Sunday, February 28, 2016

#4

Today I learnt of …

Today I learnt of a man I never met. The facts and fictions of his life escape me, but the irrevocable fact of his death, and his connection to me, gives it meaning that I cannot escape. How can what I do not know, and never did know, affect me so deeply? Indeed, how is it a real loss to me? This unknown fragment, light as a feather in the air, but heavy as a boulder on my heart? Perhaps I cannot know, perhaps I cannot …

Apparently his death brought him back into lives that he had long departed from; perhaps like myself he had retreated too far to come back into their lives, and make himself a part of their bodies once again. His heart and lungs gave way to his addiction, and he slipped out of the world, his history unknown to those who knew him then. He had become a fragment, lost in decades of dissolution, slowly becoming one with the sea of noise that he had drifted into when his heart had broken.

Till today, I had never heard of him. But my mother insists I knew of him, her brother. The truth is I have no memory of him at all. And somehow I feel guilty, a guilt for the nothingness that remains where more appropriate emotions should be. I am cut off, adrift from the world of interactions that enforce memory through regularity, frequency; of the things that make a signal amidst the noise.

He died institutionalised. It could not have been a happy death, but how are we to know? Apparently he had attended university once, even graduated with distinction, but I am unsure how much of this is real, and how much is fiction. It has all blended, as it has before, and become a myth, a story worth telling. A story perhaps better than his life was at its end, expiring in a stark, dry interior border town, where nothing much resides, and everything passes through, like tumbleweed; searching for anywhere but here, little pieces scattering along the journey.

There is a silence in these places, these in-between spaces. Perhaps that was what he craved there, a place where the noise ceased, and there was a sense of peace, even if contrived; a product of a solitude rarely present in urban life. A silence where in some moments, only the earth and the sky could be heard, as though they hummed in and of their own constitution, a resonant body of sorts that made up something that exists without us, and despite us. Something that reaches into eternity.

One of the generation of ’76, he fought the police at the barricades, apparently. So many claim to have, of that generation. An old wives tale told by prisoners we often hear, but how much of it is myth, and how much is true? We will perhaps never know, because this history has been put asunder, for a greater purpose, a greater myth, one that has begun to fail us, but at which we grasp with conviction, as though the loose sand we clutch at can rescue us from its quickening when it floods from below, and turns to a watery grave.

Friday, February 26, 2016

New Book: Lazarus in the Multiple: Awakening to the Era of Complexity

Lazarus in the Multiple: Awakening to the Era of Complexity

Surviving the Anthropocene

Published January 29 2016
Zero Books, UK

“Lazarus in the Multiple” presents a new philosophy on how to navigate the complex challenges that society faces in the 21st Century. It deploys the biblical “Lazarus” as the everyman of modernity, who is caught between past and present, life and death, and sleep and awakening amidst the humdrum and complexity of the “multiple”. The multiple is the great sea of noise[i] that lies both within and without Lazarus, from which social reality is born. In this casting, Lazarus is unable to distinguish the signal from the noise and hence remains trapped within enduring ritual and an unfulfilled existence. He is unable to find expression and take actions to bring about meaningful change within himself or in the world around him.

This book builds on the work of Michel Serres, as well as many other philosophers and theorists to articulate a new way of understanding real-world complexity[ii] and acting upon it. It invokes the metaphors of jazz musicians and fighters, and their particular ability to improvise and adapt to environments of great complexity and adversity. They achieve this through their ability to sense, intuit and seek out moments where rules can be broken in order to produce creative and innovative responses to change. As such, the philosophy put forward in this book has significant implications for leaders, strategists and everyday people who are tasked with navigating the challenges of modernity in an era that is characterised by fast changing and complex socio-cultural, economic, environmental, political and technological phenomena.

Whereas the departure point for traditional approaches to formulating theories of complexity draw on the mechanisms of complex systems, the theoretical approach adopted in this book takes the properties of complex systems as its starting point. This enables a wholly new way of deploying complexity theory in relation to societal challenges, and shifts the focus away from mechanistic, cybernetics oriented frameworks towards a post-humanist conception where sense, awareness and intuition become critical factors for negotiating the complexity of the multiple.

