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Rainbow Nation Worship| Bona Magazine

Posted on September 10, 2025
35

Some days, it’s the simplest gestures that tug hardest at the heart. On 9 September 2025, a TikTok clip emerged that did just that, a white man singing a beloved gospel hymn, years after its church debut, entirely in isiZulu. And Mzansi didn’t just see it: Mzansi felt it.

In under 24 hours, the clip shared by @dieketsengmosia34, picked up over 3,700 likes and hundreds of comments. The reason? He sang “Uzugcin’impilo Yam”, a gospel piece by Bucy Radebe that has resonated in congregations since 2020. But more than the tune, it was his heartfelt delivery, every syllable delivered with care, as if he’d grown up speaking them, that stirred something deep within viewers.

A Cultural Embrace in Every Note

This wasn’t grand and choreographed—it was real. Viewers felt the emotion pouring through his performance: worship that didn’t recognize race or background, only a shared devotion. It’s precisely what the term “Rainbow Nation” stands for—the idea of unity through diversity, not just a political slogan but a living experience.

When Social Media Becomes Heart String

South Africans couldn’t help but respond:

  • “God is God. He sees no colours…” insisted one commenter, encapsulating the moment’s spiritual weight.

  • Another put it simply yet powerfully: “South African, no DNA needed.”

These reactions weren’t shallow applause, they were heartfelt affirmations that deep down, our faith, our language, and our culture are threads that bind us tighter than what might separate us.

@dieketsengmosia34

♬ original sound – dieketsengmosia34

Missing Pieces And Why This Matters

What Briefly didn’t mention is the song’s origin in church life, how “Uzugcin’impilo Yam” has been carried for years by choirs and soloists alike, part of the tapestry of worship across denominations. And there’s the broader story: this moment came at a time when many feel the “Rainbow Nation” ideal has frayed amid social unrest and inequality.

Yet here’s the fresh angle: worship isn’t choreographed reconciliation, it’s lived reconciliation. When someone outside your language and culture sings your sacred song with authenticity, that’s where healing begins.

More Than a Viral Video

This isn’t just clickbait, it’s a gentle reminder: our nation’s beauty lives in these small acts. The rainbow doesn’t demand that all colours look the same; it asks that together, they shine.

{Source: Briefly}

Featured Image: Briefly

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