Learn your MONTH (inyanga) in isiZulu
1. January - uMASINGANA
2. February - uNHLOLANJA
3. March - uNDASA
4. April - uMBASA
5. May - uNHLABA
6. June - uNHLANGULANA
7. July - uNTULIKAZI
8. August - uNCWABA
9. September - uMANDULO
10. October - uMFUMFU
11. November - uLWEZI
12. December - uZIBANDLELA
What do we call NEW YEAR'S DAY in isiZulu?
I want to show you guys exactly the difference between renting and own. For the past 2 years I lived at this place in Victory Park rent was R12k. My unit was on sale for R1 400 000.
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Is DJ Maphorisa sampling, biting or remixing this Amatshitshi Amhlophe track? 🥺
The song is over 30 years old.
Kabza de Small previously went word-for-word on Bhekumuzi Luthuli’s ‘Abalozi’ last year.
Didn’t y’all say ‘Maskandi ingoma zamakhehla’? 🤮
Where are we now?
The discipline on display here is remarkable. I can not ignore the fact that the moment he placed his stick on the ground, the crowd responded instantly. Clear respect for authority. It’s a powerful example of order and unity, with no lawlessness.
In the heart of Guerrero Negro, Mexico, a young adventurer named Landon pulled into a dusty gas station on his motorcycle and crossed paths with a stranger who would quietly rewrite his future.
Two years earlier, while fueling up, Landon struck up a conversation with Michael. As they parted ways, Michael handed him a card and said, “If you ever ride through Rocky Point in Sonora, give me a call. I own a resort—you’re welcome to stay.”
Landon tucked the card away and kept riding.
Two years later, his journey finally led him to Rocky Point. With a mix of curiosity and hesitation, he called the number: “Hey, do you remember me? The biker from the gas station two years ago?”
Michael instantly replied, “Yes! Come on through!”
What happened next left Landon speechless.
Michael welcomed him with open arms, offering a limitless stay at his stunning resort, Laguna Shores. He introduced him to his private chef, invited him to five-star dinners with his family, and treated him like royalty—pure, unexpected generosity from a man he’d met only once, years before.
A single random conversation at a gas station blossomed into a beautiful friendship and an unforgettable experience.
Sometimes, the smallest moments plant seeds that bear fruit exactly when they’re meant to.
Chief Martin Luthuli (mid 1800s - 1921) was a South African political activist, minister and chief of the Groutville Mission Reserve (1908 - 1921). Luthuli was born in the mid-1800s and was raised and educated at the American Zulu Mission at Groutville in Natal, where his parents had been among the first converts. Luthuli was the founding member of the Natal Native Congress He was also a farmer and wagon maker, and in the 1880s he acted as secretary to King Dinizulu. In 1900-1901 he joined Saul Msane, John L. Dube, J. T. Gumede, and other activists in forming the Natal Native Congress, an organization that pressed for increased political representation for Black people as well as for economic and social changes, such as the introduction of private land tenure. Elected chief of the Groutville mission reserve in 1908, Luthuli remained in that position until his death in 1921. Albert Luthuli, who was his nephew, lived for a time in his household as a youth. Source: James E Arsenault & Company/American Board Mission, SAHO