Tag Archives

Michael

KITCHENER’S ISLAND

David Selzer By David Selzer0 Comments1 min read1.4K views

Our felucca tacked across the river Nile

to Aswan from Kitchener’s Island –

with its well watered botanical gardens

and its straight boulevards of tall palm trees –

gifted to Lord Kitchener of Khartoum,

pre Great War, as Egypt’s Consul-General.

 

As we approached the east bank, out of nowhere

it seemed, a boy appeared along side us

in a small zinc bath paddling with his hands

and singing, “‘Michael, row the boat ashore!

Hallelujah!'” – the old slave song learned then turned,

with chutzpah and courage, back to enterprise.

“Please give him anything but money,”

urged our Egyptologist guide, alumnus

of Cairo and Yale. “We must not become a

nation of supplicants.” A fellow tourist

gave him a packet of paper handkerchiefs,

another some sweets. The rest of us

had nothing but money. “Shukran!” he called,

and waved graciously encompassing us all.

He paddled off. “‘Boastin’ talk will sink your soul!'”

I thought, cheeky beggar – ‘Your Country Needs You’!

 

 

 

THE VALLEY OF THE AMARICI, KWAZULU-NATAL, APRIL 2006

David Selzer By David Selzer0 Comments1 min read1.5K views

Elijah is our guide, Michael our mentor –

Mandla and Mbuzeni – old enough

to have needed ‘white’ names.

 

“They are not tourists”, Mbuzeni explains,

as we meet healers, dancers, wedding guests.

He is politely disbelieved.

The expensive camera appears to betray us.

‘‘They are big people,” begins Mandla –

an old woman interrupts, speaking to me:

“Hey, Mister Man, what do you want?”

I explain, try to reassure. “I have worked

in the gold mines, Mister Man. I know you.”

 

Legend has it renegades from Shaka Zulu

hid in the valley, became cannibal.

In the not so long ago past,

male children had their cheeks scored,

as infants, to drain the bad blood.

Mandla stops a friend on horseback,

who willingly shows us the three

horizontal scars on each cheek.

 

We stay at Mbuzeni’s house. Through the night

there is distant drumming. We wake early

to a loudspeaker moving through the valley,

electioneering. This is Inkhata country.

 

We can see from his house a thick belt of alien

poplar trees far beyond the high grass

at the foot of a slope – a screen for an alpine-type resort.

We eat there – Mbuzeni, Mandla, the only black guests.

A friend and neighbour from the valley serves us.

The other guests stare. We become angry.

“What is now law is not yet lore!” says Mandla, laughing.

“We are where we are, guys,” says Mbuzeni, softly.