The book’s conceptual framework is deployed in a diverse set of complex societal challenges. These range from identity and the politics of forgiveness, to thoughtlessness and the manifestation of evil in society, to the bipolarity of left-right politics, and to the burning need for a behavioural transition that is required for society to adequately navigate the emerging developmental challenges of the 21st Century (such as global economic change, climate change and the loss of life supporting ecosystems). Thus, the usefulness of the conceptual framework is demonstrated. South Africa’s particular challenges are discussed in parts of the book, but these analyses are always strongly linked to their global relevance.  Through these discussions, the book identifies the debilitating and empowering potential of the multiple in an increasingly complex world.

However, while this book delivers new knowledge, it is not written the way an academic book on philosophy typically is. Rather, it is written as prose, and makes use of the power of narrative to accommodate contradictions, paradox and duality in understanding and navigating complexity. It is intended for a popular intellectual audience – i.e. a combination of philosophy-oriented creative, esoteric and academic readers – who are concerned with how to navigate the societal challenges of the 21st Century, and are interested in new ways of thinking about and conceptualising the challenges we face.

Details of Release:

“Lazarus in the Multiple” is a forthcoming publication of Zero Books (John Hunt Publications, UK) and will be released on January 29 2016. It is available in both electronic and print versions and can be (pre)ordered online at: http://www.zero-books.net/books/lazurus-multiple.

                                               

Surviving the Anthropocene



[i] As articulated in the work of the philosopher Michel Serres: see Serres, M. (1995/1982). Genesis. USA: University of Michigan Press. James, G. & Nielson J. (translators). Originally published in French by Editions Grasset et Fasquelle (1982).
[ii] Complex systems exhibit emergence i.e. surprising, often abrupt changes that cannot be predicted, but arises from extensive, ‘open-ness’, rich interconnectedness and multiplicity. Complex systems are hence highly variable, and are heavily characterised by uncertainty and non-linearity. Moreover, complex systems cannot be understood from one perspective alone because they are multivariate.

Thursday, February 25, 2016

Fatima Chapter 3 |1968: Child Woman

1968: Child Woman


Fatima felt slightly nauseous.  Mr Govender was not a kind teacher however, and she felt that she could ride out the alternating flushes of hot and cold through her body until the school siren shot out its wail.  There was always a feeling of tired calm when the siren went.  Some children rushed out hurriedly but most could feel the effects of the spent energy on their tired brains and bodies and took long to pack up while chatting and slowly making their way home in groups of twos, threes and fives.  She was looking around for Aisha when she felt it.  It seemed to come at the first and loudest blast of the siren and she moistened between her legs with the ‘decrescendoing’ wail of the remaining sound.

She couldn’t believe she was wetting herself! She was thirteen years old now.  She hadn’t even wet her bed in years.  Her neck flushed a shade of deep red and she could feel the blood being pulled to her cheeks.  Shame! Trying to remain discreet she calmly packed her homework into a satchel and made her way towards the toilet.  The green walls calmed her a little as she entered the girls toilet which was roofless on the inside forming a sunny little courtyard during most of the year.  It was silent.  Everyone had gone home and the toilet gave the impression that it was being intruded upon.  Her shoes rang on the concrete floor, the sounds bouncing from wall to wall creating a plethora of overlaid echoes.  She hoped no one could hear.

She carefully crouched down into one of the cubicles and pulled the front of her dress up.  This is when the panic struck.  Such a feeling of pure basic fear had never before coursed through her little body.  In all her short life she had never experienced the fear of death.  She did now, and it overpowered her naïve senses and drove her into a deep sleep.  In short, she fainted.  Her eyes rolled and she bent over.  Placing her head into her lap, she fainted.

It was the screaming that brought her round.  From far within the deep recesses of her mind she could hear a distant panicked guttural wailing.  In her state of discontinued consciousness she was aware of, but not immediately concerned with, the far-away screams outside her head.  She lay motionless, deeply settled within the impassive recesses of her mind until the sound of a million crickets were gently faded into her head.  The sound was like the sound of dawn which rose steadily until it became intensified hundreds of times over; amplified with a canny treble that grew louder and louder until it filled her head.  The screams began to sound more intimate, more jarring, and with a rush of confused resonance she was jolted awake in mid-scream, her own!

“Stop shouting biddha, open the door.”

