Members of the Hendricks Chapel Choir perform under a vaulted arch at Aan-die-Berg Gemeente in Randburg, South Africa, led by director Jos茅 "Peppie" Calvar. (Photos by Ken Harper)
Hendricks Chapel Choir Sings Throughout South Africa
鈥淲hy have you traveled so far to be here? Why are you here?鈥 Rev. Akhona Masiza asked the , local choirs and concertgoers at the Seth Mokitimi Methodist Seminary in Pietermaritzburg, South Africa. 鈥淭he world is out of tune. And yet, I marvel at the sight in this room.鈥
It was truly marvelous. In May, over 50 members of the Hendricks Chapel Choir (HCC) visited South Africa鈥攖he choir鈥檚 first-ever visit to the African continent. The HCC performed six times in 11 days, from Johannesburg to Cape Town and several places in between. HCC Director Jos茅 鈥淧eppie鈥 Calvar set the tone before departure: 鈥淒uring these trips, the choir is building a global network of kindness that lasts for a lifetime. Our choir students will develop lasting connections with each other and with the South African students they meet along the way,鈥 he said.
Lasting Connections and Beautiful Concerts
The tour鈥檚 first dual-billed concert featured the University of Johannesburg Choir and the HCC performing as peers鈥攃omparing notes and breaking bread before sharing the stage. Each choir performed separately, then combined their voices to sing 鈥淭shotsholoza,鈥 a well-known South African song traditionally sung by migrant workers. Baritone Samuel Mincey 鈥28 featured prominently in the lively number.
At Aan-die-Berg Gemeente, a Dutch Reformed church in Randburg, baritone Nick Dekaney 鈥26 sang his first solo on South African soil, performing 鈥淗lohonofatsa,鈥 a traditional South African song. The choir then visited Rietondale High School, where the energy was electric from the moment they arrived. Destiny, a Rietondale student, declared that she plans to sing forever, inspired by what she heard.
鈥淎n experience I will carry with me is singing with the Rietondale High School Choir,鈥 said HCC member Aurelia Harp 鈥28. 鈥淓ach and every student in that choir carries a true passion for music and everyone wanted to sing. The students had such a positive energy and it made me feel very welcome in their community and excited to sing.鈥
Culture, History and the Drakensberg Boys鈥 Choir
Between concerts, choir members immersed themselves in South Africa鈥檚 rich and complicated history. They visited the Apartheid Museum, Nelson Mandela鈥檚 house and Archbishop Desmond Tutu鈥檚 house in Soweto, went on a safari in Pilanesburg, toured the Union Buildings in Pretoria and hiked in the Drakensberg Mountains. HCC members picked up greetings in Zulu, Xhosa and Afrikaans, often wearing their 鈥渂e kind.鈥 shirts鈥攚earing their hearts on their sleeves, both figuratively and literally.

A highlight of the Pietermaritzburg leg was a workshop with the internationally acclaimed Drakensberg Boys鈥 Choir. The two groups combined for vocal and physical warmups, exchanged songs and sang 鈥淭shotsholoza鈥 together, a fitting echo of the tour鈥檚 spirit of connection. The HCC also performed that evening at the Seth Mokitimi Methodist Seminary alongside several local choirs, where soprano Eleanor Cjzakowski 鈥24 G鈥29 captivated the audience with the traditional spiritual hymn 鈥淚鈥檝e Been in the Storm So Long.鈥 Rev. Masiza鈥檚 challenge to the choir lingered long after the concert ended: they had come, he suggested, to relearn the dance of love and to make God known again as song.
Cape Town: The Final Leg
The final concert was held at St. George鈥檚 Cathedral in Cape Town鈥攁 venue rich with history from the anti-apartheid movement and long directed by Archbishop Desmond Tutu. Much like Hendricks Chapel, the cathedral is known as a place of prayer and a space where people of all faiths meet in common acceptance. The HCC shared the stage with the University of the Western Cape Creative Arts Choir, and well-known South African musician Zolani Mahola was thrilled to hear both groups perform the traditional isiXhosa tune 鈥淏awo.鈥 Organists Anne Laver, associate professor in the Setnor School of Music and University organist; Annie Spink G鈥26 and Michael Guarneiri 鈥28 also showcased their skills on the cathedral鈥檚 stunning instrument.
For several choir members who had graduated just a week before the trip, the Cape Town concert was more than the last show of the tour鈥攊t was the last time they would sing together in their current formation. The Western Cape choir students sent them off with a blessing before the evening wound down to a celebratory wrap-up dinner, where the surprises kept coming: a birthday serenade for Laver and a spontaneous announcement from Bryce Meuschke G鈥26, who shouted, 鈥淚 got the job!鈥 The choir erupted in applause.

A Legacy of Giving
鈥淥ne of the things we hope with trips like this is for you to forge lasting friendships with each other,鈥 said Calvar at the tour鈥檚 closing dinner. 鈥淭he Hendricks Chapel Choir has a long legacy of these trips because people a long time ago had a great experience and they later gave a gift to support this trip. At some point we hope you can help the choir travel again and create new experiences.鈥 Calvar closed with a line from the Prayer of St. Francis: 鈥淚t is in giving of ourselves that we receive.鈥 The Hendricks Chapel Choir is already looking ahead to Hendricks Chapel鈥檚 100th anniversary tour to New Zealand in 2030.
Hendricks Chapel Choir members and Rietondale High School students sing together during a visit in Pretoria, South Africa.
Hendricks Chapel Choir members rehearse at Rietondale High School in Pretoria, South Africa, as director Jos茅 “Peppie” Calvar plays a djembe drum.
Hendricks Chapel Choir members and local choir members in traditional dress sing together at the Seth Mokitimi Methodist Seminary in Pietermaritzburg, South Africa.
Organist Anne Laver and student Michael Guarneiri ’28 review sheet music at the organ console of St. George’s Cathedral in Cape Town, South Africa.
Nick Dekaney ’26 performs a solo with the Hendricks Chapel Choir at St. George’s Cathedral in Cape Town, South Africa.
The Hendricks Chapel Choir performs with hands over hearts at St. George’s Cathedral in Cape Town, South Africa.
The Hendricks Chapel Choir and University of the Western Cape Creative Arts Choir celebrate after their joint concert at St. George’s Cathedral in Cape Town, South Africa.
Hendricks Chapel Choir members take a selfie at a Table Mountain National Park overlook near Cape Town, South Africa.
To read the full story, visit the Hendricks Chapel website