Wednesday, 27 April 2022

The game of stones

By Azwidohwi Mamphiswana

@AuRoRa92578521

mamphiswanaazwidohwi@gmail

Back in the days before digital games, internet and streetlights, sunset was used to indicate time to go home for children.

Children would spend hours collecting pebbles from streams, rivers, and the ground just to play Ndode. They would spend hours jumping over a rope ‘Khadi’, leaving no room for obesity nor depression.

image:Google
Indigenous games are a universal language – something that you find in every city, town, and village worldwide. While they may to differ depending on where you might find yourself playing, they’re all connected by their power to connect.

Ndode is an indigenous game in the Vhavenda culture that requires the hand-eye coordination. The game is also known as Diketo,Upuca or puca and it is very popular in South Africa and Lesotho. Further afield it’s called nhodo(Zimbabwe), ondota (Namibia), or mdoko in Tanzania. 

Originally, the game used to be played by girls near the river when they went to fetch water, but through revolutions the game is unisex . The game is played using pebbles with a circle drawn on the ground between two players or teams. The player throws a stone called “gute” into the air and tries to scoop as many stones as possible out of the circle before catching gute. The player then throws the stone up and take the stones back to the circle ,remaining with a required number of stones required for the game level.

 

                      Boys playing Ndode emphasizing the Unisex nature of the game  Picture : Internet                           

If a player drops the stone “gute” or makes mistakes with numbers being removed in and out of the circle , then it is the other players’ or team’s turn to play.

The winner is a player that finishes the game with many stones and having a correct number of stones in each round. In competitions ,players are scored over a period of ten rounds with two opposing players taking turns, the one with highest score is declared the winner.


image: Google

Every game teaches, Ndode helps to concretize concepts as linear equations, counting, conceptualizations of independent and dependent variables. “ As a mathematics student who plays ndode during my free time, the circles that I see in Ndode are like the ones in my circle theory chapter. The game helps me to have skills of calculating the area of a circle”, said Tshikhala Matiba a Grade 11 learner at Tshivhase Secondary School.


Like other indigenous games, ndode has different kinds of benefits for its players. The game brings people together, promotes reconciliation, provides essential training in social interaction and boosts education retention. The game enhances physical health as it involves hand reflexes.

Image: Google


Ndode is also a game that helps the mental health problems as it requires your mind to focus on it, leaving no room for stress nor depression. It makes you think out of the box”, firmly added a medicine student at Sefako Makgatho University, Prudence Vele.


This Indigenous game reconnects urban indigenous youth to their culture.






Wednesday, 20 April 2022

TIKTOK TURNS TABLES FOR WITNEY

Who would've thought that from wiping tables, scrubbing floors and yelling "next please", she would end up being a sensation?

@AuRoRa92578521

mamphiswanaazwidohwi@gmail.com

image: Witney's Instagram


Tshimangadzo Witney Ramabulana is one of the black women who're setting flames and taking space in viral content. The 30-year-old South African has over 2.6 million followers on TikTok.


Witney Ramabulana is an adorable young woman, born and bred in the freshest grounds of Venda. She started school there, but later relocated to Pretoria where she completed her studies. After matriculation she went to Tshwane South College and enrolled her financial management course, but decided to work at a restaurant.



image: Google

"I really enjoyed working at MacDonald's, gosh the people were so amazing, and I learnt a lot as you rotate duties. I was a Barista, Waitress, Cashier ,everything and it was fun. I  then discovered TikTok late in 2018, but I was not active on the app. I actually saw a Thando Zanele's trending video and was soo curious, as soon as I started being active, I felt really at home as the app allow3ee me to be myself" ,said Witney Ramabulana tailing her journey as a MacDonald's staff until TikTok.

After joining the app, she was criticized, some people called her crazy and immature but little did they know that were harvesting the star to shine. " I had someone mentioned to me that no one will take me serious as long as I continue doing doing these tiktoks, but I did not care as I was having so much fun on the app", she said enthusiastically.

One of the discouraging comments Witney8 received.

Witney had beauty insecurities while growing up, she lacked confidence and she used to describe beauty as being light in complexion. " I grew up hating my skin tone as I thought for someone to be beautiful they must be light skin until I started accepting and loving myself so much that my skin tone became royalty to my eyes. I am a proud brown skin girl" ,she further affirmed.
Witney firmly embracing her brown skin wearing a beautiful dress.
image: Google


Being a social sensation has never been easy for anyone as cyber bullies never sympathize daily. Witney handles it by reporting and deleting hate comments in her videos. "I do get bullied a lot, I once had people call me ugly, asking why am I in the app? Hang yourself because you think you have made it in life" added Witney.

Family and people around her are her personal drive as they support and lift her on bad days. She firmly believes that TikTok has changed her life for better as she is being able to take care of her family. 

Just to mention a few, Coca-cola, Starbucks and GERT are some of the biggest brands that she works with. Besides being a tiktoker, Witney is a senior financial manager and an interior designer.

She has won and been nominated in so many awards, and this year she has been nominated on the Nickelodeon Awards under Nickelodeon African Kidfluencer category.

image: Witney's Instagram



"Regardless, with free internet, free gym, and free tutor services everyone is a winner" 





The video below is a short clip about my interview with Witney Tshimangadzo Ramabulana.


The Video below is Witney's story of growth as a content creator from her TikTok [Witney8]

The game of stones

By Azwidohwi Mamphiswana @AuRoRa92578521 mamphiswanaazwidohwi@gmail Back in the days before digital games, internet and   streetlights, su...