gus 1 #1 August 11, 2003 Further to this thread about an atrocious crime in South Africa I thought I'd post the series of emails I received from Taya Weiss (here, here). Taya spent a year doing some very difficult but very important voluntary work in SA, her emailed accounts make for sobering and provokative reading. There are 6 of them so let me post them all before you reply. Posted with Taya's permission. GusOutpatientsOnline.com Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gus 1 #2 August 11, 2003 16th August 2002 "If it is true, as Buddhist sages maintain, that materialism coarsens the spirit and that life itself is an illusion, Jo'burg is a fine place to pursue enlightenment. Theft is so common that it's hardly worth mentioning. Everyone knows someone who was murdered. You either allow the danger to poison your psyche and deaden your soul, or you learn to be brave, and laugh at the prospect of your own annihilation. Foreigners think we're nuts, coming back to a doomed city on a damned continent, but there's something you don't understand: it's boring where you are." -Rian Malan, in "From Jo'burg to Jozi: Stories About Africa's Infamous City", ed. Heidi Holland and Adam Roberts. Pilgrimage Africa's highest summit rises to 19,345ft. above sea level in northeastern Tanzania. Its equatorial glaciers, along with those of Mt. Kenya to the north and Mt. Stanley to the west, are the only ones on the continent. Kilimanjaro was first climbed by Leipzig geographer Hans Meyer with Austrian guide Ludwig Purtscheller in 1889, shortly after Tanzania was annexed by Germany. Since the mountain was now the highest point in the German Empire, Meyer went ahead with the usual colonial drill and named the topmost peak on the crater rim Kaiser Wilhelm Spitz, in honor of the German emperor. Thankfully, Tanzanian independence in 1963 brought with it the more inspiring name Uhuru Point (uhuru is Swahili for freedom). I decided to climb Kilimanjaro when I received a last-minute invitation from a group climbing to raise money and awareness to cure myositis, a rare neuromuscular disease associated with muscular dystrophy. The group of Americans from all over the U.S. had two last-minute dropouts and needed to fill the slots to keep the cost of the expedition down. Incredibly, the dates of the climb dovetailed perfectly with a workshop I was running in Nairobi for the Institute of Security Studies, so my airfare to and from Nairobi would be covered. Moved by the cause and enticed by the affordable cost, my friend Eric and I packed our South African Cape mohair socks, oiled our boots, and set out for Moshi. We were hoping that our high-altitude living situation (Joburg is at 5500ft.) would put us on equal footing with a climb team that seemed as though had been in hard-core training for the past year. The Machame route, one of the more difficult on the mountain and subject of a recent IMAX movie, takes six days: about four up and two down. The climb starts in high-altitude rainforest and traverses some of the most beautiful landscapes on earth. Alpine rock gardens, lava towers, and bright blue-green glaciers adorn the mountain, a sacred place for those who live in its shadow. The Chagga people have long been converts to Christianity, but they continue to orient church altars towards Kibo, the highest volcanic summit. Ancient places transcend the sum of their physical attributes. The mountain is more than its trees, rocks, the tinkling music of glassy lava shards under tired feet. From the gren of giant ferns and the sweet smell of trees rotting into ruch mud to the dead, airless curves of the crater at its summit, I felt myself unwittingly undertaking not just a climb, but a pilgrimage. Kilimanjaro is older than ancestors, beyond human time and suffering. Its spirit has a voice that seemed to emanate simultaneously from deep within and far outside of myself. As I took my first steps into the rainforest, I found myself-skeptic though I am-pausing and actually announcing out loud, "I am here!" to whatever might have been listening. I felt something stir. That day was supposed to require seven hours of climbing to the first camp. Eric and I did it in five, getting there at least an hour before the next arrivals. My initial euphoria and energy continued the following day, and the day after that. I felt the fire in my belly even while I was resting. My dreams at night were vivid. They ranged from themes of sorrow and redemption to one in which my brain mapped multivariable functions for what felt like a lifetime (I haven't studied Calculus since my freshman year in college). Maybe it was the Diamox we were taking to counteract the effects of altitude, or perhaps it was simple exhaustion, but even my subconscious mind participated fully in the journey. The summit attempt is made in darkness by the glow of headlamps, but our path was also illuminated by a full moon hanging in the sky like a lantern I could have bumped my head on. With only a few hours of sleep between a twelve-hour day of hiking and a full night of scrambling up 45-degree slopes covered with scree, getting to the top is a labor of mental and desire and a genetic crapshoot when it comes to altitude sickness. Extremely fit individuals were felled by pounding headaches, nausea, and the threat of cerebral edema; unlikely heroes, fuelled by sheer willpower, continued to put one foot in front of the other and pass the masses of puking hangers-on in limbo between summit and defeat. I was lucky; my hands swelled to the size of fat little sausage patties, but I never suffered even a mild headache. Frustrated with the slow pace the guides were setting (designed to accommodate the weakest in the group), they finally agreed to let me go ahead. With Monty Python's Lumberjack song playing in my head for no apparent reason, I dug my toes into loose popcorn rocks to the rhythm, breathing slowly, and made it up the final scree to Stella Point on my own. From Stella Point it is a truly airless, spiritual walk of about 200 meters to Uhuru peak. Glaciers were below me, with green streaked icicles oozing down the sides. The crater was huge, smooth, almost lithe in its curves. The sky, lightening from sunrise streaks of red and orange, evolved to a thin, pale, cloudless blue. The summit is a dry, remote, forbidding place where each step causes one to gasp through freezing blue lips. Everyone is hypoxic at the top, deepening emotion and heightening laughter for those who maintain the consciousness to feel. Other, blank faces stare out from balaclavas like so many oxygen-deprived deer caught in headlights. As I approached the apex, my greeting to the mountain-"I am here!" echoed back to me. In real life, we weather storms, endure pain, and grow from our experiences, often without a clear path from the lowest points to the highest. Summitting a great mountain offers the opportunity to turn aching into victory in a more controlled way. Waking and sleeping in a sacred place for five days, I had been feeding my demons into the metaphorical fire to motivate me on the way up. Old, festering fears and doubts had been incinerated like emotional garbage in the flames of my ascent. It was only on reaching the highest point that I felt the purifying effects of each step it took to get there. A day and a half later, my feet were swollen and blistered from a final solo run down to the gate (having lost quite a bit of weight, I was chasing an imaginary In N Out cheeseburger that kept receding around every corner). I lay exhausted under a tree as hawkers waved "Just Did It" T-shirts and cold Cokes from stands across the road. Back to the material world, filled with noise and people and guards carrying AK-47s, children playing in impoverished-looking schoolyards, failed diplomacy, food shortages, and the smells of real trash burning. Uhuru peak had freed me from some important burdens I hadn't realized I was carrying. I sent a mental thank you back up the road behind me, but felt nothing this time. The Sacred and the Terrible Nairobi, like Johannesburg, is a cosmopolitan African city filled with dreamers from all over the continent and endowed with a crime problem that has become larger-than-life in travelers' circles. Unlike Johannesburg, its location in a country that is surrounded on all sides by serious conflict has lent its crime an international mystique that seems to ride into town on trucks laden with cheap guns from Somalia. I have been to Nairobi twice before. In fact, I seem to return every four years on the nose. Nairobi provided my first glimpse of Africa when I arrived to teach in Western Kenya at the age of 17; exactly four years later, I returned on a grant to research my Harvard thesis on Kenya's constitutional reform process just in time to witness the bombing of the American embassy. Somehow it was exactly four years later as I checked into the swank Holiday Inn on Friday night and began to prepare for the ISS workshop on Monday. I would be jointly presenting the results of a survey we had done on attitudes towards firearms and crime in the city. The local media had already been stirred into a frenzy by some of the statistics: 87 percent of Nairobi residents worry about crime on a regular basis, 74 percent think crime has gotten worse, and one in ten people carry some form of weapon. Kenya is a place where I return to find myself both