Miriam Makeba (Mama Africa)
Bio
Miriam Makeba (4 March 1932 — 9 November 2008), popularly known as Mama Africa was a South African artist and activist born in Prospect Township, Johannesburg.
She grew up in a South Africa that was both alive with song and heavy with segregation. Her mother was a sangoma, her father a teacher, both instilling in her the rhythms of language, healing and discipline that would later shape her sound. Music, for Makeba, was never mere performance. It was testimony.
Long before African music found a home on global playlists, Makeba was already its heartbeat, a woman whose voice became both a weapon and a balm. To the world, she was Mama Africa: the singer who turned exile into art, pain into melody, and identity into revolution.
A voice that refused silence
Makeba’s career began humbly in the 1950s when she joined the Manhattan Brothers, one of South Africa’s most popular vocal groups of the time. Her voice, smooth as silk yet filled with protest, drew attention almost instantly. Soon she formed The Skylarks, an all-female ensemble blending jazz and African harmonies, and South Africa took notice.
But it was Come Back, Africa (1959), an anti-apartheid film in which she appeared, that would change the course of her life. When the film premiered in Venice, Makeba travelled to Italy — and then to London and New York — where her performances dazzled audiences and caught the attention of American singer Harry Belafonte. Together, they recorded An Evening with Belafonte/Makeba (1965), an album that spoke fiercely against apartheid and won a
Grammy Award
By then, Makeba’s passport had been revoked by the South African government — a punishment for speaking truth to power. Yet, exile only amplified her voice. From the United States to Guinea, from Paris to Lagos, she sang the pain of her homeland and the pride of her people.
The sound of resistance
To call Makeba a singer would be to underestimate her power. She was a cultural diplomat, a freedom fighter, a woman who wore traditional African hairstyles and attire long before the world learned the term “Afrocentric”.
Her global hits — including ‘Pata Pata’, ‘The Click Song (Qongqothwane)’ and ‘Malaika’. In the 1960s, she performed at the United Nations, addressing the horrors of apartheid in a way only art could: through melody and moral clarity. Makeba’s music became the soundtrack of liberation movements across Africa and the diaspora.
Exile, love and return
Makeba’s life was as dramatic as her voice was graceful. She married fellow activist and civil rights leader Stokely Carmichael (later known as Kwame Ture) in 1968 — a union that drew heavy backlash from the US government and led her to relocate to Guinea, where she found refuge and solidarity.
Even in exile, she continued to perform across the world, often sharing stages with legends such as Nina Simone, Hugh Masekela, and Paul Simon, whose Graceland tour brought her back into global spotlight in the 1980s. When Nelson Mandela was released from prison, one of...








