It was our Walk To Freedom
It was our
Walk To Freedom tour day. All we knew is that we ended up on Robben Island so we
could peer into Nelson Mandela' cell. The
tour bus is on time and the day starts well, a mini bus full of people we have
never met before and will never see again. The guide talks us through Cape Town
points of interest bringing us to the District 6 Museum.
The late morning
brings us to the Langa Township where we come to a reception area not unlike
many community centers I have visited on outer estates in England, where people
are trying to do good work in challenging situations. We are given the
opportunity to see some pottery painted by two township women with no sense of
passion for their task. I have seen that look before on the faces of people
serving fast food late at night near the end of a shift but not near enough.
The corridors are littered with stuff made by local township artisans. This
corridor I believe is supposed to instill in us a sense of achievement, a
country moving in the right direction, but i feel none of that within me.
We are then
introduced to our local township guide. I won’t tell you his name. I can’t add
anything to his life so I should not take anything away from it as I am just
another rich tourist passing efficiently through. He informs us we can take any
photos we want but don’t give money; we will have the opportunity to do that at
the end via him. He will judge who needs most of our money; I am already unsure
of his generosity. I will not bore you with the whole hour tour; I will not do
it justice. Our second to last stop brings us to a courtyard, filthy, not fit
to keep you beloved dog in.
We are
invited into one of the buildings where I am faced a young woman eating yogurt
from as bowl, a young man possibly partner or husband and some small children
running around the room. I think our guide is telling us about the lives of
these people. I cannot remember beyond the look from the young woman. It is the
look of a woman who is about to enter a contact with a man for sex whom she
hates. I am guessing this as I have never done this transaction but it’s the
closest I have come to prostitution. I register my and her discomfort with the guide
but he has only one point left on his tour where he will offer us the
opportunity to hand over guide money. The girl departs to another room leaving
us in this filthy room, only now I feel soiled inside, as well as outside. I
have come to a township and been involved in a transaction I am not proud of, that
of being a voyeur of poverty.
We come to
the next corner of the tour and the guide makes is last pitch to us. We are literally
in the middle of a road. On one side of the road is an empty, fenced off, new
houses built by the rich Banks that no one can afford; on the other side of the
road is the bottom end of the township. It is a series of shacks with a shared
water pipe and no toilets, literally a shit heap. We, the community of the tour
bus, are now faced with a decision. What do we give him? How much is too much? How
much to clear some of the guilt? I decide on some of money, feeling I am even
closer to being involved in some sort of prostitution. I am the male with money
and power; the girl in the room, I presume, has neither.
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