Monday 1 August 2011

The Italian Connection

Sitting on a hillside in the Italian province of Umbria, the wash of a warm, late-afternoon breeze sweeping over your naked torso and the beat of a pulsing sun adding to the fuzzy feeling of well-being as you contemplate the stark blue sky and the medieval countryside below it can certainly go a long way toward easing the misery of long hours of hard, stressful work.

As the children come rushing out of the cool interior of the 200 year-old stone building behind you, where the ceiling fans lazily waft air over the antique furniture, and leap yelling into the pool, so you ask yourself: “Is this all they say it is?”

Well the answer, dear readers, lies with he who proposes the question. What springs to mind for the average citizen is of course images of Tuscany (on the map it’s the neighbouring province, in reality I noticed very little difference), rolling hills and olive trees by the dozen. Platters of Italian salamis and cheese, accompanied by world class wines and antique furniture in ancient stone buildings. Menus to die for in cosy little restaurants hidden under twining vines and heavy beams. Ancient terracotta tiled floors and Roman ruins. Things that people in faraway lands dream of one day experiencing.

Well, I’m a curious fellow. I dream of these things too, even though I can’t stand most things Italian. It’s all about the history, and a lot about the mystique. Why are people so fascinated with Italy, and especially this little part of it? Coming from South Africa’s southern coasts, I cannot imagine a summer holiday without sun and sea, so the logical geographical choice for a person dwelling north of the Alps becomes…you guessed it…Italy. And why not use the opportunity to find out what’s the allure?

I hear you say “what about Spain?” and “what about the south of France?” Well, we’ve been to the south of France and it was pretty disappointing. Not being the type to slip into a suit and spend my life savings in the casinos of Monte Carlo or the restaurants and hotels of St. Tropez, I was left to ponder the squalid appearance and rough pebbly beaches of Cap d’Antibes where Mr. Sinatra apparently had his summer villa. For a simple soul like me it left much to be desired.

As for Spain, well…it’s simply too far away. I have a peculiar addiction to independence. This includes taking my own transport and not being reliant on other, random humans for my mobility. Especially if they speak Chinese…er…Spanish.

So we pack the car and head over, or rather through, the Alps. Leaving at two in the morning to make sure we don’t get caught up in 18km of traffic jam before the 17km long Gotthard tunnel that cuts below the ancient Gotthard pass above, our prudence pays off. The traffic jam is only 3km long at four in the morning. Coming past Milan at around six in the morning gets us safely past the big city before the general commuter rush, but afterwards we find ourselves in 50km of stop-start, bumper-to-bumper holiday traffic. They’re all heading down the main arterial route through the middle of Italy, the A1, and what can one do but grin and bear it? Sooner or later though, all bad things must also come to an end, and at around three in the afternoon we find ourselves parked outside the lovely little house we have rented in the Umbrian countryside.

Check-in time is four in the afternoon, so leaving home any earlier would have saved us some Italian traffic jams, but left us sitting here in the boiling sun outside a locked up villa for a couple of hours. All in all, we reckon we’ve juggled all the problems of our trip pretty well. Sure, it took us thirteen hours to do 800km, but we’re not stressed out, we’ve had plenty of stops and lots of laughs along the way. Almost furtively, a memory slips into my mind of a similar trip in South Africa. In those days my little 1300cc Ford had 120 horsepower less capability than my current carriage, but I still managed the 900km in nine hours. Aaahh….but for the wide open tarmac of South Africa!

Banishing the treacherous memory from my traitorous mind, I focus on good things and positive feelings. After all, this is the longed-for vacation that’s going to give me time to focus on my writing again, time to play with my kids, talk to my wife and just relax. No time for whinging and whining!

So, where is this all going? Well, as I have mentioned, coming to Italy is pretty much a must for us, considering all the factors mentioned at the beginning of this entry. Now it’s time to analyse whether or not it’s all that it’s cooked up to be.

Being a fan of Second World War history, I have read numerous accounts of the Italians by ex-soldiers, almost all of which contain stories of cowardice on the battlefield or cruelty within the POW camps. I need not go into all the details here, as it’s only important that the reader know that the Italian war record is certainly not something worth repeating as far as those Allies who were there were concerned.

Aside from a few exceptionally good chaps I’ve met during the course of my life, both in South Africa and in Switzerland, my general opinion of the Italians is that they are an excitable, loud and difficult bunch of posers, who delight in screaming their opinions at anyone who will pay attention, yet so long as one roars back with suitable threat of repercussion they will willingly back down and behave.

