Sotho Hymn 63 -

Mofokeng closed his eyes. He searched the cavern of his memory. Nothing. No Latin from the old mass. No Sesotho chorus. Just the howl of the wind and the ticking of the church’s broken clock. He felt a deep, cold shame.

The winter wind over the Maluti Mountains didn’t just blow; it remembered . It remembered the old wars, the cattle raids, and the quiet faith of grandmothers who sang while grinding maize. On this particular night, it howled around the tin roof of the St. Theresa’s mission church in the village of Ha-Tšiu, rattling the loose corrugated iron like a warning. sotho hymn 63

“No.” Mofokeng’s fist struck his own chest, a soft, hollow thump. “Not a trick. A theft. When my firstborn, Thabo, died in the mines at Welkom, I did not weep. I sang Hymn 63. When the drought ate our cattle and the children cried with hunger, I whispered Hymn 63 into the dirt. That song is my umbilical cord to my mother, who is thirty years dead. If the song is gone… then I am a stranger to myself.” Mofokeng closed his eyes

“I will go home now,” he said. “The wind is kind tonight.” No Latin from the old mass

Inside, sixty-year-old Ntate Mofokeng knelt before the altar. He wasn’t praying. He was waiting.

And in that cough, Mofokeng heard something. Not a melody. A rhythm. The rhythm of his mother’s grinding stone. The rhythm of his own feet walking to the mines. The rhythm of a coffin lowered into red soil.

Father Michael sighed, lighting a single candle. “Then why are you here?”