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November, 2003
Again, I have to start by thanking the dozens of you who are offering me housing
in your hometowns all over the planet. Wow. I intend to write you each back
individually when I get home, honest. One of these days I might have to take
another trip and visit everybody. Seriously.
Anyhow... more thinking out loud from South Africa...
The physical beauty of the place continues to astound. There's a winding road
ascending a hilly bit of coastline where, looking back over my shoulder, I actually
watched the sun set three times within thirty minutes, rising again and again
as I climbed higher up the steepening hill. The final sunset came with a view
of the Indian Ocean. Words fail.
Two other reminders that I'm nowhere near home: chutney-flavoured potato chips,
and people flashing their headlights near Cape Agulhas (the continent's southernmost
point) not to warn of speed traps but of endangered tortoises crossing the street
in front of you.
The newspapers, radio, and TV continue to make noises you simply don't hear
in the United States. For example, George W. Bush, dear friends, is widely and
unhesitatingly regarded as a corrupt buffoon. His recent timber deal, releasing
a big chunk of federal land to logging interests, was reported unblinkingly
in every media outlet I saw here as a sellout to his contributors -- no more,
no less.
Onward now to harder things. Much harder.
Got my first real look at a remaining apartheid-era township, the Cape Flats.
The interesting thing: my first reaction wasn't sadness or hope or fear or anything
I might have expected. Instead, it was... recognition. How odd.
I've seen stuff like this before, not far from home. Not comparable in size,
maybe -- the damn place just goes on and on -- but all the same: the border
towns in Mexico set up around the maquilladora plants feel just about
the same. They even look pretty similar.
I have no idea why it never occured to me before, but come to think of it: you're
looking at people of a darker skin tone assembled on one side of an arbitrary
line on a map, forced by politics to live and work as cheap labor for the folks
on the other side -- why on Earth wouldn't they look similar?
Goddamned corrogated tin -- these things aren't houses, they're ovens that people
live in.
I've also seen poverty like this on American Indian reservations in South Dakota,
or did when I was there ten years ago. But that's not comparable in size by
any means. Still, I imagine a hundred hungry stomachs surely hurt as much as
ten thousand, especially when one of them is yours.
When I first got to Africa, I was really taken with the proximity of rich and
poor -- you can go from palatial mansions to intense povery in a matter of minutes.
But now I'm thinking about it... and I live jogging distance to Beverly Hills,
and a three-hour drive to shanties outside Tijuana. Does the fact that NAFTAland
has the bourgeois good taste to keep these areas separated by greater distance
make things any better? Does it really?
And in South Africa, the society is at least now mostly committed to correcting
the problem. Not true back home, where the gutting of social services and labor
rights is combined with massive deficit spending -- thus absolutely ensuring
(despite a remarkably widespread inability to see the obvious) that inequality
will continue to worsen for the entire foreseeable future.
Yeesh.
Karma check: You can also still find rich people still living behind barbed
wire in South Africa, the inevitable imprisonment of everyone that results when
a society chooses injustice as a way of life.
And in my lifetime I've seen the "gated community" become commonplace in my
country...
One thing I love about South Africa: everyone here has experienced genuine social
change as a result of committed political activism. Back home, being any kind
of activist always carries this funky, heavy vibe, sort of like loving a woman
you know will never really love you back. But here... she does.
Man, that feels good.
I hope I can remember this back in Los Angeles, writing about Governor Schwarzenegger...
Also, the friendliness here is unrelenting. Example: I'm a rugby fan, so I
wandered over to the Newlands, the local equivalent of Dodger Stadium. There
was nothing going on, and it was all locked up, so I was about to be on my way...
but then I asked a security guard if there was any way to peek in. I was shortly
given a personal 90-minute tour of the place by the fellow who runs the South
African Rugby Museum next door. The guy just gave up that chunk of his day to
a strange American.
Try getting that at PacBell Park. Damn. And this was more than typical -- a
fine fellow named Trevor gave me a walk of the cricket grounds, too. Just like
that. (Quick check on yourself: what skin tone did you instantly picture for
Trevor? Why? See, this is the sort of question you ask yourself constantly here,
in the middle of a country trying to overcame race as an issue...)
