Learn How To Make Money From Home Using Your Smartphone In 2025
By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
AfricaNews360AfricaNews360
  • Politics
    PoliticsShow More
    Ghanaian Court annuls 2024 Parliamentary Election over irregularities
    November 24, 2025
    The future is African – Ghana President declares at UN Assembly
    September 26, 2025
    Burkina Faso to ‘street honour’ late Ghanaian President Jerry John Rawlings
    May 19, 2025
    Burkina Faso honours late president Thomas Sankara with memorial park
    May 19, 2025
    Nigeria Presidency refutes Catholic leaders’ criticism of economic hardship
    March 11, 2025
  • Business
    BusinessShow More
    President Donald Trump, left, and Chinese President Xi Jinping, right, pose for photo before their US-China summit at Gimhae international airport in Busan, South Korea, on October 30, 2025 [Mark Schiefelbein/AP Photo]
    Trump says China’s Xi Jinping agreed to accelerate purchases of US goods
    November 26, 2025
    Ghana, Dalian deepen bilateral ties to boost education, culture and trade
    November 13, 2025
    Ghana secures additional $28m grant from China for infrastructure projects
    October 17, 2025
    Ghana’s President Mahama seeks investment partnerships during Singapore visit
    August 25, 2025
    Ghana’s Tourism Minister commends Emirates at grand opening of Travel Store
    May 15, 2025
  • Showbiz
    ShowbizShow More
    Davido releases ’10 Kilo’ Music Video
    August 13, 2025
    Nigerian Star Davido’s Foundation supports 500 orphanages in annual Charity drive
    February 13, 2025
    Nigerian president Tinubu celebrates Nollywood icon Nkem Owoh ‘Osuofia’ at 70
    February 8, 2025
    Burkina Faso’s Bissa music sensation Eunice Goula drops new Banger ‘Mariage’
    September 25, 2024
    Kenya’s president hosts national music festival
    August 16, 2024
  • Sports
    SportsShow More
    South Africa name 24-man squad for AFCON 2025
    December 7, 2025
    Ghana’s Black Queens fall to England’s Lionesses by 2-0 in historic friendly encounter
    December 3, 2025
    African Paralympic Committee President Samson Deen urges leaders to make Para Sports a continental priority
    November 28, 2025
    CAF appoints Match Officials for TotalEnergies CAF Africa Cup of Nations Morocco 2025
    November 27, 2025
    Ghana’s Gov’t unveils 11-member team to drive Black Stars’ 2026 World Cup campaign
    November 26, 2025
  • Biographies
    BiographiesShow More
    Michael Gallup Bio, Age, Net Worth, Height, Parents, Siblings, Wife, Children
    July 25, 2024
  • Columns
    ColumnsShow More
    Ghana Government does not subsidize Hajj Pilgrims: Debunking the myth with facts
    March 7, 2025
    Full Speech: South African president’s address at first G20 Foreign Ministers’ meeting 2025
    February 22, 2025
    Ing. Abdullah Mohammed Billey: The Ghanaian road expert victimised for political reasons by the ousted Government
    February 3, 2025
    Ghana President Mahama’s speech at Africa Prosperity Dialogues 2025
    February 2, 2025
    An American opinion on the impending NDC Government structure
    December 17, 2024
  • Travel
    TravelShow More
    Ghana’s Tourism Minister commends Emirates at grand opening of Travel Store
    May 15, 2025
    Thousands of Ethiopian diaspora heed PM’s call to ‘come home’
    May 2, 2024
    Malawi and Ghana sign visa waiver agreement to enhance bilateral ties
    March 21, 2024
    Ghana signs visa waiver agreement with Bahamas
    February 22, 2024
    Malawi scrapes visa restrictions for 79 countries
    February 9, 2024
  • Editorial
    EditorialShow More
    FEATURE: Kigali City- A glittering jewel of Africa
    September 2, 2023
    All eyes on INEC as Nigeria decides
    February 26, 2023
    Feed Africa Summit: Continent Plans to Achieve Zero Hunger by 2030
    January 25, 2023
    Africa must speak with one voice at COP27
    November 8, 2022
    Nigerian headteacher sentenced to death after pupil’s murder
    July 28, 2022
  • World
    WorldShow More
    President Donald Trump, left, and Chinese President Xi Jinping, right, pose for photo before their US-China summit at Gimhae international airport in Busan, South Korea, on October 30, 2025 [Mark Schiefelbein/AP Photo]
    Trump says China’s Xi Jinping agreed to accelerate purchases of US goods
    November 26, 2025
    Robert Prevost
    American prelate Robert Prevost elected New Pope
    May 9, 2025
    Rwanda cuts diplomatic ties with Belgium amid Congo conflict tensions
    March 17, 2025
    ICC issues arrest warrants for Israel’s Benjamin Netanyahu, Ibrahim Al-Masri
    November 21, 2024
    Voting underway in US as Donald Trump faces Kamala Harris for presidency
    November 5, 2024
Reading: South Africa’s ‘black mermaid’ on Disney, diversity and reclaiming the ocean for children of colour
Share
Notification Show More
Latest News
South Africa name 24-man squad for AFCON 2025
December 7, 2025
Benin’s President Talon declares situation ‘totally under control’ after coup attempt
December 7, 2025
Benin foils military coup attempt
December 7, 2025
Ghana faces England, Croatia and Panama in challenging World Cup group
December 5, 2025
Ghana’s Black Queens fall to England’s Lionesses by 2-0 in historic friendly encounter
December 3, 2025
Aa
AfricaNews360AfricaNews360
Aa
  • Technology
  • Science
  • Education
  • Health
Search
  • Topics
    • Business
    • Columns
    • Gossip
    • News
    • Politics
    • Showbiz
    • Fashion
    • Climate
    • World
    • Videos
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
AfricaNews360 > Sports > Swimming > South Africa’s ‘black mermaid’ on Disney, diversity and reclaiming the ocean for children of colour
ColumnsSwimming

