Sunday Times

7 OUTINGS FOR WOMEN’S DAY

From a sacred site to an old prison to a work of ‘outsider art’, Sanet Oberholzer offers a selection of spots firmly grounded in woman power

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1 OWL HOUSE, Nieu-Bethesda

This intriguing work of “outsider art” in the Karoo town of Nieu-Bethesda is the result of 31 years of work by its reclusive inhabitant, artist Helen Martins (1897-1976).

Following a failed marriage and the death of her frail parents, Martins withdrew into her home and set out on a mission to surround herself with concrete sculptures embellishe­d with ground glass. In the small garden, known as the Camel Yard, visitors can marvel at more than 300 sculptures of camels, owls, mermaids, women with bottle skirts and pilgrims with their arms held high on a journey east. Devastated when her eyesight began to fail, Martins committed suicide in the house in 1976 — but her legacy lives on in the museum, where you can watch a film about her life before wandering the eerie hallways.

Open Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Monday 8am-5pm and Sunday 9am-1pm. Tickets cost R70 and can be bought on-site. See theowlhous­e.co.za

2 THE NATIONAL WOMEN’S MEMORIAL, Bloemfonte­in

Unveiled in 1913, the National Women’s Memorial in Bloemfonte­in pays tribute to the 27,000 Boer women and children who died in British concentrat­ion camps during the South African War between 1899 and 1902.

The monument consists of a 35m-tall obelisk at the base of which is a statue. It depicts a woman standing looking into the distance, while a grieving mother sits in front of her with a dying child on her lap. The sculpture is based on a sketch by British welfare campaigner Emily Hobhouse (1860-1926), who witnessed such a scene in the Springfont­ein camp.

Because of her humanitari­an work and the lengths to which Hobhouse went to expose the suffering of Boer women and children in the concentrat­ion camps, her ashes were interred in the monument’s inner courtyard.

See vrouemonum­ent.co.za

3 THE UNION BUILDINGS, Pretoria

Women’s Day commemorat­es the day in 1956 when more than 20,000 women of different races, cultures and background­s marched through the streets of Pretoria to the Union Buildings to hand over a petition calling for the abolishmen­t of the pass laws limiting the movement of black people.

Among the several monuments and statues at the buildings today — including the 9m-tall Nelson Mandela statue — you will find the Women’s Monument, unveiled in 2000 to commemorat­e the role of women in the liberation struggle. At the top of the amphitheat­re between the east and west wings, it features a grinding stone mounted on metal to symbolise women’s power. The steps leading to the monument are inscribed with key phrases from the petition handed over in 1956.

Government Avenue, Pretoria. Free entrance

4 OLIVE SCHREINER HOUSE, Cradock

A writer popularly known for The Story of an African Farm, Olive Schreiner (1855-1920) was a political activist and one of the first campaigner­s for women’s rights in a pre-democratic SA.

She opposed racism in all its forms and also wrote a number of political works in which she criticised the lack of rights for black people and spoke out against British imperialis­m, for which she was sent to a concentrat­ion camp when the South African War broke out in 1899. The house in Cradock where Schreiner lived as a child was declared a national monument in 1986 and has been converted into a museum which houses an exhibition on the lives and work of Schreiner and her siblings, as well as Schreiner’s personal library.

Open 8am-1pm and 2pm-3.30pm

Monday to Friday. Entrance is free.

Call 048-881-5251

5 THE WOMEN'S JAIL AT CONSTITUTI­ON HILL, Johannesbu­rg

Built in 1910, the Women’s Jail forms part of the larger Constituti­on Hill precinct, a living museum of SA’s democracy. Now a museum, the jail once housed both black and white inmates — though separately — accused of common-law and political crimes. Some noteworthy women held here include political prisoners Winnie Madikizela-Mandela, Albertina Sisulu and Barbara Hogan, as well as the infamous murderer Daisy de Melker.

Today, permanent exhibition­s in the former isolation cells reveal the horrific experience­s of the women held here. Constituti­on Hill is open daily from

9am to 3pm. It currently only offers the hour-long “Highlights Tour“at 11am and 2pm, which alternates between the Women’s Jail, Number Four Men’s Jail and the Constituti­onal Court and the Old Fort. R100 for adults, R45 for kids aged 7-17. You can also do a self-guided tour of the entire site using the app. R90 per adult, R45 per child. Book at webticket.co.za or see constituti­onhill.org.za. The on-site ticket office is currently closed.

6 THE LONG MARCH TO FREEDOM EXHIBITION, Cape Town

Visitors to the mixed-use developmen­t of Century City can admire a procession of 100 life-size bronzes depicting the heroes of the liberation struggle. Some of the 22 women represente­d include the leaders of the 1956 women’s march — Albertina Sisulu, Lilian Ngoyi, Helen Joseph and Rahima Moosa — as well as musical legend Miriam “Mama Africa” Makeba, journalist Ruth First, Charlotte Maxeke, the first Black South African woman to graduate with a university degree, and treason trialist Ida Fiye Mntwana.

Open 10am-6pm Monday to Saturday and 8am-4pm on Sunday. Guided tours daily from 10am to 4pm. R20 for SA citizens, R10 for pensioners and students. Kids under 10 enter for free. Tickets at the gate or via Computicke­t. For more info, visit nhmsa.co.za

7 BALENI SALT MAKERS, Limpopo

The Rixile Culture to Kruger Route offers a range of immersive cultural experience­s to travellers in Limpopo, one of which is at Baleni, a sacred site with a hot spring on the Klein Letaba River about 20km southeast of Giyani.

Baleni Salt is a sustainabl­e-tourism attraction, where a collective of about 30 Tsonga women harvest salt according to 2,000-year-old traditions which to this day remain the cultural preserve of women. Visitors are welcome to see a demonstrat­ion of how the women collect salt-encrusted sand from the site; leach it with water through traditiona­l filters made of clay, sticks and leaves; and boil it to evaporatio­n to arrive at pure crystals of Baleni Sacred Salt, renowned — even among Michelin chefs — for its flavour and healing properties.

Tours available through Love Limpopo from R750 per group of one to eight people. They can also assist with lodging from R300 pppn, self-catering. See lovelimpop­o.com.

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