older and younger at the same time. Four years is long enough to map significant change, and Nairobi is far enough from home to capture the essence of moments in my personal history in self-contained capsules like time bombs. They hit me like a sniper's bullets around every corner; the street where a friend was robbed while walking next to me in 1994, the matatu (shared taxi) I took to my internship every day in 1998. The girl who had just come of age, the college student, and the 25-year-old coexist in a sort of time warp in this quintessentially Third World city. The matatus are my favorite part of Nairobi. Unlike taxis in South Africa, which are known for their internecine shooting violence but not for their creative design, urban public transportation in Kenya uses a full range of paint, decals, fake fur, and purple lights. I was thrilled to see that the number 46 lovingly known as "The Death Machine" was still plying the route between Lavington and the city center. Other favorites are: Hoo-bangin' The Sacred Cow Terrible Da Boyz Don' Play 3-in-one Shoe Store Usher Al Sharpton Kansas City Jealousy Doesn't Pay The Road to Jesus Nairobi traffic, littered with these hot pink and green ghetto-mobiles, is capable of moving even when it seems impossibly packed into dusty streets with no signals. The most minute spaces are used to their full potential, keeping everyone inching along in a lethargic but still living snake of diesel exhaust and honking horns. This intricate, painstaking rush hour process reflects Kenyan society and politics better than any politician's strained metaphors about development and democracy. In a country that has been increasingly drained of infrastructure and political freedom, and choked by corruption, its people sustain a kind of life-force energy that one is hard pressed to find even a city as big and powerful as Johannesburg. Creativity allows life to continue in the face of crippling poverty, 70 percent unemployment, and a largely ignored AIDS problem. When large political spaces have been closed off, it is the tiny gaps undetected by government and police that allow movement to occur. Despite a government so corrupt that all aid money has been suspended for years because of mismanagement, the Road to Jesus and the Death Machine continue to ferry people to where they're going. In this poor but spiritual place, the Sacred and the Terrible inch along, side by side, trying not to run each other off the road. After a successful workshop and a series of interviews for an upcoming paper, I went back to visit the International Commission of Jurists where I had been based in '98. Some of my old friends were still there, and for some reason they didn't seem surprised to see me. In fact, it turned out they had been saving my mail. -TayaOutpatientsOnline.com Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gus 1 #3 August 11, 2003 21st October 2002 "When you carry a gun, you feel like you are a human being." -one of the Zimiseleni Boys, a group of youth between 12 and 16 years old in Kathorus, South Africa. Over 35 people a day die from firearm-related violence in this area. Parasites, Disease, and other Hazards of Life in North America In August, about four days after returning home to Johannesburg from my adventures in East Africa, I had to ask my friend Dave to pull over to the side of the road in Melville, a few blocks from my house. The well-dressed couple walking past clearly thought I was a pathetic drunk as I hunched over the curb, painfully ejecting dinner. Dave waited patiently and then drove me the rest of the way home. The week got worse, complete with high fevers and continued digestion problems. My doctors tossed around notions of malaria, typhoid -- even dengue fever. When I passed out in another friend's car after having blood drawn for tests, he promptly took me to his house and put me on the fold out couch, where I drifted in and out of consciousness for two days. My blood test results showed that I had a dangerously low white blood cell count, but the best conclusion as to why was one doctor's diagnosis (and this is the technical term for it): a "mystery tropical disease." You don't really know a place until you've been so sick there that you become acquainted with the inside of an emergency room-or at least a doctor's office. The medical facilities in South Africa, for those who can afford private care, are high quality by "first world" standards. Nonetheless, losing control of my health made me so vulnerable that I was forced to rely on a support system of friends and co-workers despite my tendency for martyrdom. I was well taken care of, but the insight I gained into other people's feelings of vulnerability surpassed what I learned about my own. When I had a severe relapse exactly 30 days after my first symptoms, I was convinced that whatever "tropical" East African bug had been nesting in my body was back for Round Two. Discussions about my health became a map of people's opinions and fears about larger matters. My South African friends said, "See? The rest of Africa is dangerous. This is what happens when you go north." Some suggested that I could have caught it in Soweto, which was basically like the rest of Africa. Some of my American friends said, "See? This is what happens when you live in Africa. The whole continent is disease-ridden." After writhing in pain and being unable to eat anything at all for four days in a row, I was finally successfully diagnosed and treated for a bad case of campylobacter bacteria. Checking the Center for Disease Control web site, I found that this little creature lives in uncooked or improperly handled poultry. It is most commonly found in North America. The Milky Way Moves North On August 23rd, in between bouts of horrible illness, I walked up the back stairs of the Time Square complex in Yeoville. When I reached the second floor, I headed for the Milky Way internet café, home of the R10 (one dollar) per hour connection, the cheap coffee, the inner city neo-Beatnik vibe, the outdoor balcony overlooking the grungy park. A sign on the door said, "The Milky Way has moved. Our new location is Shop 60, The Zone, at the Rosebank Mall." I ran back down the graffiti-covered stairwell, jumped into my car with the urgency of a superhero on call, and headed north to the swanky suburbs. The new Milky Way has framed pictures of galaxies on stark white walls. Clusters of all-new Pentium 4 computers with color monitors are scattered across a room at least twice the size of the old location. There is a bright red, brand spanking new espresso machine behind the counter. Prices have more than tripled, presumably to cover the higher overhead costs of renting space in one of the most exclusive shopping centers in the province. It's nothing short of internet a la Starbucks. Kids from Hillbrow and Yeoville don't have many options on a Friday night. The Milky Way was started in 1994 as a tiny grassroots operation to engage local youth in learning about technology, with special activities like Sunday outings for under-15's and free Friday night internet access with live DJ's spinning tunes for youth 15-21. "We want to continue with the service, but the problem is to get the kids to Rosebank," says owner Bruce Gillespie. Getting the youth to the computers is not a minor detail-it is the whole point. The Milky Way is no longer serving its core constituency. Gillespie says the move was "a blow to the kids," but claims the business was no longer viable in Yeoville. The real message is that as the inner city implodes economically, demographically, and criminally, its young inhabitants will be abandoned for relative security to the north. Mobility is power, something those who have it tend to forget. The kids may know where Rosebank is, and they may have the five or six rand to take two taxis to get to the mall. But they won't make the journey, because when they step into a world of four-star hotels and designer shops, they will feel immediately that they don't belong there. Without the kind of education and outreach that the Milky Way used to provide to inner city communities, another tenuous bridge across the growing socio-economic gorge has gone up in flames. That is the problem. Sustainable Development, Joburg Style The huge, internationally attended World Summit on Sustainable Development rode into town at the beginning of September for a week of high-level conferencing about the environment and lowbrow sideshows festooned with recycled plastic-bag art. Delegates were housed in hotels in heavily gated Sandton, where the proceedings were essentially isolated from the outside world. As expected, Greenpeace howled that the Fat Cats of government were "dining on the backs of the poor they were meant to represent." Government officials retorted that demonstrators were disrupting well-intentioned events, thereby also treading on the backs of the poor to further their own agenda. The poor were busy collecting firewood and trying to make a buck, and were unavailable for comment. While the main talks were held in the safety of the northern suburbs, some delegates were seen as far south as Johannesburg itself, wandering around like live bait with colourful nametags and ID badges flapping around their necks. Many, mostly Americans, were spotted at various malls, attempting to boost the local economy by purchasing