Tuesday, March 29, 2016

The Path

Body being passenger
To the mind
The mind being the path
To the soul,
I got lost in the valley
Of gratuitive obscurity
And found myself on the
Edge of realisation

I walked out the possessor
Of a world not my own
An occupant of eternity
Fixed into being

A love supreme preserved in tears,
The path long walked abolished fear!

Fatima Chapter 4 |1969: Spikes and Whites

Fatima was in good company.  Safinaz, daughter of Aunty Fawzi, also known as Fuckinarz to the boys, was at fifteen a fully formed woman of the world in Fatima’s eyes.  She always had new and exciting things to share with Fatima and more recently had begun to replace the role that the boys played in her social life.  She was the first person in Fatima’s life to speak about being modern.   To Fatima, this word soon began to embody all that was fashionable and independent about adult life and as time passed so her imitation of Safinaz grew.  You see, Fatima, like many children, had begun to feel the need to fit in.  Safi fitted in well.  She knew everyone and everyone knew her.  Even the older boys who hung around at the corner shop knew her by name.  She had a loud, giggling, laughing voice and always seemed happy.  She seemed to bounce along on her feet wherever she went and always had a wide smile ready for anyone who happened to pass by.  She could smile, greet or tease yet nobody ever took offence.  In fact, they seemed to like her more for it.

Usually, Safinaz would rest her head in her arms which lay perched upon the backyard wall and tell Fatima all her classroom gossip while Fatima sat cleaning the odd bits of stone which inevitably managed to find its way into the dry dahl kernels that were sold at the local store.  There would be a lazy timelessness that would punctuate their conversation with long comfortable silences and tired laughter.  Today, however, Safi was abuzz with excitement.  It was impossible for her to remain still.

“You don’t know what?  Today is when the Natal boys are coming to play.  Oh Fathu, so many good looking rich boys you won’t find on one single field anywhere.”

Fatima giggled! She was shy about boys now.  At thirteen she had begun to exhibit the first signs of female sexuality.  She was aware of her own confused feelings of attraction to males, especially older males.  Boys her own age were more interested in teasing, laughing, running, fighting or standing on their heads for all she could care.  In a way they were too equal to be attractive.  The older boys, however, could turn her to a blush with just a little comment.  Often, she would picture herself in the arms of a Hindi movie star and she would feel a little flutter in her heart.  Love was all nostalgic infatuation to her at this tender age.

Safinaz was sorting through all kinds of clothing trying to decide what to wear,

“How I look in this one, eh?  Nice?  Nice enough for one of them to fall in love and bring proposal?  He’ey, why you blushing like that?  Maybe you’ll get one boyfriend too!”

Fatima laughed out loud.  She, like everyone else, liked being teased by Safi’s probing, loving, naughty questions.  Despite her youthful lack of tact, Safi often perceived the true desires of those around her.  It was her ability to state it publicly in a way that revealed that she herself might share the same feeling that made people like her.  She teased; she didn’t mock.

“Come, come, come Fathu, time to go do some sight-seeing”

And with that, they made their way down to the field.  There were many people from the neighbourhood sat on the grass, most only paying half their attention to the teams who were tossing balls and warming up on the field.  Fatima could see immediately which team was from Natal.  They spoke differently.  As they shouted and called to each other she could distinguish the difference in their accent.  They had a more traditional way of pronouncing their words.  They sounded more like the older people around her.  There was little of the thickness of the Transvaal accent and more of the nasal twang of the various vernaculars used by the older generation.

Through the milieux of voices, samoosa smells, laughter and cigarette smoke she caught her first glimpse of him.  He was doing a full forward stretch, but kept his eyes on the ground and seemed uninterested and somewhat shy of the eyes that were all congregated around the edges of the field.  His tall, sinewy frame was made all the more attractive by his hair, which curled fashionably over his ears - “like a movie star neh?” Safi would later comment.  His skin shone with a deep red tan, which was exaggerated by the cricket whites that rested on his frame with an ease that suggested tailoring.  He looked up, and for the briefest of moments their eyes met.  It was in this moment, Fatima would later claim, that she first became aware of her destiny.

It is easy to be sceptical; to claim it was all post-fact rationalisation, to claim that it was what came later that day that really got her attention, but it is impossible to deny that there were powerful forces at work inside both of them which would bring them together.  A man of twenty one and a girl of thirteen, like Elvis and Priscilla, seven years between man and wife, roughly the recipe the Koran teaches for matchmaking.   A mans age halved and seven years added yields the perfect age of a wife.  It implicitly acknowledges that woman develop faster than men physically, intellectually and emotionally.  It also guarantees that a 60 year old man still has a chance of children with his newly betrothed – a good formula for successful polygamy.