Sitting here in this extremely homely, comfortable and well-appointed little home, surrounded by the proverbial olive groves and with a view over endless rolling hills, where the little stone villages perched on their tops all seem to have a rather large central construction that was so obviously the seat of the feudal lord of ancient times, one has to admit that the romance and mystique of the area is evident. Not being a fan of Italian wine (my tastes run to Spanish and Chilean reds), I am pleasantly surprised to find that the bottle of red presented to us by our absent landlord goes extremely well with my typically South African first evening’s meal of grilled beef steak, sautéed potatoes, fresh bread and salad (note to self: expand knowledge of wine!).

The roads are atrocious, the buildings run-down and dilapidated, and the incessant barking and braying of a thousand mongrels all day and all night long do tend to give an impression of the old apartheid-era “homelands” (read “reservations” if you’re American) of South Africa. However, having grown up in a country where vast tracts of land were filled with such squalor, it’s not hard to put it out of one’s mind and get on with things. After all, these days I’m one of the elite again, aren’t I? Not white and privileged, just another “rich” tourist with no need to experience the day-to-day realities of life in a large country filled with struggling peasants who know nothing of their political and industrial masters’ lives of luxury.

One does of course, have to be fair. While all other roads (the ones with some semblance of asphalt on them, that is!) leave one with the impression of being on a rollercoaster ride of bumps, jolts and incredible, stomach-turning ups and downs (this at the great speed of 40kph), the many hundreds of miles of highway that we have travelled have been examined at length by my father (accompanying us on this vacation) and myself. Generally no less than three lanes wide, they are bounded by barriers of high quality galvanized metal with anchor posts of thick, galvanized steel at least every one and a half meters apart. Comparing this to the wooden post every three meters or so securing the same galvanized railing on a South African highway, we began totaling up the differences in safety factor and cost. Appallingly vast were these differences. Hats off to Italy!

The highway itself might have been somewhat uneven (at 130kph one nearly lifts off at times), but doing a traffic count at one of our pit stops while munching sandwiches gave both of us ex-traffic policemen pause for thought. The two-thousand-car-per-hour tallies of the summer holiday period in South Africa on the highway from Johannesburg to Durban paled in comparison to the incredible amount of traffic using this Italian roadway. With that volume of traffic, the fact that the Italians are able to keep the road surface covered in asphalt at all is a major accomplishment. Once again, hats off to the Italians!

On one of these pit stops, we decided that something hot to eat was called for. The vast amounts of sandwiches prepared at home and consumed along the way had left everyone yearning for hot meat of some sort (a typically South African yearning) and we found ourselves queuing at one of the many highway “Autogrills”. Just the part that says “grill” is enough to create a particular, mouth-watering desire in my South African brain, and quite frankly I would have even settled for a cardboard and soya MacDonald’s burger at that point in time. Alas, I had forgotten my pet hate regarding Italy: the food!

Despite the vast array of counters, with sweating, gesticulating and screaming chefs behind them, there was not one hot piece of meat to be found. A mind-boggling array of hard, dry rolls filled with even harder, dryer cheese and various assortments of desiccated cold meats seemed to be the only thing on offer. A slice of pizza with many variations of vegetable, interspersed with minute scraps of the aforementioned meats was hot and dripping with a myriad layers of cheese, yet somehow lacking in appeal. Brief thoughts of mixed grill platters, hamburgers and chips, hot meat pies and the like, to be found in a South African highway restaurant, were banished as I located a small sign next to a cash register that advertised ham and cheese toasted sandwiches with a coke for three Euros. Seeing that it was a kiddies menu didn’t put me off. At least it was a hot sandwich with a reasonable portion of meat on it.

Fighting my way through a mass of screeching, gesticulating humanity, I arrived at the only manned cash register to place my order and pay. “Io no parley Italiano” was my pathetic opening parry, which was greeted with a malicious stare and violent shrug of the shoulders. “Uh…sprechen Sie Deutsch?” was my next lame attempt. A long-suffering sigh and condescending look followed this gem. Fleeting thoughts of my great-uncle strafing Italian lines with his 20mm cannon seventy years prior to this moment gave me a momentary feeling of satisfaction which helped to quell my urge to leap over the counter and throttle the uncooperative b-tch, but then I played my trump. Knowing how the Italian-speaking Swiss in the canton of Tessin detest us German-speakers from over the Alps yet willingly converse in broken English with all and sundry, I asked “Can you speak English?”. As mentioned, in Tessin this was always greeted with a big smile and “Si, a leedle bit!”

Alas, we were too far south! It seems the Italian citizens are not quite as accommodating as their Italian-speaking Swiss cousins further north. A tirade of rapid-fire Italian followed, accompanied by enough gesticulation to make me wonder if the lady had accidentally connected herself to the main electricity supply. “Ok, ok!”, I interrupted, “just gimme five (holding up five fingers) of these damned toasted sandwiches here!” I pointed at the little cardboard poster next to her till. With apoplectic fury she screeched “No, no! Bambini, bambini!!” all the while pointing at my ten year-old daughter. “Yes yes,” I replied, as soothingly as possible under the circumstances, “give her the kiddies menu version, but I want four of the damned toasts in adult size for the rest of us! Grande, comprendez? GRANDE!” Spreading my hands wide and tapping the picture of the toasted sandwich with the fingers of my left hand at the same time. “NO! No, no, no! Bambini!” was the infuriating response.

