So after travelling
together for roughly 13,062 kilometres in ten and a half weeks all the way
down from Nairobi, we finally arrived at Cape Town on a glorious sunny
winter's day. Deciding to strike while the iron was hot if you will,
we headed straight up to the top of Table Mountain. So Jamie, Noj,
Bruno, Steph, Law, Catherine, Ruth, Mel and I took a taxi to the cable car
station. It is possible to make a three-hour hike up the 1,085
metres of Table Mountain, but due to the relatively late hour, we were all
pretty happy to play lazy buggers. The Rotair cable car, which is
Swiss made old Fondue Face reliably informed me, rotates 360° and offers
spectacular views over the beautiful city of Cape Town and the Atlantic
coastline. Safely aboard, we ascended to the summit of the mountain
in double quick time. Once on top it is easy to spend hours walking
around the fynbos festooned walkways that criss-cross the flat peak of
Table Mountain, observing the cute rabbit-like mammals, called Rock
Dassies and the red-winged starlings. Each direction offers
breathtaking views over the plains of the Cape, while thrill-seeking hand
gliders, parachutists and light aircraft circle the skies overhead like
prehistoric pterodactyls. We took what we thought would be the last
group photos together before taking the cable car down again when the sun
began to dip towards the horizon.
As Jamie was due to return to Europe the next day, we decided to have a
final meal together. So Jen, Dolly, Chris, Christina, John and Steve
joined the nine of us, in a fine Indian restaurant called Bukhara, on 33
Church Street in the centre of town. We had a sumptuous oriental
feast, though I recall struggling to finish the very spicy Chicken Madras.
The local red wine nonetheless helped the digestive process. As I
had done a month and a half earlier in Bulawayo, I circled the dinner
table like a vulture with my Dictaphone, ready to pounce on any silly
comments or memorable final words. The subsequent collection of
drunken blather that I recorded from my fellow travellers will no doubt
make a memorable souvenir, with which I'll be able to double-cross the
gang in future, if they ever try to blackmail me with photos from my
birthday in Malawi! Many debates raged around the table, foremost
among which was regarding whether Ronnie Barker of "The Two
Ronnies" fame was still breathing or not. Most of us assumed he
had already shuffled off this mortal coil, but Mel and Tacklebury insisted
that he still runs an antiques' store not far from where they live.
No doubt Elvis runs the local chip shop and Marilyn Monroe teaches at the
parish primary school too. Steph's inebriated rendition of "I'm
a Little Ogo Pogo" (apparently the B-side of that all time classic
tune "The Sun has got its Hat on") and Laura's childlike account
of the trip down from Kenya being the best standout cringe mementoes.
We arrived back at the Ashanti Lodge at precisely 23h45. Technically the
bar there, known as the Kumasi café, is supposed to close at midnight.
So when Jamie, Noj, Bruno, Steph, Law, Catherine, Ruth, Mel and I piled
in, we foolishly assumed that it would be just for "one for the
road". However, the guys who work in the Ashanti, Neil, Dan, Henry,
Steve, Karen, Sue, Mark and Silvia, are a lively bunch and they had other
ideas. So two hours and nine shots later, the Kumasi still remained open.
We were forced (well to be honest, there wasn't really that much coercion
needed) into downing a selection of Slippery Nipples (Cap Velvet &
White Sambuca), Mini Guinness' (Kahlua & Amarula) and a powerful
little number worryingly called a F*ck Up (Kahlua, Cape Velvet and either
Red or Green Sambuca). Given the large amount of Indian food I had
earlier consumed, my stomach walls were literally by now at breaking point
and I tried to crawl unnoticed out of the bar. The others were
having none of it. Escaping from Colditz would have proved easier.
