Alive and in South Africa by Lois Nicholls,
published on IOL Travel website on 5 May 2009
(Click here for the
original article.)
Alive!
The word pops into my head as we enter Johannesburg's
Oliver Tambo Airport.
Ironic
really, isn't it, for a country with one of the highest
crime rates in the world? Yet I feel it. Sense it. Am
reminded of a friend who says he comes alive every time he
returns – feels boring, bland and disconnected for weeks in
his new country, Australia every time he goes back.
"An electricity in the air" is how another friend describes
it. People seem to laugh more, live more
These thoughts resonate as my daughter and I arrive jaded
yet expectant. We collect cling-wrapped suitcases and
plastic piping containing an art canvas paintstakingly
painted by my mother in law for my niece's wedding gift and
embark on our flight to Durban.
On arrival in Durban, we load luggage onto trolley,
relieved and mildly surprised everything is still intact.
We meet my precious parents who are so, so happy to see us.
It seems like yesterday yet it is years since our last
visit. My friend's Italian in-laws are there too –
collecting gifts and a watch needing repair from the bowels
of my cling-wrapped suitcase. In the commotion of
unwrapping suitcase, embracing parents and searching for
gifts, I leave the plastic piping carrying painting in the
middle of Arrivals. I remember my concentration lapse
halfway to my parent's home. The joy of arriving is tainted
by the concern that I will never see the painting again.
Surprise! Euphoria! They have found the painting. Early the
next morning, my dad and I brave the hour's journey back to
the airport to claim my well-traveled artwork. I
acknowledge the piping looks like a bazooka and marvel
no-one called the bomb squad.
We repeat the hair-raising journey back home to my parent's
picturesque little retirement village lined with neat homes
and colourful gardens.
The views are sensational. I marvel at how green and lush
everything looks. Plants grow fast. There is broccoli in
the garden, a prolific crop of bright red pepperdews (which
my dad later bottles for me), green peppers are ready for
picking and a profusion of pink dahlias bloom in the front
garden. My mother carelessly tosses seeds into a flowerbed
of rich, dark soil and they sprout within days.
I learn the bright orange flowers that joyfully spill over
a trellis in the back yard are Black-eyed Susans. I wonder
if they'll grow in my dry shale garden back home.
I photograph old oak trees and magnificent liquid amber's
dressed in their bright red autumn wardrobe. We take a walk
within an extensive boundary of electric fencing and
encounter impala, blesbok and zebra. The grass smells
sweet. I am reminded of my youngest son who when asked what
he loved most about South Africa, thought for a moment and
then said: "The smell." At the time a more cynical me
wondered what he meant. I now understand.
A warm, friendly neighbour delivers freshly baked carrot
muffins and says she'll leave cheese puffs at the front
door early on Sunday morning. Random acts of kindness are a
hallmark of this little village.
Green rolling mountains. The Howick Falls – gaily decorated
with colourful, newly washed blankets at its summit. Where
else in the world?
Everywhere are political posters marking April's elections.
Zuma is pasted on the town's pillars and posts – his
beaming face even covers an entire electricity box like
Zuma wallpaper.
My daughter is amused by a ‘Vote for the Tiger' poster and
takes a photograph to show her brothers back home. "He
looks far too friendly to be a tiger," she says of a
grinning Rajbanzi.
We travel deep into KwaZulu-Natal for my niece's nuptials.
I meet my beautiful sisters, my nephews and nieces.
Everything is warm and fuzzy.
The wedding scene is breath-taking. A stark white marquee
has a backdrop of imposing mountains, a dam complete with
ducks and a green field of inquisitive cows.
The local tight-knit farming community pitches in to help –
arranges flowers, helps set out tables and an all-important
dance floor. A garden arch is transformed with foliage and
baby's breath. The marquee is bedecked with white drapes,
fairy lights and chandeliers. Generous urns of flowers
spill out from corners, green hydrangeas, roses and soft
pink proteas add subtle splashes of colour to crisp white
table settings. My daughter and I help tie sage green
chiffon sashes around smartly dressed white chairs.
The day arrives and the weather is perfect. An exquisite
bride and handsome groom exchange vows under a fabric
festooned arch. The bride sobs when it comes to say "I do"
and we all cry with her.
Photographs are taken under an old oak tree. A
three-layered dense, dark chocolate cake decorated with
golden spun sugar and chocolate cup cakes is cut out in the
afternoon sunshine on the edge of the dam. A herd of
curious cows offer their congratulations.
My daughter is enraptured. She learns what it means to
party country style and later dances the night away in her
flower girl champagne silk dress and Ugg boots. It is 1am
before she finally gives in and falls into an exhausted
heap. The country revellers party on.
In a sober moment, I chat to my nephews about leaving South
Africa. Would they? They all say no, never. Bright, young
and highly educated, they are prepared to work abroad but
actually leave forever? Leave surfing in Llandudno? Their
friends? Their unique lifestyle? Not possible. They are
optimistic, realistic - full of life and hope. They claim
most of their friends are too. Yet they acknowledge the
road ahead is tough. "White, male and bottom of the pile,"
they laugh. So they simply study longer and harder,
confident this will give them the edge in a biased job
market. I so want them to succeed and believe strongly that
they will.
