who asks.

"That's one of the reasons I started this place, to advance literacy and to provide the community with access to books and information, which is a basic human right," he said.

- Reading Is Super Cool' -

The Book Cafe also hosts a youth group, called Reading Is Super Cool, with 50 regular members from ages four to 16. Older kids read to younger ones, and Mazibuko teaches them board games like chess and go.

Sindisiwe Zulu, 27, started the book club to help her niece get through school.

"She was failing dismally and I asked her," why.

The reply was that she didn't know how to read: 'I don't understand a thing that is why I am failing.'

"I have a lot of books at home, and I intially started with her and a few friends, and started the book club," Zulu said.

Neighbourhood start-ups like the Book Cafe took on even greater importance during South Africa's stringent Covid lockdown, when public libraries were closed for more than a year.

Small bookshops such as this one proliferate across Johannesburg, usually offering second-hand books, but also a sense of community.

The last major survey of Johannesburg's books scene was completed a decade ago, as part of the World Cities Culture Report, which found the city has 1,020 bookshops -- just five less than Paris, and about 250 more than New York.

Mazibuko likes to focus on African literature, and has hosted book launches and readings on his unassuming residential street.

More importantly, he provides a quiet, safe space for his neighbourhood.

"I come to do my assignments, read and de-stress," said 14-year-old Anele Ndlovu, one of the Soweto Book Cafe's regulars.

"It's where I like to think about what I want in my life."

Her dream is to go into finance, and become a forex trader. So while she's enjoying a Michael Connelly's thriller at the moment, she knows what she'd like to read next: "Books that can teach us how life is, and how markets work."

F.Damodaran--DT