James Mpanza (15 May 1889 – 23 September 1970) was a squatter in Johannesburg, South Africa, from the mid-1940s until the late 1960s. In 1944 he led the land occupation that resulted in largest housing development and the founding of modern Soweto. James Mpanza, SA History Online Mpanza is known as "the father of Soweto". An Overview of Soweto. Retrieved June 2013
He was a clerk and interpreter at a solicitors' office when he was 18, and he was falsely convicted of fraud in 1912. He came to notice when he was accused of the murder in 1915 of an Indian shopkeeper called Adam. Mpanza appealed his own case, arguing that he was somewhere else at the time. He was reprieved but he still received a life sentence. He served 13 years in jail, being moved from place to place because he misbehaved and attacked warders. At Cinderella prison in Boksburg at the end of World War 1, he became a Christian and wrote a short bookIzimpi zendlela yonkresku (The Battles of the Christian's Pathway). on his ideas and began preaching to his fellow prisoners.
In 1927, he was released and he made his living by teaching in Pretoria, before moving to Orlando, Johannesburg, in 1934. He would ride a horse through Orlando giving rise to an air of eccentricity. In 1937, he formed the Orlando Boys' Club, which was renamed Orlando Pirates Football Club in 1939. In 1958, he sent a proposal to the City of Johannesburg for a stadium in Orlando, which resulted in the construction of Orlando Stadium in 1959.
He held public meetings at his home in Orlando, which is now commemorated as James Mpanza House. In April 1944, despite being seen as controversial, he persuaded 8,000 people to follow him from Orlando to create a new township called Sofasonke Township with himself as unofficial mayor. By 1946, there were 20,000 people squatting there and Mpanza charged a fee to join the camp and to claim a site, and then there was a fee of two shillings and sixpence every week. In return, the squatters had their own police force. Mpanza operated informal courts at his Orlando home where family disputes could be settled. Conditions, however, were poor and there was no health service. The death of Mpanza's son, Dumisani, was put down to poor medical care. The squatters had left the slums of Orlando but their plight was still not certain and Mpanza got the nickname of "Sofasonke" ("we shall all die") as he added his opinion of their outlook if they had no help. It was this rhetoric that got him the nickname but it also encouraged the funding necessary to convert this shantytown into the town of SOuth WEstern TOwnships" or Soweto. It was not just rhetoric, however, as he used his loyal following to create supportive candidates for the Orlando Advisory Board.
Mpanza successfully appealed against a government deportation order that would have exiled him in Natal Province. This allowed him to continue to influence the Orlando Advisory Board. He later helped to set up the Soweto Urban Banto Council in the 1960s, which reduced his importance.
Mpanza was interested in horse racing and owned his own racehorses in the Orange Free State and in the Transvaal, but because of the laws at the time he had to hire white jockeys to race them.
The James Mpanza House where his family lived after his death was given a blue plaque to mark his contribution to the history of South Africa.
Legacy
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