Tag Archives: colonial era

My Cape Town With Daiyaan Petersén

Meet Daiyaan Petersén, a proud Kensington local, passionate local historian, and tour guide who’s as obsessed with Cape Town’s culture and stories as he is with a good steak salomi. At just 25, he’s already made it his mission to share the city’s layered history with the world, especially the rich heritage of the Bo-Kaap.

When he’s not leading tours or deep in the archives, you’ll find him strolling through museums, chatting to flower sellers, or tracking down the best food spots across the city. We asked Daiyaan to share his ultimate day out in Cape Town. Here’s how he’d spend it… 

Iziko Slave Lodge  

For Daiyaan, few places in the city carry as much emotional weight as the Iziko Slave Lodge in the Cape Town City Centre. Originally a home for enslaved people during the colonial era, the building now serves as a reminder of South Africa’s complex past. Permanent exhibitions trace the legacy of slavery, and rotating displays encourage conversations about human rights. 

“For me, the Slave Lodge is more than just a museum,” Daiyaan shares. “It’s a vital site of memory – one that helps ensure we never forget a chapter of our history that has often been ignored or forgotten.” One room that holds a special place in Daiyaan’s heart is the Lena van de Caab Room, an evocative space tells the story of Lena, a woman enslaved in the early 1700s.  

Location: Corner Adderley Street and Wale Street, Cape Town.
Price: Standard entry: R80. South African locals pay R50 for adults, R30 for children aged 5 to 17 and South African pensioners and students when they present a valid ID. Free entry on Fridays and on commemorative days.
Website: slavery.iziko.org.za/slavelodge/ 

Adderley Street Flower Market 

As South Africa’s oldest flower market, spanning over 150 years, the Adderley Street Flower Market offers a vibrant mix of colour, fragrance, and local character. Located at Trafalgar Place, visitors can stroll through an alleyway covered with fresh blooms, from roses to proteas.  

“The best part is meeting the flower sellers,” beams Daiyaan. “They’ll regale you with Cape Town’s most entertaining stories and infectious laughter.” Among them is the legendary Aunty Diela, a familiar face who greets passersby with her infectious laughter. If you ask nicely, the aunties might just “make a plan” to get you the best deal in the market. 

Location: 13 Adderley St, Cape Town City Centre,
Price: From R30 

Mariam’s Kitchen St George’s Mall 

If there’s one spot that tastes like home for Daiyaan, it’s Mariam’s Kitchen. Right in the middle of the city’s hustle, this unassuming local takeaway dishes up some Cape favourites, including flaky salomis, giant gatsbys, Vienna-and-chips parcels, and comforting Cape Malay curries.  

Daiyaan went straight for the steak salomi (R95), a must-have when visiting Mariam’s. “It’s vuil dyt,” he laughs, using the Cape slang for greasy, indulgent junk food. “But that’s exactly what makes it so good.” Mariam’s is perfect for a quick bite between errands or a sit-down meal that hits all the right comfort notes.  

Location:101 St George’s Mall, Cape Town City Centre
Price: From R7
Website: www.facebook.com/ 

Kloof Corner  

For those craving the outdoors, Daiyaan recommends Kloof Corner as a quick nature escape. Located just off Tafelberg Road, this short but scenic trail takes only about 20 minutes to reach the top, making it ideal for beginners or anyone short on time. Park at the bottom of Tafelberg Road, and follow the clearly marked path to Kloof Corner. 

“It’s easily one of the quickest and most accessible hikes in Cape Town, perfect for a midweek adventure or spontaneous sunset mission,” he shares. Once you summit, you’re rewarded with jaw-dropping views of Lion’s Head, the city bowl, and Table Bay stretching out below.  

Location: Tafelberg Rd
Price: Free
Website: www.alltrails.com/trail/ 

Kloof Corner  

Sunset at Kom Walkway 

To end the day on a seriously high note, Daiyaan suggests heading out to one of his favourite sunset spots in Kommetjie. He discovered the Kom Walkway by chance while driving past Noordhoek.  

“You just keep walking until the boardwalk runs out,” he says, “then you find a quiet spot, sit back, and watch the magic happen. It’s raw. It’s untouched. And it hits differently compared to the usual sunset spots in the city,” he adds.  

Location: Lighthouse Rd, Kommetjie
Price: Free, but pack a few snacks to enjoy during sunset.  

Contact Details

Daiyaan hosts a regular Bo-Kaap Heritage Walk. Upcoming tour dates are shared on his Instagram page. For bookings or to enquire about other tours, please email: petersen.abduddaiyaan@gmail.com

 

The post My Cape Town With Daiyaan Petersén appeared first on Cape Town Tourism.

