GroundUp’s David Harrison shares a look at the Grassroots Youth Academy in Makhaza, using boxing to empower youth.
Khayelitsha, South Africa (07 November 2025) – In 2004, pro boxer Jongi Kamko lay in bed at Tygerberg Hospital in Cape Town with a swollen leg and an undiagnosed circulatory problem. Doctors told him it might have to be amputated. He vowed that if he kept his leg, he would give everything back to boxing, the sport he loved.
Kamko recovered without needing an amputation. Although he never fought professionally again, he kept his promise. He became a coach and founded the Grassroots Youth Academy in Makhaza, Khayelitsha, a multi-sport youth centre and gym offering boxing, cycling and academic tutoring. The academy was registered as a trust in 2006.


Jongi grew up on a farm in the Eastern Cape until his father died in 1980. His mother and older brothers took care of him; they would sell chickens to nearby locations to make ends meet. His oldest brother was an amateur boxer at school. “He was the one who inspired me, taught me boxing. He showed me all the technical stuff; I was about ten when I started,” Jongi reflects.
At 14, Jongi moved to Cape Town with his brothers. Life was tough. One brother was killed in a stabbing in Khayelitsha’s Site B, and in 1988, he lost his oldest brother in a train accident while he was in matric. He dropped out of school to look after his mother
But he kept boxing. At the age of 20, Jongi was fighting professionally both locally and overseas — in Botswana, Germany and Denmark. In Austria, he faced former world champion Edip Sekowitsch in an eight-round bout. Afterwards, heavyweight legend George Foreman, attending as a guest, presented him with a trophy.
When he retired from professional boxing, Jongi turned his focus to helping young people escape the social ills of Khayelitsha.
“In the townships where we stay, young boys and girls have a lot of problems … I said to myself, let me take these kids and show them the way of dealing with life,” he says.


Luzuko Dyantyi joined as a trustee and coach in 2015, helping balance academics and sport. “We want to make sure that even if the students don’t end up following a career in boxing or cycling, they have had a decent education and can pursue another career.” The academy launched a cycling programme in 2017, with children competing in events like the Cape Town Cycle Tour and SA Nationals.


Many boxers have trained under Jongi, including 22-year-old Nqaba Dantile, who says, “He [Jongi] showed me a father’s love and gave me everything that I need … Grassroots Academy is a family; we are a family here.”
Another boxer, Yonelise “Anita” Poni, joined in 2017. “Coach Jongi told me, you don’t have to worry. You’re safe here,” she says.
Now ranked second in her national division, Yonelise says, “I want to give this everything and make sure that I really did it, that I left my mark in history and make my family happy because of boxing.”


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