Ron Smith Care
Centre resident Josephine Kew celebrated her 90th birthday on 5
September, with her sons Gabriel and Nicholas.
Born in
Johannesburg in 1931, Josephine refers to herself as ‘South African Chinese’. “My
father was from China and my mother from Mozambique – my home language is
Cantonese,” she says.
The oldest of
four children, Josephine comes from a very close and loving family.
“We lived and
grew up in Sophiatown and this was one of the happiest times of my life. I
attended a Chinese School, as we grew up in the difficult time of apartheid
where people of colour, including the Chinese, were not permitted to attend
European schools,” says Josephine.
“Nevertheless,
my school days and young adult life in Sophiatown were very happy and active.
People of mixed races mingled freely and were good to each other, and my
friends and I belonged to many social clubs where we would all go out dancing and
enjoying the music of the times. We also played tennis and softball and just
enjoyed each other’s company,” she adds.
Josephine met her
husband Leslie through friends and were married for 57 years, until his death
in 2015.
“He was a
professional photographer and we also ran a general dealership together. He was
very much loved and respected in our family and in the community in which we
lived and worked. I miss him very much,” says Josephine.
One of Josephine’s
simple pleasures in life is to laugh, make jokes and find the funny side of
things. “Jackie Chan movies usually make me laugh!”
In her more
active days, Josephine loved to go dancing and help her husband with the
gardening. “We planted all kinds of herbs and Chinese vegetables. I also
enjoyed knitting, reading, exercising and arts and crafts.”
Her motto is: “Be
good and kind to everyone, whether they are rich or poor, beautiful or ugly! Do
not gossip or speak ill of anyone.”
This story has also been published on Rand Aid's website.
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