The two captains met for the toss.  There was a light warm breeze which made the umpire at square leg curse.  The toss was decided without any communication to the crowd and it was only when they saw the Transvaal team spread out over the field that they knew what the status of the game would be.  They limbered up as they took up their positions and until now, everything seemed to indicate that this would be an ordinary game of test cricket between two ordinary Indian provincial teams.  These were social occasions as much as they were competitive occasions, and meant quite a lot to a minority community who were desperately trying to retain a sense of their displaced nationality. 

They were South African Indians, Indians who weren’t comfortable with having a blanket identity thrust upon them by Apartheid.  They had arrived with their own caste distinctions early in the century and some were wealthy, of high caste, who had even intermarried with whites, and felt themselves eligible for membership of the ruling classes, while others had been thought of as ‘working class’ castes and had been relegated to second class citizenship.  Generally, these barriers had been broken down by Apartheid and the communities, walled off from others by Verwoerd, had looked inwards and had unified more strongly.  We were all ‘Indians’ now and our history was indelibly linked to that of Gandhi’s earliest teachings and activities and some caste distinctions had been reversed with the twists of fate accompanying life in a strange new land.  Indeed, for some this was as simple as a name change.  "Maharaj" was a favourite, like Jews forced to choose more 'german' names which brought about the deluge of Goldsteins, Rosenthals, Siversteins, Goldbergs and Blumenthals.

They tried their best to remain normal, and this healthy competition was a way of maintaining the feeling of normality.  It must be remembered that these were the early days of Apartheid; the damage was in the process of being done.  It wasn’t as it is today, a mission complete, a derelict house whose foundations are clenched in granite, making it impossible to remove, which has to be built over.  Like the enclosed chapel in the church of the Holy Sepulchre, it contains a place of both death and awakening, something which defies time its legacy of confusion.

The main difference between these respective generations is a simple one; hope versus acceptance.  The generations of old possessed one quality that redeemed them from oppression; they possessed hope.  It was something that reflected in the quality of game that was to unfold.  The young cricketers had many dreams, many hopes and trained hard to realise them.  Long hours were spent in the nets, on the road and on the field; they were going places.  Many thought that if they played well regularly, it would eventually become impossible for them to be refused from joining the official (white) South African cricket team.  In retrospect, their hope was worth having despite their eventual disappointment.

On that stickly hot summer day though, the half-distracted crowd were in for a treat.  It was a showcase of true and genuinely rare talent.  The star (guess who?) didn’t move from his crease the entire day.  Salim Ahmed (known then to his friends as ‘Shakes’) spent the day executing perfect drives, flicks and squares.  His strength lay in his patience.  He chose his shots with deliberate and implacable calm.  Whenever a bowler managed to bowl his best, he would defend with frustratingly deliberate calm.  At the first glimpse of a loose ball however, he would pull out a stroke with perfect classic poise.  He was a dream to watch, a true professional in the making.  The crowd appreciated every second of it.  They forgot their provincial attitudes and were lulled into admiration by his display of skill.  As the time passed at the crease so he began to relax into his game.  The longer he stayed, the more he began to conjure; as the bowlers started to tire in the draining heat so each ball became more and more playable.  It began to look like a demonstration match, a kind of cricketing Harlem Globetrotters equivalent.  There was little, if any doubt, as to who won the game that day.

Fatima was enthralled, but it was not the magnificent display of sporting prowess that captured her attention.  It was the way his tailored cricket whites rippled with a gentle flow as he made each shot.  It seemed that the clothes refused to betray the nature of its wearers true strength; his sincere and gentle calm.  Even when furious strokes sent the ball sailing off into the wind and beyond the boundaries the movement of his clothes betrayed his lack of aggression.  He was not a man fuelled at the well of aggression or frustration.  Rather, he was motivated by a modest delight in executing perfect form.  He was a true academic of the sport, blessed with the quality of which she’d seen little of even in her short childhood years; inspiration.  So captivated was she by this scene that she very nearly failed to notice her father’s glee.  It was the way he slapped his thighs and let out a cry of booming delight.

‘Atchar! Look at that, what a fullah this one is! Dikrah, I’m telling you, that boy can go places one day.’

