Sandile Dikeni
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Sandile Dikeni (1966 – 9 November 2019) was a South African poet and editor.


Career

Dikeni was born in the small Karoo town of Victoria West and studied law at the University of the Witwatersrand and University of the Western Cape, where he was a member of the SRC and obtained a diploma in journalism through Peninsula Technikon. While detained by the apartheid government, he began writing poetry, and later performed at political rallies, and is quoted saying:
My point of fame wasn’t really how eloquently I could articulate an anti-apartheid stance in strict political terms. It was more cultural articulation of my anti-apartheidism.
After the end of apartheid, he worked as a journalist and political commentator, started the AM Live and PM Live radio shows at SAFM in 1995, and worked as arts editor for the Cape Times, editor of Die Suid Afrikaan and political editor of This Day. Dikeni is the author of three collections of poems, including ''Guava Juice'', (Mayibuye Books, 1992), which is followed by ''Telegraph to the Sky'' (UKZN Press, 2001) and ''Planting Water'' (UKZN Press, 2007). He also published a collection of his articles from the Cape Times, ''Soul Fire: Writing the Transition'' (UKZN Press, 2002), and his essay 'How The West Was Lost' appeared in Chimurenga 07: ''Kaapstad! And Jozi the Night Moses Died'' (July 2005). On 10 February 2005, he recorded in collaboration with German composer
Klaus Hinrich Stahmer Klaus Hinrich Stahmer (born 25 June 1941) is a German composer and musicologist. He gave added to the development of music in the 1980s through multimedia works, including music with sound art sculptures and ). He also broke new artistic ground wi ...
a collection of his poetry published by Wergo, accompanied by musicians Carin Levine (flutes);
Jennifer Hymer Jennifer Hymer is an American pianist, currently living in Hamburg, Germany. Education Jennifer Hymer was trained as a pianist for classical and contemporary music at the University of California at Berkeley and Mills College studying with Bay Ar ...
(piano);
Stephan Froleyks Stephan may refer to: * Stephan, South Dakota, United States * Stephan (given name), a masculine given name * Stephan (surname), a Breton-language surname See also * Sankt-Stephan * Stefan (disambiguation) * Stephan-Oterma * Stephani * St ...
and Olaf Pyras (percussion); Omphalo-Quartett (African drums); Andreas König and Aki Hoffmann (piano). He was described by Cape Times editor Aneez Salie as "one of the finest poets and journalists our Struggle has produced". He survived a car accident in 2005 and recovering slowly after a coma, he continued to participate in events, such as the launch of ''Planting Water'' in 2007. His death on 9 November 2019 from tuberculosis was mourned in numerous obituaries.


Poetry

* ''Guava Juice'' (1992) * ''Telegraph to the Sky'' (2002)


Other works

* ''Soul Fire: Writing the Transition'' (2002).


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Dikeni, Sandile 1966 births 2019 deaths South African male poets 20th-century South African poets 21st-century South African poets People from Victoria West 21st-century deaths from tuberculosis Tuberculosis deaths in South Africa