In DR Congo’s capital, homeless teens pin future on rap

Post By Diaspoint | June 12, 2023

“Your body ends up worn out,” he says, describing a doomed path to limbo, ending up like “a prostitute grandmother, something which isn’t supposed to exist.”

A 19-year-old with big ambitions, “Business” — a rough translation of his French street name — is one of several dozen homeless youths who have found refuge in rap.

Their haven is Mokili Na Poche, a small cultural centre in the working-class district of Bandalungwa that holds out a rare lifeline to Kinshasa’s street children and teenagers — an abandoned population estimated by aid groups to number more than 20,000.

Known locally as ‘shegues’, many are pushed onto the streets because of dire poverty, or because their families have accused them of witchcraft.

Their lives are often marked by violence, drugs and prostitution as well as by deep suspicion from wider Congolese society.

But Mokili Na Poche, which opened last November, aims to encourage the neglected and unschooled homeless youths towards creative pursuits such as making bags out of scavenged plastic, or making music.

“Business,” whose real name is Junior Mayamba Ngatshwe, is keen like the others to seize any opportunity on offer.

Chadrack Mado, another street-dwelling youngster, said he comes to the centre so that “tomorrow I don’t become a kuluna” — using a local term for the Kinshasa’s notorious machete-wielding gangsters.

The Democratic Republic of Congo is one of the poorest countries in the world despite its vast mineral wealth. About two thirds of the population of 100 million people live on under $2.15 a day, according to the World Bank.

– ‘Trapped’ –

A newly built recording studio caters to the musically inclined among the youngsters who visit Mokili Na Poche. “Business” and his friends are regulars.

“I’m trapped, I’m trapped,” the youngster rapped into the mic in the Lingala language, rhyming about how he’d left conflict-torn eastern Congo only to end up on the mean streets of Kinshasa.

A barefoot 16-year old known as “Bloodbank” accompanied the song with a rhythm tapped out on a discarded plastic bottle, and beat-boxing through pouted lips.

Later, “Business” explained that his dream was to follow in the footsteps of Congolese music greats such as Fally Ipupa, drive a fine car and visit the United States.

Life on the streets is hard, he said, explaining how some homeless youths were supportive but others tried to undermine him. “There really are witches among us,” “Business” said.

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