Leetile Disang Raditladi

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Leetile Disang Raditladi
Born 1910
Serowe
Died 1971 (aged 60–61)
Nationality Motswana
Occupation poet and playwright
Known for Raditladi Basin on Mercury, which was named after him

Leetile Disang Raditladi (1910–1971) was a Motswana playwright and poet. He was born in Serowe and got his education in Tiger Kloof, Lovedale and Fort Hare University. A prolific author, he had his first book, a biography of Khama III, accepted for publication while still in high school at Lovedale. This book was later quashed by the Bechuanaland Protectorate authorities and was not published.[1]

He was banished from the Bangwato Reserve in 1937 after Tshekedi Khama, the Bangwato regent accused Raditladi of adultery with his wife as well as for conspiring to bewitch him. After that Raditladi served as a colonial service clerk and quickly became the highest ranking Motswana in the Protectorate. Following his experiences with Tshekedi, Raditladi wrote his historical drama Motswasele II, his most famous work. The major theme of this work is with royal despotism and the perverted results of such tyranny.[2]

In 1944 the Batawana Kgosi Moremi III asked the British to appoint Raditladi as the head of the Tsetse Fly Control agency in Ngamiland. As such he became the first Motswana to head a government department. Two years later, Moremi appointed him Tribal Secretary. This appointment occurred just before Moremi's death, following which the chief was succeeded by his wife, the regent EP Moremi. Raditladi and the Regent, both foreign-born, exercised tight control over Ngamiland and quickly aroused resentment. Their clandestine love affair also become public knowledge. In late 1950 the Regent was forced to abort Raditladi's child, an event that led Raditladi's opponents to drive him out of Ngamiland at gunpoint.[3]

In 1958 after his return to Serowe Raditladi founded the Bechuanaland Protectorate Federal Party, although he played almost no part in later politics.[4][5]

Raditladi wrote several historical plays, love stories and poems.[4] In 2008 a large impact crater on Mercury was named Raditladi after him.[6]

References

  1. J. Peires, “The Lovedale Press: Literature for the Bantu Revisited,” History in Africa 6 (1979): 168-70.
  2. D.T. Cole, review of Motswasele II, Africa 17, 1 (1947): 65
  3. B. Morton, "A Social and Economic History of a Southern African Native Reserve: Ngamiland, 1890-1966," (PhD Thesis, Indiana University, 1966),236-9.
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