Title: The Diplomacy of Disagreement: How a Soft Answer Shuts Down a Hard World By Harold Mawela, Akasia, Pretoria I am writing this from my study in Akasia, on a particularly loud Friday morning. The sound of a minibus taxi hooting aggressively at a slow-moving bakkie drifts up from the street below. A few blocks away, I know the queue at the Home Affairs office is already simmering with tension—voices raised, patience shredded, fingers pointing. We live in a nation that is an expert in disagreement. We know how to differ on taxi ranks, in Parliament, on social media, and sadly, in our bedrooms. We are masters of the harsh word. We post the scathing comment. We rehearse the cutting retort. We perfect the art of the clapback. But today, the ancient text stares us down with a radical, almost offensive, proposition: “A soft answer turns away wrath, but a harsh word stirs up anger” (Proverbs 15:1). The Myth of the Satisfying Scream Let us be honest with each other. There is a part of us t...
Title: The Unhurried Harvest: Why Patience is the Pace of Promise (A Reflection from Akasia, Pretoria) By Harold Mawela I. The Highveld Thunder and The Waiting Soul The Highveld thunder cracks like God's whip over our tin roofs here in Akasia. I sit on my veranda, watching the rain lash against the jacarandas, and I think about waiting. We South Africans know waiting. We queue for water, for grants, for the lights to come back on during stage-six load-shedding. We wait for justice, for jobs, for the corruption headlines to stop reading like repeat broadcasts . Just last week, I stood in a snaking line at the Soshanguve Home Affairs—three hours of my life I'll never get back—watching frustration simmer on every face. But there's a waiting that kills, and a waiting that cultivates. James 1:4 thunders louder than Eskom's failing transformers: "Let patience have its perfect work, that you may be perfect and complete, lacking nothing." In a nation sprinting toward...