While I catch up on posts about my Mozambique/Swaziland trip-- feel free to jump into the present and check out my life through another's eyes! My sista from another papa is visiting me, so check out her blog: http://tresfabfoofoojewelz.blogspot.com/
Friday, April 20, 2007
back to the future: April 20, 2007
While I catch up on posts about my Mozambique/Swaziland trip-- feel free to jump into the present and check out my life through another's eyes! My sista from another papa is visiting me, so check out her blog: http://tresfabfoofoojewelz.blogspot.com/
March 28, 2007: Maputo, Mozambique
I'm awoken by the screaming laughter, rhymes and playing of children. Seems there is a playground next door to our hostel. Up and out, we begin our day.
Before we've arrived in Mo'bique, Tessa explains the currency to me-- apparently they've recently issued new currency where 25 Metacais (pronounced Metacash) is equal to the dollar, but the old currency (also called Metacais) is still in use in coins, so there are 3 extra zero's. Got it? I didn't either. Basically 1000 Meticais = 1 Meticais, 5000 Old Meticais = 5 Meticais, and so on, but there is new currency in coins as well. So much of the day is spent squinting for the print date on the coin in addition to doing the math on the exchange rate.
We start the day with breakfast: 1 bread roll = 2 Meti = 2000 Old Meti = 8 US cents.
We take a minibus down 24 de Junio (the main road) to the Revolution Museum: 5 minute bus ride = 5 Meti = 5000 Old Meti = 25 US cents.
We spend roughly an hour and 1/2 inside the four story museum which is empty, dimly lit and completely in Portuguese. There are some fantastic photographs of training camps in the jungle--in particular there is one black and white photo of a female soldier, standing in a forest in full fatigues, smiling quite hapily. Most of the lights in the museum are either not working or not turned on, so small galleries are lit by the sunlight trickling in from the shaded windows. We explore on our own, taking what we can from the photos and making rough, inaccurate translations.
Revolution Museum = 15 Meti = 15000 Old Meti = 60 US cents.
We wander down the broken sidewalks-- an obstacle course of its own--through an artists square where two men show us around their studios. One man works in ceramics and paints and makes clothing. The second works with leather and is a musician--he proudly plays all his instruments for us.
Next stop: central market. All the streets in Maputo are named after communist leaders which makes for great directions: "Right onto Karl Marx, left onto Ho Chi Minh".
We enter their central market which is dark and damp. The sunlight trickles through the roof and relects off the slimy silver fish lined up for sale. The market women call to you to grab your attention but throw daggers at you with their eyes when you try to take pictures. The street kids ask you for money. No one smiles unless there is a sale.
A man is making basic cheese and bologna sandwiches, so we buy one for ourselves and Tessa buys one for the street boy who has been following her.
1/2 kilo of cashews = 50 Meti = 50000 Old Meti = $2 US
Sandwich = 13 Meti = 13000 Old Meti = 42 cents US
We leave the market and walk towards the train station which I've heard from other backpackers is very nice. The facade is lime green and white, with a dark mahogany wood revolving door like a mouth. I feel I've walked onto a movie set and that I should be tearfully reuniting with or being separated from my soldier boyfriend-- but in Portuguese, maybe with English subtitles. It is a charming building and everyone is friendly to the point of being strange. We sit on the front veranda and eat our lunches, sharing a glass bottle of coca cola and make sure to return the glass bottle to the woman who sold it to us so she can get money for the glass.
Last stop: the French cultural center. I'm not sure why there is a French cultural center in Mozambique since it was the Portuguese who colonized this area, but who am I to judge these nutty, post-colonial realities. We sit in the garden cafe and sip our fresh pear juice while some locals smoke a hookah nearby.
Fresh pear juice = 30 Meti = 30000 Old Meti = $1.20 US-- of course the French cafe is the most expensive!
We meet Joe in front of the hospital and catch a bus north to the fish market at Costa del Sol, where every day the fisherman return around 4:30 p.m. and sell their catches. Fat, jovial men and women sit swatting the flies away from the fish and talk loudly to each other. Tessa buys prawn, Joe buys king fish and I buy calamari. The shopkeepers joke with us as we squirm a bit from the site of the flies and all these strange fish. We ask all kinds of questions on size, prize, freshness in broken spanish/portuguese/french. Behind the market are 5 or 6 restaurants that will cook your fish for you and one man who speaks decent English helps translate the transaction and hooks us into his restaurant.