Beneath the lower end of the door that was cut to three-quarter length she could see the wrinkled face of the ayah who cleaned up after school.  She had a concerned but calm look on her face.  It was as if maternity was bred into her; she knew she had to be calm to keep the child calm.  When Fatima managed to open the door the old ayah could see immediately what the problem was.  The sight of blood had initially worried her but now she could see what was going on.  She took the back of the girls head in her left hand while she tugged at the toilet paper with the right and cleaned the now smudged trickle of blood off her inner thigh and hands.  It was just a jot.  She spoke all the time with an intrinsic knowledge that this would help calm the girl.

“Don’t worry Biddha, everythings ok, just a little bit of blood, all part of growing up.”

Fatima didn’t quite comprehend what the ayah was saying.  Her eyes gave her confusion away.  They seemed to quiver within their large widened sockets.  They signalled to the ayah that the girl was still searching for pieces of this puzzle.  That expression of guilt, bewilderment and confusion would one day revisit her in the face of her own child but for now she was unaware of its presence upon herself.

Adding to her confusion the ayah spoke again;

“You’re a woman now, every month you’ll have little bit blood coming out from now on.”

The poor ayah was now grasping the full extent of the girls’ confusion and spoke softly to her;

“I think maybe your mummy just felt shame to tell you, but when girls become womans you bleed little bit every month, just for few days.  You can have babies from now on.  You’re getting older now, time to grow up and become a big girl.  You’ll have to be careful around the boys from now on.”

She nodded, those big eyes fixed squarely on the ayah’s shriveled mouth.  She knew that something new was happening to her and that the blood was natural but she was still horrified.  Babies!?  She was barely a child herself.  She had heard talk about high school girls getting pregnant and having babies too soon.  It was always spoken of in hushed tones, and often there was a distinctively menacing derogatory tone to the comments.

‘That one, you can see it in her from small! Always running around with the boys.  Tooo much boys all the time.  Now they all acting sur-prised but it’s the hup-bringing that’s the cause.  I blame the mother; it’s her job to teach praw-perly how to behave.’

Fatima had a new cause for panic now.  No matter what, she mustn’t have a baby before it was time to get married.  And that seemed an impossibly long way off.  She hoped that this blood didn’t mean that she could get pregnant just by touching boys.  She would have to be very careful.

The walk home was a journey of silent worry for Fatima.  Usually she would be interested in everything on the way home; the grocers stalls, the sweet aunties, the boys in the mango trees, or old Puglar-Peter the 'mentally handicapped' child of Nathoo (Bobby) Naicker who sat outside the ice-block aunties house … but not today.  Today the sun seemed to bear down onto the top of her head making her a little faint.  She was glad to get out of the sun and through the back door into the kitchen.

Her mother shifted her stance onto her left foot, turning the roti with her right hand while placing her bunched left fist into her hip,

“Why sooo late baby?”

The sight of her mother brought out the child in her; her face crumpled up into a frown as she started to cry and whine at the same time;

“My head is paining mommy.  I got sick today in school.”

A look of concern came over the older woman’s face.  She started on the child but was cut short by Fatima blurting,

“Blood came out of my cookie mummy!”


Mariam caught herself as she took in the shock.  She hadn’t had time lately to think about the girls’ age.  A sad nostalgia welled up in her chest.  Fathu was no longer a child.  Her little baby would now be trained and chained to the ways of women.  From now on she would have to learn new behaviours and the freedom of childhood would soon be gone from her.  Still, it was every woman’s fate to become like this.  There was little she could do for the child now but guide her along gently, teaching her how to behave appropriately.  She was a good child anyway, always listened and obeyed, eager to please.  That temper though, that would do her no good as a woman.  She would have to try and get the girl to bottle that raw anger, to accept things she couldn’t change.  After all, life is like that for a woman.

Click here for the previous chapter of Fatima


Click here for the next chapter of Fatima


I Won’t Forget


I won’t forget,
I can’t!
But I can only piece together,
What I’ve seen,
Felt,
And heard,
With the fragments,
That persist.

I remember,
Lost youth,
And hard childhoods,
All the rejected,
And abandoned,
Of my kind,
My generation.

Even if it’s just me,
I’ll keep the weight up,
And the hate up,
Till you hear me,
I’ll scream!
This is not a battle to lose,
Not now,
Not when we’ve come so far.

How can I forget?
Even with all this regret,
Blurring the vision of my heroes;
My mother, my father, my family, my friends,
My tree,
With Malcom and Steve,
Long rotting in their graves,
Only Tupac,
Could feel our pain,
And the drain,
Of lost youth.

I will remember,
My kind,
The boys on the corner,
Caged into slavery.
My sister’s struggles,
So much more,
In the jungle,
Where we find our trees.