South Africa’s ‘black mermaid’ on Disney, diversity and reclaiming the ocean for children of colour

Zandile Ndhlovu, the country’s first black female freediving instructor, is on a mission to change long-held attitudes and teach young people to feel at home in the sea

Posted Africanews360 December 5, 2022 8 Min Read
Updated 2022/12/05 at 9:14 AM
Zandile Ndhlovu, South Africa’s first black female freediving instructor, is changing perceptions of the ocean. Photograph: Zander Botha/Courtesy of Black Mermaid Foundation
SHARE


On the dive boats no one else looked like her. “People would say ‘are you really going to dive with all that hair?’ It’s funny until it’s not, sitting in that space and being very ‘other’,” says Zandile Ndhlovu, South Africa’s first black female freediving instructor.

“Even the wetsuits, they were not designed for a black woman. It fits your hips so you wear it, but the water is gushing in everywhere else. So all these challenges can’t help but remind you that you are the only one,” she says.

Now the 34-year-old – who was called the black mermaid at home long before the Disney live action remake of the Little Mermaid elated her by casting black actor Halle Bailey – has taken on the role of bringing more children into the water.

Born in Soweto, Johannesburg, Ndhlovu grew up far from the coast, and like many children in South Africa, was raised on tales of why she should never go near deep water.

Ndhlovu first saw the ocean when she went to visit family in the Eastern Cape, aged about 12. “That was the first time seeing wild, gushing waters, but everyone, black people, would say ‘why are you trying to kill yourself?’ if you went as much as up to your knees in water.”

Zandile Ndhlovu, South Africa’s first black women freediving instructor.
Zandile Ndhlovu says she grew up being encouraged to stay away from the sea. Photograph: Zander Botha/Courtesy of Black Mermaid Foundation

“Then I went snorkelling when I was on a trip to Bali in 2016. I was 28, and had never seen anything that looked so beautiful. All these weird and wonderful animals coexisting at the bottom of the ocean, while on land the world is so banded, in identity, race, gender.”

RECOMMENDED FOR YOU  South Africa: Mother Arrested Over Murder of Four Children Eastern Cape

Despite a string of Olympic swimmers and about 2,800km (1,739 miles) of stunning coastline, just 15% of South Africans can swim – and most of those are white. During apartheid, white children would play in the private pools that remain a fixture of middle-class suburban homes, while few black children would even have seen a public swimming pool.

With up to four people drowning every day in South Africa’s lakes, dams, oceans and private pools, almost all of them black, that legacy remains.

How do we unbox the water from only being a white people’s space? I wanted to change the narrative

Zandi Ndhlovu

Drowning is a hugely neglected public health risk in low-income and middle-income countries, especially across Africa, where the rates are high, opportunities to learn to swim are low and folk tales about the destructive power of the waves prevail. Racial disparity in swimming is prevalent across the world; in the US, for example, 64% of African American children cannot swim compared with 40% of white children.

There have been a few cases – before Disney – of cinema pushing back against the stereotypes, from the beautifully shot swimming lesson in 2017’s Oscar-winning Moonlight to the underwater scenes of box office smash Black Panther: Wakanda Forever. Ndhlovu has her own documentary out on WaterBear, a free streaming platform, and her foundation, the Black Mermaid, focuses on bringing about change.

RECOMMENDED FOR YOU  Nigeria’s university system needs radical reform: student loans for more than 100 million people might be a good place to start
Ndhlovu diving underwater
Ndhlovu has set up a foundation to encourage more people into the ocean. Photograph: Zander Botha/Courtesy of Black Mermaid Foundation

“In South Africa, black people are displaced from the ocean, it is a haunted place, and its history wraps around this narrative firmly, a place of the transatlantic slave trade.

