South Africa doesn’t have one king with one queen and a couple of princes or princesses. We have eleven official languages so we have a good few monarchies related to those ethnic groups. And some of those monarchies are powerful. If King Goodwill Zwelethini puts his weight behind a political candidate it makes a difference. Something Jacob Zuma was mindful of when he campaigned during the last elections.
A few months back president Zuma stepped in to put an end to half of the monarchies which are supported by local tax payers. Of the thirteen royal families only seven will now be officially recognised.
The kingdoms of Lesotho and Swaziland which both lie within South Africa have their own royalty too. Prince Seeiso appears in UK mags like Hello with his pal Prince Harry. And Harry pops in to visit in Lesotho. As princes do.
My favorite is the Modjadji Rain Queen. She is only ever a queen. Males cannot succeed her. She never appears in public and her “wives” take care of her. The elders select a few males for her to mate with so the lineage can continue. Usually relatives. And she brings rain to the region so she is a very special woman. Apparently the Rain Queen was the inspiration for a J. Rider Haggard novel. Now how many monarchies have a story like that?
I was listening to some old ’70’s music and recalling the dark days in South Africa when we were a pariah nation. Add to that the heavy handed legislation we lived with and music, homoeopathy and around about everything was out of reach or banned. Seventies music is a touch before my time but I do remember people talking and events going on around me.
Somehow we still managed to have fun. Lots of it. It was either behind closed doors or in neighbouring countries. Since rock music was banned, we listened to LM Radio which was broadcast from Maputo or Lourenzo Marques as it was known back then. We would trek to Botswana or Swaziland to see the likes of Eric Clapton in Southern Africa. Maybe because of our isolation or maybe because of who we are, but we had our own sound going on. For a local take on 80’s electro pop listen to eVoid’s number – Taxi Man – on You Tube. The spirit of Sophiatown continued from foreign shores. Hugh Masakela continued made music, just not at home.
Since then we have come a long, long way. We got our own township sort of rap sound called Kwaito. Take a listen to Mandoza’s number – Nkalakatha – on You Tube. You can’t listen to it and not want to move. I’m not so sure how much I like Die Antwoord even though they were at Coachella this year. The Parletones are more to may taste and another of my favorites. Lovers of George Benson will swoon for Jimi Dludlu. Better than Benson – if you asking me. Not that I am biased.
I was amazed at how similar the Scottish heather in the picture is to our fynbos back home. It’s a hardy, bushy plant with little flowers. I got to thinking of other things that are typically Scottish and their South African equivalent.
So to go all Scottish, how about bag-pipes, haggis, Ben Nevis, tartan, whisky, Gerry Rafferty, Highland cows, The Outer Hebrides, shortbread and Franz Ferdinand.
Now to run a South African version of this we have vuvuzelas, boerewors, Table Mountain, leopard print, Cape wines, Lucky Dube, Afrikaner bulls, Robben Island, rusks and The Parletones.
Oh and we drink our tea in South Africa. The Scots ask me what I am having for tea and they mean the evening meal. My brain doesn’t understand how a person can eat tea.
Being abroad makes me aware of how different life is back home. I read local news on-line and keep up with family and friends via facebook and Skype.
Politics is almost a religion in South Africa. We have been through difficult times and being aware is very important. I find the casual disinterest of people who live in safe and stable countries strange. But then I will admit, I envy that these people never worry. The news in the UK tends to be pretty bland. It’s almost as if they have to dredge up stories and sensationalise them. And foreign news plays a much bigger role here. A brilliant South African on-line newspaper is The Daily Maverick. Click here for a link – The Daily Maverick
Back home corruption is eating away at opportunities and becoming entrenched. News of attempts to stifle the media covering these stories breaks my heart. We live in a dynamic and changeable country. I vacillate between hope and disappointment. One sobering reminder of how far we have come is this. Black South Africans have only had the vote for 16 years. That’s not a long time. We are a baby country if you think about it. I hope the right people step up and take the right steps. I would like to be able to know, like they do in the UK, that all will be well when I am old one day. But then can we really know anything?
I guess when a person is travelling, what they most want to experience is the essence of a place. To my mind that includes the people, language, food, architecture, history, landscape, fauna and flora.
In the picture is what I consider the ugliest building in Cape Town. It’s called the Good Hope Centre. It looks as if someone tried to copy the Sydney Opera House.
Why they would want to do that when we have such beautiful Cape Dutch architecture to draw from I will not know. But then, back in the day, the Sydney Opera House went down like a lead balloon. As did the glass pyramid addition to The Louvre.
Cape Dutch architecture is unique to the Cape. South Africa has some fine British style architecture from various periods, as would be expected of a colony. Herbert Baker stamped his mark here. And then there are the traditional huts. They vary in style from region to region. Mud, grass, painted, not painted, rounded, square, and so on. The style is usually an indicator of the people living in the region. I got bitten by a tick sleeping in a Swazi hut some time back but they are cute and cozy. Informal shacks can also be seen in and around Cape Town. Many of the residents have permanent homes back in the Eastern Cape and make temporary homes as there is more work in the Western Cape. Look out for them coming in from the airport.
And then for some reason South Africans have gone berserk for Tuscan style homes. Less so in the Cape but huge in Jozi. Whole faux Tuscan villages exist. A bit overly themed for my liking but hey, some people love it.
Go to – My Holidays and Trips – at the top of this page to read about other places we have visited. Or just click on – this link.