It is often difficult to tell identical twins apart, as I faced the same challenge when I encountered a karate pair in the Chengeta twins, Jonathan and Louis, during the recent karate national team selection.
At some point, I was confused when the other one finished competing, and then all of a sudden, there was an identical figure competing on another mat. The Ramotswa-born brothers have similar builds and demeanours. I wondered, how is it possible? I was only to be told that the two, Jonathan and Louis Chengeta, are twins. The boys are on the rise in karate and used to compete in the same category and face each other during competitions. During an interview, the pair spoke about the thrill of competing in different categories this year. Jonathan is a member of the Pro Fitness Karate Club based at BNYC (Botswana National Youth Council) in Gaborone. “I started karate as a Standard Two pupil in 2016. We used to play football and karate, but my father, Mbiganyi Chengeta, advised us to choose karate. He needed something that would instil discipline in us,” he said.
Jonathan admitted that karate has saved him in life. He said when he was doing Standard Seven, he quit karate and joined athletics, only to derail off the tracks. Upon arrival at Chobe Junior Secondary School in Kasane, he made his way back to karate. “In 2022, I returned to karate; we went to compete in Francistown. My twin won a gold and I settled for a silver medal. We qualified for the national selection in Gaborone, where we both walked away with bronze medals. We also did kata and won gold, which gave us an opportunity to be selected for the national team for the first time. At 16 years, we fought in the Under 55kg category,” Jonathan said. The twins qualified for the finals, where they fought against each other. Jonathan and Louis went to Durban, South Africa, for the 2022 AUSC Karate Region 5 Games, where the latter won a gold and his brother a silver. Jonathan said in 2023, Louis failed to qualify for the same tournament, which was held in Harare, Zimbabwe. “I managed to defend my title. I was enrolled at Mogoditshane Senior Secondary School, which is a Botswana Karate Association (BOKA) Centre of Excellence. At the 2024 AUSC Karate Region 5 Games in Namibia, I did not do well. I won a bronze medal in the junior team. My brother scooped a silver medal in the senior team and he was also in team kumite that won a gold medal,” Jonathan said. He competed in kata at the 2024 Commonwealth Karate Championships, winning a bronze medal. But it was not easy for him in the kumite as he walked away with a bronze in the team event. “I was also selected to be part of the national team that was to compete in Birmingham, England at the Commonwealth Karate Championships in 2022. Unfortunately, he did not make the trip due to a mix-up in communication,” he said. Over the weekend, he also won a silver medal in the Under-67kg category. “I am proud of myself because I was fighting against people who have been in the senior national team for a long time. They have been winning even at international competitions,” he said.