TheeAuroraSays is a site where the local elements of setswana are explored in all i'ts psychological, cultural and social aspects. this blog aims to bring life to these aspects and associate them realistically to the contemporary world in an interesting way to help shape an open minded society.
Thursday, June 25, 2020
PROVERBS????
Tuesday, June 23, 2020
TIE THE KID
Pelo potsane e a golegwa
Pelo= the heart
Potsane= a kid (baby goat)
E a golegwa= is tied
Direct: the heart, a kid, is tied.
Simply laid, this proverb means that, just as a young goat is domesticated or tamed, so can the heart. A baby goat is tied away from its mother to hold it back from leaving safety to danger. This is done to restrain it, keep it calm or control it. The same can go for our hearts! To successfully accomplish this, the disposition of the mind which binds passions is necessary.
Growing up in a rural village called Mmadinare, I’d often hear the elderly remark, “pelo potsane e a golegwa” time and again. As a child, I just took it that adult talk was too weird and complicated, I thought they were mentally incapacitated too, (oops). How could they refer the heart as to a baby goat (really?). So I wondered, Ignorant that there was something called a metaphor. I honestly could not find the relationship between the heart and the tying of a baby goat.
Speaking of baby goat tying, when I was a kid, my dad would take us to the cattle post during school vacations. There, we reared different kinds of livestock, including a flock of goats. Each time the flock left for grazing, the baby goats or kids had to remain behind. Keeping them calm as they watched their does (a word for mother goats) leave wasn’t easy. Goats are naturally stubborn, and young ones being highly energetic, are a whole lot of trouble and hard to control. Determined to leave with the older goats, the kids would run about the kraal looking for gaps on the structure to escape. Under my father’s instruction, we had to get a hold of them and tie them to the sides of the wooden poles of the kraal. The baby goats would struggle, jump and kick to try to break off the rope. Although this might have seemed to be a little cruel, it is the African way of taming goats. Little does the young goat realize that setting it free, would only lead it to the great danger of landing between the long, sharp canines of predators, the talons of great eagles or the coils of a python. The baby goat will never understand the reason behind separating it from its mother, but the experienced keeper knows the danger lying ahead if he were to let it loose.
Similarly, the heart is full of many desires, some just too wild (lol). Imagine if your heart would go unrestrained! By all means, it would try to satisfy all of its natural desires, regardless of their nature, good or bad. Consequently, one is required to exercise the will power, logic, experience, common sense and some level of maturity in order to keep themselves from falling prey to dire penalties of going after those desires. In other words, we should not be impulsive, but decisive in action. With that being said, I urge you to tie up your baby goat in the best ways possible! Pelo potsane, e a golelgwa.
Exercise restraint after good judgement!
#THEEAURORASAYS
Monday, June 15, 2020
DOUBLE ACTION
“SETSHWARWA KE NTSA-PEDI GA SE THATA”.
SE TSWHWARWA=
what is held/grabbed/done
KE
NTSA-PEDI= by two dogs
GA
SE THATA= is not hard
Direct: what is held by two dogs is not hard
Meaning: the work that is done by two, is easily accomplished.
If there ever was an
important number, I’d like to believe it to be “2”. The number two is
so imperative that even our very being is designed around it. That is why I am
able to type this post using my two hands, with two eyes on my face, a nose
with two nostrils and two ears attached to my head. Humans even have two feet
to give them balance when they stand or walk. And so, that is why two is such a significant powerful
number. There are also two genders in this world, and also nature made it so
that the best working relationships are between only two.
Have you ever tried
chopping vegetables using one hand? Well, it’s not impossible, but I must say
it’s not very easy. It also takes time. That is why the ancient Setswana
proverb “setshwarwa ke ntsa-pedi ga se
thata” makes sense even today, for the reason that when two share a task,
the easier it gets. That is why back in the day before cutting boards, two
girls would sit by the fire to cut meat into the pot. One holding the other end
of the steak and one holding the other end, cutting.
As I ponder upon this
proverb “setshwarwa ke ntsa-pedi”, I
am compelled to think back on my primary school days. It was a time when my
sister and I were desperately in need of new school bags, as the school term
was beginning on a new year. Mother had said we didn’t need them and so she
could not afford to get them for us. And so we knew we had to devise a plan to
raise funds to buy the school bags by our own means. In her desperateness, my
sister suggested that I sold some of the chickens my grandmother had given me.
I didn’t mind, but the problem was, “who is going to buy the chickens?” It was
already Sunday noon, we were under the pressure of time because shops would
soon close and school was on the next day. Being the kids that we were, we very
much dreaded the idea of showing up at school with our old school bags on a new
year when other kids had something new. At that moment, our ideas had reached a
dead end. That is when I suggested we pray about it. For the first time ever,
my sister and I held hands to pray alone together. To our surprise, that very
same day, actually, only a few hours after our fervent prayer sessions, a bunch
of Indian men driving in expensive cars showed up at our house, looking for
chickens to buy. They needed live chickens for a ceremony at the Mosque, and
honestly, that was the most miraculous day of our lives. From then on, I knew that united prayer
works. From brainstorming, strategizing to raise funds and finally praying for
a miracle together, I shall forever remember the power of two. Perhaps if
anyone of us had tried to do it on their own, it wouldn’t have been easier or likely
impossible. But because of us TWO,
we proudly carried our new bags to school the next day.
So couple up, pair up to get the work at hand done, a twosome just might be the easy way out of a difficult task. Remember, “SETSHWARWA KE NTSA-PEDI GA SE THATA”.
NO PRESSURE
MOJA PELE O TSHWANA LE MOJA MORAGO Moja pele- the one who ate firtst o tshwana le- is the same as moja morago- the one who ate last Direct t...
-
PELO E JA SERATI, SEBATLELWA GA E SE JE. This is a Setswana proverb of which I will break down, word by word to translate it. ...
-
“SETSHWARWA KE NTSA-PEDI GA SE TH ATA”. SE TSWHWARWA = what is held/grabbed/done KE NTSA-PEDI = by two dogs GA SE THATA = is not hard ...
-
PROVERB OF THE WEEK: KE UTLWILE GA A TSHWANE LE KE BONE KA MATHO Ke utlwile- I heard Ga a tshwane- is no the same Le ke bonye ka matho- as I...