Between Black and White
By GANESAN ABBU
()
About this ebook
A society divided by law. A young man determined to do what was right. A profound search for meaning in a bizarre maze of legalized racism.
Born in the tumultuous dawn ofApartheid in South Africa. Ganesan Abbu was marked as different. Indoctrinated into a life which placed White citizens at the top of the socia
GANESAN ABBU
Ganesan Abbu is a graduate of the University of Natal Medical School, in Durban, South Africa.He is a Family Physician in Winkler Manitoba, Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Manitoba, Canada, and the current President of the Manitoba College of Family Physicians - a chapter of The College of Family Physicians of Canada.
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Between Black and White - GANESAN ABBU
CHAPTER 1
An Awful Time to Be Born
It was an awful time to be born in South Africa, especially for a Brown boy in a world that was Black and White. There was quite a frenzy, that October night in 1962, as Mom unexpectedly went into labor. Dad rushed off in the dark to fetch the midwife. I picture him now, with a pounding heart and a Viceroy cigarette nervously fluttering in his mouth, half walking, half running, striking a match to ward off the snapping dogs.
This was a grim time to be starting a life. In those first moments—as I was held upside down by the ankles, coughing and spluttering in the dawn of apartheid, dangling precariously over smoke that rose above the sambrani (frankincense) sprinkled over glowing coals—I had no idea about my hazy future in a segregated South Africa, my tenuous position as an Indian person in this society, and the doubts that would arise as to where I really belonged.
Several days later, a Hindu priest was summoned and given the precise time and date of my birth. He studied the astrological charts and bestowed upon me a name that resonated with the stars. That is how I came to be called Ganesan, in honor of the elephant god, Ganesha, who represents wisdom and clears all obstacles.
My birth-certificate labelled me as ‘Indian’. The sequence of my genes, over which I exerted no choice or control, coded into me the physical attributes that were used to construct my racial identity: brown skin, brown eyes, and straight black hair. In case these characteristics were not self-evident, when I was older I had to produce upon demand an identity card that confirmed my race.
My identity document was the stamp that determined the trajectory of my life. The law said that I could only live amongst people who looked like me and spoke like me. To live alongside people of another race, attend school with them, or socialize with them was against the regulations. We were not allowed to sit on a park bench beside White people, swim on the same beach, or travel on the same bus. The Immorality Act strictly forbade anyone from marrying across the color line. Even in sickness and in death we were separated, restricted to either White or non-White hospitals and racially-segregated cemeteries. It was as though the corpses would rise unnoticed and, in some ghoulish dance, transgress the laws of the land. There was no choice, no chance to alter this course. It was the law.
It was indeed a terrible time to be born. South Africa had just declared itself a republic and the blueprint for apartheid was being shaped. Since 1913 colonial Britain had established a system of territorial separation that maintained a divide between White and non-White individuals. A new Afrikaner-dominated Nationalist government began to build upon the foundation of British policies and entrench racial segregation into law. The Population Registration Act officially separated people into one of four racial categories that was based mainly on the color of one’s skin.
African, Asian, and ‘Coloured’ (mixed-race) people were being shuffled around like pieces on a Rubik’s cube. A grand plan—executed under The Group Areas Act—ensured that residential areas were inhabited only by people with the same skin color. There was no regard for who was the rightful owner of the land, how attached one was to a place, or what emotional ties existed between people who shared that common space. Prime locations with oceanfront views and urban business centers were reserved exclusively for White-skinned people. African people were forced into newly-constructed townships on the outskirts of urban centers or driven into distant rural ‘homelands’ called Bantustans. Indian and Coloured people were strategically positioned in residential areas that acted as buffer zones shielding White people from the African Townships. An entire province, the Orange Free State, was set aside for White people only. It held nothing orange, nor was it free. I would need a special permit to transit through this area.
Six months before I was born, our family home was in the village of Old Duffs Road. I’m not sure of the real name, but that’s what my grandparents called it. It was on the outskirts of Durban, a coastal city on the eastern seaboard of South Africa, where almost 90 percent of South Africa’s one million Indians lived.
