African Oral Narratives
Military Intelligence in Apartheid-era South Africa

An interview with Chief Sonias Vilakazi of the Matimatsatsi community by Dale McKinley and Ahmed Veriava.

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Sonias Vilakazi, chief of the Matimatsatsi community in Maandagshoek, and Dale McKinley engage in dialogue during an oral history interview for SAHA's Alternative History Project.
Sonias Vilakazi, chief of the Matimatsatsi community in Maandagshoek, and Dale McKinley engage in dialogue during an oral history interview for SAHA's Alternative History Project. (2007)

Creator: McKinley, Dale
Veriava, Ahmed
Vilakazi, Sonias
Contributing Institutions: SAHA; MATRIX: The Center for Humane Arts, Letters and Social Sciences Online at Michigan State University
Contributors: Emmanuel Mokgoga (Translator)
Moses Moremi (Transcriber)
Biography: Chief Sonias Vilakazi, chief of the Matimatsatsi community, has lived in Maandagshoek his entire life. Fifty eight years old at the time of the interview, he is married to more than one wife and has several children. He worked in Germiston for a number of years when he was younger and was made chief in 2004 after the death of his father. He was the first community leader to be approached by Anglo Platinum over securing mining operations in the area in the late 1990s and was initially one of the directors of the first Section 21 company set up to give mine shares to the community.
Description: This interview with Chief Sonias Vilakazi of the Matimatsatsi community was conducted by Dale McKinley and Ahmed Veriava in Maandagshoek in 2007 as part of the South African History Archive's Alternative History Project, titled 'Forgotten Voices in the Present'.
Date: June 11, 2007
Location: Maandagshoek, Limpopo, Republic of South Africa
Format: Audio/mp3
Language: Sotho
Rights Management: For educational use only.
Digitizer: SAHA
Source: SAHA collection AL3280

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