Despite it being winter, there is nothing cold about Thokoza Park in Rockville, Soweto, the home of Nelson Mandela’s “Champion Tree.” The park is festooned with deciduous trees, green turf changing to a brownish yellow colour, benches, swings, and the subtle warmth of the sun slating towards Madiba’s corner.
The tree, which is also known as stinkwood, is light grey with a touch of brown spots. It is an indigenous tree that grows in both high and low rainfall areas. The stinkwood’s leaves are usually a light green when the tree is young and turn to a darker green once it has reached maturity. The champion tree can grow up to 12 meters high, but in a forest environment, it reaches heights of 25 meters.
Jenny Moodley says the tree was declared a “champion tree” after the former president and his wife, Graça Machel, planted the white stinkwood to mark his 90th birthday and to commemorate National Arbor Month on 4 September 2008.
Adjacent to the tree is a life-sized mural, an excerpt from the Nobel Laureates’ speech delivered in Oslo, Norway in 1993, and two plaques that remind visitors of Madiba’s legacy.
“Over the years, we have, for every year that Madiba was around, planted a tree. On his 89th birthday, JCPZ planted 89 trees, and then every year after his 89th birthday, we went ahead and planted a tree. We have also made it a point of bringing our former presidents as well as the current president to plant trees in Thokoza Park,” says Moodley.
Thokoza Park is kept in its picturesque state by JCPZ and is well known for its other facilities on offer, such as being the perfect spot for family picnics and braais. It hosts many events, including art exhibitions and live jazz concerts. There is a children’s playground and lots of ducks to feed. The park covers 4.5 hectares, including the Moroka Dam.
Written by Sascha-Lee Joseph
18.7.2022