Old Duffs Road was a lively and somewhat uncommon place, where Indian and African people shared a communal area. The fireworks that illuminated the night sky during the Hindu celebration of Diwali, the Muslim azan (call to prayer) at 5 a.m., and the rhythmic notes of the izimbomu (a ceremonial horn used by the African Shembe Church) were celebrated equally by all who lived there. The community was very poor, but they shared the little they had. Our family sent dried fish chutney and rice to their African neighbor. They liked the spicy flavors. They would reciprocate with phutu, a crumbly maize porridge.
Before it was an edict, it was a rumor. I imagine my grandparents craning to hear the news. They want to do what? Demolish our homes! Panicked messages race through the village. People mill about a notice from the Government Gazette, some weep, and others stare with blank expressions.
You must remove all your belongings and leave your premises within the next seven days,
the notice reads.
Will they really force us out?
I imagine my grandfather saying.
They can’t be so cruel,
my grandmother replies.
Then, on the seventh day, the community is startled awake by blaring sirens and the grinding groan of bulldozers. My grandfather rushes outside. His neighbors are already gathered there, imploring the policemen to see reason.
I have an order of the court,
one of them says. It was the only license he needed.
The police stood guard with rifles in hand as my family packed some clothes, a few photographs, and a single pot into an old Mazza rice bag.
Bulldozers set about with annihilating persistence—crushing, dragging, and tearing their homes to bits. By nightfall there was only a blanketing silence, a silence that echoed the grief of those freshly dispossessed of their homes. Gone were the crudely scratched-out triangles, rectangles, and circles where my mother had once played hopscotch in her childhood. Gone were the girlish alternations of timidity and petulance, of tears and playful laughter, that accompanied a missed jump or an awkward hop. Gone was the temple where my father did more than the required three rounds, just so that he could get another glimpse of my mother, who lived next door. Gone, too, was the blush on Mom’s teenage face—while she rocked an imaginary doll fashioned out of a rolled towel and watched him do the rounds. Only the debris of flattened buildings kept company with the dust and the haze that filled the air.
Another piece of the Rubik’s Cube clicked into place. My family was tossed across the railway tracks, into an area designated for Indian people. Eventually the compensation that was paid to them—all of one hundred pounds—was only enough to purchase a dustbowl plot of land in the new Duffs Road.
They lived like squatters in makeshift dwellings that were hastily put together from scraps of tin and pieces of wood. Over time my family joined together with other families and pooled their skills and resources. One brick at a time they tried to fashion some semblance of a normal existence. Slowly they rebuilt their homes, their lives, and their self-respect. For months, if not years, as much as they tried to move forward they were held back by a lingering sense of loss.
My family had never expected this, had never seriously considered the seven-day ultimatum to leave. They believed blindly that by some miracle, by some divine intervention, the authorities would not follow through. Within a few hours, their land, their home, and their dignity were all crushed by a decree that was a few miserable words scrawled on a crumpled piece of paper. There was no recourse, no power to challenge the many hands that were complicit in carrying out such a large-scale injustice: White politicians who wrote such measures into law, senior White officials who curated the bureaucratic fine print, an entire court system that was controlled by White people, who, together with White policemen, enforced the rules.
All over the country, people of color were on the move, dispossessed of their land and displaced within their own country. The chaos served only the interest of a misdirected ideology, which the Afrikaner people called apartheid.
It was as though a crazy farmer had a dream, and in that dream, God appeared before him and placed in his hand four magical seeds. The seeds, he was told, had the power to influence a new reality, a dreamworld of sorts in which the seed would determine the destiny of each racial group: where they lived, what types of schools they attended, and what resources they would have. And the farmer believed that God had intended things to be this way, separate but unequal, and that god had entrusted him, the White farmer, with the responsibility of deciding how each of these magical seeds would be assigned. And so it was that the worst seed was given to the majority race, and that they were left to the mercy of a bleak future. The seed that offered the best of everything the farmer kept for his own kind; and the in-between seed varieties he left to the two racial groups that were in between.