As my gun hand’s fingers began twitching and reaching for the non-existent pistol at my side, I struggled for some semblance of control and took a deep breath. “Toa-sted-sand-wich…quattro, bitte!” (one can’t help throwing in a few words of whatever foreign languages one speaks when dealing with foreign language speakers!).
“Aah, tosht!” my antagonist replied, breaking out in a beam of comprehension. “Si…si, si, si!” I answered, a rush of gratitude at her sudden mood swing causing me to fall over myself to express my undying love for the great Italian language. Once again I had been subjected to the amazing capacity of Italians to turn molehills into mountains without once realizing the amount of rage they are inducing in their more reticent fellow human beings.

We received our toasted sandwiches and made a hurried escape from the harrowing crowd. Out in the parking lot, I rapidly tore apart the many layers of paper and hungrily bit into my purchase. The lukewarm bread had not a trace of brown on it and the processed cheese had barely begun to curl on the corners. The ham filling was cold and there was not the slightest trace of butter to be found. With each chew, more and more dry bread and cold lumps of cheese and ham clung to the roof of my mouth and coated my throat. Swallowing was a painful experience. My daughter’s sandwich hadn’t been included in the package, though we’d paid for five, so I handed over my unfinished specimen of Italian attempts at western fast food to her and drank a sip of water.

During the last couple of hundred kilometers before reaching our destination, my mind was filled with visions of sizzling steaks and rich, meaty sausage, known in South Africa as “boerewors”, or farmer’s sausage. Once we arrived at the supermarket near our rented villa, I headed straight for the meat counter, my stomach rumbling and my head filled with malicious thoughts of revulsion for all Italian culinary inventions. Hard spaghetti covered in weak sauces with no meat, tasteless doughy pouches filled with a single grain of mincemeat and the ever-present thin tomato sauce or the rock hard, seemingly week-old bread which they so love. Meat, I need meat, I thought.

Selecting a huge portion of beef and directing the eager little man behind the counter to cease and desist with his butchers knife (no five-millimeter-thick cuts of meat for me!) I grabbed my hunk of meat and was ready to go in search of lettuce, tomato and onion for my salad when my attention was grabbed by a tray of meaty-looking sausages that looked so much like South African boerewors that I was forced to a hesitant stop.

Now, I’ve had experience of these sort of things before, one must understand. Similar looking sausages are available all over Switzerland under the label of Italian specialties, yet no matter how many I’ve tried they’ve all been made of very finely ground meat with either a particularly bland taste or three tons of pepper, and always bone dry. What with South Africa having been founded as a way station on the spice route to India, we have a particular love of spices and their various applications that I have yet to experience elsewhere, so it is of course entirely natural that one would be unlikely to find the equivalent of South African boerewors in any other culture in the world.

Nevertheless, always being a good sucker for punishment, not to mention an eternal optimist, I bought a kilogram of the succulent-looking sausages. Now here’s the clinch. That evening’s barbeque proved to me that the Italians really must have once been a great, awe-inspiring culture. Those were the best damned sausages I have ever tasted! I’ve had them for supper, for breakfast and for lunch since then, and I will be buying more as soon as possible. Uh…hats off to the Italians!

The last thing I wish to mention here is our little trip of discovery yesterday. To those of you who have read this blog before, you’ll recall how I enjoy sitting with the old men of the village back in my hometown in Switzerland, or the hamlets of the Black Forest in Germany. One picks up a lot about the feel of a place and the ways of the locals simply by observing and listening. The humour and ragging that is bandied about speaks volumes about the character of the villagers and the mood of the place one’s in. Taking a drive through the countryside with my wife and kids while grandpa had an afternoon nap resulted in us pulling up at a local watering hole not far from where we’re staying.

A group of four old men were sitting at an outside table in the dappled sunlight, loudly contesting a game of cards. A few skinny youths with the facial expressions of wannabe Sylvester Stallones were lounging around near the pinball machine in a corner inside. Behind the solid old bar counter was a lean, sinewy man with the hard eyes and face of a fighter, the amount of tolerance he possessed displayed by the folded arms and studied indifference he showed as this family of tourists entered his fine establishment.