1 kilo calamari = 100 Meti = 100,000 Old Meti = $4 US
add ons: rice, salad, 1 beer and all the preparation = 140 Meti = 140,000 Old Meti = $5.60 US
We have an absolutely delicious dinner, with great company (minus the guys coming to the table trying to sell us jewelry and all kinds of trinkets) and end up with literally 1/2 the king fish left over, which the restaurant owner didn't seem unhappy about.
Off to bed for an early bus ride in the morning to Tofo!
Before we've arrived in Mo'bique, Tessa explains the currency to me-- apparently they've recently issued new currency where 25 Metacais (pronounced Metacash) is equal to the dollar, but the old currency (also called Metacais) is still in use in coins, so there are 3 extra zero's. Got it? I didn't either. Basically 1000 Meticais = 1 Meticais, 5000 Old Meticais = 5 Meticais, and so on, but there is new currency in coins as well. So much of the day is spent squinting for the print date on the coin in addition to doing the math on the exchange rate.
We start the day with breakfast: 1 bread roll = 2 Meti = 2000 Old Meti = 8 US cents.
We take a minibus down 24 de Junio (the main road) to the Revolution Museum: 5 minute bus ride = 5 Meti = 5000 Old Meti = 25 US cents.
We spend roughly an hour and 1/2 inside the four story museum which is empty, dimly lit and completely in Portuguese. There are some fantastic photographs of training camps in the jungle--in particular there is one black and white photo of a female soldier, standing in a forest in full fatigues, smiling quite hapily. Most of the lights in the museum are either not working or not turned on, so small galleries are lit by the sunlight trickling in from the shaded windows. We explore on our own, taking what we can from the photos and making rough, inaccurate translations.
Revolution Museum = 15 Meti = 15000 Old Meti = 60 US cents.
We wander down the broken sidewalks-- an obstacle course of its own--through an artists square where two men show us around their studios. One man works in ceramics and paints and makes clothing. The second works with leather and is a musician--he proudly plays all his instruments for us.
Next stop: central market. All the streets in Maputo are named after communist leaders which makes for great directions: "Right onto Karl Marx, left onto Ho Chi Minh".
We enter their central market which is dark and damp. The sunlight trickles through the roof and relects off the slimy silver fish lined up for sale. The market women call to you to grab your attention but throw daggers at you with their eyes when you try to take pictures. The street kids ask you for money. No one smiles unless there is a sale.
A man is making basic cheese and bologna sandwiches, so we buy one for ourselves and Tessa buys one for the street boy who has been following her.
1/2 kilo of cashews = 50 Meti = 50000 Old Meti = $2 US
Sandwich = 13 Meti = 13000 Old Meti = 42 cents US
We leave the market and walk towards the train station which I've heard from other backpackers is very nice. The facade is lime green and white, with a dark mahogany wood revolving door like a mouth. I feel I've walked onto a movie set and that I should be tearfully reuniting with or being separated from my soldier boyfriend-- but in Portuguese, maybe with English subtitles. It is a charming building and everyone is friendly to the point of being strange. We sit on the front veranda and eat our lunches, sharing a glass bottle of coca cola and make sure to return the glass bottle to the woman who sold it to us so she can get money for the glass.
Last stop: the French cultural center. I'm not sure why there is a French cultural center in Mozambique since it was the Portuguese who colonized this area, but who am I to judge these nutty, post-colonial realities. We sit in the garden cafe and sip our fresh pear juice while some locals smoke a hookah nearby.
Fresh pear juice = 30 Meti = 30000 Old Meti = $1.20 US-- of course the French cafe is the most expensive!
We meet Joe in front of the hospital and catch a bus north to the fish market at Costa del Sol, where every day the fisherman return around 4:30 p.m. and sell their catches. Fat, jovial men and women sit swatting the flies away from the fish and talk loudly to each other. Tessa buys prawn, Joe buys king fish and I buy calamari. The shopkeepers joke with us as we squirm a bit from the site of the flies and all these strange fish. We ask all kinds of questions on size, prize, freshness in broken spanish/portuguese/french. Behind the market are 5 or 6 restaurants that will cook your fish for you and one man who speaks decent English helps translate the transaction and hooks us into his restaurant.
