Lesego Foundation

Lesego Foundation A non-profit organisation on a mission to eradicate poverty and illiteracy in South Africa.

We believe in Ubuntu and believe the ability to read and write can transform a life, community and country.

๐™Ž๐™š๐™ญ๐™ช๐™–๐™ก ๐˜ฟ๐™ž๐™จ๐™˜๐™ž๐™ฅ๐™ก๐™ž๐™ฃ๐™š ๐™ž๐™จ ๐™– ๐™ˆ๐™–๐™ฃ'๐™จ ๐™‹๐™ง๐™ค๐™ฉ๐™š๐™˜๐™ฉ๐™ž๐™ค๐™ฃBrothers, hear this clearly: being s*xually disciplined is not about denying your...
08/05/2026

๐™Ž๐™š๐™ญ๐™ช๐™–๐™ก ๐˜ฟ๐™ž๐™จ๐™˜๐™ž๐™ฅ๐™ก๐™ž๐™ฃ๐™š ๐™ž๐™จ ๐™– ๐™ˆ๐™–๐™ฃ'๐™จ ๐™‹๐™ง๐™ค๐™ฉ๐™š๐™˜๐™ฉ๐™ž๐™ค๐™ฃ

Brothers, hear this clearly: being s*xually disciplined is not about denying yourself pleasure, but it is about protecting your life, your freedom, and your future.

Modern society has trained women to weaponize s*x against men. Some will use it to trap you, exploit you, or even destroy you. We've seen cases like Mavuso, where a man has consensual s*x, and afterwards the woman demands money. If he refuses, she threatens him with a r**e accusation. That is not an accident. That is strategy.

But this is only the surface. The deeper danger lies in how relationships have shifted. Once upon a time, love was the foundation. Today, most relationships are built on money. And in a money-based relationship, the woman benefits far more than the man. That's why women now "hunt" men more than men hunt women. Cheating, manipulation, and targeting men are financially beneficial for them.

Here's the truth many brothers miss: you are not always the hunter. Often, you are the prey. That "club girl" you thought you convinced to come home with you? In reality, she had already planned the ending before the night even started. She knew what she wanted, and it wasn't love.

The danger is not only with older women. Even young girls are learning the same game from their mothers. Some target older men for money, others for experience, others simply because they find older men attractive. But regardless of the reason, the trap is the same. And if you are not disciplined, you will fall into it.

That is why discipline is everything. Discipline allows you to see through the game. Discipline makes you strong enough to say "no" even when temptation is right in front of you. Discipline protects you from walking into a trap that could cost you your freedom, your reputation, or even your life.

What you call "getting lucky" might be a trap that will ruin your life. Do not think when a woman makes it easy is a blessing. Most times, it's a setup. It's bait. It is the devil waiting to destroy you.

My brother, be s*xually disciplined, and you have already defeated half the battles of life. A man who masters his desires has already conquered many demons.

A Black person can never be truly successful inside a system built, owned, and defined by whiteness.What many of us cele...
08/05/2026

A Black person can never be truly successful inside a system built, owned, and defined by whiteness.

What many of us celebrate as "success" is often just survival with better furniture. A bigger salary, a luxury car, a seat at the table, but still eating from another man's plate, living by another man's rules, and depending on another man's approval.

That is not power. And it is not freedom.

Every people in history defined success for themselves. Their own values. Their own identity. Their own future. But Black people are constantly taught to measure themselves using standards created outside of themselves, then call it progress.

The success of whiteness and the success of Blackness cannot be identical. Because when one people's worldview becomes universal, every other identity is forced to dissolve into it. And a people who disappear cannot call themselves successful, because they no longer exist as themselves.

You cannot build liberation using the blueprint of your dependency.

A boat can never sail while still tied to the anchor. In the same way, no Black man or woman can claim true success while mentally, economically, and culturally chained to a system designed by another race.

Real success begins the moment we define ourselves, build for ourselves, and create a world rooted in our own vision instead of trying to win inside somebody else's.