Afrikaner people believed in their hearts that they could correctly organize society by using neutral physical differences such as skin color as the basis for ranking human value. However, at its core, apartheid was designed to ensure the social and economic dominance of White people. The system’s fictitious gradations were designed to extinguish any sense of common humanity, and fixed bleak boundaries to the lives of all those who were not White.
Life was most harsh for African people. They were not allowed to own property or businesses in the urban centers and were pushed into the barren landscape of the rural ‘homelands’.
African labor, though, was crucial to the success of White business interests. The laborers, who were almost exclusively men, were housed in inner-city hostels and provided with permits they called dompasses. The dompasses specified where African people could work or travel to. They had to show these documents to policemen whose job it was to randomly check on such things. Forgetting to carry the dompass, misplacing it, or having it stolen rendered one liable to arrest and imprisonment. The system of migrant labor fractured the family structure. Women and children were left to fend for themselves in the homelands, where there was no work, and where poverty was rife, and disease prevailed.
Indian traders were allowed to function in restricted areas within the urban landscape. They acted as middlemen between White wholesalers and the African majority customers. Perhaps it was just chance, or maybe it was designed exactly in that manner, but Indian people were wedged into the middle, between White people and African people.
In the face of such injustice, one may rightly enquire as to why African people, who outnumbered White people by four to one, did not stand up and defend their rights.
In what was effectively a police state, the African National Congress was active as an underground movement. In August of 1962, just two months prior to my birth, Nelson Mandela was arrested and detained about an hour’s drive northwest of Durban. There had been widespread resistance to forced removals, but an unarmed people, however strong in number, could not match the well-armed machinery of the state.
To understand the context of our subjugation, one has to appreciate that our troubles were rooted in a chequered history that went back three hundred years.
In the fifteenth century the insatiable European appetite for spices from Java, Sumatra, and India was one of the driving forces behind the Voyages of Discovery. When the overland trade route through Europe was cut off by the war between the Christians and the Moors, it became imperative to find a sea route to the East. This quest saw Christopher Columbus sailing across the Atlantic Ocean and stumbling upon America. The Portuguese were the first of many seafaring nations to travel down the west coast of Africa, around its southern tip at the Cape of Storms, and all the way up the East African coast towards India. However, the Portuguese did not see any benefit from colonizing South Africa.
In primary school our history textbooks taught us that the Cape was discovered by the colonizing powers. One of the dates that is indelibly inscribed in the minds of all South African students is April 6, 1652. That was the day when Jan van Riebeeck arrived at the Cape and set up a halfway house for the Dutch East India Company: a refreshment station that would stave off the deadly scurvy and provide the sailors with reprieve from the ‘Cape of Storms.’
They arrived. The land was waiting. Empty and waiting. The simple act of arriving was all that was required to lay claim to a land that was waiting, waiting for a selected people to arrive and assert ownership. It did not matter that the Khoi people had inhabited those lands ten thousand years earlier, and that those lands held for them a vibrant history and culture that was filled with deep spiritual meaning.
The story of dispossession is ultimately a story of people and the enduring legacies of injustice. How better to create a pretext—to justify dominance over those made landless and secure a future that favored imperialistic intentions—than to deny a people’s ancient past and characterize them as unworthy of holding any rights to the land. ‘Strandlopers,’ that was how the Dutch portrayed the Khoi: godless savages and beasts, who foraged and scavenged on the beach for food.
The slender bows and stone-tipped arrows of the Khoi were no match for the muskets and cannons of the Dutch. Life on the southern tip of Africa—where the cold Atlantic and warm Indian Oceans meet—looked favorably on the Dutch, who now heralded the Cape of Storms as the Cape of Good Hope.
Where power grows out of the barrel of a gun, the one with a bigger gun, a more powerful cannon, is sure to wrest control and exert dominance. Two hundred years later the British recognized the strategic maritime position of the Cape. Encouraged also by the discovery of gold and diamonds in South Africa, they defeated the Dutch in the Anglo-Boer Wars. It would take two wars, the second fought over three years, to entrench British influence in South Africa.More than a century and a half later I was cast into this world in which the Afrikaner nation—the descendants of the Dutch explorers—had just regained their dominance. They were busy entrenching their influence, re-establishing their pride, and making absolutely sure that the mistakes of the past were never to be repeated.
