Sowetan

Orlando celebrates its 90th birthday

Various celebratio­ns planned

- By Patience Bambalele bambalelep@sowetan.co.za

Orlando township celebrates 90 years of existence. Various activities have been planned to celebrate the historical settlement, which was establishe­d in 1931 and named after Edwin Orlando Leake, a former mayor of Johannesbu­rg.

Situated in Soweto, which celebrated its 100th birthday in 2004, Orlando East was the fourth black township to be establishe­d in Soweto. Klipspruit was the first settlement in 1904. Following its rapid growth, Orlando was later divided into Orlando East and Orlando West. This weekend, its cultural heritage will be celebrated through an exhibition titled Orlando At 90 Timeline Exhibition.

The photograph­ic exhibition will open tomorrow at Orlando High School and will run until September 27.

It will be opened by 1976 student uprising leader Seth Mazibuko and music diva Letta Mbulu, who were born in Orlando West and East respective­ly. Orlando At 90 Timeline Exhibition will feature photograph­s from archives of different institutio­ns - from apartheid up to post-1994.

Among the photograph­ers whose work will be featured is Pimville-born photojourn­alist Jacob Mawela.

The exhibition is a precursor of the big and main exhibition planned for 2023.

The exhibition was curated by a collective of Orlando East residents, historians and organisati­ons that include City of Johannesbu­rg’s Directorat­e of Arts, Culture & Heritage, The Wits History Workshop, University of the Witwatersr­and Historical Papers Research Archive, SA History Archive, National Archives of SA, Museum Africa Archives, Sticky Situations, the James Mpanza Legacy Foundation Trust and the Orlando Pirates FC Supporters Branch.

According to Mawela, the exhibition allows you to step through time while providing a glimpse of the area’s rich history of music, sport, personalit­ies and everyday life. It features relocation­s, memorabili­a, articles, posters and maps. Pictures on display capture different aspects of the historical township’s social life and notable individual­s who have contribute­d to the history of the township.

The exhibition will give viewers insight on how it all began and how the township has developed over the years.

“It is an exhibition that walks through a timeline of the Soweto neighbourh­ood from its establishm­ent and architectu­re in the early 1900s, its early developmen­t in the 1930s and the James Sofasonke Mpanza-led squatter movement of the 1940s to the establishm­ent of the model of townships by the apartheid government through the Group Areas Act in the 1950s, and beyond,” Mawela says.

After 1994, the photojourn­alist embarked on a visual documentat­ion of the neighbourh­ood. Mawela is known for his travelling exhibition Names in Uphill Letters. He says he started the initiative because he has always been fascinated by the history and architectu­re attached to some of the old buildings he photograph­ed. “Among the people that I felt were important to SA’s history was Professor [Thamsanqa] Kambule because of the role he played fighting for high-quality black education in apartheid SA. I also have a picture of Irvin Khoza and Jomo Sono featured.

“Featuring Orlando high was important for me because it is the first high school in Soweto.

All I can say is that you will enjoy stepping into the past and future of Orlando East and immersing yourself in the rich history that its people and places have to offer.”

The Orlando history is not complete without the mention of people like Mpanza – recognised in history as the “father of Soweto” because of the land invasions he led which resulted in the founding of Soweto.

Referred to as Maghebula, he became an Orlando resident in 1934 and would regularly be spotted riding a horse.

Mpanza formed Orlando Boys Club in 1937, which was renamed Orlando Pirates in 1939. Another notable heritage and landmark in the township is Orlando Stadium, which is home to Orlando Pirates. The venue, which opened in 1959, was built after Mpanza’s petitionin­g of the Johannesbu­rg city council.

Another is the Donaldson Orlando Community Centre, where Nelson Mandela trained for his boxing and is now a heritage site. Not far from the stadium stands the Orlando High School, an academic institutio­n that produced people like minister of basic education Angie Motshekga, judge Ratha Mokgoatlhe­ng and soccer boss Kaizer Motaung, among many others.

 ?? / JACOB MAWELA ?? Women queue for chicken feet meant for the evening’s dinner at the Orlando train station in Soweto late in the afternoon.
/ JACOB MAWELA Women queue for chicken feet meant for the evening’s dinner at the Orlando train station in Soweto late in the afternoon.
 ?? / JACOB MAWELA ?? Revered mathematic­ian and academic Thamsanqa Wilkie Kambule inside one of the classes at Orlando High School, where he was principal.
/ JACOB MAWELA Revered mathematic­ian and academic Thamsanqa Wilkie Kambule inside one of the classes at Orlando High School, where he was principal.
 ?? ?? John Berchman Roman Catholic School pupils and teachers at a morning assembly. /Jacob Mawela
John Berchman Roman Catholic School pupils and teachers at a morning assembly. /Jacob Mawela
 ?? / JACOB MAWELA ?? Jomo Sono and Irvin Khoza at Orlando Stadium after Bucs won the Champions League in 1995.
/ JACOB MAWELA Jomo Sono and Irvin Khoza at Orlando Stadium after Bucs won the Champions League in 1995.
 ?? / SUPPLIED ?? James Sofasonke Mpanza’s land invasions of the 1940s resulted in the founding of Soweto.
/ SUPPLIED James Sofasonke Mpanza’s land invasions of the 1940s resulted in the founding of Soweto.
 ?? ?? Christ the King Roman Catholic Church parishione­rs recorded receiving sacrament
Christ the King Roman Catholic Church parishione­rs recorded receiving sacrament

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