This week was so compacted with new people, smells, landscapes, and colours that it would be impossible for me to detail everything, and it would be an insult to those experiences to summarize them without deeper explanation. I am trapped in a catch-22. I am choosing, therefore, to break up the week into segments, sharing a little at a time, and hope that through their compilation you may be able to see what I saw and hear what I heard from a more holistic lens.
Arriving. Arriving was difficult. No, it was more than that. Arriving was exciting, thrilling, and scary as hell. Meg and I arrived in Durban, picked up our VW Jetta rental car and I sat behind the wheel, stuck in a mixed cd with Aretha Franklin, and began to drive. South Africa, and indeed most of southern Africa, was colonised by the British, and drivers thus drive on the left side of the road. The air was warm and heavy, a drastic contrast to the cold, damp air of Cape Town. Banana trees with shredded leaves and burnt red soil lined the highways. Zulu women and men walked along the roadsides carrying everything on their heads: suitcases, baskets, grocery bags, cardboard boxes filled with onions, carrots, oranges, guava. My stomach was clenched tight and my temper was short, and we drove down the highway looking for the Temple of Understanding, the largest Hare Krishna temple in the southern hemisphere, which was supposedly close by. I asked Megan to look in her guide book for Zulu phrases like, "Hello" and "Where is the..." as we realised very few people in this area of the city would speak English.

Sirvana stayed with us for over an hour, guiding us through her spiritual

After we escaped the buzzing of Durban, we entered a solitary space along the coast of Kwazulu-Natal

Cows greeted us as we arrived. Cows to our left, cows in the hills, cows crossing the road in hoards, brown and black and unchecked by fences or people. We passed small villages with mud and dung huts, circular in shape, with reeds carefully laid as a roof, and children playing barefoot soccer outside, collecting water at a pump in large dirty plastic jars. No one had indoor plumbing. No one had electricity. Everyone spoke siSwati, not English. I felt like I was a witness of an indestructible, resilient life, one that had surged forward for hundreds of years nearly unchanged. At first judgmental about the poverty and this meager lifestyle, my perspective shifted to one of awe as Megan keenly pointed out the wealth of knowledge these Swazis must possess about raising cattle, about building these homes, about how to live and prosper under these dry environmental conditions. We would also learn later that cows equal currency to Swazis, and this was indeed the rule for most pre-colonial African societies. These people were not mere cowherders; in their communities, those who owned the cows were rich and powerful.
We spent the first night in a hotel off the side of the road. There were no lights for kilometers except those of the stars and the milky way. Crickets chirped in the muggy night air. We felt lucky to sleep in a room with electricity and plumbing, although small ants crawled along the dusty tile floor and the manager spoke little English. It was a bed. And we had made it across the border.





1 comment:
Tell me more, tell me more! Amazing words, amazing pictures, amazing women. I can't wait to read more about your adventures.
Love you and miss you even more.
Dad
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