Title: Let the Past Stay Buried. Theme Scripture: Isaiah 43:18–19 Dateline: Akasia, Pretoria By Harold Mawela It was a Thursday afternoon in Akasia. The Johannesburg-Pretoria traffic had finally released me from its evening grip. As I turned into the street where I live, I noticed my neighbour, a brilliant young man named Thabo, sitting on the pavement. His head was buried in his hands. His engineering diploma from TUT was somewhere in that house—collecting dust while he collected rejection letters. I stopped. I sat next to him. The sun was setting over the Magaliesberg. "But' Harold," he said, his voice cracking. "I applied for forty-seven jobs. Forty-seven. Not one call back. Last year I trusted a cousin with my savings for a 'business opportunity'—the cousin is in Thailand now, and I am sitting on a pavement in Akasia." We sat in silence. A taxi hooted in the distance. A child was selling amagwinya at the corner. Then Thabo said the sentence that brok...
THE BREAKING OF THE MOLD A Devotional Essay in the Harold Mawela Style Akasia, Pretoria — June 2026 I. THE CRACK IN THE CAGE I remember the day I finally understood what pain was for. It was a Thursday—Stage 4 load-shedding had just plunged our street into darkness, and I sat on my veranda watching the smoke from a hundred illegal fires curl toward a sky the city had forgotten. My neighbour, old Mr. Dlamini, was burning scrap wood to cook pap for his grandchildren. His spaza shop had been looted two weeks earlier. Not by foreign nationals—by boys from his own church, boys who had once called him Malume. As I watched him stir that pot in the dark, I felt something crack inside me. Not my patience. Not my hope. My mold. Brother, let me tell you plainly: The world has a mold, and it wants you to fit. It is a mold shaped like fear—fear of not having enough, fear of being left behind, fear of the foreigner, fear of the future. It is a mold shaped like selfishness—me-first, get-mine, look-ou...