He and I were both surprised when I grinned at him and said “Due Birra…grande, por favore” and he smiled a brilliant smile of welcome. Indicating the children and enquiring in Italian if they too would like something, he moved over to where they were standing. My daughter was hemming-and-hawing around the ice-cream counter, and he swiftly homed in on her, patiently explaining in very slow Italian what each and every delicacy on offer was. With big, uncomprehending eyes, she made her selection, followed by my son. Once our two beers had been meticulously poured from the fresh barrel he mounted in our presence, my wife and I, followed by the happily licking and smacking children, retired to the terrace overlooking the dusty main street outside.

The number of old men had increased, and a girl or two had joined the teenagers who were now also seated outside. A feeling of leisurely camaraderie emanated from all these people, and as we moved onto our next beer more old men began arriving, shouting loud greetings to their comrades at the cards table. A middle-aged man on a scooter arrived, his little daughter seated in front of him and doing the driving. No helmets, no worries. He downed a beer, her a cold-drink, and then they were off again. The crowd of old men grew bigger, and shouts of greeting were yelled at acquaintances passing in the street as the card game expanded and began to take on epic proportions.

There and then I vowed to learn Italian. This was the perfect situation in which to get to know these excitable, loud, irritating and yet affectionate people. Right here in their own back yard.

I will be back. Not for the cuisine, not for the fabled Etruscan countryside, and not for the love affair people have with Italian culture. Just for the simple folk, whose stories must be the same as their peers the world over.

I need to hear to hear those stories…

Tuesday 8 February 2011

Finding a Friend

In the late spring of 2003, I had been in Switzerland for two years. My private life had been a time of discovery, learning all about the Europe that I had for a lifetime so longed to see. My work life, however, had been a steadily growing source of discontent and misery. My past history had seen me in positions vastly different to where I now found myself and despite vague promises of a good future for me, my boss was showing no inclination to allow me to haul myself beyond the status of lowly labourer. I was a person at the beck and call of all manner of foreigners, themselves prisoners of poor education and lack of language skills in the Swiss workplace.

I had spent my time eagerly trying to engage people in conversation, querying oft-used words and phrases, experimenting with the strange-sounding dialects that accompanied my daily life, and trying to come to terms with the absolute incomprehension my fellow workers displayed about anything not directly related to the article currently in front of their faces. I had never seen white people who were unable to do the most basic arithmetic, or read more than two or three words at a time. Any attempts to find common ground for a conversation via subjects such as history, geography, art, music, philosophy or similar topics were met with blank looks and turned backs. Finding this total lack of general knowledge completely baffling, I took to looking up particular subjects of conversation and making a point of finding out exactly how to communicate my meaning in German and the particular language of my proposed conversational partner. I was convinced that the fault lay with me.

It didn't. The only success I ever had in engaging a work colleague in interesting and stimulating conversation was when I heard that a co-worker was Macedonian and asked him if he had ever heard of Alexander the Great. The value of true interaction with another human being is borne out to this day by the fact that, despite the vastly diverging paths in life that we have taken since then, this fellow remains a good friend even now.

I had sunk so low by the time spring of 2003 came around that I was seriously considering giving up on Switzerland and going back home to South Africa. My days were a drudgery of slogging about the construction site, mixing and carrying buckets full of plaster to men who could barely read, yet were my masters due to their long years of experience in the game. My language skills had improved dramatically, so much so that I was able to cringe in embarrassment when I listened to my masters loudly discussing the issues of their jobs with the architects and engineers that frequent the construction sites. It is a fact of life that, the worse one's language skills are, the more unintelligent and poorly-educated one appears, even if this is not the case. I would feel so embarrassed for my colleagues as I listened to their bumbling attempts to explain their points of view in broken, badly-accented German. It was enough to read the body language of the Swiss they were talking to, but it was worse to overhear the Swiss discussing the shortcomings of the labour force at hand in a dialect they thought was at an unintelligable level for all within earshot.

To be at the beck and call of such "artisans" as these, and to know that one could do far better than them if given the chance, was devastating to my self-esteem, and each day spent shovelling concrete, sweeping basement floors or removing nails from old shuttering boards drove me further into despair.

Imagine my delight when the company suddenly found itself with an excess of work and I was detailed to help a young foreman (seven years my junior) with one other labourer. We were to build a family home. The plan was for us to do the basics with freelance artisans hired in for the brickwork and concreting. We went through a number of these temporary workers, never finding anyone who was up to scratch, and because our own artisans were all busy on other sites, the young foreman (to his everlasting credit) started me off bricklaying. It's hard to believe that at such a late stage in my life my one and only goal had become to be allowed to lay bricks, but that's how low I had sunk.

Soon I was bricklaying reasonably competently and had taken over some of the artisan work from the foreman. Temporary workers would come and go and as the building progressed it became accepted that I was no longer just a labourer. A temp would be assigned to me and we would shutter a staircase, or reinforce a slab. The kind of work that required a bit of a brain and was so infinitely better than loading bricks onto scaffolding for someone else to lay.

