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Women in agriculture: Farmers from across South Africa are featured on the Farmer’s Inside Track podcast. Pictured are Food For Mzansi’s Dawn Noemdoe with urban farmer Sibongile Cele. Photo: Food For Mzansi

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PODCAST: Urban rooftop farmer is turning Hillbrow green

by Noluthando Ngcakani
18th Feb 2020
in News
Reading Time: 3 mins read
A A
Women in agriculture: Farmers from across South Africa are featured on the Farmer’s Inside Track podcast. Pictured are Food For Mzansi’s Dawn Noemdoe with urban farmer Sibongile Cele. Photo: Food For Mzansi

Farmers from across South Africa are featured on the Farmer’s Inside Track podcast. Pictured are Food For Mzansi’s Dawn Noemdoe with urban farmer Sibongile Cele. Photo: Food For Mzansi

We’re gearing up for Season 2 of the Farmer’s Inside Track podcast, so we’re taking a little break. While we’re finishing off the brand-new episode you can hear from the first week of March, you can listen to some of our favourite episodes from Season 1 again.

Food For Mzansi editor Dawn Noemdoe chose her favourite Season 1 episode: Our interview with Hillbrow rooftop farmer Sibongile Cele. The weekly Farmer’s Inside Track instalments are available on different platforms, including videos, podcasts, a weekly e-mailer and a bustling Facebook group.

In the heart of the bustling concrete jungle of Johannesburg lies the residential neighbourhood of Hillbrow. When we imagine this inner-city suburb, we tend to paint a very bleak picture. Marred by violence, drug abuse, prostitution and destitution, this place is even referred to as a slum by some.

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But one urban farmer, Sibongile Cele, is slowly trying to change the negative narrative associated with the neighbourhood. Cele has managed to create a business, Mcebo Wealth Rooftop Farm, which not only brings a splash of colour to Hillbrow, but also seeks to change the food systems in the inner-city.

READ MORE – Urban rooftop farmer making a difference in the sky

In this week’s Farmer’s Inside Track podcast episode, Cele joins co-founder of Food For Mzansi Ivor Price and editor Dawn Noemdoe in studio. In their conversation, Cele gives insights on the motivation to creating her sustainable vegetable business on a rooftop in Hillbrow.

She says that growing up in Soweto her father played a key role in the inception of community gardens in the area. Her passion for changing food systems, she says, stems from her father’s influence.

“The passion that grew with us as children growing up in those community gardens in Soweto carried us. It is something that you always take for granted. Then, as you grow older you realize that there is passion.”

Throughout her discussion Cele also reminds us that farming in its true essence is a task that tests resilience of the spirit.

“It takes me back to purpose!” she excitedly says. “When you’ve got purpose and vision to see things change, there is tenacity in finishing strong and being the difference that you want to see in the community.”

A former auditor with Deloitte, Cele started the initiative two years ago. “Seeing the rooftop producing was a wow moment. To finally see the vision that we have been looking at. It has gone up and it’s been implemented, and we are bringing the change in the inner city.”

As an urban farmer Cele has hopes to utilize as much space as she can. She says living as a “landless South African” one can look up to the skies – the buildings in Joburg – to realize your agricultural dreams.

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“The future is seeing households taking the food issue very seriously. To say can we grow our own vegetables in our backyards and make the difference,” she says.

 

The Farmer’s Inside Track podcasts and videos are recorded in both Cape Town and Johannesburg and are available on different platforms, including a weekly e-mailer, a WhatsApp line and a bustling Facebook group.

To get free access to all the exclusive content on Farmer’s Inside Track, head to farmersinsidetrack.co.za and sign up. To join the WhatsApp line, either click here or send a WhatsApp with the message “Sign me up for Farmer’s Inside Track” to +27 81 889 9032, providing your name and surname, e-mail address and province.

  • Farmer’s Inside Track is proudly brought to you by Food For Mzansi, Africa’s Best Digital News Start-up. Advertisers who wish to explore opportunities on any of the Farmer’s Inside Track channels can e-mail ivor@foodformzansi.co.za and kobus@foodformzansi.co.za.
Tags: HillbrowHydroponicsJohannesburgMcebo Wealth Rooftop FarmSibongile CeleUrban farming
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Noluthando Ngcakani

Noluthando Ngcakani

With roots in the Northern Cape, this Kimberley Diamond has had a passion for telling human interest stories since she could speak her first words. A foodie by heart, she began her journalistic career as an intern at the SABC where she discovered her love for telling agricultural, community and nature related stories. Not a stranger to a challenge Ngcakani will go above and beyond to tell your truth.

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With 11 global awards in the first three years of its existence, Food For Mzansi is much more than an agriculture publication. It is a movement, unashamedly saluting the unsung heroes of South African agriculture. We believe in the power of agriculture to promote nation building and social cohesion by telling stories that are often overlooked by broader society.

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