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Don Mattera

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Name
  
Don Mattera

Role
  
Education
  

Don Mattera Don Mattera is Afraid to Write a Followup to Memory is

Books
  
Azanian love song, Memory is the weapon

Similar People
  
Lebogang Mashile, Keorapetse Kgositsile, Phillippa Yaa de Villiers, Gcina Mhlope, Dennis Brutus

Veteran journalist and poet extraordinaire don mattera honoured


Donato Francisco Mattera (born 1935), better known as Don Mattera, is a South African poet and author.

Contents

Don Mattera wwwafricanwritingcomholdonmaterajpg

Toekomsrus creative writers with don mattera


Overview

Don Mattera BBC World Service Programmes From Prison to Poetry

Born in Western Native Township (now Westbury), Johannesburg, South Africa, Mattera grew up in Sophiatown, at that time a vibrant centre of South African culture.

Don Mattera Lot Detail Original Typed Poem by South African Poet Don Mattera

In his autobiography Memory Is the Weapon he writes: "Sophiatown also had its beauty; picturesque and intimate like most ghettoes.... Mansions and quaint cottages ... stood side by side with rusty wood-and-iron shacks, locked in a fraternal embrace of filth and felony.... The rich and the poor, the exploiters and the exploited, all knitted together in a colourful fabric that ignored race or class structures." This "multiracial fabric" did not conform to the separatist policies of apartheid and so the suburb was destroyed and the people forcibly removed.

Don Mattera's grandfather was an Italian immigrant who married a Xhosa woman from the eastern Cape. They moved to Johannesburg, where Mattera's father was born. At the time, he was classified as an Italian. Under the apartheid system, Don was classified as a "coloured". This group was the last to be forcibly evicted from Sophiatown; they were taken to the nearby suburbs of Westbury, Newclare and Bosmont. Don is proud of his heritage and considers himself to be Italian.

Mattera was adopted by his grandparents and sent to a Catholic boarding school in Durban. He returned to Johannesburg when he was 14 and then continued his education in Pageview, another suburb that suffered under apartheid when the residents were again forcibly removed during the 1960s.

He then became politically active. As a result of these activities, he was banned from 1973 to 1982 and spent three years under house arrest. He was detained, his house was raided, and he was tortured more than once. During this time, he became a founding member of the Black Consciousness movement and joined the ANC Youth League. He helped form the Union of Black Journalists as well as the Congress of South African Writers. He also joined the National Forum, which was against what it referred to as the "racial exclusivity" of the United Democratic Front.

He then worked as a journalist on The Sunday Times, The Sowetan, and the Weekly Mail (now known as the Mail and Guardian).

Mattera decided to convert to the Muslim faith and is now deeply involved in the community, with a special interest in young people and the rehabilitation of ex-prisoners.

Awards

  • PEN Award (1983) for Azanian Love Song
  • Noma Children's Book Award (1993) for The Five Magic Pebbles
  • Steve Biko Prize for his autobiography, Memory is the Weapon
  • Honorary PhD in Literature from the University of Natal, Durban
  • World Health Organization's Peace Award from the Centre of Violence and Injury Prevention (1997).
  • South African Order of the Baobab in Gold for "Excellent contribution to literature, achievement in the field of journalism and striving for democracy and justice in South Africa."
  • References

    Don Mattera Wikipedia


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