The essential character of three hundred years of suppression, first by colonization and then by apartheid, was that people of color were not free to choose in South Africa, but had a social structure that was forced upon them. In the innocence of my early childhood these false divisions appeared as though they were the natural order of things. I trusted all that I saw and experienced, believed without question that the circumstances under which I lived were the way that life was intended, accepted without reason that I belonged in this place, and assumed without proof that Indian people had always been a part of South Africa.
Exploring my experiences during apartheid in South Africa made me challenge the misconceptions that I held in my childhood. However, it would take many years for me to understand the truth of it, and those years would be fraught with struggle. I came to realize how difficult it was to be sandwiched between African people and White people, what an ordeal it would be to unshackle myself from the constraints of apartheid, and how, through this journey, I would constantly question the notion of where I really belonged.
CHAPTER 2
Coolie be gone
I spent most of my early childhood in the village of Duffs Road. Our little hamlet lay on a sharp bend in the road that led from Durban toward the African township of Kwa Mashu. In the arc of that road was a factory that assembled bus body frames onto chassis. Next to the body shop was a row of businesses: a general store, a barber shop, and a funeral parlor. There were many accidents on that bend, and survivors often claimed that they saw ghosts and heard eerie, unexplained voices. People in our village often joked that accident victims had a good chance of ending up in either the body shop or the funeral home.
The houses in our village were mostly modest dwellings, made from bricks or blocks and covered in plaster. Many homes were painted in pastel shades that reminded me of ice cream. Our house was banana yellow and our next-door neighbors’ strawberry pink and lime green. The family that made their fortune in the bus assembly enterprise lived in palatial buildings that were shaped like monuments to the transport industry: ships, buses, and even airplanes. The airplane house came complete with a glass-windowed cockpit that served as a viewing deck, wings that were constructed to scale, and a fuselage adapted into living quarters.
We lived in an extended family dwelling on Swan Road, only three doors away from the bus factory. My younger brother Poobal and I shared a cramped two-bedroom home with our parents, paternal grandparents, and my father’s younger brother and sister. It was remarkable how we managed with so little space.
Only Indian people were allowed to live in Duffs Road. I spent the first two or three years of my life in this insular bubble, sealed off from the outside and surrounded only by people who looked like me, dressed like me, and spoke like me. If you walked through the streets you would have noticed the rich and diverse tapestry of traditions that gave clues to who we were. You would have spotted the warm glow of freshly-strung marigold garlands draped above our front door. It was typical of the welcoming entranceway to any Tamil-speaker’s home. The red flags hoisted on bamboo poles (jhanda) outside our neighbor’s house would have given you a clue that my three friends who lived there spoke Hindustani.
I knew of no other world outside of Duffs Road and I felt safe in this cocooned existence that was sheltered from everything that lay outside. My earliest recollection of venturing outside this cloistered existence was when I was four years old.
On a hot summer’s night during the Christmas period of 1966 we were driving along the Golden Mile. This is a long stretch of beachfront road that lies about ten kilometers away from Duffs Road. The Golden Mile was Durban’s answer to Copacabana in Rio, or South Beach, Miami.
Tropical was certainly the dominant aura on the Golden Mile. It was lined with grand colonial-style hotels that were surrounded by clipped green lawns, and fringed with palm trees. It was a storybook setting, something in between the glamour and glitz of The Great Gatsby and an enchanting fairy-tale world. White men in dinner jackets and their ladies in polka-dot dresses dined on the verandahs of elegant restaurants. Attentive Indian waiters in black pants and crisp white coats decanted wine, carved meat, and poured sauces with white-gloved hands.
We drove along the Golden Mile, Mom and Dad up front and Poobal and me in the back seat of our second-hand blue Vauxhall. I turned down the window, stuck