Amangwane | Mankwane | Ngwane

Matebele a Hlongwane, who also call themselves Mankwane/Amangwane originally come from the Ngwane nucleus,though some of us have been incorporated into new tribes and clans because of colonialism and tribal expansions, we still remember our roots as Amangwane. Our clan praise has some southern sesotho because we have intermarried with them for hundreds of years and we have even adopted sesotho as our mother tongue. In Lesotho, there is a village called Mankoaneng,which translates to The Land of The Ngwanes,which proves that we have not forgotten our roots despite changing our home language from isinguni to sesotho

Hlongwane! Ngwane!
Tebele ka thebe e telelele!
Matebele ke mahola-maya-hodimo eseng maya-fatshe!
Peo tsa Hlongwane tsa sehololo!
Hlongwane wamakhulukhulu!
Wena hlanga la kaNgwane!
Ngisho nina enibahle njengezihlabathi zolwandle!
Ngwane wasemandla! Masumpa oncwele!
Masenga Sileka!
Nduku zinobulongwe!
UZikhali ezingalingani nezamaxhengwana!
Ngisho nina baka Sangweni elingawelwa abafokozana liwelwa izinkonjane zasemaNgwaneni!
Sang’elibanzi elingavulwa abantokazana ngoba livalwe ngezihlangu zamadoda!
Aaa nina baka Matiwane!
Nina baka Matiwane abaqobosha ithole elintanga zimashumi!
Ligwalagwala lakithi elimadolo abomvu!
Elakha UBhungane wamaMbo lunyelele!
Mangwane kaMasumpa obamele nje bathakathi owaphambana nenkomo ozolumba!
Aaaa Hlongwane! Ngwane! Masumpa!

Chemical engineer who worked at Shell Downstream SA and Sapref. Served as non-executive board member at Dube Trade Port Corporation and National Metrology Institute of South Africa. Passed away in September 2019. Posthumously awarded Doctor of Administration. Founder of Nisa Finance, using technology to help small businesses access financing, and Zaio, a tech platform providing practical experience to over 3,000 aspiring software developers. Sits on Steering Committee for UNICEF Innovation Fund and Yoma Project in Kenya. Computer Science graduate from University of Cape Town. During the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, they inhabited the region north of the Pongola River. Their kingdom would eventually evolve into the modern Swazi nation under the leadership of King Sobhuza I and his successors. πŸ” Search here πŸ”+ ADD CLAN NAMES🎬 Watch our videos