inkyfingers.typepad.com > Township Life, Imizamu Yethu (New Year's Eve 2006)

Introduction

The township in Hout Bay, Cape Town, has grown from a loose collection of shacks in the late 1980s to an established township known both as Imizamu Yethu and Mandela Park. Imizamu (sometimes Imizamo) Yethu is isiXhosa for "Our Struggle".

Locals have joked that they prefer the appellation 'Irishtown', after a house-building charity - the Township Trust - that has transformed many neighbourhoods in the last few years with the help of Irish volunteers who come each November.

Go here to see some of their work www.irishtownship.com

The workers at Original Tea Bag Designs live in Imizamu Yethu. Most live in rudimentary shacks made from scrap pieces of wood, the ubiquitous corrugated iron (for both roofs and walls), and plastic sheeting to keep the rain off. Holding down a steady job and going home to a shack every night can't be good for the spirit. Shops, shebeens and cafes stock only the very basic staples.

But there is hope. The Township Trust is coming to the end of its whirlwind building programme, which has shown the SA Government what can be done with some Irish application (and building skills). Some of the workers are, or are looking forward to, moving into their own houses. Some people are grabbing the opportunities that the New South Africa has allowed. It is these entrepreneurs, albeit in a small way at first, who will make the biggest impact on the lives of the previously oppressed and presently disadvantaged population.

I have been told that the house building programme is intended to house all the 'original' residents of the township. This is easier said than done and there have been many accusations of corruption. Others believe that when some people are assigned a house, they immediately rent it to 'outsiders' or distant relatives and remain living in their shack - effectively adding to the housing problem.

The situation, inevitably, is going to leave some at the bottom of the pile where they were in the first place. Historically, there is some tension in the township over illegal foreigners who work for less than the 'going rate' and others who sell drugs. I've seen this myself: it's a strange sight seeing a top-of-the-range white BMW making a delivery amongst the squalor.