Shumba dumps tshega for priestly robes

Ratshega has dumped his old life
Ratshega has dumped his old life

Shumba Ratshega says he will don his tshega for the very last time this weekend before he throws it away and becomes Prophet Moses of his new Heaven Harvest Ministry church. Staff Writer THALEFANG CHARLES meets the man that created a genre of music called Makhirikhiri

No local artist, dead or alive, has ever achieved African fame like Shumba Ratshega. Born Moses Molapela 35 years ago, and just like the biblical Moses, he took Botswana traditional music to the Promised Land and jammed it to new African markets that could not speak a word of Setswana. And they loved it.

The Shumba has roared throughout Africa. From the humid coastal city of Tanzania's Dar es Salam to Kigoma on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, to the lakeside beach bars of Lake Malawi, from Nkhata Bay to Monkey Bay, to the dark drinking joints of Burundi’s Bujumbura, to the clean streets of Kigali, Rwanda, to the beautiful and truly African city of Kampala, Uganda, to the Kenyan metropolis of Nairobi, to the white sandy beaches of Mombasa, to the rolling tropical highlights of DRC. Inside the long distance buses, from Lusaka’s famed Intercity Busrank, where drivers behave like they are on some extreme sports, passengers are serenaded with Shumba’s DVD. Since early 2010, they have jammed to Shumba’s songs in bars and various drinking holes selling typically warm beers throughout east, central and southern Africa.

Editor's Comment
Routine child vaccination imperative

The recent Vaccination Day in Motokwe, orchestrated through collaborative efforts between UNICEF, USAID, BRCS, and the Ministry of Health, underscores a commendable stride towards fortifying child health services.The painful reality as reflected by the Ministry of Health's data regarding the decline in routine immunisation coverage since the onset of the pandemic, is a cause for concern.It underscores the urgent need to address the...

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