Book reviewCommunityCommunityEducationEntertainmentNewsNewsNews galleries

Dream with Me: Young South African Women Share Their Dreams for the Future

"We were deeply moved by the willingness of young poets to share their dreams, to make them tangible by committing them to paper."

SEDIBENG.- As South Africa reflects on the importance of our youth on 16 June, three brave young women have won prizes for their moving poems on the dreams that keep them inspired.

The competition, which ran throughout May, invited young poets to use their imaginations and lean into a possible future that may be very different from the present. On Youth Day, tomorrow, AVBOB will announce the three winning poets and share the dreams that inspire them.

 

The First-prize winner, winning a cash prize of R1 000, is Sthandiwe Mawela.

The Second-prize winner, winning a cash prize of R700, is Mokokobale Amanda Manamela.

The Third-prize winner, winning a cash prize of R300, is Zwonaka Mukwevho.

 

South Africa’s recent past has been marked by hardship and inequality, and the challenges we currently face can seem overwhelming. All the more reason, then, to remember the immense promise represented by a new generation of readers, poets, and dreamers. This year, the AVBOB Poetry Project celebrates Youth Day by announcing the winners of the ‘Dream with Me’ mini-competition. We share these three courageous poems and congratulate the winning poets on their imaginative responses.

 

“We stand in amazement at the entries for this mini-competition,” said Johann de Lange, the competition’s Chief Judge.

Sthandiwe Mawela.

“It is profoundly encouraging to witness such hope and resilience among young aspiring poets. We always hope for responses that are personal, but that also appeal to a wider audience. The three winning poems in particular represent a major achievement. Reading them, we were reminded how poetry can summon hope even in the most challenging times.”

 

First-place winner Sthandiwe Mawela (17) is a Zulu girl from the bright and lively Jacaranda streets of Pretoria. She discovered her love for poetry early, winning gold medals at speech and poetry festivals. Soon she was writing and performing her own work. Today she is a published poet (the AVBOB writing competition 2022), using poetry as a platform to defy stereotypes and address social issues that affect people’s daily lives.

 

“I had already written ‘This Dream’ before knowing about the theme of the competition. My superstitious mind saw it as a sign to enter.”

 

This Dream

Sthandiwe Mawela

 

This dream,

Like blood runs through our veins.

Pumping blood into our hearts, the source of its existence.

Stimulating us to “phusha, phanda, play”

so long as the sun like our voices rises

and stars as our yellow smiles shine.

 

Decades ago,

the same dream was

injected into the flesh,

breathed into the souls,

and indoctrinated into minds of the immature youth

as they clamoured against broken pens and papers handed

to them by the ‘almighty’ cabinet orchestrating their fatal

downfall.

 

This dream,

like blood runs through our veins.

We are roses which blossomed from soil watered by the

bloodshed from the struggle and strife of the 1976 icons

who paved a path for the resilience we embrace.

 

With right comes responsibility.

Therefore, we carry burdens of weeds

which grow alongside us infecting our pure souls

with “Greed and Desire”.

 

Regardless,

our ambitious eyes stare out the tinted glass of

deteriorating taxis, dreaming of mercs and beemers

as we strive for generational success.

 

Amanda Manamela.

 

Second-place winner Mokokobale Amanda Manamela (17) is a Grade 11 learner at Gerson Ntjie High School in Ga-Mothapo, Limpopo. Since she won third place in last year’s AVBOB Poetry ‘Family First’ mini-poetry competition, she and three of her school friends and contemporaries have been trying their luck in various writing competitions, spurred on by the encouragement of their English teacher and mentor.

 

“This poem was aimed at changing people’s mindset so that they can start viewing dreams from a different perspective. It was a way of saying that dreams do come true,” says Amanda, who also performs her poems at the school whenever there are functions.

 

Dreams

Mokokobale Amanda Manamela

 

All men in action are dreamers

It’s not what the mind envisions at night after a lullaby

But the desire in everyone to achieve

It’s the future which awaits the limits to be pushed

 

Dreams are real and surreal

They are not the fairytales we leave behind

When the sun starts speaking through the curtains

They materialize when you finish working and not when you are tired

 

Happy are those who dreamt and put in the work thereafter

They had visions and paid the price

 

Third-place winner Zwonaka Mukwevho lives in the village of Muswodi Dipeni on the northern border of Limpopo. She is a Grade 10 learner at Ratshibvumo Secondary School.

 

“I started to write poems a year ago. This year, I entered a competition on Vhumbedzi (an online radio station) and four of my poems were selected to be part of their anthology. I have never won anything for my poetry before. I want to be the best writer, to test my capability, and AVBOB is the best platform to do that. I wrote that poem because I wanted to tell the world that nothing will stop me to achieve what I want to achieve. Nothing will stop me from reaching the sky.”

 

I am a conqueror

Zwonaka Mukwevho

 

I am a conqueror, strong and bold,
I fear no challenge, no story untold.
I face each battle with grit and might,
And with every step, I claim my right.

My journey’s been long, but I’m not done,
For I know that my race is yet to be won.
I’ve climbed mountains and sailed the seas,
And every obstacle I’ve faced with ease.

My heart beats with courage, my spirit soars,
For I am a conqueror, forevermore.
No matter the darkness that comes my way,
I find the light, and I lead the way.

With every breath, I rise above,
And with every victory, I gain more love.
For I am a conqueror, with passion and drive,
And nothing can stop me from reaching the sky.

I am the warrior, the one who fights,
And in my heart, I know what’s right.
I am a conqueror, bold and true,
And I know that with strength, I’ll see it through.

 

Avbob said that while the future is as unpredictable as ever, we can take courage from the vision of these three extraordinary young women.

“They already know that poetry is both a refuge and a launching pad into the world. It will always challenge and uplift us in equal measure and renew our connection with ourselves and with others. We invited these young poets to imagine possibly very different futures, and they used poetry to do just that. That in itself is a testimony to the power of words to change lives.”

 

You can read the full story on our App. Download it here.

Lerato Serero

Lerato Serero is the Editor of Sedibeng Ster. With the experience of well over a decade. Lerato is passionate about writing stories about the community. Service delivery stories are his favourite. Email: leratoserero@mooivaal.co.za

Related Articles

Check Also
Close
Back to top button