And that is why men like Ramaphosa will never end corruption. Because corruption is not a glitch in the system, it is the natural behaviour of leaders who are rewarded for protecting the system instead of transforming it. They do not break the chains. They manage them.

Investigative journalism is dead.Buried under corporate funding, political influence, and media houses owned by the same...
08/05/2026

Investigative journalism is dead.

Buried under corporate funding, political influence, and media houses owned by the same elites they pretend to hold accountable.

What we call "news" today is mostly narrative management.

They don't investigate power. They negotiate with it.

They selectively outrage the public. They amplify stories that benefit their sponsors. They suppress stories that expose the real architects of society's problems.

The media has become a psychological operation on the masses.

Every headline is crafted to shape perception. Every debate is designed to keep people emotionally distracted. Every scandal is carefully rationed to maintain the illusion of accountability.

And the public keeps confusing information with truth.

Real investigative journalism would expose the banking cartels, corporate monopolies, political puppets, intelligence networks, and the economic systems keeping millions trapped in survival mode.

But instead, we get endless celebrity drama, manufactured outrage, and political theatre.

The modern media doesn't exist to awaken society.

It exists to manage public consciousness.

A population that cannot tell the difference between journalism and propaganda becomes easy to divide, easy to control, and easy to exploit.

More Money Won't Save You.We've been sold a dangerous illusion: that happiness is always one upgrade away. One bigger sa...
08/05/2026

More Money Won't Save You.

We've been sold a dangerous illusion: that happiness is always one upgrade away. One bigger salary. One luxury car. One expensive house. One more achievement.

But have you noticed something?

The excitement never lasts.

That dream car eventually becomes just transportation. The new phone becomes old within months. The high-paying job that once felt life-changing becomes stressful and ordinary. And the lifestyle you once prayed for becomes your new baseline.

This is called the ๐—›๐—ฒ๐—ฑ๐—ผ๐—ป๐—ถ๐—ฐ ๐—ง๐—ฟ๐—ฒ๐—ฎ๐—ฑ๐—บ๐—ถ๐—น๐—น.

The hedonic treadmill is the psychological cycle where people constantly chase pleasure, success, and material possessions, only to emotionally adapt to them very quickly. No matter how much you gain, your mind resets and starts craving the next thing. More money. More status. More validation.

Like a treadmill, you keep runningโ€ฆ but never truly arrive.

That's why some of the richest people are deeply unhappy. Because fulfillment cannot be purchased. External things can stimulate you, but they cannot complete you.

Real happiness comes from things that don't lose value: Purpose. Meaning. Strong relationships. Inner peace. Community. Legacy.

If your self-worth depends on possessions, then your peace will always depend on what you can buy next. And that is a form of slavery modern society has normalized.

Step off the treadmill.

Invest in your mind. Invest in your people. Invest in becoming someone meaningful, not just someone successful.

Because one day the money may slow down. The applause will fade. The beauty will age. The trends will change.

And when all the external things disappearโ€ฆ

Who will you be without them?

There are people who used to criticise Dudula when Nhlanhla Lux was leading itโ€ฆ but suddenly joined when Zandile took ov...
07/05/2026

There are people who used to criticise Dudula when Nhlanhla Lux was leading itโ€ฆ but suddenly joined when Zandile took over.

Then there are those who criticised Dudula under both Nhlanhla Lux and Zandile, calling it dangerous, xenophobic, divisive, but now that the same anti-immigrant rhetoric is being pushed by their brothers and sisters in KZN, suddenly it's "patriotism."

So the principle changes depending on who is speaking? Depending on the province? Depending on the tribe? Depending on whose hands are carrying the same message?

That tells us something important: For many people, this was never about morality, law, or solutions. It was about identity politics and emotional allegiance.

A dangerous thing is still dangerous even when spoken in your mother tongue. And propaganda doesn't become wisdom just because it comes from people you culturally identify with.

Some of us are watching this inconsistency carefully.

Because not all of us are from KZN. Not all of us are tribalists. And not all of us are willing to abandon principle every time the political wind changes direction.

And the irony is almost poetic now: Even Nhlanhla Lux is criticising the anti-foreigners movement he helped ignite.

