The Ekukhanyeni mission station (Ekukhanyeni = "place of enlightenment") was established by John William Colenso, the first Bishop of Natal, in 1854.[1][2][3] The Zulu language writer Magema Magwaza Fuze was educated there from about the age of 12.[4]
^Harris, Mary N. (5 August 2018). Sights and Insights: Interactive Images of Europe and the Wider World. Edizioni Plus. ISBN 9788884924674 – via Google Books.
^Barber, Karin (5 August 2018). Africa's Hidden Histories: Everyday Literacy and Making the Self. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0253347299 – via Google Books.
^Draper, Jonathan A. (1 April 2003). The Eye of the Storm: Bishop John William Colenso and the Crisis of Biblical Inspiration. A&C Black. ISBN 9780826470904 – via Google Books.
^"Fuze, Magema" by Hlonipha Mokoena in Emmanuel Kwaku Akyeampong & Henry Louis Gates Jr. (Eds.) (2012). Dictionary of African Biography. New York: Oxford University Press. Vol. 2. pp. 403–405. ISBN 978-0-19-538207-5.
and 4 Related for: Ekukhanyeni mission station information
The Ekukhanyenimissionstation (Ekukhanyeni = "place of enlightenment") was established by John William Colenso, the first Bishop of Natal, in 1854. The...
including Zisize (Ingwavuma) Educational Trust which is the mother to Ekukhanyeni cluster foster care scheme, Ingwavuma Women's Centre and Embathisa, both...
English or Biblical names. He was educated at the Ekukhanyeni ("place of enlightenment") missionstation. In the 1850s, Fuze trained as a printing compositor...
of Natal. Using the printing press he brought to his missionary station at Ekukhanyeni in Natal, and with William Ngidi he published the first Zulu Grammar...