overpriced wooden giraffes. Police were bussed in from all over the country for the two-week event calendar, giving Sandton residents (and Sandton residents only) a brief taste of what it would be like to live in a community where there was more than one police officer for every thousand civilians. On a Sunday night at ten, with the Summit in full swing, I pulled up to a red light in my 1994 Opel Kadett. The Melville intersection was deserted when another car pulled up in the lane next to mine. As I turned my head slowly, I saw the barrel of a gun and a man getting out of the car, which happened to be a very nice Audi sedan. Without thinking, I shifted into gear and stepped on the gas, aiming for the on ramp to the well-patrolled highway north. The would-be hijackers' chase was brief and unsuccessful, and I got away safely. After the adrenaline wore off, I felt almost no lasting fear. My most tangible emotion was annoyance, that a bunch of well-dressed guys in a new car thought it would be fun to dismantle my lifeline of transportation for spare parts. For better or for worse, I chuckled at the Americans with their soapstone carvings and bead necklaces, pitied the residents of Cape Town and Port Elizabeth who spent two weeks without any police force at all, and ignored the bullhorn rhetoric from both sides of the development parade. Instead of joining one of the various protest marches the following weekend, I went to the opening of a new community center in Riverlea (a poor mining neighborhood with gang problems) and taught a group of girls how to deliver a solid knee to the groin. Now that's sustainable development. (Go to www.impactsouthafrica.com for more information about knees to the groin.) Pelindaba The research I'm engaged in through the Institute for Security Studies has led me in some interesting and unforeseen directions. As an affiliate of the Arms Management Programme, I am writing about demand factors that influence the availability and use of small arms and light weapons in conflict and post-conflict communities. As part of a practical exercise in understanding the impact of guns, I was sent with some of my colleagues (mostly late-20's to early 30's black men) to a weapons training with the South African commandos at Pelindaba, where the old nuclear weapons program was once based. As we pulled up in convoy to the dirt road entrance marked "Defence Facility," everyone seemed to switch into a different mindset. Guys who speak to each other in Zulu or Xhosa when they're not speaking English started yapping away in Afrikaans. There was a sense that we were all about to enter a forbidden space, the lair of the slain enemy. Some of the men in my group had actively participated in armed struggle, just as some of the officers there to train us had been involved on the other side. When we got out of our cars in an open field with targets lined up in the distance, there was a nervous moment of silence. Moments later, some of the researchers broke into a dance, yipping sound effects and yelling about how the bones of their comrades were probably fertilizing the grass (unlikely, but the image was disturbing). The mood was oddly cheerful as a few of the guys pointed out the way the surrounding hills would prevent the screams of apartheid-era torture victims from being heard outside the valley. Possible acoustics were discussed in a very matter of fact way, with the white officers chiming in occasionally. The only awkwardness was for those who didn't catch the banter in Afrikaans, still apparently the de facto language of the military. I watched as crusty old defence veterans helped former MK (Umkhonto we Sizwe, Spear of the Nation) sympathizers with the finer points of dismantling an AK-47. We shot the AK-47s, AK-Ms, R5 assault rifles, Skorpion automatic pistols, light machine guns, and a variety of handguns. There was a sense of power about the whole exercise, but also a jubilant, if unspoken, celebration at the blatant crossing of boundaries that were once inviolable. At the end of the day, almost all of the cardboard targets had been reduced to a few shreds. When there was nothing left to aim at, we retired to the commando headquarters where a braai (BBQ) was being prepared. For several hours, policy researchers on the ethical management of small arms and human rights violations made small talk over beers with a division of the military populated largely by serious gun enthusiasts and former enforcers of apartheid. Cigarettes were lit, laughs were shared, grilled meat was scarfed down without the hassle of utensils. It was dusk as our convoy rumbled back to the highway, a strange silhouette against the new South African sky. Solidarity A few weeks ago, I was contracted as a dedicated independent researcher to put together a five-day training course for police on Violence Against Women and Children. Given that there are twelve countries in the SARPCCO region (Southern African Regional Police Chiefs Cooperation Organization), all of which will be using my course outline, training and instructor manuals, and audiovisual materials, it was hard to pin down exactly what the target audience would be. Urban Johannesburg investigators? Illiterate, rural Mozambican officers? To be safe, representatives from all countries agreed to aim for the lowest common denominator. In a conference held for five days in Pretoria, delegates from each country's police force sat through demonstration modules and discussed course content. For the most part they were an enlightened group, accepting without argument that marital rape is possible and that wife beating isn't justified by the payment of lobola (bride-price). Controversies flared over whether spanking children could be a crime, whether a woman's consent could be withdrawn once an act of intercourse was in progress, and whether clothes or the lack thereof could be responsible for sexual harassment. Luckily, none of the participants had the time or energy to demand final approval of the course content. I'm wielding about as much power as one woman can over regional police education, which means I haven't gotten much sleep lately. My recent work on gender-related issues has spanned from workshops for academic researchers to conversations with young guys in Soweto. All along the spectrums of education, race, and income, I've noticed that people hit the same kind of wall when it comes to talking about everything from men hurting women to men shooting each other. Yesterday, Sunday, I spent the afternoon in a planning session with a new Gender Equality Group in Kliptown (a poverty-stricken "informal settlement" in the South Western Township). An almost equal number of young men as women showed up to talk about (or disagree with) the group's mandate and objectives. Initially, the room was very quiet as I asked people to tell me what they thought of when I said "gender." By the end of an hour, I could barely get in a word edgewise to facilitate. One young man asked, very candidly, what gender-related problems had to do with him. He had never had much of a problem with things like virginity testing or sexual harassment, so how could he have a role in engaging the issues? When people hit this wall, I try to replace the term "gender" with another identity word such as race, class, or location. I said: "I'm white, and I've never had a problem with race, so why should your problems as a black person be my concern?" He immediately exclaimed, "Well, how can we have equality if only the blacks sit around talking about it? Just because you're white doesn't mean you can ignore race." I nodded. The connection dawned. "Okay," he said, "I'm already sitting at the table, so let's work together." Homecoming and Practicalities The work that I've engaged in won't be finished at the end of the year. But, it can wait for a visit home. On December 12th I'm getting on a plane to London, then another plane to Boston. I'll be arriving in Boston Friday, December 13th, and staying in the US until January 12th. From December 30th to January 10th I'll be on the west coast. After that, it's back to Joburg for at least six months. I would like to see as many friends as I can while I'm stateside. There's nothing like sharing experiences and catching up in person. In Boston I'll be staying with my parents. California is still up in the air, but I will have email, so don't hesitate to drop me a line. Yours, -TayaOutpatientsOnline.com Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gus 1 #4 August 11, 2003 11th February 2003 "It is, after all, the dab of grit that seeps into an oyster's shell that makes the pearl, not pearl-making seminars with other oysters." -Stephen King, On Writing Homecoming Part II This year, my birthday fell on a Tuesday in Johannesburg. Feeling bold about having returned from my trip to the US to a place that still feels like home, I decided to throw a party. The purpose of the gathering was also a housewarming; within three days of coming home my landlords gave notice that they were selling the property and I had to move. Within two weeks I was unpacked in my huge but noisy flat in Killarney, several blocks away from the US Consulate and the onramp to the M1 North highway. My guest list looked something like this: 1. As many friends from the Kliptown informal settlement as could fit into their shared minibus 2. Skydivers