1 kilo calamari = 100 Meti = 100,000 Old Meti = $4 US
add ons: rice, salad, 1 beer and all the preparation = 140 Meti = 140,000 Old Meti = $5.60 US
We have an absolutely delicious dinner, with great company (minus the guys coming to the table trying to sell us jewelry and all kinds of trinkets) and end up with literally 1/2 the king fish left over, which the restaurant owner didn't seem unhappy about.
Off to bed for an early bus ride in the morning to Tofo!
Thursday, April 19, 2007
Monday, April 9, 2007
March 27, 2007: Maputo, Mozambique
To get to Mozambique, Tessa and I take a relatively uneventful 5:30 a.m. bus from Pretoria. We notice that at the last gas station before the border, everyone is buying massive amounts of eggs (which they don't refrigerate here). Seems eggs are double the price in Mo'bique. Tessa and I consider starting an egg trade but reconsider since we're not that passionate about the import/export business.
Crossing into Mo'bique is pretty sweet because for about a quarter of a mile you're not in any country at all. Your bus arrives at the border and you must get off and go into a building which is split down the middle. Each side is a mirror image of the other-- it is the immigration/emigration building of each country. You hand your passport to some lady in head-to-toe khaki military garb who will then ignore you completely, flip open to a page in your passport, and stamp something while not look-- all the while continuing her conversation with the other officers.
Then, in the midday sun, you take a walk up a dirt road that is no man's land to go to Mozambique. On this road you will find immigration officers sitting together in the shade people watching, as well as some of your fellow travelers carrying their belongings on their heads-- though not everyone seems to walk across. In fact more than a few never seemed to enter the offices and as the bus drove by us to pick us up on the other side, I thought-- are we caught in an illegal egg ring? I've watched enough Sopranos to know when to keep my mouth shut, so we quietly waited on line at the immigration half of the building to pay 17 more Rand (egg tax?) and get an entry stamp (I now officially only have 4 pages left in my passport and still 3 more years till it expires-- high five worthy!)
Back on the bus, I spend most of my time attempting to write but end up producing chicken scratch. Tessa and I play games with two little girls who are also riding the bus (roughly 3 and 4 years old?) I give the older one my pencil and she happily scribbles on and inside my Chinua Achebe novel. I encourage her-- why shouldn't novels be coloring books? If she doesn't mind, then why should I? So we have a lot of fun together--but by 5 p.m. we're arrived in Maputo.
My first impression of Maputo is that this is the Havana of my imagination-- a dilapidated paradise. At some point in time there was a sufficient amount of money invested in this city-- by the architecture, I estimate the 60s or the 70s-- but there has been no investment since. So the structures of the buildings are frozen in that moment-- a kind of optimistic resort architecture in the vision of Portuguese colonialism. But time and history interrupts this narrative-- the liberation occurs, the money leaves, the time passes, the people stay, the buildings are abandoned and sometimes reclaimed by locals but never in their original imagination. The beauty is not in the remnants of the first vision but in the continued use or a faded cityscape functioning as the backdrop for some unintended vibrant life.
And even the action can throw you into what seems like another time-- a couple walks hand in hand through the faded glory of a railway station, old men playing chess on the sidewalk with bottle caps, school kids in wide 70s-style slacks.
We check into the hostel where we bump into Tessa's dive instructor from Tofo, Simon-- who is passing through to leave the country just to return and get a new visa stamp so he can continue working. We also meet Joe-- a terribly funny British guy who does research on early warning systems. We four go to a new Mozambican restaurant and I have a delicious traditional dish "Matapo con carangueijo"-- pounded cassava leaves with peanut flour and coconut milk with 2 crab claws. Yum.
We comfortably walk along the pitch dark streets and Tessa and I realize that there are women walking home alone. It is a nice sight and I realize how relaxed I feel. The moist air, the broken sidewalks, the radiating neon from a corner store-- it envelopes you. We grab some coffee and share two pieces of chocolate cake before heading back to the hostel.
Crossing into Mo'bique is pretty sweet because for about a quarter of a mile you're not in any country at all. Your bus arrives at the border and you must get off and go into a building which is split down the middle. Each side is a mirror image of the other-- it is the immigration/emigration building of each country. You hand your passport to some lady in head-to-toe khaki military garb who will then ignore you completely, flip open to a page in your passport, and stamp something while not look-- all the while continuing her conversation with the other officers.