I was finally won over when a microphone was produced and not needing much
encouragement in that department, I started to belt out a collection of
popular ditties. More photos were taken. Steph apparently used up a
whole film in the bar alone. We fell into our dorm around 03h00, and
before you could say "Interesting Meester Bond", we decided that it would be a brilliant idea to all
pile into one bed. Things were already getting desperate for Noj,
who was on the bottom, by the time Catherine, the penultimate person
climbed aboard. I, however, provided the killer coup de grace as I
hurled myself on top of the others. The screams emanating from
beneath me would have woken the dead, let alone the guests in the other
dorms. But it seemed like an appropriately childish action with
which to draw a close to our overlanding shenanigans. Jamie certainly
thought it was a blinding last night and I'll wager it provided a
formative preparation for the college years that await him when he returns
to Scotland. Over the following days, the Drago gang left one by
one, till none bar Catherine and myself remained. Though other fun
nights in Cape Town were had, I believe that the memories of that first
one will live on long after the rest have faded from our collective
memory. I don't know how many of the Dragoman crew I'll see again.
Quite a few I would like to think. But I'll look forward to next
year when I'll get to develop the photos from the last two months, and
relive all the magnificent memories once again.
But Cape Town is about much more than just wild nights on the town.
And while the others busied themselves confirming flights and packing
bags, I filled the hours doing regular urban things which Cape Town
affords the possibility to do. Bruno and myself visited the
excellent "Two Oceans Aquarium", which offered me the best
chance I have had to view marine life since I visited Sea World in Florida
many moons ago. There are nine separate halls in which visitors are
given the chance to see a wide array of aquatic flora, invertebrates, fish
from both the Indian and the Atlantic Oceans, sea mammals, sharks and
moray eels. Afterwards we treated ourselves to a cinematic feast in
the massive Victoria & Albert Waterfront Shopping Centre.
Showing in the Nu Metro cinema were two excellent epic films,
"Gladiator", starring Russell Crowe and "The Patriot"
with Mel Gibson. Given that each film cost only 20 Rand (3 Euro) we
decided to see both movies in rapid succession, leaving ourselves barely
enough time to stock up on popcorn and refill our Slush Puppies at the
interval. Another day saw the two of us along with Steph, Law and
Catherine going on a excursion around the Cape Wine Lands with Ferdinand's
Tours. We visited the vineyards at Simonsig, Simonsvlei, Eikendal
and Rhebokskloof and learned a lot about wine production. Given the
excellent South African wines that we had drank up till then, sampling
their wares on the day proved somewhat disappointing. But a fun day
out was had meeting new people and enjoying the lush countryside.
By this stage, a significant amount of web updating had built up for me.
So taking full advantage of the fact that Niamh, an Irish friend of my
cousin Alison, was living in Cape Town for a few months, I headed out past
New Lands Rugby Stadium to her flat in the leafy southern suburb of
Kenilworth. Spending two full days nailed to the seat in front of
her flatmate Amanda's computer, I was again feeling ready for some more
tourist action. So Niamh and I opted to do the very worthwhile Grass
Route tour "Behind the Rainbow Curtain". Most tourists to
Cape Town think of the city in terms of the picturesque V&A
Waterfront. For the price of 160 Rand (25 Euro) the Grass Route tour
affords one the opportunity to see how people live in the many shanty
towns where thousands of non white Capetonians live. The driver of
our tour was a friendly coloured chap called Peter Veerapen, who typically
for the new South Africa, was of mixed extraction - Indian, Tamil,
Filipino, French (from Mauritius) and Khoisan. For our tour, Niamh
and I were the only white people on board. Peter told me that in all
the years since 1994 that he'd been doing the tour, he could count the
number of white South Africans that voluntarily paid to come along on one
hand. Perhaps this is due to ignorance or the fact that one tends
not to do tourist things so close to home. More probably though,
Peter said, the reason was due to a combination of disinterest and guilt.