“So how do we unbox the water from only being a white people’s space?” she says. “For me, I need to be in the ocean, it is where I feel peace. In 2020, I qualified as a freedive instructor. I wanted to change the narrative around black people in water that was being thrown around so recklessly.

“And people have held on to that narrative, everybody absorbs it and it is where we find ourselves around water, today. My own grandmother would say ‘you shouldn’t be there. The ocean is not a place to play.’ Black people say to me all the time ‘why are you doing white things?’ My family was freaked out,” she says.

“I started the foundation to challenge all that, to actively take part in hard conversations about the status quo, and what it would take to diversify the ocean. I might have to take 500 kids snorkelling to get one kid passionate, but it is worth it. Now, we are building in swimming lessons. So very many kids can’t swim.”

The environmental degradation of the ocean is something that concerns Ndhlovu greatly and she believes that connecting children with the underwater world helps raise their awareness.

RECOMMENDED FOR YOU  Opinion: Africans can lead the future, but first, we must rewrite our narratives

“You see the corals bleaching,” she says. “You are seeing a lot of plastic pollution and this aspect is important for the kids to see. These worlds colliding.”

Change often occurs in tiny, gradual steps, she says. “I see the parents in shock, they say, ‘Never in my life did I think to see my kids under the ocean.’ It’s a generational thing but it gives them pride and equal status because being in the ocean has been a very exclusive thing, even for people who live close by.”

Ndhlovu on the beach at sunset
Ndhlovu: ‘They feel empowered. It’s so important to get the kids in the water.’ Photograph: Zander Botha/Courtesy of Black Mermaid Foundation

Ndhlovu adds: “They feel empowered. Most of the kids are afraid, they jump out and cling on to the buoy screaming if they see a fish. You can feel the fear. But fear, sometimes we need to walk into it. It’s so important to get the kids in the water.”

A former industrial relations expert, Ndhlovu is now a full-time instructor and runs the foundation mainly out of her own pocket. But she hopes the idea of black African children reclaiming the sea will take hold in her country and beyond.

“That’s why to me, too, this Disney film is important,” she says. “When people see this, it explodes their idea of what a mermaid is. It allows a greater proportion of the world to be that mermaid – ‘Ariel looks like me’.”

RSS EDITORS’ SUGGESTIONS

  • AFCON 2025: Cameroon’s crazy 24 hours analysed
  • Ernest Nuamah making steady progress in ACL recovery
  • Otto Addo visits injured Abdul Mumin in Spain
  • Hohoe United break Bechem’s home invincibility with historic win
  • Asante Kotoko charged over alleged Safety breach involving match officials
TAGGED: Africa, Black Mermaid, Race, South Africa, swimming, Women's rights and gender equality, Zandile Ndhlovu
SOURCES: theguardian
Africanews360 December 5, 2022
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Telegram Email Print
Previous Article Nigerian presidential hopeful Peter Obi pledges to reform currency market, subsidies
Next Article UK economy to shrink in 2023, risks ‘lost decade’: CBI
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Latest on AfricaNews360

  • South Africa name 24-man squad for AFCON 2025
  • Benin’s President Talon declares situation ‘totally under control’ after coup attempt
  • Benin foils military coup attempt
  • Ghana faces England, Croatia and Panama in challenging World Cup group
  • Ghana’s Black Queens fall to England’s Lionesses by 2-0 in historic friendly encounter

More recommendations for you

  • AFCON 2025: Cameroon’s crazy 24 hours analysed
  • Ernest Nuamah making steady progress in ACL recovery
  • Otto Addo visits injured Abdul Mumin in Spain
  • Hohoe United break Bechem’s home invincibility with historic win
  • Asante Kotoko charged over alleged Safety breach involving match officials

You Might Also Like

Soccer

South Africa name 24-man squad for AFCON 2025

December 7, 2025
Sports

IBSA President hails Africa’s ‘strength of spirit’ in blind sports

November 15, 2025
Soccer

Fifa sanctions SAFA with 3-0 defeat to Lesotho and £7,000 fine following Teboho Mokoena breach

September 30, 2025
NewsPoliticsTop Stories

The future is African – Ghana President declares at UN Assembly

September 26, 2025
  • Bereavement
  • Debt Management
  • Finance
  • Job Creation
  • Small Business
  • Climate
  • Education
  • Fashion
  • Health
  • Rights
  • Science
  • Sanitation
  • Mobilisation
  • Secondary Education
  • Celebrity News
  • Tertiary Education
  • Culture
  • Security
  • Corruption
  • Creed
  • Athletics
  • Basketball
  • Boxing
  • Formula 1
  • Rugby
  • Soccer
  • Tennis
  • Minning
  • Gaming
  • Technology
AfricaNews360AfricaNews360
Follow US

© 2024 - AfricaNews360 | All rights reserved.

  • About
  • Advertise with us
  • Contact

Removed from reading list

Undo
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Register Lost your password?