After a few months had passed and the house was well into the second story, a temporary worker arrived that left me with vague feelings of anxiety. A Swiss man of roughly my own age, he was a qualified builder and spoke perfect Swiss-German, just like the foreman. He knew his way around a building site and could confidently discuss almost anything under the sun with his compatriot, the foreman. I sensed impending doom. If this chap was going to stay on the scene, I realised, I would soon be relegated back to plucking scraps of polystyrene insulation from the mud around the site and cleaning dried concrete from used shuttering.

The shroud of Swissness that excludes all foreigners when two Swiss converse among themselves in their own language would fall over the foreman and the newcomer as they tested the waters with one another, and I found myself falling back on quiet, disjointed conversations with my Yugoslavian friend...the one of Macedonian stock who had an awareness of his own cultural background. It's necessary to point out at this point in the story that I have a propensity for languages, tending to pick them up very quickly including all the gestures, intonations and accents. This is, however, not always a good thing, for I was working with Yugoslavs and Italians and had developed a way of speaking Swiss-German in whatever accent suited the moment.

One day my cell phone rang. Fearing that there was a problem at home (my wife worked and my young son was at times alone) I answered immediately. It was my wife, and as we conversed in English I noticed the newcomer giving me an intensely curious look. Some time later, as we were battling to shift some heavy gear, he asked me in German: "How come you can speak such good English?" I gave him a blank stare, thinking what an idiot he was, and replied, "It's my mother tongue."

He looked at me as if I was mad and said, "But you're a Yugoslav!" For a moment I was baffled, until I realised that he had only ever heard me speaking in my broken, Yugoslav-accented Swiss-German. I burst out laughing and replied in English, "No, I'm a South African". I could see the surprise and disbelief on his face, which I expected by now. Most Europeans seem to have no idea of the history of the African colonies, though they readily believe that Americans, Australians, Canadians and New Zealanders should be white and European in their appearance, with the odd exception of an occasional red, brown or black skin.

Once he had recovered, he surprised me by saying in perfectly accented American English, "I can speak English too". You must know that I had been starved of all English for two whole years, never able to hold a decent conversation or explain myself clearly. I was absolutely startled. The look of shock on my face must have mirrored that on his, for we both burst out laughing. The rest of the afternoon was spent in a luxurious state of delight as we hungrily traded conversation for the last four hours of the day. He wanted to know all about me and all I wanted to do was talk and talk and talk and talk in my beloved English.

The next few weeks as we finished the building were spent in a delirium of laughter and delight as we discovered more and more in common with one another. We both loved old rock and roll. We both sang Elvis songs. We both played a musical instrument. We were fascinated by other languages and loved mimicry and making people laugh. We shared a love of stimulating, interesting conversation and had similar interests in history and day-to-day life. Books that I had read in English, he had read in German.

My everlasting memory of that construction site took place one fine, sunny morning just after sunrise. We were standing on scaffolding laying bricks. He at one end of the new wall and I at the other. The sun was just starting to burn the last of the early-morning mist off the land and its rays shone directly onto us, like a spotlight on a stage. He must have felt the same as I did, for he suddenly raised his trowel to his lips like a microphone and started doing a fine rendition of Elvis Presley's "Rock-a-hula-rock". My laughter must have encouraged him to take his performance to the next level. Leaping up onto a small three-step ladder on the scaffolding next to him, he proceeded to swing his hips and wave his arm about in true Elvis style as he sang passionately into his trowel. I glanced over the wall we were bricklaying. Directly opposite us was the facade of the neighbours house. With the glare of the morning sun in our eyes, we hadn't noticed the window opposite us in the shadowy facade being opened.

An elderly Swiss lady leaned out the window, a duvet clutched in her hands ready to be shaken out. Her mouth hung open in surprise at the sight of the wildly gyrating and loudly singing bricklayer just five metres in front of her face. I burst out in fresh gales of laughter, and he immediately hopped down off his podium and resumed bricklaying. In the time it took for him to carefully set a brick in place, his astounded audience-of-one remained frozen to the spot, her mouth still gaping. Removing the excess mortar delicately from the joints, he glanced up at her ever so casually and chirped brightly, "good morning!". The shutters banged closed as that genteel lady recovered herself and made her escape from these early-morning lunatics. We turned to one another and burst out laughing, convulsing in glee til the tears ran.

That is how I met Garry for the first time, and it has been a wonderful eight years of fun-filled friendship with one of the kindest and gentlemanly men I've ever come across.

I know how well Garry can sing and what a gifted entertainer he is. His intelligence and humour never fail to entrance me, and he has become like my own brother. I am sure he is destined for great things and will continue to staunchly support him in his bid for stardom. I hope that whoever is able will do the same.

Well, I promised my readers more on my current diversion in the last post and this is it. After this we'll get back to some more regular tales.