I see them still,
Making monkeys of us,
Ignoring us,
High up in the trees,
Far away from the safe earth,
The land of true liberation,
The land of education and literacy,
The glass ceiling,
With the Rands mounting on every gilded,
Step of the social ladder.

I know this lie,
I know this slavery,
It isn’t much different from before,
Only now,
We’ll learn to ignore both black and white poor,
Cause we’re so blurred with regret,
Our vision can’t hold their gaze,
As we drive by in our metal monstrosities …
Do we fail to see it?

I can’t relinquish my pain,
Because I see it etched on the faces,
Of so many races of babies,
Sick, neglected,
Poor, disaffected,
They all know rejection,
And the lie of unconditional love,
The lie of childhood,
And the lie we’re now expected to act out,
In this cruel human system of men and rules,
Of greed and abuse,
Of treachery and history,
So much slave hate in it!

So I’m keeping my pain,
And I’ll have to accept my anger,
So I can continue to find the way forward,
And keep reminding us,
Like a Sangoma,
Who has to know great pain and will engage with it,
And commit to suffering,
So that he can continue to heal others,
By knowing it!

Don’t ask me why,
All our saints die,
You know,
How Martin Luther King and Brother Malcolm,
Steve and Tupac,
Took the pedestal to voice this pain,
Knowing that the blows and the bullets that would come,
Wouldn’t compare to the pain,
They were already holding inside.

That the bullets would bring relief,
From the misery of their struggle,
Taken from their people,
Into their hearts,
Using pain as fuel,
Using love as energy,
Using hate as defence,
Making the true sacrifice,
To speak the Truth!

That our children still suffer,
And our women still struggle,
Our babies still die,
Of neglect and ignorance,
Living in cages that teach very early that,
Home is a place to escape from,
Home is a place to flee!

And they ask us why?
They say we have weak minds,
They say we don’t know how to live,
That we choose to be this way,
And with every breath,
They breathe life into the fears they put into us,
Through a myriad of brainwashing experiences,
Our minds are lost to the wizard,
A wizardry they are unable to see themselves make!
Or so they claim

But where were they to teach us,
Where were they when our parents,
Had to cower,
In the presence of theirs?
Where were they on June 16th,
And where were they in ’64,
Where were they in ’49,
Where were they when Steve died?
Do they even know what I’m speaking about?

This is my religion,
And these are my ancestors!
This is my duty,
This is my Way,
This is my path,
To bear testament,
To my experience,
With every honest ounce I can muster!
If I am to preach,
This is my prayer!

To take the pain within
And make healing of it,
Is to know true strength,
How to suffer for the love of others,
Like our mothers and fathers,
Who took the pain,
Who took the humiliation,
Who suffered more so we could suffer less,
These are my ancestors!

My whole membership to this world,
The world of principles and rules,
Seems false,
At every turn,
I see my ghetto boy responses,
Betray my lack of synergy with,
Inclusion in,
This machine!

I feel like a pretender,
In this world,
The world of so-called higher thought,
New theory and old history.

I know my history,
I know all your lies,
Past, present and future,
Sown into the very fabric
That I am forced,
To engage,
To get paid,
To get laid,
Slave!

How can you reject me?
If you never owned me,
And why,
Does your rejection hurt so deep?
Somehow at the core,
Of who I am,
Slave!

Push out those tears!
Push out those fears!
Be Free!


From:
Resurrection:
Reflections, Collections in Anger (2001-2004)


Sunday, February 21, 2016

#3

Amongst the scattered pigeons

So why am I telling these stories? I am trying to understand where my heart broke, and why it continues to break, unceasingly, into so many fragments. But the more I struggle with telling this story, the more I am forced to accept that my story is not mine alone, and my pain, likewise is a shared pain.

My story is a story of a shared history, a history lived through others.  My resentment, likewise, is scattered through all their stories, and to tell mine fully; theirs must be told too. However, it is not a history I can provide evidence for, or a history I can claim is true.  It is a history in my mind; that I feel a deep connection to.  A history of emotions, not events.  How to relate this history? Where to start? Where is the beginning? And why am I so concerned with telling these stories?

I suppose I could tell it in parts, but I am afraid that might miss the point, that the essential threads might be lost, the threads which bind history to the present, which make us relive the realities we’ve left behind.  But how to hold your attention? How to ensure your eyes don’t glaze over at my next sentence? I will start in the present.

