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Sculpture: JOHN TENGO JABAVU (1859-1921)
Artist: Dina Grobler
John Tengo Jabavu was born on 11 January in 1859 near the Methodist mission school at Healdton district. It was not long before he received his Teacher’s Certificate. From 1877 to 1881 he taught in Somerset East, working during the pre-dawn hours as a printer’s assistant on a local newspaper. In 1881 he became editor of the Isigidimi Sama Xhosa, which was printed and published at Lovedale Institution. In 1883 he passed the Matriculation Examination of the South African University.
Jabavu founded and become editor of the newspaper Imvo Zabantsundu (Black Opinion) in 1884. In 1885 he married Elda Sakuba. And in 1886, the
young Jabavu opened his office in King Williamstown. He put his whole life into his work and soon his paper was known and read throughout South Africa. He became a member of the Wesleyan Conference and took an active interest in the welfare of his people. His wife died in 1900, leaving four sons. Shortly afterwards Jabavu’s eldest son was sent to England for education, while the younger one became a teacher in the Cape Province.
Jabavu supported the Republican struggle for freedom against British Imperialism during the South African War. For that reason, he was jailed by the British military authorities during the war. He died at the home of his son at Fort Hare on 10 September 1921. Alexander Jabavu, second eldest son of the late John Tengo Jabavu, took over the editorial of the newspaper















2000: Sun City, ACT 2000 – The African Computing & Telecommunications Summit

1998 – 2002: CSIR VR Centre





