An African Barista on an Extraordinary Journey
Written by: Starbucks Save to Instapaper
JOHANNESBURG, April 2026. When Starbucks launched its first store on African soil ten years ago, Kabelo Jori was just beginning his own journey behind the bar. This month, those two stories meet.
Rwanda’s Coffee Legacy
Rwanda is not a random stop on the coffee map. Starbucks has been buying here since 2004, a decade after the 1994 genocide. Coffee became one of the threads the country used to recover.
In 2009, the Kigali Farmer Support Centre opened, the first on the African continent. Agronomists there work alongside smallholder farmers on yields, soil health and sustainable practice. Almost half a million Rwandan farmers now depend on the industry.
Behind every bag on a South African shelf sits more than twenty years of quiet partnership.
A Journey To The Source
For one South African barista, this is more than the source of a cup he has served hundreds of times. It is a place shaped by what coffee can carry.
Kabelo beat 83 fellow partners to earn a place on the Starbucks Origin Experience trip to Rwanda. He will travel to the source of one of the brand's most celebrated coffees. A coffee he has served hundreds of times. On soil he has never stood on.
He was asked to share what this journey means to him.
When he first heard Rwanda, one word was not enough to describe what he felt.
"Honestly, it felt bigger than excitement. It was a mix of disbelief and responsibility. Rwanda wasn't just a destination. It felt like being invited back to the beginning of something I've been part of for years without fully understanding. I was nervous, yes, but more than that, I felt chosen to carry a story."
From Competition To Calling
At some point the journey became about more than winning.
"It stopped being a competition the moment I realised I wasn't trying to win anymore. I was trying to represent. Represent my store, my partners and every cup I've ever served. That shift from proving something to standing for something, that's when it became a calling."
Redefining Mastery
The purple apron represents mastery. This trip is changing what that word means to him.
"Before, mastery felt like precision, recipes, technique, consistency. Now, mastery feels like connection. It's understanding the hands behind the coffee, the soil, the story, and carrying that with intention every time I serve a cup."
Serving With Meaning
He has served Rwandan coffee to hundreds of guests. Now he will stand where it grows. When he returns, one thing must change.
"I hope my hands slow down. Not in skill, but in awareness. I want every movement to carry meaning, knowing exactly where this coffee comes from and who made it possible. I don't just want to make drinks. I want to honour them."
The Meaning Of A Perfect Cup
Ask him what a perfect cup feels like and he will not talk about taste.
"A perfect cup feels like presence. Like everything else pauses for a second. It's warmth, but also clarity. It's that quiet moment where nothing needs to be added or changed. You feel it before you even think about it."
Behind the bar, there is a moment when everything goes still. He knows exactly what it looks like.
"Yes. It's that moment just after the first sip, when someone doesn't speak. They just pause. You see it in their face. That silence is everything. That's when I know the coffee has done something deeper than just taste good."
Listening To The Story Of Coffee
He was asked what he thinks Rwanda's coffee would say to South Africa.
"Slow down and listen to me. Not just taste me, but understand me. There's a story in every sip and it deserves your attention."
Getting a coffee right is not always about technique. Sometimes it is about instinct.
"I've redone a drink more times than I'd like to admit. Not because it was wrong on paper, but because it didn't feel right. Sometimes you just know. It might look perfect, but if it doesn't sit right with you, you start again."
A Transformative Experience
Kabelo boards the plane to Rwanda. The question is who comes back.
"Someone more grounded. More aware. Less focused on being impressive and more focused on being intentional. The person coming back understands that coffee isn't just a product. It's people, its place and its purpose."
Ten years in, this is what the brand has built.
Get new press articles by email
Latest from
- 50 years on, South Africa's youth are fighting for a future
- NPI establishes free boot camp for graduates, with 80 job opportunities - tackling high graduate unemployment with workplace readiness
- Breaking Down Borders TV Series Wins International Telly Award
- World’s best food photographs served up - South African photographer triumphs
- South Africa’s franchise sector is expanding. The structures to support that growth are not keeping pace.
- Why Child Safeguarding Must Become SA’s Loudest Promise During Child Protection Week
- When food becomes medicine - The science behind ENBIOSIS 2.0 and what it means for South Africa
- Breaking Down Borders Africa Tour bursts back with Botlhale Boikanyo, as the new face of Season 2
- Micro moments are greater than macro meltdowns for employees
- The Bottleneck at the Top - Get out of the Way for Business Growth
- Strong Her - Rethinking Women’s Fitness Through the Lens of Physiology
- The recommendation moment - the 0.7-Second Moment Pharmaceutical Brands Can’t Afford to Miss
- Estate vs non-estate - What the numbers actually say for North Coast buyers
- Why employee benefits fail to address employees’ ‘hidden tax’
- 117-year-old private college takes next step towards university status
The Pulse Latest Articles
- Rethinking Performance: Part 4 Of 5 Why Judgement Matters In Performance Evaluation (June 15, 2026)
- How Should Water Feel? Inside The Innovation Shaping Modern Showering (June 15, 2026)
- Hisense Launches Soweto Football Pitch Project (June 12, 2026)
- Magic: The Gathering Assembles The Marvel Super Heroes (June 12, 2026)
- Star Wars And He-man Drive Surge In ‘kidult’ Toy Spending (June 12, 2026)