from the Johannesburg Skydiving Club where I've jumped in the last year, white and mostly well-off 3. Colleagues from the Institute for Security Studies 4. Colleagues from People Opposing Women Abuse 5. The Melville greengrocer I buy veggies from 6. A Harvard friend doing her Ph.D. research in Joburg for the year and her roommate, an Associated Press reporter recently returned from a harrowing arrest in Zimbabwe 7. The security staff of the building I now call home The invitation was for "Tuesday at Taya's", and called interested parties to shirk their usual weekday routines in favor of good food, free beer, and an opportunity to huck water balloons in the general direction of the consulate across the street "just to see what they'll do". It was BYO Missile Defense Shield, and since most people didn't want to test American aggression, no water balloons were actually tossed. What did happen was a low-key yet, for me, momentous occasion. Friends I've made here in the last year came together for one of the unlikeliest gatherings I've seen in South Africa. I felt privileged to have friends from the township as guests in my home, since they have hosted and fed me more times than I can count. The security guards (who are black) initially refused to let them come up to my flat in utter denial that they were as much invitees as the various white couples they hadn't questioned. When I eventually coaxed one guard into coming in for a beer, he seemed to relax, but maintained a look of distinct disbelief at the scene. At that moment, a few young Kliptown guys were teaching a Chinese social worker from Hong Kong how to do gumboots dancing as the Melville greengrocer talked politics with a POWA volunteer and her accountant husband. Later, as people were leaving, he asked if I had another beer for him. I lied and said no, keeping in mind that I preferred him to be lucid enough to do his job. He said, "You see? This is what happens when you have black people over. They eat, they drink all your beer, and the next thing you know, they're gone!" Homecoming Part I I got off the plane in Boston on Friday, December 13th exhausted but happy. It was cold and grey, but still familiar, and I was relieved to find that I didn't turn into a pumpkin or immediately lose all sense of global perspective upon touching down on American soil. My secret fear of being questioned by Ashcroft-appointed security personnel because of the stamps in my passport turned out to be overblown, and I rolled my suitcase out to meet my mom at the baggage claim curb. After putting my bag in the boot-wait, trunk-I hesitated before walking to the right side of the car to get in. So far, so good. It wasn't until we got to the busy Storrow Drive that the real fear and alienation set in. Seeing oncoming traffic on the "wrong" side of the road, I started yelling and almost got us into an accident. Boston was the city where I was born, grew up, and learned how to drive, but it was as though someone was holding a giant mirror up in front of everything. I was through the looking glass and it was all the more strange since it was supposed to be home turf. The only positive outcome of my inability to readjust to the roads was a curiously energetic parental chauffeur service rendering it unnecessary for me to drive a family car. Boston and New York were easy to visit because they don't feel like home. I had recurring dreams about oncoming traffic, but there was minimal culture shock and no regret about the life I've chosen as compared to the one my east-coast peers are leading. As always, it helped that it was the dead of winter and got dark by 3pm every day. Yet most of my longings in these places were material; although I had truly missed the cupcakes from my favorite bakery in Belmont and the bagels from H&H in New York, I felt nothing deeper calling to me. I was on vacation. California was a different story. The life one leaves behind is the most difficult to return to, even for a short visit. The first place I willingly chose as a home after getting my degree still resonated with the memories I left there on my way to South Africa. Some of this mental debris, like the work I found unfulfilling and the ludicrous cost of living, hit me with affirmation that I've ventured into a less predictable but more rewarding life. Others, like friendships rooted in shared personal history and my buried sense of belonging, struck a sore place and presented unwanted pop-up maps of my emotional landscape, complete with cost-benefit analyses of my choices. I reveled in dinner gatherings with old friends, sipped coffee in my favorite park, and ate life-changing sushi. My awareness of the courage required to exist between worlds is only tangible while traveling between them. The day before leaving the U.S. everything seemed wobbly and surreal; the Starbucks that has taken up residence in what used to be a Friendly's restaurant near my parents' house in suburban Boston looked to me as though it could beam into space at any second. It is incredibly liberating to bear witness to this impermanent sense of place. The act of traveling is a spiritual declaration of freedom. It requires sacrifice but rewards the brave with the perspective that home is truly "a moveable feast", a lunchbox to be packed on a life journey. Cricket: It's Not Just a Noisy Insect Anymore The ICC Cricket World Cup has descended on South Africa with a kind of fervor I usually reserve for games with some semblance of pacing. There are certain triggers that make me feel like I have giant stars and stripes tattooed all over my face, and one of them is cricket fever. In my American ignorance, what I know about this distinctly un-American game can be summed up easily: it can actually go on for days without end and seems to feature at least some commentary about how to grow the grass on the field for maximum team performance. "One-day cricket" is about as fast moving as it gets. Nonetheless, the World Cup kicked off on Saturday night with a big ceremony featuring speeches by the likes of President Thabo Mbeki and performances by everyone from Dave Matthews to a troupe of dancing zebra puppets. South Africa narrowly lost its first game against the "Windies", or West Indian team, but morale is still high and talk of a new era in African sports is afoot. The South African equivalents of Superbowl commercials frequently feature a dusty township team of young black kids engaged in an earnest game of cricket. The winning team breaks into African-style dance with the community joining in jubilantly. These shots are usually spliced into footage from actual cricket games, which feature predominantly white players and a corresponding white male crowd. The gap between the present and future of the game is only as surmountable as race-based cultural differences in South Africa: which is to say no one really knows what is possible. In the meantime, as one of my favorite cartoon characters from a strip called "Madam and Eve" said: "No matter what, I can support a sport that has tea breaks". Starting Over Every New Year brings with it reflection and resolutions. At the end of 2002 I paused to take stock of the twelve months behind me. It was one of the first opportunities I've had to consider the wisdom and outcome of my decision to sell what little I owned and move to, as Rian Malan so aptly puts it, "a doomed city on a damned continent". I encountered both support and opposition to the idea when I started talking to people about it late in 2001, but I got the general sense that everyone thought I had a touch of madness. Madness aside, I did have plenty of self-doubt about jetting off to work on difficult issues for no pay in a place where I had no history, no connections, no family, and basically no support system. The great (sometimes even terrible) thing about real dreams is that you can't stop a person who has found one so important they feel they have nothing to lose. My dream was to take my skills and my passion for issues that are larger-than-life in South Africa (violence against women and children, HIV/Aids, conflict resolution) and see what I could do by sharing my privilege instead of using it to make money. My journey took me all the way across the United States and into the Southern Hemisphere. While here, I have struggled to live within my means but have found fulfillment in leaving behind the constraints of what I thought I needed to be happy. A good friend of mine termed my change in mindset and life direction a "secular conversion". There is, of course, no need to travel halfway around the world to change your spiritual or vocational landscape, but for me it made sense. I studied African History at Harvard and had lived and worked in Kenya and traveled all over the eastern part of Africa. I was drawn to the idea of Johannesburg because it is in the vanguard of nonprofit work for the entire continent. A cosmopolitan city with a unique economic and social identity, it matched my mood both in the way people here nonchalantly live on the edge and the way a search for social justice is interwoven into the fabric of everyday life. 2003 will be different, another starting over. I've moved into a spacious flat in a building where I'm no longer either in the ghetto or living like a serf in a one-room cottage on someone else's property. I'm more willing to find a balance between