Dube Train Short Story By Can Themba

The story follows a narrator on his daily journey, describing the "shoving savagery" and "sour-smelling humanity" of the overcrowded train. The routine is shattered when a young thug ( tsotsi ) begins to harass and assault a female passenger. While most commuters remain indifferent or fearful—acting as "train-using, bus-boarding philosophers" who avoid intervention—a large, muscular man eventually confronts the tsotsi . The confrontation turns violent; the tsotsi stabs the big man, who responds by throwing the tsotsi out of the moving train's window. The story concludes with the train continuing its journey as if nothing significant had happened, underscoring the desensitization of the public to violence.

The narrative follows an unnamed narrator’s daily ordeal aboard the train from Dube station to Johannesburg. What should be a simple commute transforms into a ritual of survival. The “train” is a character in itself—overcrowded, lurching, and dehumanizing. Themba captures the stench of sweat and cheap perfume, the press of bodies against each other, and the low hum of resigned misery. Dube Train Short Story By Can Themba