Wopko Jensma

Wopko Pieter Jensma (born 26 July 1939 in Ventersdorp, South Africa) is a South African poet and artist. During the 1960s and 1970s Jensma published three collections of poetry, next to that he created graphics and reproductions of woodcuts. He disappeared from Johannesburg without a trace in 1993, and has not been seen since.

Early years
Wopko Pieter Jensma, born in Ventersdorp on 26 July 1939, was the eldest of three children of Dutch immigrant Pieter Duurt Jensma, who came to South Africa in 1928, and Anna S.C. Coetzee. He has a sister, Elsa and a brother called Andries. Jensma spent most of his childhood in Middelburg, Eastern Cape, where his father worked at the Grootfontein College of Agriculture. At school he participated in rugby, among other things, and a goal kick from him made his team win the rugby match against the neighboring town of Hofmeyr and this event was published in the town newspaper 'Die Midlander', a report which Jensma later used on both the cover and the cover of his poetry collection "I Must Show you my Clippings". His mother died in 1948, after which his father married Francina Coetzee, a young woman from the area.

Background
Jensma's art is ethnic, based on a theme unique to himself, lino-printed images of animals drawn as characteristics of people. His poetry was characterized as having a jazzlike feel to it; he described his words as his jazz instrument and his expression being his rhythm.

A selection of Jensma's poems appeared, with a brief biography, in the anthology Ten South African Poets edited and introduced by Adam Schwartzman (Manchester: Carcanet Press, 1999). There is an online appreciation of Jensma's poetry and art works, with quotations and some biographical details, by Tony McGregor entitled I write you from afar: Wopko Jensma, enigmatic poet of Africa.

Disappearance
In 1993, he was taken to the Johannesburg General hospital for his weekly treatment. When the Salvation Army driver came to fetch him, he was nowhere to be found. People who knew Jensma were contacted in all the major centres, the Salvation Army checked all its shelters and attempts were made to determine whether he had entered a mental home in Pretoria. All efforts failed to produce any trace of him. His pension was last drawn in August 1993. No information of what became of him is known.