I cannot start at the beginning. We are already here, and the journey eludes memory. And I cannot start at the end, because I do not know the end. But bear with me, because this story somehow transcends the usual stories and it explains how we have come to be here. In any event, in the way I imagine it; it is a story that distinguishes itself from others.

I’m hoping this story unlocks something. What that is I do not know. It is something I feel, more than I comprehend. Something I desire, but can only intuit. My story begins here, as you will see as the story unfolds. Its beginning is embedded in the present, and moves forward with every moment of it. It is inescapable. It haunts me in every moment, is resolutely with me in every experience. I tire of it, so pervasively does it permeate my reality.

I clutch at fragments, to know myself, and my experience. They cannot be organised; they can only be assembled. They extend into too many other spheres, too many other experiences, to be captured and arranged. When I attempt to collect them they blend together, become indistinguishable, and begin to hum, like a background noise. Where they begin and end is unknowable.

Perhaps the same is true of me. So I will tell my story in a mishmash of scenes and anecdotes, because fragments are all I have to tell this story with; a kaleidoscope of borrowed memories and feelings. I rush into them and quickly lose them, as though I were an intruder. I am amongst the scattered pigeons, so to speak, of memories whirling in the air.




Friday, February 19, 2016

Fatima Chapter 2 | 1924: The Juggler


As a child, Suleiman was a sensation in Kholvad, a small town along the Jumna river in Gujarat.  His talent had been discovered at a young age.  Suleiman had always been able to juggle things, but by the time he turned six he was the Mozart of juggling, a child prodigy with suspended objects, a feat requiring great focus and intense concentration.  His brow had been furrowing since he was a child as his forehead crinkled and sweated over his eyes, which seemed oblivious to the entire drama occurring just overhead.  It had all started when his uncle had shown him the simple 3-ball juggle after buying a few cricket balls for the boys in the family.  Suleiman had studied him intensely before disappearing outside for a while.  When he came back he had fashioned 3 paper balls and showed him that he’d learnt the trick.  He threw them about as if it was no big trick at all as his uncles jaw dropped in awe.  Suleiman was three years old. 

For every year since he turned 3 he’d learnt to juggle two more objects, and at six was juggling 9 objects in suspended symphonies, altering rhythms with ease, and changing objects from a pile on the ground which would grow and shrink with his act.  It started off as a family show, which soon became a neighbourhood show, and pretty soon all of Kholvad knew of the little boy who seemed to float things above him with ease as he moved and juggled at the same time to a beat which seemed to come from inside him, an alternate reality of rhythms which enabled his strange talent.  The human brain, it is said, can only accommodate up to seven different things at the same time.  How Suleiman, and indeed many other jugglers, manage to defy this limit with their own internal systems of reference is indeed astounding. 

Unlike most jugglers however, Suleimans development as a juggler occurred while his cognition and speech was still developing in early childhood.  A young mind with the capacity to juggle is a rarity indeed, and so was his mind, even at a very young age.  It would develop into a rare balancing act of its own later in life as his speech developed in a mind already constructed for juggling, it had to develop within a much more complex framework of taxonomies held together in simultaneous harmonies of suspension. He never forgot anything, and it seemed like he had to account for every relevant fact in his mind before he could come to a decision.  He would appear to retreat from the space that held him in conversation with a person or a group into another one, somewhere in his mind, where the intensity of the juggling act required such concentration that he would have to venture deep within himself to acquire a focus within it all.  Over time, he became better at accessing this state of mind, travelling back and forth more rapidly and with shorter pauses - but they always remained a little too long, provoking a feeling of discomfort in the listener, like they were supposed to say something to fill the space between them which had suddenly become so vacuous in the absence of his engaging eyes. 

In particular, his speech found a rare rhythm of its own within, occurring in a kind of counterpoint to the way in which the rhythm of his own thoughts occurred.  In his mind, he could suspend many thoughts at the same time, forming a kind of thought laboratory of quite some value.  He could evaluate and relate a whole plethora of concepts in relation to each other – a true generalist mind, with a penchant for tying up little idiosyncratic facts into amazing tapestries of stories. 

