Become a Virtual Tourist Member Today!  Sign Up for Free | Sign In
Soweto General Tips
Search:
Home » Travel Guides » Africa » South Africa » Soweto » General Tips

Soweto Hotels

Real reviews from real travelers.

Soweto Tourism


Best Soweto Travel Deals

Cape Town Luxury Villas
Looking for the Cape Town Luxury Accommodation?

Kenya accommodation
Everything you need to know about safari in Kenya.

Cheapest Flights Tickets
Compare Limited Time Airfare Deals Fast And Save On Airline Tickets.

South Africa Holidays
Luxury Tailor Made Holidays to South Africa. Talk to the Experts

Accommodation Cape Town
Luxury Accommodation Cape Town 5-Star Boutique Hotel, Camps Bay

Sponsored Links

All about Soweto:

Tips and photos for Soweto vacations and tourism, posted by real travelers and Soweto locals.
Local Time 5:05 am Saturday, January 10, 2009
Soweto Map
• Soweto Hotels
Popular General Tips | Other General Tips Tips | All Tips (10)
Sort By:  Most Recent | Best Rated
My visits here
  • Tip Rating:
  • I came here a few times a child, on a church visit, plus on school outings.

    As a white girl, growing up in the suburbs, I had no knowledge of what went on in Soweto whilst growing up.

    The Nursery School staff that came into work from Soweto everyday (some staff stayed on the property), didnt say much about what went on, only that they needed their passes with them at all times.

    I didn't, as a young girl, understand the implications of all this...

    The government kept things quiet, and, as they had control over the media at the time, nothing was broadcast.

    I first visited Soweto when I went with my family to a church meeting. We knew the pastor and he had specially invited us to a service.

    We stood in the front of the church and sang a song… the only white people out of hundreds of people.

    I didn’t feel at all scared or nervous, the love and acceptance I felt from the people in Soweto was immense. They are a community in the true sense of the word.

    There are also a lot of people doing a lot of good who are trying to make better lives for themselves and others in Soweto.

    Leave a Comment

    Rate   Not Helpful  1   2   3   4   5  Very Helpful

    Visiting Soweto?

    Read reviews about Soweto Hotels

    Real Reviews from Real VirtualTourist Members.

    Vibey on weekends
  • Tip Rating:
  • Orlando West (Mandela's former house) - Soweto
    Orlando West (Mandela's former
    house)
    by cybernation
    Send Photo to a Friend
    Hector Peterson Memorial Site where the famous 1976 photogragh of a young boy being carried away dead which has been seen all accross the world ,
    Regina Mundi Church where the students uprising started in 1976,
    The house where Nelson Mandela used to live during his early days in Soweto.

    The people are always eager to share thier struggle with visitors.

    Leave a Comment

    Rate   Not Helpful  1   2   3   4   5  Very Helpful
    Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital and Nkosi*
  • Tip Rating:
  • My mum had a nursery school for over 20 years. It started out of her double garage and ended up being a 75 child/15 staff school with a large school building on the property.

    We had kids from all backgrounds and walks of life and were one of the first multi-racial schools in the area. The beauty of this was that, unlike what some people thought at the time (early 1980s), colour was never an issue, and the school flourished, as did the kids.

    This leads me to a sad story.

    It is about a little boy called Nkosi*. He was at mum's nursery school.

    He got very ill when he was 3 years old, and went to Baragwanath Hospital (now called Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital). We went to visit him and bring him some toys and love.

    The ward was clean but scant. Nurses friendly, but few and far between.

    We spent some precious time with him (he had a tumour), promising to visit him again the following weekend. He was smiling broadly at us, even amidst his pain.

    We never got to make that second visit, and my eyes well up with tears thinking about that time now. He was such a precious little boy, the apple of his mum's eye. And then he was gone.

    The hospital had done all they could do, but it was too late. We did a collection for the childrens ward after that, having seen how few toys and equipment they had. Loads of love but stretched means.

    They do wonderful work here, with a seemingly un-ending and non-winning task. There is so much help needed. It is one of the, if not the biggest and busiest hospital in the southern hemisphere, with some fine surgeons.

    This hospital was actually built for British troops, back in May 1942. It is a very large hospital, with nearly 3,000 beds, over 400 buildings, covering a total area of 173 acres.

    *Nkosi is not his real name.

    This photo is my little reminder of him :)

    Leave a Comment

    Rate   Not Helpful  1   2   3   4   5  Very Helpful
    Bishop Tutu Buthelezi
  • Tip Rating:
  • Wax Model at Madame Tussauds - Soweto
    Wax Model at Madame
    Tussauds
    by Jenniflower
    Send Photo to a Friend
    Since 1994 South Africa has gone through a tremendous reconciliation process with the official end of apartheid.

    Tutu Buthelezi, a Bishop from Cape Town has been instrumental in bringing about reconciliation by forming a Truth and Reconciliation Committee.

    This committee was set up as a specific place where people who had done criminal things for political reasons could come and air their hearts, tell what they had done, and ask for forgiveness.

    This may sound inconceivable to many - but it worked!!!!

    Thousands of people came asking for forgiveness from the families of their victims, many a tear was shed, but everyone concerned found a relative peace within.

    A sense of closure.

    Many of the people hurt during the apartheid era were in Soweto, so this truth and reconciliation process had significant meaning within this community.

    This is yet another reason why I am so proud to be South African. VIVA!!!!! :)


    ~ Reconciliation ~

    'For true reconciliation is a deeply
    personal matter. It can happen
    only between persons who assert
    their own personhood and who
    acknowledge and respect that of
    others.'

    - Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu

    Leave a Comment

    Rate   Not Helpful  1   2   3   4   5  Very Helpful
    Nelson Mandela ~ who is he?
  • Tip Rating:
  • He was born in the Transkei on 18 July, 1918. His first name, 'Rolihlahla' is interpreted as 'troublemaker'.

    The Nelson was added later, by a primary school teacher of his... Mandela's boyhood was peaceful until the death of his father landed him in the care of a powerful relative.

    He became involved in student protests against white colonial rule at the institution at Fort Hare, and this set him out on the long walk toward personal and national liberation.

    Having run away from his guardian to avoid an arranged marriage, he joined a law firm in Johannesburg as an apprentice.

    Years of daily exposure to the inhumanities of apartheid, where being black reduced one to the status of a 'non-person', a 'nothing' in some people's eyes, kindled in him a kind of absurd and willful courage to change the world...

    And he did :) He is a much loved and revered person in South Africa, and the world. His is a hand of friendship and love, healing and productivity.

    This painting hangs on the wall in his old home in Soweto.

    Leave a Comment

    Rate   Not Helpful  1   2   3   4   5  Very Helpful

    Visiting Soweto?

    Read reviews about Soweto Hotels

    Real Reviews from Real VirtualTourist Members.

    Youth Day ~ 16 June
  • Tip Rating:
  • On this date, in 1976, Soweto students protested against the official introduction of studying Afrikaans as a set curriculum subject.

    They would have no choice whether to study it or not...

    This language was seen as the language of the apartheid era as the leaders at the time were Afrikaans, and so there was a very anti-Afrikaans feeling within the black community.

    To have to suddenly HAVE to learn this at school was outrageous to them and so they protested. Theirs was a battle against the authorities and lives were lost.

    Hence the remembrance of these brave students.

    This photo is the well-known photo of Hector Pietersen and his sister Antoinette, Hector being carried by Mbuyisa Makhubo. He was killed in this protest :(

    Leave a Comment

    Rate   Not Helpful  1   2   3   4   5  Very Helpful
    A South African Ghost Story
  • Tip Rating:
  • This true story happened in Soweto.

    A man was hitchiking on a very dark night in the middle of a storm. The night was rolling by and there was hardly a car on the road.

    The storm was so strong that he could hardly see his feet in front of him. Suddenly a car came towards him and stopped. Without thinking, he got in and closed the door, only to realise that there was nobody behind the wheel.

    The car moved off slowly. He looked ahead and saw a curve in the road. Scared he started praying, begging for his life. He was terrified. Just before hitting the curve a hand appeared through the window and turned the steering wheel. The man, now paralyzed with fear, watched how the hand kept appearing everytime they got to a curve.

    Gathering all his courage, he jumped out and ran to the nearest lights he could see. Wet and in shock, he went into a bar and asked for a double brandy. After drinking it, he told everyone of the horrible experience he had just had. Everyone was silent when they realised that the man was crying.

    About half an hour later, two men came walking into the shebeen and, on seeing the terrified man, the one said to the other, " Mfowetu, isn't that the idiot who got into the car while we were pushing...?"

    Leave a Comment

    Rate   Not Helpful  1   2   3   4   5  Very Helpful
    Tours?
  • Tip Rating:
  • I would personally never do an actual tour here (would rather be with a local friend), but they are popular and if you don’t know a local to show you around, I would recommend it.

    They take you to local sparzas (informal shops), and shebeens (bars), restaurants and some sights.

    The sights are commercialised and a ‘Soweto experience’ will not be totally accurate with all the comforts that come with a tour, but it’ll probably be the closest you will get to experiencing something of this fascinating place.

    The tours also bring much needed revenue to the area.

    Leave a Comment

    Rate   Not Helpful  1   2   3   4   5  Very Helpful
    Redevelopment
  • Tip Rating:
  • There has been much redevelopment in Soweto.

    There are still squatter homes, which are basically corrugated tin dwellings. No windows. Roofs have heavy rocks to keep it on when the wind blows.

    There is electricity and fresh water now available to the community. Long overdue but there now thankfully.

    There is still much to do, millions of people needing aid takes a while, but I think the government has, since 1994, made huge strides in helping the people’s lifestyles here.

    There are also very nice looking homes in Soweto. You get the poorest of the poor living here, as well as some very wealthy people in other areas within Soweto.

    Leave a Comment

    Rate   Not Helpful  1   2   3   4   5  Very Helpful
    Vibey on weekends
    Hector Peterson Memorial Site where the famous 1976 photogragh of a young boy being carried away dead which has been seen all accross the world ,
    Regina Mundi Church where the students uprising started in 1976,
    The house where Nelson Mandela used to live during his early days in Soweto.

    The people are always eager to share thier struggle with visitors.

    Leave a Comment

    Rate   Not Helpful  1   2   3   4   5  Very Helpful
    More Soweto Tips
    Overview
     
    General Tips
    Tips: 10 - Photos: 12
    Restaurants
    Tips: 4 - Photos: 8
    Hotels and Accommodations
    Tips: 2 - Photos: 2
    Things To Do
    Tips: 10 - Photos: 19
    Nightlife
    Tips: 1 - Photos: 2
    Off the Beaten Path
    Tips: 6 - Photos: 10
    Tourist Traps
    Tips: 1 - Photos: 3
    Warnings or Dangers
    Tips: 3 - Photos: 3
    Transportation
    Tips: 5 - Photos: 4
    Local Customs
    Tips: 1 - Photos: 4
    Packing Lists
    Tips: 1 - Photos: 0
    Shopping
    Tips: 2 - Photos: 2
    Sports Travel
    » Add a tip now




    Destinations near Soweto

    » See all locations nearby
    » Popular South Africa locations


    Find:        Matching:  Advanced