A video of Keegan has gone viral on Facebook. In it he is seen dancing and singing to two Zulu songs for his mother and her friends at their home in Nottingham Road in the KwaZulu-Natal Midlands earlier this year.
When asked what it is about the isiZulu culture that attracted him to it, Baker said simply, "I just like the language and how they do things".
He said he had been speaking the language since he was 2 and that he was taught by the family's domestic worker. She even gave him the name Sandile, he said.
"I know it has a meaning but I don't know the meaning."On weekends, Keegan – who is at boarding school during the week – can be found sitting at home watching the Shaka Zulu series, over and over, said his mother, Sarah Finlay.
Keegan said he watched it that often because it taught him the history of Zulu people."It has lots of history and also the language and what they wear and how they do things."
Keegan said he practiced his isiZulu with other Zulu people in his neighbourhood. He casually told News24 that they are not shocked by the fact that he speaks the language so well because "they've known me speaking it for a long time, so they know how I talk and stuff".
But this was not the case when strangers come across the rosy-cheeked blonde boy. When they hear him speak, most of them are amazed and their mouths dropped, he said.
Nonetheless, the feeling he got when he put on his 'kit' as he calls it, could best be summed up in three of his own words: "excited, fashionable and confident".
When he grows up, he said he wanted to become a sangoma.
"It's like a Zulu doctor, a sangoma. I think I was 4 or 5 when I went to my friend's house and his maid was a sangoma and she showed me everything there."
Keegan said he had two favourite songs, one is sung by Eastern Cape crooner Nathi titled Nomvula and the other is from the Sarafina movie soundtrack called Vuma Dlozi Lami.
News24
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