Then, in the midday sun, you take a walk up a dirt road that is no man's land to go to Mozambique. On this road you will find immigration officers sitting together in the shade people watching, as well as some of your fellow travelers carrying their belongings on their heads-- though not everyone seems to walk across. In fact more than a few never seemed to enter the offices and as the bus drove by us to pick us up on the other side, I thought-- are we caught in an illegal egg ring? I've watched enough Sopranos to know when to keep my mouth shut, so we quietly waited on line at the immigration half of the building to pay 17 more Rand (egg tax?) and get an entry stamp (I now officially only have 4 pages left in my passport and still 3 more years till it expires-- high five worthy!)
Back on the bus, I spend most of my time attempting to write but end up producing chicken scratch. Tessa and I play games with two little girls who are also riding the bus (roughly 3 and 4 years old?) I give the older one my pencil and she happily scribbles on and inside my Chinua Achebe novel. I encourage her-- why shouldn't novels be coloring books? If she doesn't mind, then why should I? So we have a lot of fun together--but by 5 p.m. we're arrived in Maputo.
My first impression of Maputo is that this is the Havana of my imagination-- a dilapidated paradise. At some point in time there was a sufficient amount of money invested in this city-- by the architecture, I estimate the 60s or the 70s-- but there has been no investment since. So the structures of the buildings are frozen in that moment-- a kind of optimistic resort architecture in the vision of Portuguese colonialism. But time and history interrupts this narrative-- the liberation occurs, the money leaves, the time passes, the people stay, the buildings are abandoned and sometimes reclaimed by locals but never in their original imagination. The beauty is not in the remnants of the first vision but in the continued use or a faded cityscape functioning as the backdrop for some unintended vibrant life.
And even the action can throw you into what seems like another time-- a couple walks hand in hand through the faded glory of a railway station, old men playing chess on the sidewalk with bottle caps, school kids in wide 70s-style slacks.
We check into the hostel where we bump into Tessa's dive instructor from Tofo, Simon-- who is passing through to leave the country just to return and get a new visa stamp so he can continue working. We also meet Joe-- a terribly funny British guy who does research on early warning systems. We four go to a new Mozambican restaurant and I have a delicious traditional dish "Matapo con carangueijo"-- pounded cassava leaves with peanut flour and coconut milk with 2 crab claws. Yum.
We comfortably walk along the pitch dark streets and Tessa and I realize that there are women walking home alone. It is a nice sight and I realize how relaxed I feel. The moist air, the broken sidewalks, the radiating neon from a corner store-- it envelopes you. We grab some coffee and share two pieces of chocolate cake before heading back to the hostel.
Tuesday, April 3, 2007
March 24, 2007: Soweto
Today, March 24th, is Tessa’s 26th birthday and she has decided to celebrate it in Soweto, which is a township outside of Johannesburg. Tessa, whose capacity to organize community events is unmatched by anyone I know, began working with her friend Gino and a non-profit called S.K.Y. (Soweto Kliptown Youth) to have an event. Tessa and I had been planning on travelling during my Easter break and since her birthday was so close I decided to leave Cape Town a week early, extend my break and celebrate her birthday with her. Lightbulbs appeared above Tessa’s head, knocking around the halo for a moment. She asked me if I would want to perform for some kids in Soweto and of course I said yes... and then the organizing began. Tessa’s Dutch friend Tikvah, who is teaching in Pretoria for a few months, plays guitar and so her and I had been exchanging emails—“What songs do you know?” “How about this song?” “Sorry, I’ve never heard of that musician.” “Really!? That’s not popular in the states?” and on and on, until finally we decided on the set list: “Sing” and “Lemon Tree” by Travis, “Three Little Birds” by Bob Marley, “Heart and Shoulder” by Heather Nova, and “One” by U2.
So yesterday, Tessa, Tikvah and Grace (Tessa’s friend from Uganda) picked me up at the Johannesburg airport and we returned to Tessa’s apartment and ran through the songs. Ouch! Wake up call for Nathalie—I need to start singing more often here. But we managed and were pretty optimistic about what Tessa came to name: “International Music Day: Kliptown”.