living like a poverty-stricken monk and a full-fledged yuppie, especially in the interests of my stress level and my health. Most importantly, though, I'm deeply engaged in the fulfilling work I once thought was only available to the independently wealthy or the unusually lucky. (The best way to start someone brainstorming about what they really want is to say, "If you won the lottery and had all the money in the world, what would you do tomorrow?" Realizing I couldn't wait that long, I went ahead and did it anyway.) I had to step over the edge to find my work, commit to it, and take a stab at making a living at it, but there's no going back now. Question of the Month: How Long Will I Stay? I'm still planning my life a year at a time, and I plan to stay until the end of 2003. The Institute for Security Studies has hired me as a research consultant on gun and violence issues, and there is an exciting project in the works to start a program of my own teaching self-defense. My biggest motivation is that I've built a life where I am relevant and effective to the issues I care about, which was my dream when I set out from San Francisco in December of 2001. Last year was incredible, but often difficult. I lost most of my possessions in the first half and almost gave up on my health in the second. The rewards of those sacrifices are still in the pipeline; I've only just laid the foundation for what I will learn and accomplish in the months ahead. Happy in Johannesburg, -TayaOutpatientsOnline.com Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gus 1 #5 August 11, 2003 25th March 2003 "This will be an unjustifiable war and because it is unjustifiable it is immoral. And if it is immoral, in my view, it is also evil." -South African Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Desmond Tutu "A war is a war. It's a brutal thing." -Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld A Passport at War Last Thursday morning as the Uh.S.-led war against Iraq began, I walked into my office at the Institute for Security Studies to joking calls of, "Hey, Warmonger!" and laughing threats to string me up by my toenails to make an example of American arrogance. I laughed and sat down at my desk, fired up my computer, and checked the news. The troops were going in, Bush was making stern-sounding speeches about defending the American people and disarming Saddam Hussein, and the much of the rest of the world was looking on with self-described "disgust, helplessness, and anger." I am relatively cynical about American influence abroad. In 1998 I was conducting research for my Harvard thesis in Kenya when the American embassy in Nairobi was bombed. Hundreds of Kenyans were injured and many blinded by shards of flying glass from the explosion, but the U.S. was initially ambivalent about providing aid to the victims of the blast. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright downplayed the news that officials in Washington had repeatedly denied the Ambassador's requests to move the embassy from its insecure location downtown (news that indicated most Kenyan casualties could have been prevented). I watched as the FBI forbade rescue efforts from proceeding, sealing the area off as a crime scene even as some Kenyans died beneath the rubble. Witnessing the aftermath made me aware that American freedom and democracy were fragile. I woke up to the harsh reality that human life has little value in power politics (I also lost an American colleague in the bombing), but my underlying belief in my society remained intact. Regardless of whether one sees this war as being driven by a just cause or by an out-of-touch American military juggernaut, most agree that it is changing America's presence in the international community. As an American living abroad, I feel alienated when I see signs proclaiming "America-UK-Israel is Axis of Evil", but I am also sharply conscious of how far away I am from the domestic politics of war and protest. As I let the magnitude of the new global situation settle in, I struggle with a combination of anger, fear, and homesickness. I recognize that the deepest sense of home I have is for the U.S., the deepest sense of identity is as an American, and that the foundations of home and identity are suddenly in question as the war unfolds. Thursday afternoon I went to my bank to deposit a check. The only form of identification they accept from foreigners is a passport, so I turned over my eagle-embossed passport along with the signed check. In the background, television monitors aimed at the people waiting in line were tuned to war news instead of the usual Nedbank propaganda. The teller looked down at my passport, looked up at me, and said loudly, "Well, well, well, we have an American in the bank!" She went on to inform her fellow tellers, and in the process ended up announcing to everyone there that I held an American passport. Waving it around from behind her bullet-proof glass, she yelled, "Why are you bombing Iraq?" I pointed out that I myself was nowhere near Iraq, even going so far as to say that I didn't vote for the guy who single-handedly ordered the war. She continued to argue, saying that Bush was a madman and that most Americans must support him since he is the president. As soon as my transaction was finished, I made a beeline for the exit. South African banks have double doors at the entry and exit; you enter the first door and have to wait for it to close before the next door opens. A man followed me into the "holding area" between the two doors, and in the few seconds we spent there leaned over and said quietly, "I should kill you so you Americans can see how it feels to see civilians dying for nothing." The next door opened and I ran out, breathing through a dizzy sense of unreality as the man disappeared around a corner. I stopped to tell a security guard what had happened and then left. As I drove the final stretch to my house in Killarney, I passed the U.S. Consulate where protesters have been camped out 24 hours a day. I managed a feeble "hoot for peace" as I passed them, and heard others hooting through the night from my living room several blocks away. Africa at the Margins The official South African position has consistently been against the war. President Thabo Mbeki sees it as a "blow to multilateralism", and his view is shared by many African leaders. Archbishop Desmond Tutu said on Friday that the attack on Iraq was an "immoral" war in which America was abusing its power, and Nelson Mandela has openly lambasted both President Bush and Prime Minister Blair for their failure to use diplomacy instead of force. The United States has closed its embassies in South Africa, Nigeria, and Kenya, citing security issues. The African perspective on war incorporates concerns about the New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD), which depends on support from the G8 to work towards poverty alleviation and economic development on the continent. With Europe and the United States in the heat of a political standoff over the war, aid to Africa is again on the back burner of the world's leadership. Many countries are allegedly withholding planned aid to African countries in case it is needed "more urgently" in Iraq for humanitarian relief. Meanwhile, more than 400 African workers have fled Iraq for Jordan, fearing for their lives. The International Organization for Migration reports that African workers crossing the border are largely of Sudanese origin, with some Somalis and Chadians. There are refugee camps being set up, but for this small group caught between a war and a hard place, the prospects are bleak. U.S. and British Diplomats say that South Africa's stance on the war may be less important than its stance on Zimbabwe when it comes to funding development. With African criticism of the United States' aggression comes the inevitable charge that South Africa and the African Union have done nothing to curtail the violence and instability in Zimbabwe. Robert Mugabe (or "Mad Bob" as he is known around these parts) is terrorizing his opposition and preventing food production that is causing famine in the entire Southern African region. South Africa's lukewarm embrace of and refusal to interfere with the violent and destabilizing Zimbabwean leadership has made many South Africans and others in the region furious at the inaction. Unfortunately, Mad Bob and the rest of the African continent will become more and more marginalized as the world's attention turns to Iraq. For more information on Zimbabwe, go to www.zwnews.com. Reconciliation vs. Justice Last Friday, March 21, was Human Rights Day in South Africa. It was also the day the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) handed its final report to President Thabo Mbeki. The TRC embodies one of the biggest political compromises ever made. Designed to allow an investigation of who did what to whom during the apartheid era, it allowed amnesty in exchange for information. The objectives were to educate the nation about what happened during what some call "state-sponsored terrorism", but more importantly, to allow a healing process through the sharing of stories. The compromise was the offer of amnesty. Some of the atrocities committed by the apartheid security apparatus have now been aired, but victims and survivors who participated by telling their painful stories have