The elderly appear more pragmatic, slightly less
optimistic. A sage farmer tells me, "If you live here, you
can't complain, you stand in queues if you have to. You
adapt."
The next day my brother-in-law shows me the foundations for
his new home in the foothills of Mt Curry.
I gasp at the stunning views of mountains and grassland.
The plans are in his head, not on paper. Finding a builder
was easy. He sought out a builder who had built his last
farmhouse at least 18 years ago.
"I put word out in the Transkei that I wanted to build a
house and he arrived at my front door five days later."
No council stipulations or regulations.
I remember the rigmarole in getting our own building plans
passed through council, the red tape and petty formalities.
The "fauna spotter catcher" a neighbour was required to
hire so he could scout for animals in gum trees before
allowing clearance for a building envelope.
The fact that we require an expensive permit every time we
want to burn anything at all. And yet, through it all, I am
grateful everything works like a well oiled, predictable
yet efficient machine.
I leave the wedding venue full and saturated with family.
My daughter writes in her journal that "mom sobbed again".
We stop at an Underberg farm stall to buy mazavaroo and a
grainy loaf of home-baked bread. The village is brimming
with scraggly Splashy Fen revellers in need of a greasy
breakfast and a hot shower.
At a local mall, I later discover Mr Price Home. I almost
buy two over-sized cushions but sanity prevails and I
purchase two vases instead – one a deep red, one white.
They are both made in South Africa, not China.
I re-introduce my daughter to Nik-Naks, Frito's and Big
Korn Bites. We load up on old favourites to take back to
her brothers and father.
I'm in a happy bubble, an impenetrable and nostalgic
laager. Yet every now and then something dark and sinister
invades – tragic accidents caused by over-crowded buses,
over-tired drivers and erratic driving. A news story
reveals the intruders that killed a six year old boy and
left his mother in a coma have been sentenced to life
imprisonment. So too have iconic muso Lucky Dube's killers.
The jails must be full to overflowing, I ponder.
The crime is insidious, evil – a deadly viper that
heedlessly invades the beauty, peace and serenity. It
unsettles me.
My dear friend drives an hour to visit. She hasn't aged a
bit – still gorgeous after all these years. We chat as
though we saw each other yesterday. I show her my
photographs saturated with scenery shots.
"The countryside is achingly beautiful," I dramatise. Then
I am slightly embarrassed by her bemused and vaguely amused
expression.
"I suppose we take it for granted," she kindly
acknowledges.
I chat to a dear old Cape Town friend for an hour on the
phone – I long to see her in person, to see the expressions
on her face. Maybe next time.
I visit a precious old school friend - comfortingly the
same. She still has the same gracious home and enviable
garden – a warm and generous husband and two beautiful
children. They are off to boarding school – he's loving
life, his sport – she lives for her horses.
Too soon we have to return home. The drive to the airport
seems even more hair-raising than the last. The truck
strike is over so all the heavy weights are on the road. A
20-ton truck thunders past – we're doing 120 km an hour so
heaven knows how fast he's travelling. I am slightly
fearful we will not make it.
We arrive safely. I try not to cry. I remind my tearful
mother that we are so fortunate we are not refugees fleeing
our country without hope of ever seeing family again.
"We're actually really lucky," I convince us both. "We'll
come back soon," I add optimistically. It works, sort of.
This time I am tearful but not sobbing. We have barely
passed through security when my daughter is apprehended and
her hand luggage searched. She has mistakenly put Gran's
pinking shears in her pencil case.
Customs kindly allow us to return them to Gran. I am
grateful for the lighter moment. Later in Jo'burg I too am
forced to hand over my booty – pickled pepperdews lovingly
bottled by my dad are confiscated. I vow to squeeze them
into my suitcase next time.
The flight back to Brisbane via Singapore is interminably
long.
My sons and husband meet us at the airport – we are
embraced, feel loved, missed. In the weeks we've been away
my teenaged son has grown taller than me. His younger
brother has almost learned how to whistle.
We return to our home among the gum trees. I step out onto
our veranda; breathe the fresh night air, thankful for the
heralding of cooler weather. It has rained while I was gone
and in the light of the moon, I see that the grass is
uncharacteristically green. The imposing ghost gums
surrounding our home like sentinels are stripped of their
bark. It is a different, still unfamiliar beauty, I muse.
I stroke our faithful golden retriever's downy ears – and
note she doesn't appear to have realised we left at all.
The guinea pigs have survived.
I notice my husband has folded all the washing. "We even
cleaned out your car," says my son.
Home. Yet the yearning remains. A little piece of me
forever missing.
Lois
Nicholls is the author of Aussie, Actually, soon to be
released in South Africa by Aardvark Press. Go to
Aussie
Actually