It was fertile ground for the imagination to flourish, and Suleiman was comfortable dwelling in his mind.  As a child, his mind was calmer and he would often ponder to himself for hours.  Perhaps being able to physically juggle helped him establish the calm needed to juggle the thoughts in his mind.  His speech was a mirror of this complex machine, and he would soar to great heights of expression with language as a teenager, juggling concepts and metaphors with great ease and accomplishment.  Only his closest friends noticed that he spoke more easily in the open.  Indoors he would often grow silent, and when he did speak it was as if the roof prevented him from adequately juggling the concepts in his mind and he would grow frustrated.  Without the perception of a great deal of space above him he couldn’t establish a feeling of clarity in his mind, and was unable to adequately elocute his thoughts freely, they seemed to clash and fall against themselves, like a juggler under a low roof.
 
Religion often puzzled him.  It seemed, everyone’s beliefs were really the same and he could never quite figure out why everyone was arguing about it so much.  To him, even at a young age it seemed clear that people constantly confused religion with tradition, and only a wise few knew their own religions to adequate factual depths.  They seemed to need to disagree more than they needed to find agreement.  It seemed that they sought out conflict in order to justify their positions, each keeping to his or her own caste, even after converting to Islam.  The world wasn’t as simple as was taught in the religious schools – outside it was far more complex.  It seemed inevitable that something large and troublesome was brewing.  The British Empire was in its final decline.  In the aftermath of the 1st World War it seemed to grow more devious.  Like all empires their worst nature is exhibited in its declining phases.

“I’m actually a refugee here dikrah!” he would tell anybody who would listen, “I fled the British ... out of the frying pan ...” it would end. 

When he was bustled onto a ship for South Africa one winter evening, he had become aware that India might not be safe for Muslims anymore.  He wondered how anyone could hate someone just for worshipping God in a different way in a country whose dominant religion had a thousand faces for God.  It seemed incongruous, almost manufactured.  It is true that the mogul period had indeed brought Islamic conquerors to India, but they were not necessarily averse to learning from and indeed adopting some of the practises they learnt from their subjects.  So powerful and attractively diverse a country stokes the imagination of many who visit it, but to Suleiman it was a place in which he had to juggle many uncertainties at a young age, culminating in a personal exodus to a strange new land filled with yet more uncertainty. 

His mind found no rest on the ship.  The sway of the sea made his ears pulsated and pounded within, as if rejecting the changing movements of the ground beneath him, juggled by the great ocean like a toothpick the ship never stabilized and his internal gyroscopic systems were scrambled.  He lost a lot of weight, but some of the cook’s assistants had taken a liking to him and sneaked him treats from the galley.  Everything he ate came back up and he was constantly nauseated.  He knew he would never return to India.  He had flown the coop, forever.  The ocean did offer him some peace, occasionally, and he would sun himself on deck, amazed that seagulls could be found so far away from anything, trailing in the wake of the ship, picking out scraps that were thrown out to the sea, and which the ships rotors turned up to the surface, confused little fish caught in a mini-whirlpool glinting their signals to the hovering gulls.   

By the time his ship reached Durban in 1929 he’d already decided never to juggle again.  It seemed like a thing children do, and having felt the true loneliness of adulthood at a very young age in a terrible sea journey west across the Indian ocean he’d decided that he would have to be his own man from now on.  To juggle would make him an attraction of a kind which betrayed the nature of the act; he would seem like an entertainer, when he was really a juggler of thoughts and ideas.  He decided he would have to be a man who could juggle his life, already in pieces, so that he could keep them all there albeit in different states of suspension and hence relevance, at different times in his verbal juggling matches.  It was a good decision in one sense, there was a lot of verbal juggling matches going on in South Africa at the time.  Already his mind had become an ideological minefield, with trip-ups and conflicts between the many things he held in his mind.  He was always looking for the elusive synergies that tied things together.  His knowledge of various religions, their philosophies and histories, had helped him identify his first synergies, which to him defined all spirituality in humanity. 

"There's only one God dikrah, so what is all the fuss about?"

And at other times,

“A god is a thing only when you yourself are a thing – in reality God is unknowable, like his name, so how can God be a thing if he cannot be named?”

He would bombard confused visitors in the living room with this one in particular.  This was one of his favourite verbal jests.  He would repeat it many times and on many different occasions in the living room of his Lenz council house into his old age.  Their eyes would shift to the floor, not sure what the appropriate response to this kind of question was they would remain silent, or offer up a smile and a nod.  In all the years that he threw that statement out he never received any satisfactory comment back.