Why Is the Tonse Government Failing? Exploring The Nature and Consequences of Malawian Politics

Saulos Chilima and Lazarus CHakwera, When MCP needed UTM

By Innocent Nyondo and Austin Kajawa

Malawi has been a victim of bad governance from colonial times and despite the changes in political system and parties, the problem has remained the same if not grown in magnitude. If the ‘Tonse Alliance’ boasts that they can change the nature of Malawi’s socio-economic hurdles by implanting a ‘tonse philosophy’ in the people, then that philosophy should contain, by a larger margin, a strategy to rewrite the constitution for the Malawian people.

The incredibly sad truth is that, in Malawi, the Malawians are powerless as to what they want and how much they can achieve. Somehow, our political system leaves more than it is supposed to in the hands of the politicians through policy to affect the achievements of ordinary Malawians.

Plato in the republic gives a concise explanation of the nature of change in political organisations. In his reasoning, it is after one political organisation has lost the goal for which it was brought into being that the citizens decide to move to another political organisations.

British colonial forces charge at a group of rioters in former Nyasaland in 1959. Photograph: James Burke/Getty

During the colonial era, the British set up a political pattern that ignored the native Malawians considering them inferior and not worth their time in discussion and decision making. And since the Malawians were left out, the policies that were made thereon largely lacked interests. This injustice and greed by the British led one John Chilembwe in 1915 to lead the Malawians in an uprising. The uprising though unsuccessful, it inspired a spirit in the Malawians that they deserve a share in their own politics and sparked the spirit of nationalism.

Later in 1958, a group of young, educated Malawians such as Aleke Banda, Orton Chirwa, Masauko Chipembere and others invited a doctor then working and living in Britain, Dr H. Kamuzu Banda to come and lead them in forcing a participation of Malawians in their politics. When Kamuzu Banda came, his main emphasis was freeing the Malawian people from the British. His emphasis on freedom with his popular chanting of ‘freedom, ufulu, mtendere’ was so much welcomed so that the British were opposed and Banda, after serving as Prime Minister, became President.

Two weeks after Banda became President, there occurred a cabinet crisis. In which Kamuzu Banda was in a fierce quarrel with his cabinet ministers most of whom had invited him to Malawi and helped him to the presidency. Consumed by greed, Banda thought he was the only one entitled to rule and no one else’s opinion mattered. He declared the arrest of most of his political opponents and educated Malawians.

During the leadership of Banda, or the one-party political system as it is referred to, there was some economic change. Opportunities emerged better than there had been during the colonial days. But with educated people arrested, businesspeople persecuted and no one to advise him, nepotism crept in. Then there was economic stagnation, and the people demanded a change of political system. Dr Banda had been invited to help in the fight for independence, and it seemed to the people that he had fulfilled his purpose and he had to go.

It was this thinking that ushered in Bakili Muluzi. The freedom that Kamuzu had preached had now taken on a more extreme level. Government resources were now open to plunder not just by a small group of selected Malawians, but by every Malawian. Muluzi convinced the people that everything that government owned was their property and they could do with it as they pleased.

While private citizens were now able to acquire and accumulate wealth during this time by taking advantage in business opportunities, the lax in how government managed resources increased corruption, mediocrities in managing state-owned enterprises, and general poor governance.

When Bingu took after Muluzi, he did extraordinarily little in fixing the political system. His focus was economic transformation. But economic transformation in a political system that is falling apart can never be sustainable. That is why even after enjoying some economic advancement during his tenure, we are still worse off today. The leadership of Joyce Banda fails so short to be described as a presidential term. It was a mere continuation of government until the next election in which a professor of law became president.

In all fairness, it seems Peter Muntharika somehow saw the main problem with our politics. He invited Dr. Klaus Saulos Chilima to help him with reforming how government business is managed. Still, the age-old political spirit of greed saw some ministers block the success of Chilima because his reforms were a danger to their embezzling government resources. Even as APM thought reforms a clever idea, it is surprising how the law professor who is a specialist in constitutional law did not think reforms should start with amending our constitution in the favour of the people.

Today as we talk about the ‘tonse’ government and their desire to transform Malawi through a ‘tonse’ philosophy, our expectations of whether they will be able to transform anything at all should be embedded in how much change in government structure they make through reforms and amendment.

The sad part is that corruption is still rampant, cronyism and regionalism still hindering the socio-economic freedom of Malawians. It is now vivid that “tonse alliance” administration discreetly driving Malawians because poverty levels are too doubling the previous statuses, hence, signalling no change as per promises made.