There is a new decree by the vanguard of the Mokobi clan in Serowe that
we all meet once a year outside the hustle and bustle of weddings, funerals,
family hearings and social media networks such as Face Book, WhatsApp and
Instagram. The one day meeting is set aside for nothing but a bonding session
for a fast growing family and the venue is decidedly our ancestral home in
Mhashwa, Serowe. Mhashwa is however, the
corrupted name given to the Ba-Kalanga ward during the well documented tumultuous
reign of Bangwato Regent, Kgosi Tshekedi Khama. The proper name of the ward is
Nswazwi, but that is a story for another day.
At our maiden get-together on
Boxing Day last year, it was decided that rather than the occasion being a
purely family pilgrimage, some other social good should be factored into the reunion.
On this occasion the clan decided to clean up the graves of departed family members.
Most of the descendants of the family patriarch, Rev. Hamilton, Lekgowe, Mokobi
are buried at the Goo Rra Seretse cemetery outside Serowe where he was also
laid to rest in 1980.
One of the striking features of the Goo Rra Seretse cemetery is its
sorry state. The place is unkempt, with tall trees, bushes and grass predominant
following the earlier rains. While there are graves covered with marble or
granite slabs and elaborate headstones engraved with the names, dates of birth
and death, and biographical data of the deceased, the majority of graves are
marked with metal frames covered in shading nets. The shade nets are in most instances,
old, sunburned and rain washed, tattered and an eyesore.
Discussions at the cemetery inevitably centred on the upkeep of this final
resting place for the dead. The thrust of the discussion was establishing who
between the families and local authorities was responsible for the maintenance
of cemeteries. In the end it was concluded that while local authorities are to
some extent responsible for the upkeep of communal parks and cemeteries, graves
have been left to families and as in all aspects of human endeavour, there are
those families that make an effort to maintain the graves of their fallen
members and those that, quite frankly, do not care.
“You wouldn’t sleep in filth would you!? So how then do you expect our
dearly departed to rest in such?” asks one of my concerned cousins.
The blight of neglected graves is however, not confined to this
cemetery. I have observed this sorry state of affairs across the country
whenever I have had the misfortune of attending the burial of family members,
friends, colleagues and acquaintances. One finds hideous shreds of shading nets,
pieces of sun-baked plastic flowers and other cultural and religious artefacts lying
all over the graves. Cattle, goats and donkey’s graze here and the village juveniles
smoke weed under the shades of trees in the cemetery while lovers have brazenly
turned the place into their rendezvous.
Being in the midst of the dead got me thinking. Assuming that when I
die, my family will get the opportunity to bury me, we all know that this final
rite of passage is not always possible, I have discussed this matter with my
wife, Tshego’ and my aunt, Rakgadi Mma Tjabo, (Margaret Balule) and made it
clear that when the time ultimately comes and I exit this world, if I’m not
getting a headstone, I will not mind a metal frame to mark my grave but I do
not want tacky shading nets or plastic flowers on my grave.

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