That should tell you something.

When the creator of the fire starts warning people about the flames, maybe it's time to realise this thing has gone far beyond "patriotism."

If we are going to have serious conversations about immigration, crime, borders, labour, and the economy, then let's do it honestly.

But once you start changing your moral position depending on who is speaking, you are no longer defending principles.

You are defending your side.

The immigration narrative in South Africa has become dangerously confused.First the conversation was about "documented a...
07/05/2026

The immigration narrative in South Africa has become dangerously confused.

First the conversation was about "documented and undocumented immigrants." Then it became "foreigners." Now it's "illegal immigrants."

Three completely different categories. Three completely different realities.

That confusion is not harmless. It is politically dangerous.

A criminal is not the same as a foreigner. An undocumented person is not automatically a criminal. And a Pan-Africanist is not someone who supports lawlessness.

But now, because everything is being lumped together, if you believe Africans should unite, you can suddenly be accused of "supporting criminals." That is dangerous thinking. It shows a society that no longer knows how to identify its real enemy.

This is what happens when emotions replace clarity.

If these anti-immigration movements are truly patriotic, then be consistent: Fight criminals regardless of race or nationality.

Because it's not only one race selling drugs in South Africa. It's not only one nationality trafficking women and children. It's not only foreigners involved in corruption, hijacked buildings, syndicates, or exploitation.

So why not organize around crime itself?

Help the police expose drug networks. Help border patrols secure borders. March against traffickers. March against corrupt officials who protect syndicates. March against anyone destroying communities, regardless of where they come from.

That is patriotism.

And maybe then many of us would join, because there would finally be clarity and direction.

But this current confusion? This emotional mixing of "criminal," "foreigner," "African," and "illegal immigrant" into one category is reckless.

History has shown many times that when societies lose the ability to distinguish between a criminal and an identity group, innocent people eventually suffer.

A nation cannot heal itself through confusion. It can only heal through truth, precision, and justice.

Scarcity creates value.That's why gold is valuable. That's why rare art is protected. That's why currencies collapse whe...
07/05/2026

Scarcity creates value.

That's why gold is valuable. That's why rare art is protected. That's why currencies collapse when governments print too much money.

The more something is endlessly available, the less people value it.

The same principle applies to human behaviour.

When a woman constantly exposes her body for public consumption, she may capture attention for a moment, but attention is not the same as respect. Excitement fades. Mystery disappears. Dignity erodes. What becomes common eventually becomes cheap in the eyes of society.

A currency loses value when it is overprinted. A person loses value when they overexpose themselves to a culture addicted to consumption.

Not everything valuable should be accessible to everyone. Some things gain power through restraint, discipline, and scarcity.

In a world that profits from overexposure, preserving your dignity becomes an act of intelligence.

We live in a society obsessed with treating symptoms while ignoring the root cause.Imagine a village drinking water from...
07/05/2026

We live in a society obsessed with treating symptoms while ignoring the root cause.

Imagine a village drinking water from a river. One day, people start getting sick. The water is contaminated.

Now imagine trying to clean the water only at the point where people drink it, while the source of the contamination upstream remains untouched.

That would be a pointless exercise.

Because the real solution is not where the sickness appears. The real solution is where the contamination begins.

That is exactly how society operates today.
Most people only react to visible problems, because they cannot see where those problems originate. They fight effects while remaining blind to causes.

In South Africa, every frustration is now being dumped onto "illegal immigrants."Crime? Illegal immigrants. Unemployment? Illegal immigrants. Poverty? Illegal immigrants. Collapsed services? Illegal immigrants.

But that is not analysis. That is emotional convenience.
Illegal immigration is a symptom of a much deeper structural failure: a broken economy, weak leadership, corruption, collapsing institutions, unequal land ownership, dependency, and a system that no longer serves ordinary people.

People are trying to clean dirty water downstream while refusing to confront who poisoned the river upstream.

That is why we will "March and March until we die" without solving anything.

Because anger without understanding becomes performance. And noise without root-cause analysis changes nothing.