seen no compensation or justice. Perpetrators of gross human rights violations have been set free while victims continue to struggle with old wounds, economic, physical, and emotional. A local newspaper described one woman's experience with the Commission: "In addition to her describing in graphic detail how her husband was tortured by the then Venda security police, her story was convincing because she had an exhibit - her husband, sitting helplessly on a wheelchair.The man became mentally and physically disabled after he was brutalised by the police. He was arrested for assisting ANC "terrorists" and severely tortured. During the torture, the man soiled his pants and the police forced him to eat his faeces, the commission heard. The woman spoke of the agony of having to look after a man who is unable to be a man, who is a vegetable." The perpetrators of this torture have been granted amnesty and are currently working in the new South African police force. Some victims fear that reparations from the government, an alternative to traditional justice, will fade into the realm of "unrealistic" solutions the way the American government now refuses to entertain the idea of reparations for slavery. As reconciliation takes it course, justice means different things to different people. The question is whether the amnesty for those who did participate in the TRC and the freedom from prosecution of high-level leaders and politicians who didn't, worked. Despite the many failings of the Commission, most South Africans say it was a (qualified) success. The sacrifice of great things to avoid war infuses politics here, as far from the current American rhetoric as Joburg is from San Francisco. The full text of the TRC report can be found at http://www.gov.za/reports/2003/trc/index.html. For Bagels, Burritos, and Old Friends For some reason, this war has brought on a bout of homesickness unlike any I have ever experienced. Maybe it's a combination of how long I've been living away and the alienation of war politics, but it mostly manifests itself as a craving for serious Mexican food. I dream of fresh salsa, hot tortilla chips, big fat burritos from the Mission district in San Francisco. Occasionally these cravings are interrupted by thoughts of real toasted bagels with tomato and cream cheese in the morning. I close my eyes and remember how it feels not to speak with a strange accent, and how there are places in the world where I can order a glass of water ("wadder") and have the server understand me. On Sunday I'll think about the bulk of the New York Times and brunch with old friends. I'm still happy where I am and with the huge flood of incredible work I'm doing, but it's good to know my ties to home are still rooted somewhere beneath the surface. -TayaOutpatientsOnline.com Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gus 1 #6 August 11, 2003 24th April 2003 "This is a humanitarian catastrophe of horrid and shocking proportions. The conflict has cost more lives than any other since World War II and the death toll from all the recent wars in the Balkans doesn't even come close." -George Rupp, president of the International Rescue Committee, speaking about the current conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). DRC at a Glance: Duration of conflict: 4.5 years Related deaths since 1998: 4.7 million Years since last general election: 43 Outside countries involved militarily: at least 5 Documented atrocities confirmed by the UN so far: rape, murder, deliberate maiming, torture, forced cannibalism, child recruitment into militias. Other Wars I have stopped turning on the television news and started reading more press outside of the mainstream. Escaping incessant coverage of one war and its aftermath only leads to a gruesome kind of variety: the world is full of sideshow conflicts. Many of them rage in Africa, under the radar of international coverage or even humanitarian aid. It becomes difficult when living, as Rian Malan has written, in "a doomed city on a damned continent", not to see the rhetoric of the Iraq war from all sides as somehow hypocritical by omission. The civil war in the Democratic Republic of Congo has claimed 4.7 million lives since it started in 1998. UN investigations into reports of atrocities in Eastern Congo have found that rebels against Mobutu Sese Seko killed and ate Pygmies, a small tribe of about 600,000 native to the area, on a significant scale. Prisoners were forced to eat pieces of their own bodies while others were forced to eat their comrades' flesh. As early as 1996, government troops sent to subdue rebel forces in the east systematically raped women and girls in villages along the way with impunity. Civilian men were indiscriminately killed and maimed. Years later, the militias and militaries involved are many, and they are all accused of war crimes regardless of their affiliation. Although a political settlement among the various warring factions was just signed in Sun City, South Africa, it is not the first push for peace. Other recent tries have ended in failure, and the country's acting president did not even attend this latest signing. Zimbabwe, Uganda, Rwanda, Angola, and Namibia have all had troops involved in the conflict. Rwanda, threatened by the continued existence of Hutu militia in Congo, is unapologetically talking about jumping back in before the ink in Sun City has had a chance to dry. Guns outlast peace agreements. In 1976, Robert Mugabe said, "Our votes must go together with our guns. After all, any vote we shall have, shall have been the product of the gun." He was certainly right that votes and guns often go hand in hand, which is probably the only reason he still retains power in Zimbabwe in 2003. As the opposition Movement for Democratic Change grows stronger, his tactics are becoming more brutal. In South Africa, we hear reports of political opponents' torture by electric shock, widespread rape, and six million people condemned to starvation. The man credited with freeing Zimbabwe from colonial oppression has turned his own revolution on its head: now he is the villain in the crosshairs. While the world's gaze is transfixed elsewhere, a true grassroots struggle for democracy is at war with an aging but very violent soldier fighting for glory that has long since passed. Every day in South Africa 600 people die of Aids. The ANC government's minister of health, Manto Tshabalala-Msimang, refers publicly to "HIV and Aids" but never to "HIV/Aids" because she still refuses to acknowledge the connection between the virus and the disease. Instead of providing the cheap and available medication that could help people survive and live without stigma, the government talks about the medicinal uses of olive oil and the importance of diet while the death toll continues to rise. Zackie Achmat, the head of the well-organized Treatment Action Campaign, is something akin to this war's revolutionary leader. Openly HIV-positive, he refuses to take anti-retrovirals on principle until they are available free through the national health system. He was locked up seven times by the old regime for fighting apartheid, but he is prepared to go back to jail under the watchful eye of the ANC government if that's what it takes to help Aids sufferers. Of this irony, he says, "it's like fighting against your own parents." Ignorance is a powerful weapon, but so is courage. Last year I lost a friend in battle. She had been trying to get out of a bad relationship for about five years. One day after months of counseling she went to the magistrate's court in downtown Johannesburg and braved the jeering clerks. She walked out with a protection order against the man who had been physically and sexually abusing her since one week after their first date. The next day, he went to the poverty-stricken area where she had taken shelter. There were no security guards, no fences, no gates, and no streetlights to illuminate his approach. He walked right up and shot her, again and again. She died. The police have not arrested him. I quit counseling survivors of domestic violence and rape and started training police. This war is quiet, with no discernible beginning and no visible end. Two American visitors came to Joburg last week, an old Harvard friend who has just finished 27 months in the Peace Corps in Zambia and one of his colleagues. On our way to dinner, a car started dangerously tailgating me down a narrow street. As soon as I could, I pulled over to let the car pass. Instead, the driver pulled up next to me. Inside the car was a white male driver, and closest to my window his wife held a baby of perhaps three years on her lap with no seatbelt. The man, in a clear-cut case of road rage, began yelling and accusing me of driving dangerously when he had a baby in the car. I had no idea what he was talking about so I did the respectable thing and tried to de-escalate by putting my hands in full view and remaining silent. When he was finished, I said simply, "I'm sorry, now please move on." He responded: "I'll decide when to move on, you stupid bitch. The next time I'll take you out of that car and give you a good hiding." His baby started to cry and his wife looked straight ahead as if in a trance. My de-escalation techniques slipped as I told him not to speak to me that way. Hearing my accent, he ordered my humble car full of American