I bid you adieu,
...

Monday 7 February 2011

New Project

Hello people. I'm really sorry to have been gone for so long again. I'm very involved in a project that lies close to my heart at the moment and time just doesn't stretch quite as far as it should...

My best friend here in Switzerland has landed an appearance in Switzerland's latest TV show, "The Greatest Talent in Switzerland" (actually it's in plural form, but that doesn't sound so good in English). I started a Facebook group to gather support for him and it's growing exponentially, so there's just been no time for writing down any stories for you all. I hope you will forgive me. As that classic moron once said (and this one often does...), "I'll be back!"

In the meantime, here's a link to Garry's first appearance:

http://www.videoportal.sf.tv/video?id=a37714d0-1c40-4a85-a134-441fbbfbcb18

This is a man with talent and a voice to die for. He just needs a little help from his friends (and some professional backing...)

Time permitting, I shall return with a decent run-down on Garry, just so you know what's keeping me so occupied.

For those of you on Facebook who might be interested in seeing what it's all about, simply click on the title of this post.

Until later.

Tuesday 28 December 2010

The Foefie Slide

Having read over the last post, I realise that there aren't yet any tales from the army days, despite my having mentioned that they are the most popular. The reason I always talk of the army and police tales together, instead of separating them, is that they both feature that amazing character, "Bob". He was with me during my national service and later in the traffic police, and without him those days would never have been as humourous or enjoyable as they were. So though you haven't yet heard about us in the army, you do know our antics already. Anyway, here is one of my all time favourites, dredged from a dusty old floppy disc that may have just issued its last gasp in parting with this story:

Place: 5th South African Infantry Battalion, Ladysmith, South Africa
Time: Late Summer, 1992

One fine sunny day we got a call from a girl called Cynthia that we were both trying to impress. Though none of us would admit it, we were actually in competition for her attentions. I felt I had been cuckolded by my steady girlfriend back in Durbs and Bob didn’t have a steady girl at the time, so we were keen on Cynthia, who was by far the most desirable of the local Ladysmith girls.

So here she was, asking what we thought of going with her and her mate Beatrice to the Colenso River for a braai (that's barbecue for you non-South Africans). Of course we were dead keen. Beatrice was short, fat and dark haired, whereas Cynthia was tall, shapely and fair. None of us were interested in Beatrice, but Cynthia had made it abundantly clear that while she would settle for either one of us it would only be on condition that the other one accommodated Beatrice. She played us like a fiddle, but we were happy to accept whatever conditions were imposed, so long as the hope of a night with Cynthia remained within reach. It was tacitly accepted that none of us were capable of getting it on with the tubby Beatrice, but that we would play the game as far as possible and cross that bridge when we got to it. That is to say, hopefully when the other one got to it.

So here we were in the foyer of the NCO's quarters, on the payphone with Cynthia. Knowing that if any of the other off-duty NCOs happened to overhear us they would want to jump on the bandwagon, we tried to keep our conversation low. This was our undoing, because it attracted the attention of my pre-Bob best mate, Padda, who was the last guy we wanted along, as not only was he quite a capable ladies man himself, but he harboured some resentment against Bob and I, as prior to my meeting Bob he and I were basically inseparable. He would certainly give it his best go to try and ruin anything that we had hoped to achieve with Cynthia and Beatrice.

Sauntering past, making it look as casual as possible, Padda gave us a wink and asked where we were going to braai that afternoon.
“What, us? Braai? No, we’re not braaing anywhere!”
“That’s funny guys, ‘cause I just heard you arranging to braai at the Colenso River, so how’s about it? You’ll just have to give me a lift to the Butcher so’s I can buy some meat and then we’re off, eh!”

Nothing for it but to take Padda along, damn. Well that put paid to any romantic notions we might have been cultivating. Once we had been to the Butcher and the Bottle Store, we headed out to the suburb where Cynthia's parents lived. Because she didn’t want her neighbours to see her getting picked up by us instead of her steady Permanent Force boyfriend (whom she had temporarily cut contact with on meeting the two of us) her and Beatrice were waiting for us there instead of at her flat or Beatrice's parents' place. Beatrice still lived at home. We could see their faces fall as they saw Padda, but we made out as if it was all part of our plan, as we couldn’t let them see that we had allowed ourselves to be bullied into bringing him along. The army was like that, especially amongst an elite group such as us that had endured the horrors and rigours of Infantry School together. You just didn’t get outright nasty with one another. It was okay if it was done by omission, such as neglecting to tell Padda that we were off on a fun outing, but it was something else to tell him outright that he wasn’t wanted.