However, the South African Indian community had impressed him with their ability to discard some caste trappings and establish a community.  It wasn’t perfect, and a lot of this unity had been formed as a reaction to an oppressive colonial system of abuse, but it was a lot better than the strict distinctions imposed upon an Indian in India.  Here, he was truly a more modern and free man than he would be allowed to be back home.  His hardships as a child and a young adolescent never left him though and later as he grew into an adult he struggled to assimilate the traumas of feeling abandoned to a hopeless fate by an un-wanting family.  Hence, there was a schizophrenia about him; sometimes he was a proud man, needing no-one and nothing to support him, a real soldier of life.  At other times he was an abandoned boy, searching to fill a space in him which he couldn’t quite understand, an emptiness which always seemed to catch him unawares around the corners in his mind.  He was aware of his almost demonic bearing when thrashing the boys. 

After arriving in Natal and living with an uncle for a few months he had decided to join family in Johannesburg but was surprised at their dampened response to him.  They were poor and in reality he was another burden thrust upon them by misguided family in India.  He felt desperate and alone but remembered what he had promised himself on the ship, “He was now his own man!”  Ten years old or not he had stepped up to the plate and taken the reins of his own life.  The results would be his karma alone but he felt his life had become a drifting ship and needed to be steered.  His next action was calculated and he would incur the age-old transaction; the experience would make him stronger, but he would pay a penalty too. 

One day he packed his meagre belongings into his sleeping blanket and went to the nearest orphanage and declared himself an orphan.  He pronounced in his loudish voice; “My parents sent me here by mistake, they thought we still had family here but there is none.” It was a bold-faced lie - he was merely disowning his family because he already felt disowned himself.  It was an action he would repeat in later life, a departure which would hold far more symbolism than appeared to the normal eye.  It would take him through three different marriages and two families but would come to define him too.  A child may fantasize about many things in the security of love, warmth and companionship of their parents but a child abandoned, better off with someone else is always lost to the world in some ways.  They had lost him when they put him on that ship.  The hardships of the journey had hardened him; in the face of overwhelming fears and insecurities fantasy was no real refuge.  He couldn’t blow out a candle and fall asleep to a world of dreams and fantasies – he had to watch out for the rats, animal and human, that he encountered on that first journey. 

Ship journeys then were a more community affair.  People from the same ship were transported en-masse to demarcated areas where they would build communities together.  The relationships that developed on the ship would come to define the communities and their histories, alliances, friendships, feuds, stories of humanity, deceit and love.  In particular, the areas around Dundee, Newcastle in Natal were settled with whole shiploads of people from India.  It explains some of the distinctness of Indian features which change from place to place across the Natal landscape.  There is more ethnic diversity within the Indian community than outside of it in Natal – it is a world of various features and traits all invisible to an untrained eye and to Suleiman there was more equality here than in India.  Imagine if everyone could be equal?  The slight migration towards this principle by a diasporic patchwork of Indians in Natal had already yielded leaders like Ghandi, who consolidated the strength of a weakened and abused community against the might of the British Empire and helped build a kind of settler unity amongst the Indians in South Africa.  It wasn’t perfect, but it was better than what he’d experienced of India. 

The orphanage was not quite what he’d expected.  He thought it would be a kind of bed and board arrangement that would leave him to his own devices during the day, able to get out and find a way to make an earning or learn a trade for himself.  People who experience extreme rejection and abandonment at a very young age have to find a way of co-existing with the world.  They never truly feel a part of it, but feel subjected to it.  They are the limbless subjected ‘I’ at times, at other times a process which can be deconstructed only in terms of its experiences, actions and reactions – a planet unto themselves even though immersed in the world.  The orphanage required him to develop into an even fiercer independence.  The children in the orphanage seemed to fall into two categories – those who quietly and humbly suffered their fate and those who reacted against the world for the perceived injustices thrust on them by an unkind fate.  He would learn to assert himself, to take little truck from anyone and to take his life by the reins.  He became, in his view, more of a man. 

The cycles of abuse always have a starting point.  They don’t always have an end; they tend to persist.  Suleiman didn’t escape this cycle, and learnt that sometimes violence was necessary.