Tessa pulled some money together from her organization Cucu (www.cucu4children.nl) and bought cartons of bananas, apples and oranges and 3 great, big, chocolate cakes! She also rallied a few of the international students she was friendly with to come along with us to Soweto to see the township and share in the experience.
Before we set out for Soweto, Tessa receives a call from Gino’s girlfriend—a friend of his from Soweto has been shotand killed, so he won’t be organizing the day. A warning? A sign? We all look at each other unsure and call SKY to see if we can still bring food and play a few songs. Bob, the founder of SKY gives us that relaxed African invitation as through Kliptown was his living room—and it sort of is, as we’ll see children run about his driveway, hang out on the back patio and peer curiously into the kitchen.
Packed up, the caravan sets out—Tessa, myself, August (from Ghana), Grace (from Uganda) in one car and the Dutch car: Camille, Manuel, Tikvah, Esther and Melissa. We were led to Kliptown by Papi—one of the men from Kliptown who works with SKY. The city of Johannesburg fades into the background as the city highway turns into road, turns into unrepaired pavement, into a brick red mud alleyway alongside train tracks. We enter the labyrinth of Kliptown driving slower and slower at each step to soften the dips into the potholes or avoid a group of children until we are crawling along. A parade of outsiders? A caravan of voyeurs? We are witnesses but also being watched. WE are a spectacle—as we drive through some people gossip, some children smile and wave, some kids give us the stare. I’ve seen this stare before in Khayelitsha and I’ve yet to understand fully what goes on behind those eyes.
Finally we arrive at the SKY building, park, meet and greet, then set out for the recreation building which is a short walk from the SKY house. The sun had started poking through the clouds and the mud began to dry as we leisurely strolled through the Kliptown streets—a boy pushes a smaller boy on a very old bike, a soccer game erupts in the wide point of the road, music blares from a delapitated shack, a local boy scares one of the Dutch girls with a rubber snake, some curious kids join our walking group, a few men stand over a rusting bbq that has scrap peices of chicken grilling. There is life here. There is trash strewn everywhere, the children are dirty, the rusting walls of each shack nearly touch eachother but there is life in this place—and this life may be more real than a lot of the life and culture of other places I’ve travelled to. I am happy because although I am a visitor, I don’t feel like a tourist.
We enter the large, colorful recreation room whose walls are filled with books and posters of NBA players (the NBA sponsors SKY and build the rec room a few years back). By now, roughly 50 kids have gathered. But before our performance, we receive a surprised gift from SKY—they’ve arranged for the “flowers of Kliptown”, a children’s dance troop that performs all over South Africa to make money and promote SKY, to perform for the community’s kids and us.
Two young teenage girls take a seat with their drums and they begin pounding out a fast beat. A tiny girl explodes from the side door and begins dancing, expertly twisting and turning each limb. A tiny boy follows her and they act out a little lovers quarrel until she motions for her girlfriends to join her. A dozen girls, all in pink flirty skits and matching bandeau tops run out into the center of the room. They dance in a messy unison that is at once disciplined and fun and free. Their tiny bodies and the boom of the drum beat together until they are mockingly run offstage by the boys’ group, who wear old, oversized fisherman’s boots. The boys begin to drum their own beat by stomping and slapping their boots. The sound bursts from their small hands and these tiny men tease the girls until both join together and the room is filed with their energy.
All the kids applaud and we also holler and clap for these amazing children. I am truly impressed by the way they gave all of their energy to the dance—you could see it in the beads of sweat on their foreheads, the stomping easily heard from far away, and the strength of the kicking leg or control and technique of the swirling hip. I felt honored to have such a performance given to us. Last, the maestro had all the kids sing “Happy Birthday” to Tessa and Tikvah (who was turning 25).
Next up was our performance. Tessa had made some copies of the lyrics so that the kids could sin galong if they wanted. At first shy, it took a lot of encouragement and repetition to cajole them into singing or clapping along, but soon they go tinto it—singing the chorus to the Travis song: “For the love you bring, won’t mean a thing unless you sing, sing, sing”.
We also invited two of the kids who had been playing around with the guitar and drum to play a song with us. Tessa had all the kids stand up and we sang Marley’s “Three Little Birds” together (a universal classic). We all began to dance and sing and laugh together in a circle. It was a great time.
