Chaba Di A Fela Apr 2026

"Our kraals are empty because there are no hands to milk the cows," Rre Molefe sighed, leaning heavily on his staff. "The schools are quiet because the mothers are gone. If the people finish, who will tell the stories of where we came from?"

"If we only cry that we are perishing, we teach them how to die. If we plant, we teach them how to remain."

That afternoon, despite the grief, the remaining elders of Manyeneng did something they hadn't done in years. They took the children to the communal fields. They taught small hands how to turn the soil and bury the seeds. They sang the old songs, not as dirges, but as rhythms for work. Chaba Di A Fela

"We say the nations are perishing," she began, her voice thin but steady. "And they are. But a nation is not just the people who stand; it is the seeds they leave behind."

The village of Manyeneng was once a place of "many waters" and endless laughter. But the seasons had changed. It wasn’t a drought of rain that took the people, but a silent thief that stole the young and left the old to weep. "Our kraals are empty because there are no

Mme Masechaba sat on her woven mat, her eyes fixed on the dusty path leading to the graveyard. She had buried her third son that morning. As the village elders gathered under the great Lekgotla tree, the air was heavy with the phrase that had become a bitter greeting: “Chaba di a fela” —the nations are perishing.

She reached into her apron and pulled out a small leather pouch of heirloom seeds—sorghum and maize that had been in her family for generations. She reminded the elders that while the elders and the strong were falling, the children—the orphans of the village—were still watching them. If we plant, we teach them how to remain

The phrase (or “Ditshaba di a fela” ) translates from Sesotho or Setswana as "Nations/Tribes are perishing" or "People are dying." In Southern African literature and oral tradition, this is a somber and powerful theme often used to describe periods of great suffering, such as the impact of the HIV/AIDS pandemic, war, or social decay.