idealists to "piss off back to our own country" (and a few other things that don't bear repeating). We ended up having a nice dinner anyway. I forgot all about the man and his rage until I was trying to get to sleep that night. Eyes wide open in my bed in the dark, I was afraid and I was angry. I pictured the man taking out his anger on his wife and child as he had with me and I felt helpless. I pictured him trying to drag me out of my car and give me a good hiding. The war against fear, intimidation, and hate is a very personal one, and I tune into it daily. The Bank Story Part II: Power and Protection Six days after a Nedbank teller flashed my American passport around a bank branch and announced my presence to a somewhat hostile lunchtime crowd, I chaired a seminar at the Institute for Security Studies on violence against children. Several people from the American embassy showed up to participate and apparently enjoyed it enough to stay afterwards for the lunch. One of my colleagues was telling the bank story with half a mouthful of meat pie when one of the embassy staff overheard it. The following day I received a call about the incident and found myself on the phone with the American regional security officer. (They really liked the seminar! I thought.) The officer asked me to come in and make a statement, but I was ambivalent. Did I really want the United States as an entity to be getting involved in one little incident at the bank? I was over it, wasn't I? The US embassy is in Pretoria. I craned my neck checking street numbers to make sure I was headed in the right direction. There was no need to fear missing it, though: it takes up an entire city block and looks like a serious military installation, or a downed invader spacecraft. There is a huge wall around the perimeter, police vehicles stationed at every corner, and strange looking antennae protruding into the sky. Across the street, the Embassy of Mali occupies a charming colonial house with a gate that was swinging half open next to a snoozing guard. The contrast made me feel queasy. The US block exudes a sense of imperial power and brute strength, with its flag sticking out over the blank walls and the anti-tank embankments around the outside. Why did it have to be so walled in? Because someone blew up the last embassy I visited in Nairobi. It took me half an hour to get through security at the gate. After I had finally been given clearance to enter the compound, I imagined the Darth Vader theme song playing as I walked up a steep stone ramp, past a mirrored outside wall, and finally to the imposing doors of the building itself. I turned over my passport to a uniformed officer and got a badge, then waited for my escort. The structure that houses America's official presence in South Africa is like a self-contained village. Familiar accents float by as groups of people chat in open spaces, hallways, and a large café area. The meeting itself was rather uneventful: I didn't know the teller's name, nor did I want specific reprisals against her. I just wanted someone to make it clear to the bank that customer privacy must be respected. I was assured that my great country would, in no uncertain terms, open up a good old-fashioned can of whoop-ass on the Nedbank corporate headquarters. I was dismissed. As I gathered my things at security, I noticed that my hands were shaking. I suddenly felt the protection of the powerful in a very personal way-even allowed myself a sense of relief that I am considered important enough to be worthy of regional security attention. But there was also a vague undercurrent of unpleasantness about the whole affair. I thought of the guard sleeping on Mali's side of the street. Perhaps it was the guilt of being officially counted, and held accountable, in the "for us" column when I know there are innocents in the "against us" ledger who don't really belong there. (I wondered if my mother, an American who was born in Beirut, would have been afforded the same kind of sympathy. I doubted it.) Maybe it was a feeling of helplessness that even and perhaps especially the most idealistic Americans are targets of hate. I struggle, sometimes blindly, against the idea of a world where war dictates identity and fear is more powerful than peace. Coming of age, again, in Africa As I write this, I'm at the Stanley Hotel in central Nairobi, Kenya. I'm here for a week doing preliminary work on a project I'm heading for the ISS examining the demand side of the gun market in Kenya. It has always been a dream of mine to stay at the Stanley, a distinguished old colonial relic ("since 1902") that was frequented by the likes of Hemingway, Denys Finch Hatton, Edward Prince of Wales, and even Clark Gable. Kenya's first locally brewed beer was served in the bar here in 1923. My first time in Kenya in 1994, when I was teaching in a community school in the rural Western province, I lived in a mud hut frequented by chickens and sometimes a very loud rooster. Delicacies such as live termites were served in my hut, but rather unceremoniously out of an old coffee can. I remember taking the night bus from Kakamega to Nairobi for the day with a fellow teacher back then. Neither of us had showered or seen a mirror in weeks when we rolled into the Stanley to splurge on breakfast. First, we snuck upstairs to the first floor restaurant bathrooms and marveled at the marble as we washed up in the sinks. (A maid happened in, but we asked her nicely in Swahili to please not kick us out and she just laughed.) Afterwards, we headed down to the Thorn Tree Café and stuffed our faces with waffles, and our bags with extra food for our host families and souvenir napkins and silverware for our villages. I can admit this now because I've become so-well, legitimate-a well-scrubbed paying guest with a suitcase full of respectable clothes. For old times' sake, I still always pack a flashlight, travel towel, mosquito net, and knife just in case. And not in vain, as it turns out. I needed them during the one unexpected night I had to spend at a different hotel en route to the Stanley, a rowdy brothel with no linens and an overly enthusiastic nocturnal clientele. I can't seem to outgrow adventure around here.OutpatientsOnline.com Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gus 1 #7 August 11, 2003 2nd July 2003 "Faith is the daring of the soul to go further than it can see." -Elle Botha's kitchen refrigerator magnet "We did not travel this road to become a nation of hijackers. We did not travel this road to become a nation of women and child abusers. We did not travel this road to become corrupt." -Desmond Tutu on post-apartheid South Africa. At Walter Sisulu's funeral, Orlando Stadium, Soweto. May 17, 2003 Open Door, Blue Sky She was a skydiver. On Sunday, June 22nd, 2003, Elna Botha of Melville, Johannesurg, struggled to open her reserve parachute until about 100 feet above the ground. She hit the ground very hard and died on impact. Elle was one of my best friends. I was standing on the ground looking up at the sky when it happened. I saw her cut away her malfunctioning main parachute, and watched that canopy as it drifted down. When I looked back up for the standard white reserve, the sky was empty. Three people went to the scene where she died. Eric, the Chief Instructor, and Deon, the Duty Instructor, were required to be there. I was there on behalf of a third instructor who was several beers to the wind within five minutes of the incident. I cannot describe what I saw, and even if I could I wouldn't want to share it. What I witnessed was the naked truth of human fragility, and the truth of that particular time and place belongs only to the three of us who were there. Late afternoon sun glowed through opaque clouds on the horizon. The wind had died and the air was still. The ground was as solid as it has always been: without remorse, uncaring, beyond moralizing. After helping the police and coroners and arranging for someone to call the family, I remembered that her two dogs would have to be fed. Friends offered to accompany me to her house so that I could drive her car back and then get a ride home. The first thing we did was to call the security company on the sign outside the gate. We wanted to avoid being shot as intruders by armed response if we tripped an alarm. Life suddenly seemed cheap again in Johannesburg. The dogs seemed as though they knew. The house was just as she had left it, and I refused to contemplate the finality of her absence. From 3pm when she hit the ground until 7:30pm when I finally arrived home to my own empty flat, I was in efficiency mode, a place of necessity. I didn't shed a tear. My fingers had swelled slightly with the pressure of keeping in the horror, as though my skin could barely contain the enormity of what I had seen. When it was safe to let the grief out, there were torrents. The grief is selfish, now that the anger has run its course. It is a lonely kind of sadness. Others mourn the Elle they knew. I also mourn the pictures of death I carry with me, pictures that have aged me in intangible ways. A crumpled white canopy, just out of its container, shrouding part of her like an angel's wing. I have to accept that Elle's body was not the definition of her being. My friend's spirit had long gone from that dry, desolate spot in the veldt where the pieces of her lay silent. Elle Botha: