Mdajaković

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Mdajaković

Mdajaković

@LazMchenge

Milky-way Katılım Ağustos 2017
463 Takip Edilen244 Takipçiler
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Miles
Miles@C139999·
Hearing birds chirp outside and you haven’t slept
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Former Kleva Black🇿🇦 🇿🇦#FreeCongo#FreeSudan
Yall, we have a 13 year old girl who was just removed from her home situation due to violence and molestation. Found her a foster home with a grand mother who is used to fostering abused kids. We need clothes, sanitary pads, groceries and shoes. She wears 10 to 11 yr old clothes as she is severely underfed and underweight. If anyone can assist her, please DM me.
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Tumisho Masha
Tumisho Masha@TumishoMasha·
South Africans know the truth and won’t stand for lies.
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Katlego Maseng 🧠
Katlego Maseng 🧠@KatlegoMaseng1·
A 31-year-old from Soweto just built a wheelchair that can move up, down, and climb stairs. His name? Ernest Majenge. Remember it. Because this is how the world changes. 🌍
Katlego Maseng 🧠 tweet mediaKatlego Maseng 🧠 tweet mediaKatlego Maseng 🧠 tweet mediaKatlego Maseng 🧠 tweet media
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Extremely African💋💋
Things teenagers should learn about South African history.
mzansi fo sho 🇿🇦@PalesaMogorosi_

Mpumalanga province is also home to the Lyndenburg Heads from the Iron Age (circa 500 CE) 🇿🇦 ANCIENT HISTORY LESSON!!! 📜🛖🌍 The story of our heritage is often told through the vast landscapes and ancient rock art, but only few artifacts capture the complexity of our early history as vividly as the Lydenburg Heads. The seven terracotta sculptures, which are dated to 500 CE (approximately 1500 years ago), represent some of the earliest known examples of Iron Age art in South Africa. More than just pottery, they serve as silent witnesses to the sophisticated cultural and ritual lives of the Bantu-speaking farming communities that had settled in the Mpumalanga region nearly fifteen centuries ago. The discovery of these artifacts is as remarkable as the heads themselves. In 1957, ten year old Karl-Ludwig von Bezing stumbled upon pottery fragments while playing on his family’s farm near Lydenburg. It was a discovery born of childhood curiosity that would also eventually reshape South African archaeology. Some years later, after meticulously gathering more shards, Karl-Ludwig von Bezing brought them to the University of Cape Town. Under the care of experts, the fragmented clay was reconstructed into seven distinct heads, revealing a level of craftsmanship and symbolic depth previously unrecorded for that era in the region. Physically, the heads are divided into two distinct sizes. The two larger sculptures are large enough to have been worn as helmet masks, likely by a child or adolescent, while the five smaller heads were designed with holes at their base, suggesting they were once mounted onto poles. Each head is hollow, crafted from local clay, and adorned with intricate "appliqué" work. The features - eyes resembling cowrie shells, prominent ears, and lips - are formed from thin strips of clay. One of the most striking details is the presence of incised neck rings, which many historians believe may signify beauty, wealth, or even high social status within the community. While six of these heads bear human-like features, one of them possesses a more zoomorphic appearance, often interpreted as a lion, symbolizing a possible link between human leadership and animal power. The cultural significance of the Lydenburg Heads lies in their likely role as ritual instruments. Because they were found buried in a sacrosanct pit - a common practice for "decommissioning" sacred objects - archaeologists believe they were used in initiation ceremonies or rites of passage. These ceremonies were pivotal moments in early Iron Age societies, marking the transition from childhood to adulthood or the induction of members into secret societies. The heads were not merely decorations; they were likely imbued with spiritual authority, used to teach moral lessons or represent ancestral spirits during dance and performance. Today, the Lydenburg Heads are celebrated as national treasures. While the originals are preserved at the Iziko South African Museum in Cape Town, their legacy remains rooted in the valleys of Mpumalanga. They provide undeniable proof of a thriving, artistic, and socially complex society that flourished long before the modern era. Through these clay sentinels, we gain a rare and intimate glimpse into the spiritual and social foundations of South Africa’s deep past.

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Relebogile Mabotja
Relebogile Mabotja@RelebogileM·
Please find this man!!! 💔💔💔
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Jackson
Jackson@HermainExcel·
I dated a woman for three years. She had a 2-year-old son, Andile, from a previous relationship. The dad was out of the picture. We broke up because she wanted to 'party' and I wanted to settle down. One night, she dropped Andile off at my house at 11 PM. She said, 'I can't do this anymore. You take him. You’re better at it.' And she drove off. I have zero biological relation to this kid. The courts told me I had no rights. But I fought. I got guardianship because she abandoned him. I’ve been a single dad to another man's kid for 10 years. I’ve taught him to shave, to drive, and to treat women with respect—ironically, the respect his mom never showed us. She surfaced recently because Andile is a star athlete and made the local paper. She wants front-row tickets to the game. Andile told the coach, 'If she shows up, don't let her in. My dad is the guy in the stands wearing my jersey.' Biology makes you a relative. Loyalty makes you a parent.
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Renaissance ⚔️ Morio
These are the young people who sacrifice their lives and sanity then get erased by history. This is the first time I’m hearing his name but I know he probably died without any accolades nor recognition beyond a victim of the state.
🇿🇦TheGreatDlamini🇿🇦@Phislash

Johnny Mashiane, a 15 year old anti apartheid activist could barely even move his mouth to talk after facing 2 weeks of detention and brutal torture by apartheid forces in South Africa 1985. 💔💔💔

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Hige
Hige@sicmayanmidilli·
@chefsevenn I'll buy a pencil from my mom for $2m. it has sentimental value
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mandisa
mandisa@ummandiisa·
Another hidden gem you need to check out in Eastern Cape 😍😍
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Lwammie
Lwammie@AladyPL·
Shout out to all the Cashier's that say "it's on special when you buy two, shesha go get another one ngizokulinda". 👏👏👏👏
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Moshibudi💎
Moshibudi💎@moshibudi_·
I’m so painful I’m so hurt guys💔💔💔💔💔💔💔💔 Please stop bringing these things on the TL guys. Ka le kopa yoh💔
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