There were very few times that she saw her father taken by inspiration.  More often than not he seemed to draw out his feelings and ideas from the complex maze of his personality.  One was never quite sure what inspired him to think and say the things he did.  Mad genius or confused wandering, you could never quite discern where his motivation lay.  It was almost paradoxical that he drew so much pleasure out of so simple an activity; watching a game of cricket.  It’s just another one of those quirks of humanity that we are drawn to extremes to strengthen or weaken our condition.

To be fair to all the cricketers who played that test, people who came back the next day weren’t disappointed when Shakes declared his innings on 141 not out.  There were many other talents lurking on the field who were driven to new heights, inspired by Shakes’s performance.  Bowlers, batsmen and fielders alike took to the field with a quickened sense of reflex, energised and occasionally pumped with adrenaline.  The crowds would grow steadily from mid-morning till late afternoon and it wasn’t long before the Indian press were there, snapping away, writing furiously and interviewing Transvaal and Natal cricket union officials.  Even they were inspired for they began to make predictions of mixed sport, or at the very least inter-racial contact between the separate sports bodies.  It would be too much to say that this one match began a crusade for recognition of non-white sportsmen but in truth these were the very beginnings of what was to become a long battle, where compromises would be made, allegiance’s tested and sometimes broken.  Shakes would play his part, and to be fair to him he never lost sight of the simple inspiration that motivated his excellence.  He never regarded his talent as larger than himself or the people who surrounded him and would eventually never compromise his position; no integrated sporting body meant he would never play for his country in any capacity. 

He would give no timid answers when given the opportunity to play for his country in a lesser capacity, as an occasional exception to the rule, as part of experimental white teams who would allow in a few non-white players.  Rather, he would relish in integrating what was left of the countries displaced players.  But these were early days, and as he exited the field and he was completely unaware of the young girl seated on the grass ten metres away who would steal her way into his heart.

The newspapers began to collect in Fatima’s cupboard space.  Nobody quite noticed that she had begun a stockpile of them because she’d said she needed them to help her with her homework.  Her parents approved and the boys were too distracted by other things to care, but if anyone had cared to rifle through them they would have discovered that there seemed to be a consistency about the articles which were being cut out.  Only Safi knew Fatima’s little secret.  She would comment;

“Hey, he’s sooo cute Fathu.  Look, he’s smiling in this one, what nice teeth too.  Perfect for you, if only you were little bit older, but who knows; maybe luck will come your way.  If it’s meant to be then it will be; inshallah.

Noticing those teeth, Fatima was unaware of the incident which would bring them together and thought privately that he did have beautifully perfect teeth indeed, not a flaw in their assembly.  Her own teeth overlapped slightly in certain places and she’d never really thought about her inadequacy before Safi’s comment.  Her admiration had made her somewhat self-aware.  She wondered if she would ever be beautiful enough for a man like him.

Click here for the previous chapter of Fatima


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Wednesday, March 9, 2016

Proof or Dare


John Papadakous roared across three lanes en-route to the city.  The N1 was - as usual - constipated in the left and middle lanes, but he had timed it right, and felt a rush of satisfaction as he opened the throttle into the space before him.  He was difficult not to notice.  The dusk-orange Lamborghini was hard to miss, even though it was low enough to pass under most of the side-view mirrors of the cars on the road that day, for the most part conventional Japanese and European sedan models from the most recent to some relics from the 70s and 80s.  He wasn’t quite sure if he had a meeting that morning or whether he was just racing towards the city so he could find out that he did.  Last night’s binge had obliterated all memory of plans he might have made and he was relying on his personal assistant to point him in the right direction when he got there.  "There", was a strip club, which he owned and ran, the name of which was emblazoned across his number plate. 

He was hard to miss on the road.  In person, however, if lost in a crowd in a mall, he would still have stood out, but in a less conspicuous way.  His thick Rolex would certainly have stood out, if his arms weren’t so hairy that any watch seemed to bury itself deep within his fur.  It was his head-hair that made him stand out most though.  He was almost compulsive about its shape, which he waxed carefully into existence every morning from the thick hair that still remained on his head.  Like his car, it kept an immaculate curve from front to back, and seemed to flex, like an illusory hologram fitting its various movements in perfect accompaniment.  It was a hairstyle for all occasions, and a car for all occasions that distinguished this seasoned millionaire from the crowd in a mall.

