Mvula ya Nangolo (Peter Mvula Ya Nangolo, 9 August 1943 – 25 April 2019) was a Namibian journalist and poet.[1][2][3][4]

Mvula ya Nangolo
Born(1943-08-09)9 August 1943
Oniimwandi, South West Africa
Died25 April 2019(2019-04-25) (aged 75)
Tauben Glen, Windhoek, Namibia
NationalityNamibian
Occupation(s)Journalist, poet

Biography

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He was born in Oniimwandi, Oshana Region, Northern Namibia, on 9 August 1943, and grew up in Lüderitz and later Windhoek. He joined the independence movement SWAPO at the age of 18 and later moved to Germany on a journalism scholarship. He was one of the first black journalists of Namibia, and the first editor of the SWAPO-owned periodical Namibia Today. With Tor Sellström, he published the book ’Kassinga: A Story Untold’ in 1995, an account of the 1978 massacre by the South African military of hundreds of Namibians in a refugee camp in Angola. He was a Special Advisor to the Namibian Ministry of Information and Communication Technology,[1] and died on 25 April 2019 in Tauben Glen, Windhoek as a result of complications from a stroke the previous year.[1]

Quotes

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The beginning lines of the poem From Exile (version 1992) are

From exile when I return

I’m going to beg someone to touch me very, very tenderly

and gradually put me at ease

I wish to feel again how life feels

— Mvula ya Nangolo, From Exile, [3]

In the poem Namibia (2008) ya Nangolo wrote:

My heart opens up when I am in the mountains

Where I can be alone with my thoughts I’ve returned here to be in the deserts

I love to hear the sound made by sand dunes

— Mvula ya Nangolo, Namibia, 'Watering the Beloved Desert', Makanda: Brown Turtle Press, 2008[5]

Publications

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Ya Nangolo's publications include:[6]

  • Ya Nangolo, Mvula (1976). From exile. OCLC 862796307. 17 pages. Poetry.
  • Ya Nangolo, Mvula (1991). Thoughts from exile. Windhoek: Longman Namibia. ISBN 9780636015210. OCLC 27054678. 37 pages. Poetry.
  • Ya Nangolo, Mvula. From Exile, 1992.[3] Poem.
  • Ya Nangolo, Mvula; Sellström, Tor (1995). Kassinga : a story untold. Windhoek: Namibia Book Development Council. OCLC 475610224. 81 pages. Account.
  • Ya Nangolo, Mvula (2008). Watering the beloved desert : new and selected poems. Makanda: Brown Turtle Press. ISBN 9780982166000. OCLC 1289890799. 60 pages. Poetry.
  • Beier, Ulli; Moore, Gerald (2007). The Penguin book of modern African poetry. Penguin classics (4th ed.). London: Penguin Books. ISBN 9780140424720. OCLC 466152546. 448 pages. First edition 1998.
  • Chipasula, Frank Mkalawile (1985). When my brothers come home : poems from central and southern Africa. Middletown, Connecticut, USA / Scranton, Pennsylvania, USA: Wesleyan University Press. Distributed by Harper & Row. ISBN 9780819550927. OCLC 10072530. 278 pages.
  • Okoro, Dike (2012). We have crossed many rivers : new poetry from Africa. Lagos, Nigeria: Malthouse Press. ISBN 9789788244325. OCLC 809615834. 346 pages.
  • "Revue noire". Revue noire (4). Paris. ISBN 9781157412045. OCLC 1043091201. 64 pages. Combined March-April-May 1992 issue.

Secondary literature

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  • Opali, Fred (2010). "Poetic form and the construction of meaning in the poetry of Mvula ya Nangolo". In Makokha, J. K. S.; Barasa, Remmy; Daramola, Adeyemi (eds.). Tales, tellers and tale-making : critical studies on literary stylistics and narrative styles in contemporary African literature. Saarbrücken: VDM Verlag Dr. Müller. ISBN 9783639311372. OCLC 1302249691.

References

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  1. ^ a b c Kahiurika, Ndanki (25 April 2019). "Veteran journalist Mvula ya Nangolo dies". The Namibian. Archived from the original on 2022-10-02. Retrieved 7 November 2024.
  2. ^ Staff reporter (May 6, 2019). "Tribute to Peter Mvula Ya Nangolo … On behalf of 50 former Swapo secondary education students in the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1975–1980". New Era Live. Retrieved 7 November 2024.
  3. ^ a b c "Mvula Ya Nangolo-Namibia | Revue Noire". www.revuenoire.com. Revue Noire, Contemporary Expressions from Africa and Worldwide, BICFL s.a.s., Paris, France. Retrieved 7 November 2024.
  4. ^ "The love streak in Mvula ya Nangolo's poems". The Namibian.
  5. ^ Ya Nangolo, Mvula. "Namibia". scottishpoetrylibrary.org.uk. Scottish Poetry Library. Retrieved 7 November 2024.
  6. ^ "Showing 1-9 of 9 Results". search.worldcat.org. OCLC, Inc. Retrieved November 7, 2024.