The world is watching missiles and headlines in Iranโ€ฆBut the real battlefield right now is water.The Strait of Hormuz.A ...
06/05/2026

The world is watching missiles and headlines in Iranโ€ฆ
But the real battlefield right now is water.

The Strait of Hormuz.

A narrow passageโ€ฆ carrying a massive portion of the world's oil.
When tension rises there, it doesn't stay there.

It travels.

It shows up in your life quietly:
At the petrol station.
At the grocery store.
In the cost of simply existing.

In South Africa, food prices have already jumped, twice in just one month.
Petrol has gone up again.
And when fuel rises, everything follows.

Transport costs rise, food costs rise, survival becomes expensive.

In the United States, it's the same story.
Energy prices spike. Inflation pressure builds.
The average person pays for a war they will never fight.

This is how power works in the modern world.
Not just through bulletsโ€ฆ but through supply chains.

The Strait of Hormuz is not just a location.
It is a pressure point of the global system.

And right now, that system is cracking.

This war is not just about territory or politics.
It is exposing something deeper:

How fragile the global economy really is.
How dependent nations are on routes they don't control.
How quickly "stability" turns into chaos.

For years, we were told this system was strong.
That globalization made the world efficient and secure.

But now?

One conflictโ€ฆ one choke pointโ€ฆ
And the cost of living starts choking entire populations.

What we are witnessing is not just a war.
It is a stress test of the old system.

And the truth is becoming clear:

That system is reaching its limits.

Everything is being rewritten.
Energy. Trade. Power. Alliances. Survival itself.

The question is no longer whether change is coming.

The question is:

Who is prepared for the world that comes after?

There are two mindsets competing for the future.One says: ๐—จ๐—ป๐—ถ๐˜๐—ฒ.The other says: ๐——๐—ถ๐˜ƒ๐—ถ๐—ฑ๐—ฒ.The mindset of unity expands the ...
06/05/2026

There are two mindsets competing for the future.

One says: ๐—จ๐—ป๐—ถ๐˜๐—ฒ.
The other says: ๐——๐—ถ๐˜ƒ๐—ถ๐—ฑ๐—ฒ.

The mindset of unity expands the circle.

It understands that development is built on cooperation at scale. The larger the circle, the greater the exchange of ideas, skills, capital, and opportunity. It sees Africa as a system that must integrate, not just politically, but economically and psychologically. Because no fragmented region has ever sustained power for long.

Unity asks bigger questions:
How do we move beyond borders that limit trade?
How do we outgrow identities that divide us?
How do we build toward a world where humanity itself becomes the primary identity?

It knows that growth is an outcome of integration.
More connection, capacity, and more development.

Unity compounds.

The mindset of division contracts the circle.

It sees difference as a threat and separation as protection. It promises order through exclusion, "cut this off," "keep them out," "protect what's ours." But it ignores a fundamental reality: once you justify division, you cannot control where it ends.

Because contraction is contagious.

Today it's "South Africa vs Africa."
Tomorrow it's province vs province.
Then tribe vs tribe.
Eventually, neighbour vs neighbour.

Each contraction reduces trust. Each reduction in trust weakens cooperation. And without cooperation at scale, economies shrink, institutions fail, and competition turns hostile.

Less connection, less capacity, and underdevelopment.

Division compounds too, but in reverse.

It doesn't stabilise systems; it fractures them.
It doesn't create security; it multiplies conflict.
It doesn't build prosperity; it limits it.

So the contrast is clear.

Unity is expansion, and expansion creates growth, resilience, and development.

Division is contraction, and contraction produces stagnation, instability, and eventually chaos.

So the real question is not about borders or immigration or politics.

It is about direction.

Are we expanding into a broader human identity, or retreating into smaller, fearful categories?

One path builds the future.
The other slowly cages us all.

The future will be shaped by which mindset we choose to follow.

Address

300a Crutse Street
Jabavu

Opening Hours

Monday 08:00 - 17:00
Tuesday 08:00 - 17:00
Wednesday 08:00 - 17:00
Thursday 08:00 - 17:00
Friday 08:00 - 17:00
Saturday 08:00 - 03:00

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