We were joined by a group of African-Americans - one lady from Bermuda, a
couple and their daughter from Chicago and a mother and daughter from New
York. We began in the colourful hilly Muslim area of Bo-Kaap, the
oldest suburb in all of Cape Town. The Cape Muslims are the
descendants of slaves who were brought here by the Dutch from countries in the east such as India, Malaysia, Java and other
Indonesian islands. The slaves spoke a trading language called
Malayhu and consequently their descendants call themselves "Cape
Malays". When they were freed by the British in the 1830s
they were allowed to settle in Bo-Kaap, where they have remained ever
since despite the best efforts of some Afrikaner governments. Not so
lucky were the inhabitants of a former lively suburb of Cape Town known
simply as District Six. Home to a vibrant heaving blend of races -
coloured, Jewish, Greek, Italian, Indian - District Six disproved the
white government's lie that the races had to be separated because they
couldn't get along. Though black Africans had been forced out of
District Six earlier in the century, its remaining mix of inhabitants
helped to mould the popular soul of Cape Town, making a mockery of the
government's stance and apartheid ideology. Having failed to change
the area into a "Whites Only" zone, the racist government then
decided in the mid-sixties to declare District Six a "slum".
Offering its inhabitants paltry sums of "compensation", they
sent in the bulldozers in 1966 forcing the people out. Now it lies
as a barren wasteland, testament to the Nationalist's government's
stupidity and cruelty. Looking down the barren remains of the main
thoroughfare of Hanover Street, it was hard to picture the street as a
bustling walkway. However, in the excellent District Six museum, they had
plenty of photos of District Six back in its heyday. There we learnt
about the hated pass laws that forced blacks to live in their overcrowded
"native" Bantustans, as well as how life was for non-whites
under apartheid. Keen to learn more about District Six, I bought two
novels by Alex La Guma, a local author, and representative of the ANC, who
died in Cuba in 1985. "A Walk in the Night" (1962) &
"In the Fog of the Seasons' End" (1972) describe the decay and
disintegration of the poor tenements of District Six with a compelling
crispness that one can almost smell. To try to capture the sounds of
the era I bought an excellent compact disc on the global Nascente label
called "Freedom Blues - South African Jazz Under Apartheid"
(1999).
Next we headed to the black townships of Langa and Khayelitsha.
Langa, meaning "the Sun", is along with Nyanga (meaning
"the Moon"), the oldest formal shantytown in Cape Town.
There we visited the Chris Hani Community School run by a lady called
Maureen Jacobs for destitute children of the illiterate or semi-literate
hostel dwellers, who have migrated to Cape Town from the Eastern Cape in
search of employment. These kids, aged 6-16, are very poor, do not
yet even have birth certificates and even in some cases if they do,
definitely lack sufficient education to be accepted into state schools.
So Maureen and her colleagues try to teach practical facts like basic reading and writing or how one should cross a road safely to these needy,
but spirited kids. The children sang and danced for us and also gave
a moving rendition in Xhosa of "God Bless Africa", the beautiful
national hymn of South Africa, a song that it was once forbidden to sing.
Then we made for Khayelitsha, meaning "new Home", Cape Town's
largest informal settlement. In the 12 square kilometres of
Khayelitsha, it is estimated that between 1.2 and 1.3 million people live.
We visited the house of Vicky Dzuni, a long-time inhabitant of
Khayelitsha. Outside her home looked like a mish-mash of wood and corrugated iron, but on the
inside, Vicky had done her best to make it very homely and comfortable,
adding what mod cons she could afford. Once again the friendliness
of the people, despite their poverty, was disarming. We ventured
into a shebeen, a word borrowed from Gaelic, that was used to describe the
illegal bars, which served as important meeting places during the dark
days of apartheid. Here follows a quote from Alex La Guma's "A
Walk in the Night", which describes the roll filled by these
shebeens. "The pub, like pubs all over the world, was a place
for debate and discussion, for the exchange of views and opinions, for
argument and for the working out of problems. It was a forum, a
parliament, a fountain of wisdom and a cesspool of nonsense, it was a centre for the lost and the
despairing, where cowards absorbed Dutch courage out of small glasses and
leaned against the shiny, scratched and polished mahogany counter for
support against the crushing burdens of insignificant lives. Where
the disillusioned gained temporary hope, where acts of kindness were
considers and murders planned."
Finally, we visited a soup kitchen run by Rosie Gwadisa. She told us
how, despite the abject poverty of the black shantytowns, and the mounting
problems of HIV and AIDS, everyone looked out for each other and they felt
very safe. Peter informed us that he found the coloured townships
far less safe than the black shanties, because before 1994 black youths
tended to join the African National Congress (ANC) or the more radical Pan
African Congress (PAC) as part of the anti-apartheid struggle, while
coloured teenagers used to join gangs. The culture of gangsterism is still
very much a part of South African urban life today. On the very morning we
ventured into Khayelitsha, a bus driver and a passenger were shot dead on
the outskirts of the township as part of the continuing taxi wars that are
occurring as the government tries to regulate the taxiing industry.
Nowadays white people bemoan how violence in South Africa has become much
more widespread since the ANC gained power. But as Peter told us -
the violence was always there. It's just that now white people are also
feeling its effects. Since the first democratic elections in the
country, however, the ANC have managed to build 750,000 new homes for
first time homeowners. These houses are 80m² and cost 15,000 Rand
each. Funding is totally subsidised for those who earn less than 800
Rand per month and partially subsidised for those who earn more than this
amount. The government estimates that it will take 20 years to be
able to provide all modern amenities (electricity, clean water, postal
services, street lighting, signposting and rubbish collection) to the
sprawling townships in the area. But at least they have made a start.
If you ever visit Cape Town I heartily recommend taking the Grass Route
tour, as you will gain a truer picture of what the new South Africa is
really about.
In the afternoon I said farewell to Niamh and venture out to Robben Island
on my own. The boat journey over only took 25 minutes. Our
guide and driver around the island were called Sobantu and Kevin
respectively. We took in some spectacular views of Cape Town and
visited the Lime Quarry, where forced labour was used for decades.
Robben Island has served as alternatively as a leper colony, a mental
ward, a military base and a jail for criminals and political prisoners
since the 19th century. During the height of the anti-apartheid
struggle, Robert Sobukwe, Govan Mbeki (father of President Thabo Mbeki),
Walter Sisulu and of course former President and Nobel Peace Prize winner
Nelson Mandela were imprisoned here. A lively former inmate, Moseli,
from the Eastern Cape, who was jailed there for five years from January
1977 till January 1982, took us on a tour of the maximum-security
facility. We saw the tiny cell where Nelson Mandela was held for two
decades and I learned a lot about the tricks the inmates used to try to
frustrate the efforts of the cruel Afrikaner wardens to break their
spirits. During all my time in Cape Town I found it difficult to
imagine how only a decade ago Mandela was still in jail and apartheid had
not yet been dismantled. Visiting Robben Island helped in this
regard and is just one more of the "must do's" that make up any
Cape Town itinerary. The final hours of my stay in beautiful Cape
Town were filled with visits to the interestingly named "Labia"
cinema, and a "Doctor and Nurses Party" organised by the
Ashanti, where a group of very attractive young girls dressed up as nubile
nurses administered injections of vodka and Red Bull. For medicinal purposes obviously. Otherwise I
meandered around the flea markets and shops around Long Street, where
there was a great African music shop, in which I picked up a blinding
album of Afro-Portuguese tunes from Lisbon, Angola, São Tomé & Cabo
Verde called "Adventures in Afropea 3 - Telling Stories to the
Sea" (1995).
Now Catherine and I have left the administrative capital of South Africa,
heading east on the Baz Bus, a hop on hop off mode of transport ideally
geared towards backpackers. I'm currently staying at the very homely
Moby's hostel in the town of Hermanus, run by a friendly couple called
Jannie and Elmine Boonzaaier, where yesterday we spent the afternoon
watching shoals of Southern Right Whales. These beautiful giant
creatures come within 10 metres of the rocky southern shoreline and it is
easy to spend hours watching them going to and fro'. So another
month now draws to a close. Ahead lies August and two weeks of
working our way through the Garden Route, the Drakensberg Mountains, the
hilly country of Lesotho, the Boer, British and Zulu battlefields (Don't
you throw that bloody spear at me!), the Kingdom of Swaziland and finally
Jo'burg. By the time I write my next update I might even be in
Perth, Australia. But something tells me that you'll have enough
already on the web page to keep you busy till then. So in the
meantime, keep sane, safe and healthy and I'll try to do likewise.
Till then, goodnight, or as the Xhosa say "Rhonanai".
Gav (31 July 2000)
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