Afterwards we went back to the SKY house and gave out an apple, an orange, a banana and a piece of chocolate cake to each child. Papo wanted to take us around Kliptown but we ended up spending most of our time at a shabeen in a nicer area of Soweto. A shabeen is someone’s house that they’ve made into a restaurant or bar. A mixture of soul music, American and African jazz pumped on the patio and we were welcomed by the whole family: Joe was the dad and owner, his wife was the chef and the two younger daughters were the waitresses.
I was standing in the front yard talking to a few people when Papi came up to me and pointed to this small old lady sitting in a dark corner, a felt hat tilted stylishly on her head. He asked if I know who it is-- I look again and she looks back at me, two bright wide eyes peering out from the shadow under her hat. "That's Tandi Klaasen--she's a famous jazz singer. Come over and meet her". We walk over and Papi says to Thandi-- "This is Nathalie, she's a singer too. She has the voice of an angel. She sang for the kids today". Rhandi, roughly 70 or so, stands up to shake my hand and begins asking me about my music!
Throughout the night we talk sporadically about music and life. She started singing in Soweto and doing shows with various jazz acts, eventually singing with the likes of Miriam Makeba (one of my mother's favorite singers). One night after a show, she was leaving a club when some men threw chemicals on her that burned the skin on her face (there are some conflicting stories about why this exactly happened-- including from Thandi herself. Some say it was racially motivated, some say there was a love triangle and this was revenge). But there was triumph in her voice. I know because she sang for us that night. She said that she thought it was beautiful that young people were coming into the townships and crossing boundaries-- everyone was really quite surprised to see such an international mix of young students (white and black) at a shabeen.
So before we left she sang a Xhosa song for us that is traditionally meant to be sung when friends are leaving. Everyone gathered around--foreigners and locals together-- in a circle around her. She lowered her head and it seemed her voice rose from under her and her arms floated out to the sides as the melody announced itself. She is a true performer. The drama in her swelling voice and slow movements captured your attention completely-- we were all hers for those few moments, standing in Soweto, inside its history and its song.
So yesterday, Tessa, Tikvah and Grace (Tessa’s friend from Uganda) picked me up at the Johannesburg airport and we returned to Tessa’s apartment and ran through the songs. Ouch! Wake up call for Nathalie—I need to start singing more often here. But we managed and were pretty optimistic about what Tessa came to name: “International Music Day: Kliptown”.
Tessa pulled some money together from her organization Cucu (www.cucu4children.nl) and bought cartons of bananas, apples and oranges and 3 great, big, chocolate cakes! She also rallied a few of the international students she was friendly with to come along with us to Soweto to see the township and share in the experience.
Before we set out for Soweto, Tessa receives a call from Gino’s girlfriend—a friend of his from Soweto has been shotand killed, so he won’t be organizing the day. A warning? A sign? We all look at each other unsure and call SKY to see if we can still bring food and play a few songs. Bob, the founder of SKY gives us that relaxed African invitation as through Kliptown was his living room—and it sort of is, as we’ll see children run about his driveway, hang out on the back patio and peer curiously into the kitchen.
Packed up, the caravan sets out—Tessa, myself, August (from Ghana), Grace (from Uganda) in one car and the Dutch car: Camille, Manuel, Tikvah, Esther and Melissa. We were led to Kliptown by Papi—one of the men from Kliptown who works with SKY. The city of Johannesburg fades into the background as the city highway turns into road, turns into unrepaired pavement, into a brick red mud alleyway alongside train tracks. We enter the labyrinth of Kliptown driving slower and slower at each step to soften the dips into the potholes or avoid a group of children until we are crawling along. A parade of outsiders? A caravan of voyeurs? We are witnesses but also being watched. WE are a spectacle—as we drive through some people gossip, some children smile and wave, some kids give us the stare. I’ve seen this stare before in Khayelitsha and I’ve yet to understand fully what goes on behind those eyes.
Finally we arrive at the SKY building, park, meet and greet, then set out for the recreation building which is a short walk from the SKY house. The sun had started poking through the clouds and the mud began to dry as we leisurely strolled through the Kliptown streets—a boy pushes a smaller boy on a very old bike, a soccer game erupts in the wide point of the road, music blares from a delapitated shack, a local boy scares one of the Dutch girls with a rubber snake, some curious kids join our walking group, a few men stand over a rusting bbq that has scrap peices of chicken grilling. There is life here. There is trash strewn everywhere, the children are dirty, the rusting walls of each shack nearly touch eachother but there is life in this place—and this life may be more real than a lot of the life and culture of other places I’ve travelled to. I am happy because although I am a visitor, I don’t feel like a tourist.
