Thursday, October 9, 2008

MY SOUTH AFRICA -Excerpts of my life in the African Continent




I started driving a week after arriving in Pretoria, telling myself constantly to think “KEEP LEFT, KEEP LEFT” as I drove in the opposite direction I had driven back home. Here in South Africa, the right of way is on the left side of the road.  I had a whole set of new challenges, except that I had driven on the left some twelve years back when we lived in Singapore. Now, learning to dodge motor bikes and street vendors was a new task I had to contend with!  On that first day I got lost in what looked like a Black Township (which I later found out was Mamelodi) and was overwhelmed by the disparities I saw.  Some type of workers’ long houses, perhaps; lots of people waiting for buses; everyone going about their business.  I didn’t feel threatened, just lost, but quickly finding my way back. We really have so much in the house and lawns the embassy provided for us, I remember thinking.We have grass and flowers; everything in the township seemed parched and brown.

Later during that first year once I got used to South African life, I went to Mamelodi often to deliver clothing and school materials as part of an embassy sponsorship program; in doing so I learned about the disproportions between Black and White schools, the decay of township classrooms and lack of teaching aids and materials. Black students had to go without chalk, pencils, textbooks … I’d like to believe that I changed part of all that, but really -- whatever I did and concerned myself with was but a drop in a very large bucket of things to do, teach and improve. Years of neglect and government indifference cannot be scraped in only three years of guardianship! I know other people after me continued the project picking up where I left off as I pick up after the people before me. 


During our three years in Southern Africa we drove to several countries in the region, among them, Swaziland, a tiny nation landlocked between South Africa and Mozambique. The countryside along the highway was bordered by thick pine forests, the mountains … just breathtaking!. There were cattle roaming freely and farms and arable land. I am told, by friends still there, that in later years, a township has grown alongside the highway with no running water, no city services … utterly poor. Other countries we’ve seen: Namibia, Botswana, Lesotho, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Mozambique and Malawi each and every one of them so different yet so similar. For me, most of the Africa I know, including Kenya, brings the memory of awesome spring thunderstorms, exceptionally vibrant sunsets, and enormous pale yellow moons. I have read that Southern Africa is home to some 800 bird species (!) and it ranks as one of the top birding destinations in the world.

Did I mention the wild thunderstorms…howling empests that break-up the dry spell of winter? In our first year the rains came in the middle of September, right after our arrival in Southern Africa; on our second year the winter dryness -- brought on by the bonfires from people trying to keep warm – was broken by storms in early October; the most refreshing first rain of the season hauling away dirt and smog … so long overdue.  Generally, during the colder darker days of winter (June through August) a medium weight haze, from township and veld fires, permeates the atmosphere making breathing difficult and the air quality sometimes intolerable. When rain finally graces the land with its soothing quality, the countryside and the people take on new overtones.

On our last year there, rains came in mid-July as we were packing out for our move back to the USA, a kind of farewell from above, I felt, allowing us to see yet another display of natural supremacy.  Abruptly, the heavens became gloomy as thunderous pitch-black clouds and brilliant lightning bolts crisscrossed the sky. Almost immediately, vast and plump raindrops began playing their music on our tiled rooftop … merging from a steady crescendo into a thriving deluge. I recall our happiness as we graced the front lawn with dances and squeals -- my children in their bare feet -- appreciating the cleansing purity of rain.

As time progressed, South Africa became ‘home’ in the disappearing shadows of the Apartheid regime, a disappearance mostly in name really, as the situation for the common Black worker didn’t seem much improved. We feel that our lives were warmed indelibly by the South Africans we met.
 
As we prepare to leave, I can’t help but think of the beautiful Ndebele women clad in alluring and colorful dress designs, their multi-ringed necks … will I not see them again on route to their village carrying baskets proudly on their heads, their babies wrapped 'round their backs?
As we depart South Africa, people of all backgrounds enjoy more social equality, if not economic yet, certainly educational.  There is still a lot to be done! The new generation is positively harvesting the goods scattered during those historic times at the end of Apartheid. South Africa is undoubtedly one of the most beautiful and rewarding countries we have experienced life in. I hope to be back some day...   



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