The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Maputo neighbourh­ood is ‘living museum’ of Mozambique’s culture

- Camille Laffont

MAPUTO: Turn a corner in Mozambique’s seaside capital Maputo, and the skyline vanishes. Colonial Portuguese buildings and mid-century modernist apartment blocks give way to a maze of rutted alleys crammed with tin-roofed shacks.

This is Mafalala, Maputo’s most famous neighbourh­ood — a place enshrined in the guidebooks as the cradle of Mozambique’s postindepe­ndence culture.

But as a rough district in one of the world’s poorest countries, residents struggle to capitalise on their community’s heritage.

Three years ago, a group of students and profession­als decided to change that by opening a museum to preserve the district’s history and culture.

“We usually say that Mafalala is the capital of Maputo,” said Ivan Laranjeira, director of the Mafalala Museum.

“This is the heart and the soul of the city.”

The mustard-yellow building stands out among a sea of sheet metal roofs.

Most young people in Mafalala survive day to day, relying on informal work, unable to fully exploit their heritage and creativity.

Yet the district has produced two Mozambican presidents, Samora Machel and Joaquim Chissano, legendary footballer Eusebio da Silva Ferreira, and poet Jose Craveirinh­a.

Since the 19th century, Mafalala has attracted workers from rural Mozambique, lured by cheap rent and short commutes to the city centre.

With 30 of Mozambique’s languages spoken here, the district is a hub of cultural diversity.

Pubs rub shoulders with mosques and evangelica­l churches, between concrete block walls covered with colourful murals.

Tourists are welcome to take walking tours and sample the local cuisine, but they are rare.

Rich heritage

“There is something special in particular about Mafalala, and that is the reason why this is a historical place,” said Laranjeira, flanked by black and white pictures of some of the country’s greatest past leaders on the wall behind him.

“Mafalala is a neighbourh­ood that is actually a living museum.”

Signs stuck in the dusty streets list some of the local attraction­s. Machel’s house. Eusebio’s birthplace. And a tribute to Craveirinh­a’s poetry, capturing the spirit of the place.

But many of the homes of the district’s famous figures have fallen into ruin, or are now occupied by new residents.

It was in Mafalala’s alleys that revolution­ary spirits were raised and nurtured against Portuguese colonisers, culminatin­g in a decade-long war that paved the way to independen­ce in 1975.

Since then, the revolution­aries have led the country, but the euphoria of liberation has died down.

Now young, barefoot players kick footballs in the sand, in front of an imposing graffiti image of Eusebio.

Back at the museum, Laranjeira — who has spent the past 15 years working to preserve the history of the district — explains the items on display.

One is a handmade guitar fashioned from a tin box, with strings made from motorbike spokes. It was used by earlier singers of “Marrabenta,” a popular national dance genre.

There are traditiona­l costumes, as well as a rag football like the one used by Eusebio, who catapulted Portugal’s team to worldwide fame in the 1960s.

But it’s not only the collection­s on display that matter here. The museum is also a cultural education centre for the neighbourh­ood’s youth. Music is a big part of the district’s culture.

“Mafalala was a birthplace for musical creation,” said rapper Danilo Malele, known by his stage name ‘Kloro’.

He’s composed a song dedicated to the district, called “Show na mayf”.

The district’s musical potential is thwarted by poverty, he said. Musicians “are not worried about doing music” but “start and then leave it behind because they have other priorities”.

Jamal Age agrees. The 28year-old brags that he’s the best dancer in Mafalala, at least when it comes to breakdanci­ng. But he says there’s no future in it.

“We love our culture, whether it’s dancing, singing, music. But the problem is that we don’t have enough money to fund these arts,” Age said.

When he’s not dancing and recording his performanc­es on the city’s rooftops, he makes sofas in a workshop on the street.

Now gentrifica­tion looms, threatenin­g to push residents to the outskirts of the metropolis.

Just a few blocks away are some of Mafalala’s plushest villas and trendiest terraces — part of a grand refurbishm­ent of the old city centre, now home to expatriate­s and rich elites.

 ?? ?? A young woman looks at some photograph­s inside the Mafalala museum in the Mafalala neighbourh­ood in Maputo.
A young woman looks at some photograph­s inside the Mafalala museum in the Mafalala neighbourh­ood in Maputo.
 ?? ?? Two women walk in front of a mural with traditiona­l drawings depicting the culture and history of the Mafalala neighbourh­ood in Maputo.
Two women walk in front of a mural with traditiona­l drawings depicting the culture and history of the Mafalala neighbourh­ood in Maputo.
 ?? ?? A man on a bicycle passes the entrance of the Mafalala Museum in the Mafalala neighbourh­ood in Maputo.
A man on a bicycle passes the entrance of the Mafalala Museum in the Mafalala neighbourh­ood in Maputo.
 ?? — AFP photos ?? An aerial view of the Mafalala neighbourh­ood in Maputo.
— AFP photos An aerial view of the Mafalala neighbourh­ood in Maputo.
 ?? ?? A young man works welds a metal pipe in the Mafalala neighbourh­ood in Maputo.
A young man works welds a metal pipe in the Mafalala neighbourh­ood in Maputo.
 ?? ?? A woman walks in front of a mural with traditiona­l drawings depicting the culture and history of the Mafalala neighbourh­ood in Maputo.
A woman walks in front of a mural with traditiona­l drawings depicting the culture and history of the Mafalala neighbourh­ood in Maputo.
 ?? ?? A woman carries a water bottle on her head in the Mafalala neighbourh­ood in Maputo.
A woman carries a water bottle on her head in the Mafalala neighbourh­ood in Maputo.
 ?? ?? A young Muslim woman walks through one of the streets of the Mafalala neighbourh­ood in Maputo.
A young Muslim woman walks through one of the streets of the Mafalala neighbourh­ood in Maputo.
 ?? ?? A woman talks on the phone in Mafalala neighbourh­ood in Maputo.
A woman talks on the phone in Mafalala neighbourh­ood in Maputo.
 ?? ?? Two Muslim women walk through one of the streets of the Mafalala neighbourh­ood in Maputo.
Two Muslim women walk through one of the streets of the Mafalala neighbourh­ood in Maputo.

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