The parallel consciousness of self and surroundings... is the key to transforming mentalities and reshaping societies.” -

Edouard Glisant


Friday, 9 December 2011

"...a dead end..."

Enoch Yemohson is from Ghana. He and his family live in the flat that Dolly the milliner once lived in, above Bez Valley Tailors and Broadway Milliner.

Enoch's shop is 'Current Audio and Electricals' at 82 Broadway, a few shops away from 8th Street. 


He came to South Africa in 1989 because of the political instability in his own country at that time, and has been in business for five years.

“Things are not working but we are just trying,” he says.

Enoch has a diploma in electronics. He fixes TVs, microwaves, DVDs and “anything that is electronic and a domestic appliance.”

He pays R 5,000 per month for rent. Electricity and other costs are continually rising in the shop and at the flat. He used to pay R 320 per month for electricity at home. Now he gets bills for R 1,600 per month.

Enoch sold his car because he could no longer afford to run it. This has been bad for business because he can't collect and deliver repairs. 

“Business is very, very poor,” he says. “People on this side don’t have money. This area is a dead end.  Maybe I will have to move out the way things are.”   

Enoch rents out part of his shop to other businesses: A hairdresser, a barber and a tailor.

The hairdressers, Solange and Angie, are from Kinshasa, DRC; the barber, Dalton Nkhoma, is a Malawian; and the tailor, Chester Misiska, is also from Malawi. They all live in Bez Valley.

Chester is friendly with Mr. Moti from Bez Valley Tailors.  The two tailors refer customers to one another.

Chester and his 23 year old son live in a backroom in 8th Avenue.  He calls it a "boy's room". The room is on the same property as Katy Mazibuko's room (see earlier blog). They have lived there for eight years


Current Audio and Electrics: 082-3900-433; Chester  Misiska, Tailor: 078-8313-833 

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