February 4

Manche Masemola

Martyr, 1928

art by Rev. Kirsten Kohr of Uhrichsville, Ohio 

Almighty and Everlasting God, who kindled the flame of your love in the heart of your faithful martyr Manche Masemola: Grant to us your servants, a like faith and power of love, that we who rejoice in her triumph may profit by her example; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.


It is believed that Manche Masemola was born around 1913, in Marishane, South Africa. She grew up with her parents, two older brothers, a younger sister named Mabule, and a cousin named Lucia. She was not sent to school, but worked with her family on their farm. Her family was not Christian, but rather followed traditional local religious practices. The Christian community in their region was very small, and was looked upon by most people with much suspicion.

In 1919, Fr. Augustine Moeka of the Anglican Community of the Resurrection established a mission at Marishane. Manche Masemole and her cousin Lucia first heard Moeka preach as a result. She was eager to learn more and began to attend worship services and classes at the mission twice a week.

Soon she expressed a desire to be baptized, but her parents tried to forbid her. When their prohibitions failed to dissuade her, she was beaten. On a number of occasions, Manche Masemola remarked to Lucia and Moeka that she would die at her parents’ hands and be baptized in her own blood. Then, on or near February 4, 1928, her mother and father took her away to an isolated place and killed her, and buried her by a granite rock on a remote hillside. She was about fifteen years old.

Although she was not yet baptized, the church has historically recognized catechumens who died before they could be baptized as being baptized by their desire for baptism. In 1935, a small group of Christians first made a pilgrimage to her grave. Larger groups followed in 1941 and 1949. Now, hundreds visit the site every August. In 1975, her name was added to the calendar of the Church of the Province of Southern Africa.

Manche Masemola is one of the twentieth-century martyrs whose statues are displayed at Westminster Abbey. More than 40 years after her daughter's murder, her mother was also baptized into the church in 1969.

Excerpted directly from “Lesser Feasts and Fasts 2022,” p. 76-77.

Lessons and Psalm

Ruth 1:8-18
Psalm 118:8-14
Matthew 19:13-15

Preface of a Saint (3)