Cynthia was such a lady that it was naturally accepted that she would get the front seat next to Bob, who drove. Of course this left Padda and I with Beatrice squeezed in between us on the back seat. While this sent Beatrice into ecstasies of delight, it did nothing for Padda and I, whose full attention was directed toward the front, in order to see to it that Cynthia was suitably distracted by our superb witticisms and didn’t have too much time to admire Bob's manly profile as he piloted us in that car of cars, the Cream Dream. En route between Ladysmith and Colenso Padda and I must have had at least three beers each, all the while urging another ale on Bob. You see, while we drank for Dutch courage, we were also aware that it wouldn’t do to have Bob appearing all sober and gentlemanly while we degenerated into drunken slobs in the back seat. Fortunately Bob played along and matched us beer for beer.

Soon we found the river and the lovely picnic spot on the banks that Cynthia had in mind when she invited us there. There was a large old tree growing right on the banks of the muddy river, its branches reaching way out over the water. Under the tree was a grassy patch where we could set up our equipment, which basically consisted of cool boxes and braai grids. The big attraction, however, was the very professional foefie slide (known as a Zip-Slide elsewhere in the world) that was mounted in the tree and trailed out over the river, connecting at the far side to some fixed point on the bank.

Someone had attached a proper steel cable, about 10mm diameter, to the tree trunk and across the river. Suspended from the cable was a welded stainless steel inverted T-piece that one could hang from by the hands. At the base of the upside down T was attached a grooved pulley wheel with a proper roller ball bearing on an axle. I had never seen such a professional foefie slide, and naturally we three guys were as eager as hell to try it out. Of course Cynthia had known the reaction that we would have to the slide, and as she seemed to take a perverse pleasure in pitting males against each other to win her attentions, she was more than keen to encourage us to display our manly capabilities. Fighting the other two off, I was the first up the tree. Gripping the shiny stainless steel crosspiece, I launched myself and attempted a somersault as I let go mid-river. Half-stunning myself as I landed flat on my back in the water, I quickly recovered and cast my eyes shoreward to see what reaction I had engendered amongst the watching ladies. After my inglorious and pathetic crash-landing, they had no eyes for me and were intent on Bob and Padda, so I grabbed at the trailing rope (it hung from the T-piece so that you could drag it back to the shore) and headed hurriedly for shore to reclaim my share of the attention. As Padda managed to grab the rope out of my hands, so Bob was up the tree. Padda was left holding the rope for him. Outfoxed by the wily gentleman!

Swinging out over the river, Bob's jump wasn’t much better than my dismal attempt. It wasn’t helped by the disparaging shouts from Padda, who had quickly sussed out that Cynthia was the type to go for whoever was the most impressive and hadn’t actually chosen any one of us yet. Padda didn’t do much better either, and I think we were all left with the impression that we needed more speed on take-off, in order to achieve a more impressive leap into the river, not to mention that he who went furthest would be deemed more manly. With the order of sliding established it was my turn, and I determined that this time I would kick off from the tree with as much might as possible in order to gain the desired velocity. As I gripped the smooth stainless steel handle with my wet hands I gave an almighty push with my feet against the tree trunk. My legs shot out in front of me and the momentum created such a force that I had a moment of desperate panic as I felt my grip slipping on the crossbar. Only the unthinkable fear of making a fool of myself in front of the ladies gave me the necessary strength to retain my grip on the handle, but it was a very close thing indeed. Making a rather weak twist and somersault into the rushing waters, I surfaced thinking how lucky I had been and wondering if the females were suitably impressed.

Once I reached the bank again, rope trailing, I handed over to Padda. Bob had already scrambled up the tree and was waiting for Padda to pull the handle bar within his reach. I knew that he would be thinking exactly the same thing as I had been, and I shouted for him to beware of pushing off with his feet when his hands were wet, but I was too late. He had grasped the handles and pushed off with both feet, full force. To make matters worse, Padda had retained his grip on the trailing rope and was running below Bob, who was suspended a good 8 feet off the ground, pulling with all his might in order to give Bob a boost. As Cynthia, Beatrice and I watched in horror, Bob took off at high velocity, his outstretched arms just maintaining their grip against the force of Padda’s strong pull below. As the force of his kick-off took effect his feet and legs overtook his body, and, as I had feared, the momentum was just too much. His wet hands couldn’t maintain their grip, and the handle was ripped from his grasp by the forces in play. With the forward swing of his legs his torso was forced downwards, hands dangling groundward. The momentum kept him turning, and the everlasting picture burnt into my brain is of Bob descending, arms and legs outstretched like an evil spider dropping onto its unsuspecting prey, as Padda, eyes rolling in terror as he looked over his shoulder at the descending Bob, continued his run with an extra burst of speed to try and avoid the impending impact. Bob kept on turning, and eventually landed on Padda with his back, his head facing down and to the rear, firmly wedged up Padda's crack, while his backside rammed Padda powerfully on the back of his fleeing head.

