Through The Eyes of the Child - Gudani Ramikosi
Very few writers are willing to take a step back and see the world through the eyes of a child. They view childhood as that formative stage that deserves no glory.
.
Gudani Ramikosi (fifth from left) at the Polokwane Literary Festival
That’s until you meet Gudani Ramikosi (30), a passionate author of children’s literature who regularly steps into those small shoes and seems to enjoy the walk.
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Very few writers are willing to take a step back and see the world through the eyes of a child. They view childhood as that formative stage that deserves no glory.
.
Gudani Ramikosi (fifth from left) at the Polokwane Literary Festival
That’s until you meet Gudani Ramikosi (30), a passionate author of children’s literature who regularly steps into those small shoes and seems to enjoy the walk.
“When I was growing up
there were lots of Ghanaian authors whose children’s stories I enjoyed. I
remember the one about the death of a guitarist husband which’s twist at the
end was both amusing and educational. I have always found children’s literature
to be an important step in understanding African orature”, Gudani discloses.
Interesting enough, her
early years as a writer were not spent searching for stories to tell. She came
into literature through poetry. “It’s easier coming out as a poet since you can
voice what you think. That’s how I came out. However I am still interested in
poetry, both writing and reading”, she says. For this MuVenda woman the medium
she is most comfortable articulating in is her own mother tongue. Advocating
for language, Gudani believes it’s only through Tshivenda that she can fully
express herself better.
Gudani’s writings are
based on Tshivenda myth and mythology. She credits her fascination with cultural
themes on having undergone all the initiation rituals a MuVenda woman should
before being certified mature for marriage. “It was in 2000 that I finally took
part in the domba dance. I also
underwent training for womenhood. I didn’t like it at first but I ended up
enjoying”, Gudani says. The author adds that one thing that stood out for her
during her initiation was the use of metaphors and symbols to emphasize issues
such as sex, husband, parenthood etc.
Such use of metaphors
fitted well into the manifestation of her early love for children literature
and Venda culture. “It is
transforming to accommodate the modern working woman and accept the leadership
role that VhaVenda women play in the world today”. Metaphors also sparked her
creativity to finally put the pen down.
“In 2009 I attended a Room
To Read workshop held in Polokwane which is where I learnt about writing for
children. While I always had stories to tell the structure was finally given
during the workshop”, she confesses. Freshly inspired Gudani wrote Thilli’s Journey, a children’s book
illustrated by Limpopo artist Jonas Mailula. Thili’s Journey is a story about a
little girl’s adventures with fantastical superstition, folk and mythical
beliefs that she has to conquer during her visit to her grandmother.
This
brilliant Tshivenda book was translated into seven South African languages and
a few overseas ones. Gudani is worried that few Black authors see value in talking
to children, let alone in mother tongue. “We depend a lot on English literature.
There’s actually few written by Africans”, she gripes.
Being
married to Limpopo-based artist Vonani Bila and mothering two young boys,
Mhlahlandlela (5) and Samora (3) Gudani says parenthood helped her to
understand children’s fascination with animal characters in their stories. Both
her sons are still at crèche but she reads them bedside stories from books she
borrows at Makhado Library.
In
2012 Gudani published her second book titled in the sacred valley of the rising sun which was illustrated by Melvin
Naidoo. The main character is Piggy, a domesticated monkey. It explores
identity crisis in a society trapped in materialism and consumptionism.
Inspired by award-winning
Dr Gcina Mhlophe and two SALA Lifetime Achievement winners from her village Gudani
has an unpublished Tshivenda novelette and a novel manuscripts with the latter
funded by the National Arts Council of South Africa. She also headlined the
inaugural Polokwane Literary Festival in 2011 and has read her women
empowerment poem Zwa uno muta in an
episode of the SABC2 Tshivenda soapie Muvhango.
Listening to Gudani speak
passionately about Tshivenda literature, poetry and orature it dawns that she was
uncomfortable with being limited to the confines of Shirley Village in Elim,
but chose to go where angels tread. “Parents should enjoy reading books for
their children. Kids will never enjoy if they are not taught by their parents”,
Gudani says.
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