It's the same in restaurants and hotels, or talking with people on the street.
Like I'm royalty and didn't know it.
Maybe the entire country is sorry about the whole baboon thing, and trying to
make it up to me.
The Garden Route
Every tourist guidebook to South Africa I've seen recommends taking a drive
to what they call the "Garden Route" along the continent's southern coast. None
of the books even mention that you'll spend a minimum of half an hour driving
past the townships flanking the N2 highway out of Cape Town -- like they're
not even there.
Hello? That's precisely the attitude that helps create conditions like this
in the first place.
Still, I keep driving... and damn. The scenery is worth the trip. It's all still
oddly familiar -- like stretches of Nebraska bumped right up against the California
coastline -- but also exotic and strange. Imagine wild springboks and ostriches
roaming outside Omaha, and you've got the right picture in your head.
Sometimes I see stuff that makes me think this whole Rainbow Nation thing is
gonna happen. In a small town where I stopped for gas, young white guys were
working for a young black manager, and nobody seemed to even notice. (This was
an exception; usually it was the other way around. I'm just saying.) But there's
still a lot of the old apartheid around, more and more as you get out of Cape
Town.
And there's downright ugly. (Some of which is me, but I'll get to that.) The
town of Knysna is an overprecious little resort on the Indian Ocean, all Martha
Stewart gingerbread and prefab antique-y, the sort of place guidebooks love
and I usually can't stand. But the only thing worse than being chasen by baboons
here seems to be driving these roads at night. South Africa hasn't much gotten
around to little things like divided highways, reflective paint, streetlights,
or even guard rails. In short, night driving here is bloody terrifying. And
it got dark about the time I rolled into Knysna. Thus, wicker furniture and
tea sets became the order of the day.
The woman in charge of the bed and breakfast I stopped in was extremely sweet
to me -- but referred to the security guard outside as (my hand to God) "Blackie,"
whom she also promised was very conscientious -- as if I might assume he wasn't
for some reason.
Uh-oh.
So I went out to say hi. And before I could even start a conversation, this
not-particularly-dark-skinned fellow announced that I really should call him
"Blackie," and why? -- because he was so black, that's why. And then he let
out a hearty not-actually-laughing laugh that clearly must usually amuse the
tourists.
Oh, dear. Oh, no. Damn damn damn. I tried to continue the conversation, but
the show was over. Thanks for coming, good night everybody...
So I went for a walk. Up the street, three teenagers were standing outside a
closed electronics store, watching the TV through the window. All of them were
black. They were also very thin, like they hadn't eaten in a while. And two
blocks later, for the first time (this never happened to me in Cape Town), I
was confronted by people aggressively begging for loose change. All of them
were black. And thin.
So of course I handed over my change, passing restaurants where well-to-do patrons
(all of them white) were noshing on crepes and strips of beast. (South African
cuisine, incidentally, largely consists of the flesh of large game animals.)
Then I went another block or two -- almost to the edge of the cute little hamlet
-- and still, more begging.
And these didn't look like most of the street beggars I see back on LaCienega
Blvd. in Los Angeles. These weren't alcoholics, or people with mental or physical
disabilities, or folks who looked like their lives had simply exploded and they
had nowhere to go. These Africans just looked... normal. And really hungry.
So I gave what little paper money I had, until I literally had no money left
and was heading back to the Hotel Stepin Fetchit, just trying not to feel overwhelmed.
And still, another young boy kept asking for money.
And then I did something I'm ashamed of (even though a lot of other people would
have done exactly the same thing, I know): I told him "no." I didn't know where
an ATM was (or if I found one, what then? How much, to how many, for how long?
Where is the line?). I was tired. And most of all I was starting to feel increasingly
helpless, and I didn't like feeling that way. So I said "no."
And he persisted.