We enter the large, colorful recreation room whose walls are filled with books and posters of NBA players (the NBA sponsors SKY and build the rec room a few years back). By now, roughly 50 kids have gathered. But before our performance, we receive a surprised gift from SKY—they’ve arranged for the “flowers of Kliptown”, a children’s dance troop that performs all over South Africa to make money and promote SKY, to perform for the community’s kids and us.
Two young teenage girls take a seat with their drums and they begin pounding out a fast beat. A tiny girl explodes from the side door and begins dancing, expertly twisting and turning each limb. A tiny boy follows her and they act out a little lovers quarrel until she motions for her girlfriends to join her. A dozen girls, all in pink flirty skits and matching bandeau tops run out into the center of the room. They dance in a messy unison that is at once disciplined and fun and free. Their tiny bodies and the boom of the drum beat together until they are mockingly run offstage by the boys’ group, who wear old, oversized fisherman’s boots. The boys begin to drum their own beat by stomping and slapping their boots. The sound bursts from their small hands and these tiny men tease the girls until both join together and the room is filed with their energy.
All the kids applaud and we also holler and clap for these amazing children. I am truly impressed by the way they gave all of their energy to the dance—you could see it in the beads of sweat on their foreheads, the stomping easily heard from far away, and the strength of the kicking leg or control and technique of the swirling hip. I felt honored to have such a performance given to us. Last, the maestro had all the kids sing “Happy Birthday” to Tessa and Tikvah (who was turning 25).
Next up was our performance. Tessa had made some copies of the lyrics so that the kids could sin galong if they wanted. At first shy, it took a lot of encouragement and repetition to cajole them into singing or clapping along, but soon they go tinto it—singing the chorus to the Travis song: “For the love you bring, won’t mean a thing unless you sing, sing, sing”.
We also invited two of the kids who had been playing around with the guitar and drum to play a song with us. Tessa had all the kids stand up and we sang Marley’s “Three Little Birds” together (a universal classic). We all began to dance and sing and laugh together in a circle. It was a great time.
Afterwards we went back to the SKY house and gave out an apple, an orange, a banana and a piece of chocolate cake to each child. Papo wanted to take us around Kliptown but we ended up spending most of our time at a shabeen in a nicer area of Soweto. A shabeen is someone’s house that they’ve made into a restaurant or bar. A mixture of soul music, American and African jazz pumped on the patio and we were welcomed by the whole family: Joe was the dad and owner, his wife was the chef and the two younger daughters were the waitresses.
I was standing in the front yard talking to a few people when Papi came up to me and pointed to this small old lady sitting in a dark corner, a felt hat tilted stylishly on her head. He asked if I know who it is-- I look again and she looks back at me, two bright wide eyes peering out from the shadow under her hat. "That's Tandi Klaasen--she's a famous jazz singer. Come over and meet her". We walk over and Papi says to Thandi-- "This is Nathalie, she's a singer too. She has the voice of an angel. She sang for the kids today". Rhandi, roughly 70 or so, stands up to shake my hand and begins asking me about my music!
Throughout the night we talk sporadically about music and life. She started singing in Soweto and doing shows with various jazz acts, eventually singing with the likes of Miriam Makeba (one of my mother's favorite singers). One night after a show, she was leaving a club when some men threw chemicals on her that burned the skin on her face (there are some conflicting stories about why this exactly happened-- including from Thandi herself. Some say it was racially motivated, some say there was a love triangle and this was revenge). But there was triumph in her voice. I know because she sang for us that night. She said that she thought it was beautiful that young people were coming into the townships and crossing boundaries-- everyone was really quite surprised to see such an international mix of young students (white and black) at a shabeen.
So before we left she sang a Xhosa song for us that is traditionally meant to be sung when friends are leaving. Everyone gathered around--foreigners and locals together-- in a circle around her. She lowered her head and it seemed her voice rose from under her and her arms floated out to the sides as the melody announced itself. She is a true performer. The drama in her swelling voice and slow movements captured your attention completely-- we were all hers for those few moments, standing in Soweto, inside its history and its song.
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