Gaza Tihosi - Gaza Kingdom: A Submission To: Premier of Limpopo
Gaza Tihosi - Gaza Kingdom: A Submission To: Premier of Limpopo
Gaza Tihosi - Gaza Kingdom: A Submission To: Premier of Limpopo
9. We were robbed of our status and we were forced to implement their programmes.
10. Apartheid grouped and disaggregated us as it pleased.
11. We were forcefully migrated from our original homes and dumped in the middle of
nowhere, quite often in the wild amongst dangerous animals.
12. We paid tax without reaping the benefit thereof
13. We became tenants on our own soil.
14. Schools and other modern facilities were few and far between.
15. This is the state in which we were when democracy was born in this country in 1994.
16. You can imagine the relief that we anticipated.
17. To us, the advent of democracy promised a lot:
17.1. We thought the inequities of the past will disappear
17.2. We thought that there will be redress
17.3. We thought our situation would improve.
17.4. We thought all traditional communities will receive equal treatment.
17.5. We thought that dummy leadership will not be allowed to continue to usurp
authority.
17.6. We thought those who were disadvantaged will come back home from Babylon.
18. Sixteen years later, we are still waiting.
19. Whilst we agree that the Government of the ruling party has taken our communities
to a higher level in certain respects, a lot leaves much to be desired, particularly in
terms of the issues around traditional leadership.
20. Where we come from, the traditional leadership landscape is grossly uneven:
1) The rightful rulers have been reduced to nothing
2) Instead, we have impostors seating on the throne
3) Furthermore, it is friends of Apartheid who were confirmed as traditional leaders
even though their neither had the required credentials or the support of history
4) Those who were traditional leaders at the turn of the twentieth century, have been
replaced and overtaken by Bantu homeland appointees. In fact, the homeland
system has made a mockery of the concept of traditional leadership. During that
time, most collaborators and corrupt characters incredibly, landed stout traditional
leadership positions without a single drop of sweat. There were those who were
voted by homeland parliaments instead of communities (and not born) to be
traditional leaders.
Below follows an illustration of the facts above:
1. The Duiwelskloof Group
1943: Van Warmelo reported that the Duiwelskloof Office had 15 chiefs with equal
status. Amongst them he included Nhlaneki and Ngobe .
1957 : Only Ngobe and Nhlaneki were recognised as such
47 villages were given to Ngobe
18 villages were given to Dzumeri who was given the rare title of a sub-chief
13 other villages were grouped together to constitute a new Community Authority
(Xiviti)
This was done for inexpensive administration
Fact, history and diversity were not considered
1973 : The Xiviti Community Authority became a tribal authority named Twananani
Authority(included amongst others Homu, Nkomo, Hlomela, Ndindani)
1990 : Homu (5 Villages) became a Tribal Authority
1969: They were forced-removed and settled within the Kruger National Park, at
Ntlhaveni after some border adjustments
Makuleke was given Blocks H, I and J. The other Blocks from A to G were given to
other local communities
1981 : According to Govt Notice No 15 of 1981, Makuleke was handed over to
Mhinga as a headman.
Makuleke does not report to Mhinga
He has a functional Tribal Authority Office which was furnished by the Gazankulu
Homeland government
His office was also provided with government employees for staff
After 1994 the staff was inexplicably redeployed to other centres
Makuleke also claimed and won ancestral land
Mhinga has no say upon it.
However, Mhinga still claim to be Makulekes senior.
COMMUNITY AUTHORITIES
1968 : These leaders were removed with their followers from their ancestral land in
Venda by force
They were loaded into trucks and dumped in the wilderness of the Kruger National
Park where there were not even basic facilities such as schools, supply of clean
water
The ancestral homes of Nkavele, Hlungwani and Bevhula were in what is now
Mphampulis area in Venda
Makhuvele came from the Sinthumule area, also in Venda
These communities did not have the slightest of affinity.
While in Venda, they were independent
They are still regarded as independent headmen without a chief.
Culturally, this is wrong.
These leaders are traditional leaders and their people regard them as such.
Their situation does not need a commission of enquiry.
All it needs is recognition.
THE HLANGANANI SET-UP
Gaza Tribal Authority
Duvula(Makhuvele)
Xigalo Muhunguti
1966 : They were removed from their ancestral land with force`
They were settled on trust land under the Gaza Community Authority
1970 : Gaza Community Authority split into four community authorities:
Vuyani (Duvula & Mahuntsi)
Rungulani(Khamanyani& Xigalo)
Tiyani (Nkanyani, Mangulwani, Mangove, Xihimu &Mudona(Mashaba)
Yingwani Ribungwani(Later recognised as chief and granted a tribal Office)
The Netshimbupfe Cluster
Had 41 farms
All fell under Venda-Shangaan Tribal Authority under Stefaan Tshikonelo
Affected Shangaan leaders were Madonsi, Mahonisi, Penny Nghotsa
The Shangaan leaders were unhappy in this union
1962: Madonsi Community Authority came into being
Had 15 farms under Headman Madonsi
1962 : Mahonisi and his farms(Jimmy Jones & Seeli) were incorporated
Into Mavambes territory without mutual agreement
1974 : Madonsi was given full Tribal Authority status
(Penny Nghotsa was subjected to Madonsi)
1956; A meeting of Machangana and Venda chief took place in the presence of
Commissioners
Number of tihosi present : 17
The tihosi were instructed to come up with three tihosi
The total population of the affected area was 1907
Of these 1370 were Machangani
537 Vavhenda
Vavhenda were given 2 chiefs(Mashamba & Nesengani)
Machangani got one chief(Bungeni)
The remaining Machangani tihosi were reduced to independent headmen: Bokisi,
Ntshuxi, Mahatlani, Mbhokota,Xihambanyisi,Makhuvele,Mtsetweni,Wayeni Malele
and Chavani. This is how Machangani ended up with forty-seven independent
headmen
5.
5.1.
5.2.
5.3.
It is common knowledge that in the year 2000 the former Premier of Limpopo,
Ngwako Ramatlhodi recognised Kgoshi Sekhukhune as King;
In 2005, the Kwazulu-Natal government passed the Ingwenyama Trust Act which
declared Zwelithini to be the king of Kwazulu-Natal;
The Kwazulu-Natal Provincial Government under former Premier Sbu Ndebele
restored iNkosi Zondi a descendant of the mighty rebellion leader Bambata.
In the Eastern Cape former Premier Balindlela also picked up her courage and
restored the Mandela dynasty whose leader was alleged to have been demoted..
This year, 2011, it is in the air that President Jacob Zuma is in the process of putting
up a traditional leadership structure of the Khoisan people. We are not asking for the
creation of brand new traditional leadership structures, but we are only asking for
their recognition.
Other benchmarking trends taken from modern history are as follows:
In the former Gazankulu area,
Between 1957 - 1968: 15 tihosi were recognised
Between 1967 1995: 18 new tihosi were recognised
In Venda
All independent headmen have been elevated to senior traditional leaders
In the heartland of Sekhukhune area
By 1960, the central Sekhukhune area had 4 Makgoshi only
By 1968 the heartland of Sekhukhune had 25 new traditional leaders had been
recognised
The Ramodike regime also created many, many more senior traditional leaders all
across former Lebowa
In all these cases, we see no evidence of commission of investigation.
We appeal for consistency
We appeal for equity
We appeal for redress
We appeal for urgency
Thanks you for listening to our clarion call