Local news

Balobedu Royal Council not impressed by Queen Modjadji series

The Balobedu Royal Council says it is not impressed with the Queen Modjadji television series which debuted on the Mzansi Magic channel on Sunday, July 14.

However, the Modjadji Royal Council and family say they were consulted and gave their blessing for the series. Secretary-general of the Balobedu Royal Council, Gabriel Rasebotsa, told the Herald, that the production is a misrepresentation of the Balobedu people. The Balobedu Council applied for an urgent court interdict aiming to prevent it from airing, however, the Pretoria High Court dismissed it. “The attire and the beads the actors are wearing are not what we wear.

They are also using actors from other ethnic backgrounds whose pronunciation of our language is not good. “The production team should have first consulted with us and sat down with the queen, and we would have looked for the relevant elders who would have shared our correct history,” he said. Rasepotsa likens the series to genocide and says the story is an attempt to wipe out their culture and values through misrepresentation.

Limpopo Provincial Legislature Speaker, Makoma Makhurupetje; Film-maker, Duma Ka-Ndlovu; MEC for Education, Mavhungu Lerule-Ramakhanya and Mayor of Greater Letaba Municipality, Dagma Mamanyoha, at the Queen Modjadji premiere.

Also read: President Ramaphosa is in Modjadji attending the Rain Queenship

The story is produced by Duma kaNdlovu, who hosted a premiere at Montecasino in Johannesburg last week where dignitaries including Greater Letaba Municipality Mayor Dagma Mamanyoha, Education MEC Mavhungu LeruleRamakhanya and Sports, Arts and Culture MEC Jerry Maseko were present. The regent of the Bolobedu royal nation, Mpapatla Modjadji, was also part of the occasion. Ronnie Moroatshehla, spokesperson of the Modjadji Royal Council and family, said the series is their brainchild, stating that Duma Ka Ndlovu consulted with them, and they gave him their blessing.

Rasepotsa said they plan to coronate Queen Masalanabo in September this year.

At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!

Support local journalism

Add The Citizen as a preferred source to see more from Letaba Herald in Google News and Top Stories.

Emelda Tintswalo Shipalana

Tintswalo Shipalana, a journalist for the Letaba Herald, has been in the media industry for over a decade. She started her journey in radio, but ended up in print which is her first love. She joined the Herald newspaper as a cadet in 2016, where she graduated with a journalism qualification from the Caxton Training Academy. She also has a qualification in Feature Writing from the University of Cape Town and a Media Management qualification from Wits University. She is completing her BA Communication Science degree with UNISA. She sleeps well at night knowing she is a voice to the voiceless and her work contributes to promoting local talent, businesses and service delivery. Her love for her community keeps her working hard every day.

Related Articles

Back to top button