He glanced up at the mountain for a brief second.  It was still there.  The sun shone a dim grey slate on the mountain.  It seemed to disappear into the mist of clouds caught on its top.  He wished he could buy a vehicle that would allow him to drive all the way to the top; something that surfed the air on anti-gravitons, like in the movies.  Wouldn’t that be something?  He twisted his mind around the possibilities as he entered the city. Almost on autopilot, oblivious of the stares his Lamborghini inevitably drew, he snaked his way through traffic on the city streets, passing by vendors with huge cartloads of goods, and street-kids up early, looking for breakfast … all forming one big obstacle course for his mindless meander through the streets in his outlandish vehicle.  Even unconsciously, every movement of his car gestured for the attention of everyone around, and for the most part, it worked.  Everyone paid attention.

The bouncer removed two orange heavy plastic traffic cones from the parking spot immediately outside the entrance to his club and he swung into it in one deft forward movement.  No doubt, everyone was still paying attention.  As he was getting out of the car, with his back turned towards the entrance, a group of street children seemed to bounce by nearby him, playing a game of footie with an old orange juice bottle.  It was at this precise moment, many would claim, that he slumped forwards back onto the door he had just closed.  His knees buckled underneath him, and he felt a strange wetness running down his torso.  His blood had covered the front of his pants like a thick wet coat of paint, and he couldn’t tell where he was bleeding from.  He was aware of screams of astonishment and heard instructions being shouted to get help, but the voices seem muffled and remote, like they were voices in a dream.  I’m dying, he thought, so this is the moment, and faded into unconsciousness.  

From where he had stood at the corner of the parkade, Juju, had seen what he needed to, and it scared him into a deep, long silence.  He had seen the killer, exactly as he had seen it before, in the darkroom.  But what did this mean?





Thursday, March 3, 2016

Juju

Juju often wondered what his mother must have been like.  He was sure he knew her, somewhere inside of him, because he had been out of the womb for at least a month before she died.  That month, was often a mystical source of strength for him; he could feel her quickening inside him when he thought about it.  Somehow she was there, a part of him, and he felt her guidance as a real force, from wherever she was. 

The villagers said she had given up her life so he could live, and that there was no other explanation to it.  Often, he thought that the forces of nature were indivisible, even though later, in school, he would have to accept the principle of divisibility in order to comprehend the education he was receiving. What was sure, however, is that he could not be divided from her; her presence was a shadow within him, both present and absent at the same time.

The other thing that occupied him was his nickname.  “Juju,” he thought, it didn’t seem African in the slightest.  It had been given to him by the heavy smoking head-matron of the Hillside Convent in Beira, who had taken one look at the streaked flesh running across his head from the middle of the forehead to the point where the spine met the neck.  It seemed almost like some of the hairstyles she’d seen in her now enormous collection of Juju dolls, collected from all over the continent in her travels as a care-worker in remote third world African villages. 

He’d arrived at the convent within two hours of his mother’s death, a month old infant with a wound that had healed and sealed itself, seemingly, in an instant.  The matron had been nonplussed by the affair of the wound, but had failed to realise the significance of the nickname that had almost mindlessly rolled from her lips.  His mother had given him a Xhosa name, Tulani, and he still wondered what had inspired this choice of name, her being far removed, it seemed, from anything remotely Xhosa in her native land of Mozambique.  “Tulani,” he often repeated to himself, as if in secret, so nobody else could hear.  He didn’t want anyone to know the magic it made him feel.

Even now, as a young twenty three year old journalist, he was divided in how he envisaged the moment of his separation from his mother.  A stroke of lightning, he thought, had many routes through the sky; why it landed on her head as it did still escaped any logical explanation. It might as well have been a spiritually divined event.  As the villagers had witnessed it, had streaked from a hole in the sky straight into her crown and she had reared up, seemingly to consume the whole current and preserve the child on her back.  The streak had passed across her back - on which he was perched, wrapped tightly within the folds of a blanket - over his head, and down his spine and hers; killing her almost instantly. 

She had seemed, to the villagers, to have a moment of awareness at the outset of her death, which had led her to protect her child using all her spirit.  The irony and cruelty of what the villagers considered a metaphysical intervention was emphasized by the fact (that was claimed by many present) that she had been wearing rubber sandals at the time she had been struck. 

Something that random, Juju thought, was bound to be full of purpose if one opened up to the idea that it might in fact be a spiritual event. Or perhaps, a bit of her heel or toe was in contact with the ground at that time, maybe she was touching a plant, or something else that was earthed.  One thing that he took for fact from the villagers though, because they had buried her body, was that she was untouched and had died with a smile on her face.

So if he believed all that was rational and classifiable and divisible, why on earth would he believe that there was something special about that moment other than what he wanted to believe?  Perhaps most of his inclination was due to a blend of wishful thinking and intuition. But there was also something else that motivated his imagination to seek out what lay beneath the surface of events. His secret.