she lived not just to subsist, but to grow and transform herself and those around her. She died in flight, doing what she loved. I grieve, not for her soul that has gone from here, but for the laughter, companionship, shared pasta dinners, and hot cups of lemon ginger tea that I will miss. I sometimes try to wish that I hadn't seen what I did, but I can't. I felt love for my friend even in the prosaic vigil of being at that place with police tape and orange cones and vans and men with badges. I was there to honor her death. Chasing Justice On a quiet Sunday morning in May, I was fast asleep and diligently adhering to Operation Sleep In and Have a Day Off. The phone by my bed interrupted the peace at 7:30am, and within five minutes I was in my car starting what would be a very long week. A friend (we'll call her "M") had been assaulted in the middle of the night by her ex-boyfriend. I knew them both fairly well, but hadn't seen it coming. I was angry. Through my morning grogginess on the phone, I heard her saying, "I thought I was better than this." One eye was swollen shut and black, making half her face into a darkened mask. He had punched her repeatedly and then kicked her when she was on the ground, injuring her shoulder. There was blood crusted in her hair where the back of her head hit the floor, and she was shaking in the early winter cold. The police had been called, and we waited for the officer to arrive and take a statement. Minutes passed. We called again. The voice at the other end of the line said someone was on the way. The female officer arrived in civilian clothes and sat down with us. She was unprepared to open a docket or take a statement. Instead, she gave a brief lecture on how, if we managed to get a protection order, we should be careful of whom we got to serve the order on the assailant. "Our blacks," she said, "believe that it is okay in their culture to beat women." With those few words, she invalidated the experience of the white survivor sitting in front of her (beaten by a white man). The facts sitting at the table that morning seemed not to change her opinion. The treatment wasn't much better at the hospital. M got decent medical care, X rays of her head and shoulders, and a doctor who initially refused to fill out the legal form documenting injuries. Eventually (encouraged by my harsh words when I took him aside to explain his duty) he took pen to paper, but said he was unqualified to determine what had caused the injuries. He wrote only that he detected a smell of alcohol on the victim. I took photographs of the wounds with the policewoman's camera and made a mental note to get a second doctor's opinion on the causes of injury. I drove M home to her parents' house after the hours of paperwork and medico-legal ordeals. They were horrified at how she looked. By the end of the day, I started to realize how scary it was for me to be helping someone through this process yet again. An angry ex-boyfriend shot my last client after being served with a protection order. I wasn't sure I was ready to be jumping back in, especially with someone I cared about as a personal friend. Sometimes, though, there is no choice but to be there. By Tuesday she was ready to go to court. The long line outside Room 22 would have made for days of waiting if I hadn't pushed my way to the front. I was dressed in a suit and didn't openly state that I wasn't a lawyer: anything to get M what she needed. We joked that I should just buy myself a black robe and pose as a magistrate. The real magistrate granted the temporary protection order and a final hearing date, but refused to attach a suspended warrant of arrest. It took three tries to get the wording on the order correct. No one at the court would tell us who was responsible for serving the order on M's assailant. Two days later I found myself in a patrol car heading for his house. The police had offered to be my backup, but refused to serve the order themselves. I wasn't sure whether to laugh or cry as I clutched the form he had to sign and stood at the door with two uniformed officers behind me. He wasn't home. The following day, I called in a favor from a friend at police headquarters and had him threaten the officers with disciplinary action unless they served the order within the day. I got a full salute the next time I entered the station. Three weeks after that, I sat in a small office with M, the assailant, and his lawyer. Also present were the assailant's sister, a witness on M's behalf, and a senior magistrate. M's hands were sweating so much that water poured from them whenever she unclenched her fists. The air was heavy with tension. The circulation of the photographs, my chat with his lawyer, and M's statement that she had had enough of courts swayed the magistrate beyond argument. I was proud to be her advocate and her friend as we left with warrant of arrest in hand. Why is justice such a difficult chase? I wish that no one needed me to bully police, attempt to serve protection orders myself, yell at medical professionals, and push to the front of the line. Still, I do it because I can. IMPACT South Africa Perhaps because I have seen so many women at the crisis end of the trauma cycle, it has been my dream for the last year to offer people and communities something other than crisis management. I have been working to start an Impact self-defense and empowerment program (also known in the US as Model Mugging) in Johannesburg. I took my first Impact/Model Mugging class when I was 19 years old and went on to complete several advanced classes on weapons and multiple assailants. In 1996, a New York Times article documented my successful use of the physical techniques while on assignment as a Let's Go travel writer in Jordan. This month, after a lot of planning and leaps of faith, the dream became a reality. Lynn Auerbach, executive director of Impact Boston (www.impactboston.com), flew in with a total of three instructors to live in my flat for nearly five weeks and help me launch IMPACT South Africa. Instructors Jim Watson, Robin Colodzin, and Rufus Royal volunteered their time to be here. Raymond Phillips, a South African who teaches kickboxing professionally, has trained as my male instructor and partner. IMPACT is unique because the male instructor wears a full suit of padded armor that students can practice hitting full force. Both Raymond and I completed nearly 100 hours of instructor and fight training, a complement to over a week of training I did in Boston in December. Our classes this month included women, children, and teens in the townships, inner city, and suburbs. Physical self-defense is only part of the equation. IMPACT focuses on the mental and emotional aspects of boundary setting, relationships, and self-esteem. We offer a new way of perceiving what our rights are in the world and how to exercise them with safety and awareness. The class is safe, non-judgmental, and non-competitive, and can be part of the healing process for survivors of violence. Johannesburg is a place of fear for most people who live here. It's not just the epidemic levels of child abuse, rape, hate crimes, and murder; it's the way we are all afraid to stop the car at intersections after dark because hijackers could be lurking out of sight. It's the way guns are used out of proportion to the force necessary to snatch cell phones, wallets, jackets, grocery bags. It's the way houses have high walls, spiked gates, armed response guards, and informal shacks have nothing but deadly hot coals to heat the winter air. Most Joburg residents are survivors of some kind of violence, even if only the violence of living in perpetual fear. Empowerment is not the denial of that fear, but a more aware way of using it. Throughout the month of June, we set out to teach and transform the way people think about defending themselves. We watched as 16-17 year old girls in Soweto started to use their voices, articulating their histories and fears and finding the power to claim their future. We watched as 10-year-old children in the impoverished mining community of Riverlea discovered that they have a right to be safe. We witnessed lesbians who face the threat of hate crimes in the inner city claiming their right as full citizens of this country. We listened as professors at a major university voiced their renewed intention to work together for gender equality in higher education. I believe that IMPACT South Africa is going to change the way entire communities define fear, safety, and empowerment. I hope to grow it as an organization until I can hand it over to a South African director as a lasting initiative. Until then, I will continue learning and growing into the person I want to be: someone who can create a safe bridge for those willing to cross to the other side of pain. With great faith, -TayaOutpatientsOnline.com Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gus 1 #8 August 11, 2003 That's all of them, a lot of text I know but well worth reading. GusOutpatientsOnline.com Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
GiaKrembs 0 #9 August 11, 2003 WOW, what an amazing and brave woman. Here's to Taya!!! Raddest ho this side of Jersey #1 - rest in peace brother Beth lost her cherry and I missed it .... you want access to it, but you don't want to break it. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites