I Will Never
be a Mandela
I always love
devouring any literature on the most revered human being on earth. One, who
is
almost a living saint and who has made many
Africans, black people and mankind at large stand
high and
proud in their defence of humanity – Nelson Mandela.
To many he is
the world’ most loved statesman, a warm and magnanimous human being who is
also willing to own up to his failings. This is the man who came out of
prison after 27 years smiling and preaching reconciliation to all. To most
people he is the founding father of the modern South Africa and it is the
idea of Mandela that is the glue that binds that country together.
This year
Madiba, as he is fondly called, marked his 91st birthday. He
has naturally become fragile. Many fear that inevitable moment. And many
shudder at the thought of a South Africa without Mandela.
As confessed
earlier, I am a Mendalaphillist. Whatever material I get hold of on the old
man is food for me. Actually whenever I read something on him I feel
rejuvenated and realise how minuscule my contribution to mankind is. It
surely is a humbling experience.
The other
day, though, I was more than humbled to read that actually the great African
icon grew up in simple surroundings in a typical African village like any
African child. Actually it read just like my childhood experiences.
In the
article, Mandela talks of his wish to have his final rest alongside his
ancestors in Qunu, in Western Cape, where, he says, he spent the happiest
years of his boyhood. In his autobiography, he describes it as a place of
small, beehive shaped huts, with grass roofs.
“It was in
the fields,” he writes, “that I learned to knock birds out of the sky with a
slingshot, to gather wild honey and fruits and edible roots, to drink warm,
sweet milk from the udder of a cow, to swim in the clear, cold streams, and
to catch fish with twine and sharpened bits of wire.”
Wow! I felt
like I was living in that same small village many years ago in my boyhood.
For what else did I do when growing up in Chalowe village in the Bena plains
of Njombe, in the Southern Highlands? Similar indulgencies!
I learnt to
knock down birds from the sky and from the many leafy trees in the villages.
Though I have to admit I was very poor if not very bad in that art. I, and
many other failed boys like me, had to find another means of catching birds.
This involved spreading some grains on the ground where we would set up a
trap involving a half suspended bamboo-woven-bowl held by a stick tied to a
long rope. As soon as the birds were under this bowl we, hiding somewhere
far, would suddenly pull the rope and naturally the supporting stick and the
bowl would collapse on top of the birds. We would then come with a huge
blanket and catch the birds.
And like
Mandela we also spent most of our time gathering wild honey and fruits and
edible roots. I will never forget the ‘makusu’, ‘masada’, ‘masaula’,
‘mafwengi’ and many other famous wild fruits from the southern highlands.
Actually with the advent of the Sumry bus services to Mbeya I have already
begun receiving in Arusha some fresh ‘makusu’ fruits from Njombe.
I also tried
drinking warm sweet milk from a cow’s udder. In a nutshell I was a disgrace.
Not only did I miserably fail to place my mouth appropriately but the cow
became so enraged that I received a well aimed kick. I ended up spending a
few days in bed after a thorough thrashing from my father. Naturally, I never
went again near a cow.
We, the
Chalowe boys, also enjoyed bathing in the clear, cold streams in the village.
Though, on one occasion some wayward youths stole our clothes while we were
frolicking in the waters. You can imagine the spectacle we made as our naked,
wet and small bodies toddled along the village streets to the respective
homesteads.
Fishing! I
also loved fishing. But for all the years that I used my crude fishing rod
whose twine rope and sharpened bit of wire was attached at one end, I caught
only one fish. This was in contrast to my friends who caught basketfuls of
fish all the time. For that, I plan to re-visit this hobby in my old
age.
As you can
see I grew up just like the old Madiba. But all the past, present and
immediate future signs show that I will never be a Mandela.
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Saturday, May 26, 2012
I Will Never be a Mandela
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