The United Ulama Council of South Africa (UUCSA). A Muslim organization has written to Acting Police Minister, expressing concern over SAPS immigration enforcement operations taking place in and around mosques where Muslims are hiding fellow Muslim illegal immigrants.
As much as we have an illegal immigrant problem in South Africa, we also have a problem with corrupt South African civilians. Rotten to the core. We will never solve anything until we look within!
What baffles me is the way we can unite and come together through football but cannot unite and come together against our corrupt and evil governments.
This will be our office for the next two days. The President of the country is in court wanting to stop Parliament from holding him accountable and investigating his possible breaches to the Constitution. He is citing reputational damage and public humiliation if the process continues.
We are arguing against that. Firstly, courts can’t stop Parliament from doing its work. Secondly, the courts can’t view the perceived reputational damage of the President as something that supersedes the Constitutional obligation of Parliament to hold the Executive accountable.
Dr Bonga Shoba once shared with me this exact piece of information about a gold belt that stretches through Babanango and Nkandla.
Mpongompongweni in the banks of Insuze river once swallowed men and women who were mining for what was then believed to be gold/copper. The natives didn’t know what was that precious stone/material that was found deep beneath the soil.
They reportedly sold it to Indians in Durban who quickly disappeared after buying it. Every time they’d go to sell, they’d find a new face.
“UBUHLE BENDODA ZINKOMO ZAYO.”
The saying "Ubuhle beNdoda ziNkomo zayo" has been widely misunderstood in modern times. Many interpret it to mean that a man's worth, beauty, or status is measured by the number of cattle he owns or the amount of wealth he possesses. This is not the original meaning.
This expression is neither a proverb about material success nor a celebration of earthly riches. Rather, it is a sacred expression rooted in the spiritual philosophy of our ancestors. Within the indigenous worldview, cattle are not merely livestock. They are sacred symbols intimately connected to the realm of the ancestors.
They represent the living bond between the physical and spiritual worlds. Cattle accompany life's greatest ceremonies, birth, marriage, thanksgiving, reconciliation, and death, because they stand as earthly representatives of those who have crossed into the ancestral realm. When our forebears said, "A man's beauty is his cattle," they were not speaking of possessions. They were speaking of his ancestors.
The deeper meaning is:
"A man's true beauty is revealed through the strength, dignity, and presence of the ancestors who walk with him." His beauty is not counted in livestock, money, or material abundance. It is seen in the blessings upon his life, the wisdom that guides him, the honour he carries, the protection surrounding him, and the unseen spiritual foundation from which he lives.
To admire a man's "cattle" in this ancient sense was to acknowledge the spiritual lineage behind him, to recognize that he walks with the favour, guidance, and presence of his ancestors. The saying therefore has nothing to do with riches.
A poor man with a powerful ancestral foundation possesses greater beauty than a wealthy man whose spirit is empty. Material wealth may be inherited, acquired, or lost, but the true beauty of a man is found in the living relationship between himself and those who came before him.
This is why the expression is far deeper than it appears. It is a spiritual declaration disguised as ordinary language, a reminder that the greatest wealth a man can possess is not what stands in his kraal, but what stands behind his spirit.🍃🫶🏽
FROM THOYANDOU (LIMPOPO premier take notes) TO PIETERMARITZBURG
Her story: She was booked for 2027 at her local hospital. Done in 30 minutes by Dr Sihle Ngobese
Once Madlanga says the situation is nebulous, then Mme Baloyi says it’s improbable, and Adv. Khumalo starts helping you locate parts of your own statement...Just know you’re going to jail.
@real_sinesipho they were eating a lot of healthy things to supplement. There were no modifications of grains, less chemical based fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides.
That's why they were slim and have clear skin than most of us today. Lots of bad things are happening now! 😢😕😭
An American woman living in South Africa says she's been pleasantly surprised by the way many South African men approach women. She praises their respectful demeanor, saying it's a refreshing contrast to the harassment and catcalling she often experienced in the United States.
nalu uphuthu okufanele ludliwe abantu nezingane zabo Hhayi lolu olumhlophe olunonisayo libophe isisu lukhande nezifo.
Piles , ulcers, iron deficiency, inflammation of the colon and indigestion will be history.
Amabele / sorghum. 🌾🍃💚