Whenever he was behind the camera, a whole universe seemed to liberate in the moment his flash opened its illuminating beam upon a subject.  Until recently, he had not fully appreciated the value and curse of this gift.  It allowed him to penetrate the very depths of time and space itself to arrive at a full understanding of whatever he photographed.  The experience, it seemed to him, was narcotic, but he didn’t understand it fully. It was only last night that he had glimpsed the potential of his birthright and a new understanding of his abilities had become apparent. 

He threw on an overcoat and some boots and stepped out for a walk towards the docks, determined to shake off this fantasy, inhale some sea air and be surrounded by real large-scale rusting human constructions. They gave him a strange comfort and grounded him, perhaps because it was an inescapably real environment. 

But something nagged at him deeply enough for him to veer off course.  He just had to see.  He glanced at his watch.  It was three-fifteen in the afternoon.  “It wouldn’t be long now, I’d better get going,” he thought.  He would still have to get there and choose out a spot from where he couldn’t be seen. He didn’t want to be questioned by any cops should they pitch up asking questions. That is, if what he thought was going to happen, actually happened. 

He turned into a tarred street with cobblestone pavements called Hout Street, and made his way over to the far end of the parking lot outside Heritage square.  He hurried along, it would be soon now, if it happened.  He knew that he could have taken a walk down the docks and cleared his mind at the edge of one of the piers and read about the whole incident tomorrow in the papers if it did happen, but what he wanted to see was if it happened the way he had envisioned it.  Besides, he thought, he would know if he was crazy or not.  He pondered on this for a bit; perhaps all it would achieve would be to prove conclusively that he was indeed crazy.  If it happened, what would it mean?  Nevertheless, he had to see for himself, madness or not. 

Click here for the next chapter of Juju

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

#5

Icarus in Chains


At first he was aware only of the figure in the centre of his vision, crouched low like a dancer about to perform, his right knee touching the ground. Before he could sense the movements he could hear a rustling. It filled his ears as it followed each movement of the figure, however slight. As he rose his right knee left the point at which it had been in contact with the ground. It seemed as though the contact had been so light that by merely willing his legs they had rippled and begun to rise.

His sweat and blackness raised a polished sheen from itself, and as he rose and extended his arms outward, his skin was outshone only by the metal links which circled his arms, legs, waist and neck. Each link was equidistantly wound around his limbs at regular fifteen centimetre intervals from each other, from joint to joint. And from each link there was a chain, which was tautly extended far out of his vision. It seemed as though the chains were fixed to the ground but he couldn’t see them; they were fixed too far away for him to collect within his vision. Somehow, though, he knew that the chains were bound to the earth.

His movements grew more constrained as he rose; the tautness of each chain increasing, drawing him towards the tension in each of them as his muscles flexed at the growing restrictions which accompanied his rising form. As he sought to stand upright it seemed he became contorted in one direction or another, his rising frame unable to find a stable posture as each chain negated his muscles, seeking rather to will each limb towards a bound constancy.

The rustling! Every movement of his seemed connected to the roots of the chains, moving the world with him. The roots ended in nerves that ran through the earth, merging the movements of his form to the far reaches of its landscape. As he moved, the earth moved with him, and sought to resist him, pulling itself towards itself as he attempted to do the same. The tussle of push and pull played out in a cosmic dance, the Nataraja enslaved, each movement reshaping the world as he moved to free himself of restriction.

Subtle movements were met with subtle resistance, and he would twist and turn, lightly at first, attempting to use finesse to find the sleight of hand required to free himself from the resistant interplay that his movements coevolved with the reluctant earth. In a sense, the earth became a muse upon which he played out his dance, trying here and there to let his movements towards freedom reach the nerve endings that would unlock the codes required to free him of the chains which kept him bound to, but not understood by, the global everything beneath him. He never seemed to actually look at the ground; he seemed determined to feel it through his chains.

It seemed that in all his movements he never could quite arrive at a stable equilibrium, and he would contort from one direction to the next. Gradually, he would grow more uneasy, and would begin to buck. He seemed to ripple before he reared, like Dumile Feni’s horses. The shock of it would bring about a sharp jolting from the chains and their rustlings would collect into a coherent violent chime. The jerking, a chaotic catastrophe of meta-stability, would pull him into a restricted rearing, not quite able to break free but brought under control, for a moment.

Then he would begin to move slowly, again. Over and over, caught in a cycle that would always escalate towards collapse before he would begin his ascent towards the sky again. Icarus chained in wax-iron clasps, he was visible only in dreams.