In contemporary South African music and poetry, “Ndiyagodola” has evolved into a cry of exhaustion. The rapper Nasty C, in a lesser-known track, spits: “I bend, I fold, I wake up, I do it again / Ndiyagodola, but God knows I’m not a pen.” The metaphor is sharp: bending like a pen writing someone else’s story. But the artist refuses to be merely an instrument. The act of speaking—of rapping, of writing this very essay—is the first act of straightening one’s back. Perhaps the most beautiful and tragic aspect of “Ndiyagodola” is that it contains within itself its own opposite. In many Nguni languages, the prefix “-godola” can shift with tense and aspect. “Ndiyagodolile” means “I have bent”—past tense, completed action. But the present continuous “Ndiyagodola” implies that the bending is still happening. There is no promise of rising. And yet, the very fact that one can say “I am bending” means one is still alive, still conscious, still capable of straightening.
But this bending was not only physical. It was psychological. It meant swallowing one’s pride, swallowing one’s rage, swallowing the words that could lead to a beating or a jail cell. The poet Mxolisi Nyezwa once wrote of such a posture: “We learned to make ourselves small / so that the boot would pass over us.” That is “Ndiyagodola”—the art of becoming invisible in plain sight. In isiXhosa culture, the body carries history. Elders still speak of the ukugodola of their parents: the way a mother would bow her head when asking a white farmer for permission to visit her dying husband in another district. The way a father would bend his back while digging roads for a wage that could not feed his children. The body remembers. Arthritis in the knees, a permanently curved spine, a neck that cannot straighten—these are the physical legacies of “Ndiyagodola.” ndiyagodola
The great anti-apartheid activist Steve Biko wrote about the psychological liberation that must precede political liberation. He spoke of “black consciousness” as the moment the oppressed realize that their posture of bending is not natural but imposed. Once that realization dawns, the bending becomes a choice, and a chosen bend is always stronger than a forced one. “Ndiyagodola,” then, can be a war cry: I am bending now, but I am measuring the distance to your throat. In the end, “Ndiyagodola” is not a surrender. It is a tactic. It is the bamboo that bends in the hurricane and does not snap. It is the muscle that stretches under weight and grows denser. It is the prayer whispered in a dark room when the rent is due and the child is sick and there is no one coming to help. The act of speaking—of rapping, of writing this
Yet there is also a sacred dimension. In traditional Xhosa spirituality, bowing before ancestors ( ukuthoba ) is an act of reverence, not subjugation. “Ndiyagodola” before the amadlozi means acknowledging that we are part of a chain of being, that we are not the first to suffer, and that we draw strength from those who came before. This duality is crucial: the same posture that was forced upon Black bodies by colonialism was also a posture of voluntary humility before the divine and the dead. Thus, “Ndiyagodola” becomes an act of reclamation—turning the oppressor’s weapon into a tool of spiritual survival. No one embodies “Ndiyagodola” more acutely than the Black South African woman. She bends to fetch water from a river miles away, the clay pot balanced on her head. She bends to scrub floors in white suburbs, her own children left in the care of an elderly grandmother. She bends over a coal stove to cook pap for a husband who drinks away his meager wages. She bends to birth children in a clinic where the nurse speaks Afrikaans and calls her “Kaffir.” folded arms—before singing “Wathint’ abafazi
To say “Ndiyagodola” is to speak a truth that does not seek pity. It is to name the exhaustion without being consumed by it. It is to acknowledge the knee on the neck—and to breathe anyway. For generations, Black South Africans have bent under the sun of injustice, and still they rise. Not always quickly, not always completely, but always with a memory of standing. And that memory, that stubborn, aching hope, is the straight spine inside the bending back.
Ndiyagodola, kodwa andikaweli. I am bending, but I have not fallen.
But the woman’s “Ndiyagodola” is also a quiet revolution. In the 1956 Women’s March to the Union Buildings, 20,000 women stood in silence for 30 minutes—bowed heads, folded arms—before singing “Wathint’ abafazi, wathint’ imbokodo” (You strike a woman, you strike a rock). That stillness, that bending before the storm, was “Ndiyagodola” as political strategy. It said: we have bent under your laws for decades; now we bend only to pick up the stone of liberation. One might think that with democracy in 1994, the need to bend would end. But “Ndiyagodola” has proven stubbornly persistent. Today, it describes the young graduate with a degree who bends to fill out a hundred job applications and receives no reply. It describes the father in a shack settlement who bends to tie his shoelaces before a dawn walk to a temporary construction job. It describes the grandmother bending over a grandchild who is HIV-positive, because the clinics are far and the antiretrovirals are late.