A Home on Vorster Street, Razina Theba
A Home on Vorster Street, Razina Theba
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A Home on Vorster Street
A Memoir

Author: Razina Theba

Narrator: Amrain Ismail Essop

Unabridged: 6 hr 52 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 11/20/2023


Synopsis

As a young girl, Razina Theba makes her way every day to the tiny family flat on Vorster Street in Fordsburg. It is here, just outside of the Johannesburg city centre, where she grows up, playing in the Yard with countless cousins, learning to enjoy perfect syrupy paan and the best way to brew chai for her bajee. It is also where she observes her family’s harassment by the Security Branch, as well as her parents’ determination to make their business at the Oriental Plaza a success. In A Home on Vorster Street, Razina witnesses the ebb and flow of a tight-knit neighbourhood trying to survive the forces of apartheid and, ultimately, where she learns of the value of family love and the enduring comfort it provides. At times funny and charming and, at others, painful and tender, this dazzling collection of stories is a spirited exploration of a colourful Indian-Muslim family bound by loyalty to their culture, community, religion and each other.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Margaret on May 04, 2023

This is a delightful very personal South African memoir,bringing to life the highly intelligent characters and lives of the extended family of a Muslim Indian community living in Fordsburg, Johannesburg from the sixties to present. Woven into the text are impact of paternalism racial Stereotyping and......more

Goodreads review by Zaheera on August 02, 2023

There was a post that sought reads that describe South Africa and while South Africa is home to a diverse colorful people, Theba's memoir allows the reader a glimpse into the lives of people living through apartheid within an Indian neighborhood in Fordsburg. The narrative speaks volumes as it trans......more

Goodreads review by Waheeda on June 03, 2023

Razina Theba took me of a journey into the minds and lives of my own elders. Her family was my family. Their customs were my customs. Her extended relatives were my extended relatives. A more 'real' book, I have not yet read.......more