His favourite memories of the orphanage were of the times he spent up on the roof, alone amongst the cooing of the homing pigeons that were kept by the master of the orphanage, but tended by the orphanage handiman who was only known to the children by the nickname ‘Pepsi’.  He had made a habit of escaping to the roof, finding solace amongst the pigeons and the afternoon sun.  Here, his mind roamed free and the passing of time seemed eternal.  If there was any true immortality, he mused, it could be found up on a roof like that; fractured souls beneath it, and the heavenly sky above it, a passageway to the gods.  He befriended the pigeons in his characteristic manner, getting to know them individually, one by one, until their cooing felt like the purrs of a cat within his breast.  When Pepsi discovered him asleep beside the coop one afternoon, sunning himself like a Cheshire cat, he thought he could put Suleiman to work a bit, seeing that he liked it up here.  Pepsi taught him how to harvest their guano to use as fertilizer, how to make fans out of their feathers that could be sold, how to tend and care for them, and introduced him to the concept of 'homing pigeons'.  This fascinated Suleiman.  Unlike him, these pigeons would always fly home, no matter where you took them in the world they would find their way back.  It was a blessing in Suleiman's life to be assigned these duties.  It gave him a sense of purpose, and an excuse to spend time alone up on the roof.  He could invent duties for himself and excuse himself from the more boring daily activities of children at the orphanage.  Up there, he dreamed of flight, of soaring, gliding and floating on air.  It was the freest he had ever been, and the world seemed an endless journey for the young adventurer.

Later he would go to war for General Smuts, expecting to return home to a future of a free world, where all men irrespective of class and colour would be equal, having all fought side by side for the freedom they now enjoyed from the monstrous Nazis.  He’d endured many hardships in North Africa, travelling with a Pathan dominated troop who taught him the ways of battle.  They would all return to meagre rewards, a bicycle for some, a pittance for others – the soldiers returned to a post-traumatic abyss and depression and anger was quick to set in.  The first to suffer were the families.  The men drank more, and became restless and violent.  They were were relegated to a succession of restrictive laws by Smuts.  He had betrayed them to a depressing fate, which included amongst other things; the Ghetto Act of 1946.

Suleiman eventually juggled a life with three marriages and two families too.  He married a coloured woman during the time of Smuts – the bastard led him to lose his family.  Alcohol and the pressures of identity being thrust upon them by the new Nazis drove them to depression and there was constant worry over their fate as a family. 

Later, at 35 he’d married Mariam after a second union which proved childless.  He’d just settled into a family life in Kliptown, when their land had been stolen from them and given to the whites; they’d been moved from Kliptown to Lenz into these council houses.  They’d resisted, but the bastards had shut down the schools.  The children now had to travel ninety minutes by train to get to a school. 

"They went for our soft targets,"

As Suleiman was fond of saying.  The men were stuck in depression, emasculated and further stripped of the security of extended family structures.  There was no way to live as an equal even though they’d all fought as equals in the war and the returning men expected emancipation.  Instead, they were slammed with Smuts’s new laws which restricted movement, restricted them to ghettoes and slums, and many turned to thuggery, alcoholism and depression.  The downward spiral of these communities begins here, where families, communities and whole social structures, which have been evolving in some cases since the journey on the ship from India, are now broken up, tearing away the centre which holds things together, relegating them to a new world where there is never enough space for everyone. 

It seemed that Gandhi had failed to ensure a reasonable future through his wise and peaceful ways.  His inner wisdom relied on an oppressor ultimately being able to acknowledge the suffering caused by his actions and to make amends, recognising the humanity in its oppressed subjects.  It seemed that the British Empire was locked in its last spasm of domination and the blinkered Victorian elites and working class yobs had spread a kind of deeper disease throughout their dominions.  Maybe Gandhi felt that the end of slavery was a beginning of a progression to a new way of human society, but the Victorian arrogance had choked all possibility of that out of existence.  They used their notions of civilisation as a way of justifying their superiority over others.  Being civilised, being Christian and being western were all one and the same now, in a very anglo-saxon kind of way and a vicious class distinction had been placed on all and sundry who were conquered. 

For Suleiman, as a young man, there already was a need to find new way of doing things.  Socialism, with its disdain for class, race and caste alike had found a resonance within him.  It seemed to fit neatly into the underlying framework of all religious philosophy he had encountered, not explicitly, but in its humanitarian intentions; to focus governance on communities and societies rather than rich elites.  Indeed, what differentiated Islam as a religion was equality amongst believers.  To Suleiman, socialism was also a natural outcome of the principle of equality. 

“Dikrah, how can there be equality if some people are starving and other people get rich off it?”

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