And this is the shamey part: I started getting angry. At a kid. Who, I'm pretty
sure, was hungry. Who, I'm certain, has had about one-millionth of the luck
in life I've had. Whom, I'm pretty sure, I could comfortably feed on a regular
basis if need be. But I just couldn't help him right then, and even if
I did, I wouldn't be able to help the next kid, and the next, who were visible
on street corners ahead. And the sinking feeling sucked, and before I could
even process it all, I started to become frustrated, and it was in my voice
the second time I said "no."
The kid, no idiot, heard the anger. And then came contempt in his eyes.
This was an interesting moment. I wasn't an American to this kid; he couldn't
have heard any accent. I was a paunchy, square-headed white guy in South Africa,
just overwhelmed with the whole goddam thing. And he was a black guy in South
Africa, equally overwhelmed and vastly the worse off for it. The distance between
us was as great as any interpersonal distance I have ever experienced -- like
any similar encounter in the States, I suppose, but amped by this country's
horrific past -- and I suspect the same thing happens every night here.
It would have been a very easy step to allow my anger to become a judgment of
the kid, or worse, a generalization. I have this weird feeling like I just tried
on a South African's head in a gift shop.
I went back to my room -- waving ruefully to "Blackie," whose name I was never
able to learn -- and climbed small into a very large bed. The next morning,
I awoke strangely angry at the white woman who ran the B&B, as if somehow what
happened on the street was somehow her fault -- and all of Knysna's, even. Sure
enough -- see! I said to myself -- when we chatted during my check-out I learned
that her husband had made a fortune as a cigarette wholesaler during the apartheid
years, a time of safer streets (her words) for which she quite visibly yearned.
Aha, I thought... I know what this all means...
And just as I was working up a good holier-than-thou, she mentioned that one
of her family members had been murdered in the random violence (as opposed to
the organized, state-administered kind) that has become an increasing staple
of post-apartheid South Africa. And she cried.
And I couldn't be angry at her anymore. Or the kid. Or even myself, strangely,
since I'm pretty good at that.
The shit here is just big. More than I can think through yet, anyway.
Back on the road...
Driving onward on the highveld, on the N1 toward Johannesburg, I saw one of
the most beautiful sights of my life, 200 kilometers southwest of Bloemfontein
(look at a map: square in the middle of nowhere, in other words), as the sun
set behind me and a torrential rain brewed ahead: a perfect half-circle rainbow,
touching the ground on each side of me, as bright as a child's cartoon and as
large as you can imagine.
And a second one, almost as bright, surrounding the first.
Imagine this. Two perfect, concentric rainbows, arching from the clear ground
on your left to the clear ground on your right, as bright as electric lights.
Rainbow Nation, indeed.
And I realize my admiration for Mandela has increased tenfold at least. Not
only has his life helped an entire nation start working through intense stuff
I'm just barely glimpsing, but it turns out, I'm told, there was a point about
ten years ago -- shortly after the assassination of another prominent activist,
Chris Hani -- when the whole country could have gone much more kablooey, had
Madiba not gone on TV and pleaded for peace.
I think of Mandela and realize nothing in my American experience fully compares.
I look at his beautiful wise face and find myself wondering what Dr. King would
look like if he hadn't been murdered halfway done.
South Africa had to almost destroy itself before they could listen to wisdom.
At present, there is not a single voice like Mandela's given a regular forum
in my home country. Not one.
I realize that I have become more afraid for America, having visited here.
The long, deserted road in front of me went right down the center of the two
perfect rainbows -- directly into a frightening storm.
Like I said, land of metaphors...
PS: the greatest Oldies radio station I've ever heard is in Pretoria, South
Africa, of all places. And good music can get you through any long drive.
PPS: there is no such thing as a good seat at a cricket match. Anyone who claims
otherwise is lying.
PPPS: good news, perhaps: in Bloemfontein, there's an upscale shopping mall
where I saw something I hadn't seen elsewhere in South Africa: prosperous, upper-middle-class
blacks, seemingly fully equal in economic and social status. Yet in the food
court, the blacks still sat with other blacks, and the whites still sat with
other whites, walking through each other. In other words, exactly the way similar-status
blacks and whites usually function back in Cleveland.
Sigh...
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