Sunday, October 21
I returned to Langa Township again today. This morning we visited the Langa Baptist
Church, a congregation that is bursting at the seams. I love Mt. Zion Baptist Church in
Charlottesville, but this church has even more energy than they.
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Langa Baptist Church |
And yet – aside from the fact that they are both Black
churches – there are other similarities.
Music in Langa is the primary vehicle for worship. During the hour and a half we attended, only
a small portion was dedicated to the lesson for the day from the Bible and the
minister preaching. The rest was music –
in English and Xhosa.
In fact the sermon
was the same – the minister would preach in English and then suddenly divert
into Xhosa. He was talking about Hosea
(the lesson had been read in Xhosa so I don’t know content), and it was about
how the Israelites had abandoned God.
One of the hymns they sang – all hymns usually in Xhosa with some
English refrains – said “He {God] calls me his friend.” A God that looks on humans as his friends – a
profoundly new experience for me. The
Israelites, preached the minister, were the forgetters; we forget God but he
never forgets us.
The music itself is like American Gospel – writ even more forte – music that makes your body vibrate
and your feet start tapping. You can’t
sit still – at least I can’t – in an African American church. And in the Longa Baptist Church today, I
couldn’t sit; most of the time I had to stand and move my feet and my hips.
The lead male member of the choir moved across the stage and
at one point he was jumping straight up and down, and then twirling. It was spontaneous and yet it reminded me of
the Masai Warrior dance I saw 20-plus years ago in Kenya.
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Container Shacks and others |
Our guide Siviwe Mbinda was born in this township and now
works there. He is the founder of the
Happy Feet Youth Project, which we visited, and he danced with the
youngsters. Siviwe believes in his
people – Xhosa, he says, are the most intelligent of the tribes. They value education and peace. Mandela was Xhosa as were many other leaders
for ending apartheid in South Africa.
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Upper Income Home in Longa |
Housing in the townships varies from the poorest shacks to
cargo containers made into houses to small shanties to more substantial
cinderblock houses to quite nice single family homes. Siviwe says that people want to better
themselves, and move up into the middle class but they don’t want to leave the
township. It has a sense of community.
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Working Class Homes |
In fact, the social nature of the Xhosa community is such
that a municipal park is never used by individuals because, he says, Xhosas
would think an individual sitting alone in the park is crazy. They use it for festivals but never as a
place to re-create. An interesting
conundrum for an Xhosa planner, I would think.
The youth group – Happy Feet – performs gumboot dances,
which originated with South African miners as an alternative to drumming. They wore the gum boots to protect their feet
from the water in the mines. The moves
and steps we observed were similar to those in the Disney movie “Happy Feet”
about penguins.
Yesterday we had visited Langa for lunch and a ride around
the township. Founded in 1927, Longa was
first the home for Black African men coming to work the docks of Cape
Town. One of the maritime companies
still owns a building now used as an entry level apartments for families
arriving in Longa. Each apartment with
two bedrooms has three families per bedroom, with communal cooking
facilities. We visited one of these apartments
that is currently occupied by 16 men. It
was very neat but very small.
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Hostel for Families |
Langa seems proud to be offering itself as a tourism
destination. The people appreciate
tourists dining in their restaurants (now numbering some 6 or 7 I believe) and
purchasing crafts from their arts center, which we also visited.
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Pottery Painting Workshop in Longa |
There, women are learning the craft of
pottery painting and are making pots and then painting and glazing them for
sale. They use traditional Xhosa patters
of black and white lines, feathers, leaves.
Very beautiful.
I need to write about
our visit to Robben Island where Nelson Mandela and hundreds of other Black and
Colored prisoners were warehoused for decades.
But I am still absorbing the experience and not yet ready to publish my
thoughts. Instead, I post these photos I
took of African Penguins, who look very much like nuns with white wimples and
black robes and headpieces.
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African Penguins on Robben Island |
1 comment:
Hi Kay, I've enjoyed all of your posts, but this one seems the most moving so far. The children's faces are so bright. The sense of the tragic past must weigh heavily on these places even as the people sing of being God's friends. I remember watching Mandela on tv as he walked out of prison into freedom.
I guess you are now as far away as the ship will take you. From now on, in a sense, you will be coming home.
Love from, Mary
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