With a might thump the two collided and Padda went down under the dead weight, arms and legs splayed, literally biting the dust as eyes, nose and mouth were buried in the dirt with the splayed out Bob on his back. Now bear in mind that liberal quantities of alcohol had been consumed, and we were all loose-limbed and brave. What with Padda having taken the brunt of his impact, Bob was immediately up on his feet, albeit somewhat groggy, and ready to regain his stature in the eyes of the ladies. As for me and the girls, we were dumbfounded. What we had just witnessed was normally enough to kill someone, and while both were knocked breathless, and seemed a little dazed, here Bob was insisting that it was only a minor mishap. I realised that, true man that he was, Bob was, in his befuddled state, only following that unspoken manly rule that you don’t let on to women who you are trying to impress that you are mortally injured. Knowing that we were all as drunk as lords, and that Bob was seriously concussed, to say the least, I felt it my duty to dissuade him from another attempt. But he was adamant. “My Uncle Jumbo always told me, Bob, that if you fall off a horse you get straight back on!” he mumbled groggily. Something in his eyes warned me that it wouldn’t do to interfere at this stage, and I let him have his way. Padda was having nothing to do with this round, and stayed far away, nursing his bruises.

Up the tree Bob went again, loudly proclaiming to all and sundry that it was merely a minor setback, but no worries, this time he had everything under control. Noting the glazed look in his eyes I was not so sure, but recognising a fellow male recovering his pride I looked on as he made a repeat performance. Grasping the handles with his still wet hands he gave another almighty push with his legs and this time it was almost instantaneous as his legs shot out in front of him and his fingers relinquished their grasp on the crossbar. Performing a graceful but somewhat loose half somersault, he landed in a puff of dust, splayed out as if caught in a star jump during Army PT.

Dead silence. As we all looked on I was certain that he was dead. One could hear the birds chirruping and the bees buzzing. A couple of kids shouted on the far bank of the river. Bob didn’t move. As we all glanced at each other, wondering if he was alive, I gathered my wits about me and approached the “body”.
“Hey Bob,” I whispered, “Are you alright?”
A low moan emitted from the splayed out form on the ground. Relief! He lived, if only for now. “Bob, speak to me!” I said.
Another long, drawn out moan. Coming close enough to prod him, I gave him a nudge in the ribs. “Are you okay, pal?” I asked.
Loud grunts at the prod in the ribs, and another prolonged groan.
Realising that he was going to live, my usually sadistic side took control again, and I stepped back to view the effect he was making on the rest. Recognising of course that there was the ever-present need to impress the ladies going through his battered thoughts and that he would be extremely worried about the loss of face in front of Cynthia, I began to find the situation extremely amusing. Every time he hauled himself up on all fours he would collapse again in a cloud of dust with a groan. It was all we could elicit, a groan. He was so badly winded that he couldn’t talk, but in his desire to make out to the ladies that it was no big deal he kept on trying to talk, and the more he tried the more he groaned.

It was, of course, the end of the festivities. Cynthia, displaying that other, more mature side of her nature (she was older than all of us, I think) took over completely. Although Padda and I would happily have left Bob to recover on his own (we had after all been through far worse punishment in Infantry School) and thus had the field to ourselves with the handsome, debonair lieutenant out of action, we were quickly put to work by Cynthia who gathered up the car keys from the stunned Bob's possessions and set Padda and myself to packing up our things and getting everything into the car.

Before I knew what I was doing I found myself in the backseat of the Cream Dream with a subdued Padda and Beatrice. While Cynthia drove and Bob sat in the passenger seat protesting that he was more than capable of driving his own car, I sat brooding that I hadn’t taken the initiative myself. After all, he was my mate, and no woman should have been driving the Cream Dream!

Looking back, I realise that it was disgruntlement at the kid glove treatment that Bob was receiving at the hands of Cynthia due to his fall that was causing my irritation. You see, we were all at the absolute peak of fitness, Padda, Bob and I. As I watched Bob I could see his recovery in his eyes, but he, wily bastard that he was, was busy realising that as long as he hammed things up he was going to continue receiving preferential treatment from the luscious Cynthia.

Unfortunately for him Cynthia was wiser than we knew. Once again with hindsight I think that we underestimated her. She was a pretty, single girl saddled with a child from a liaison with her Permanent Force Corporal, and she stood no chance with the locals, who had branded her, but she was able to make a big impression on us “newies” passing through on our military service. While she had intimated to us at the time that she was through with her Corporal, I think he was under the impression that she was wanting a little ‘breathing space’ and not aware that she was dallying with a couple of national servicemen. She must have realised that if Bob was seriously injured then it wouldn’t take long for her name to come out as having been present. This would have put paid to any form of respectability that she may have hoped to retain after we had passed through her life. In fact everything we ever did with her was, without our realising it, kept in secrecy. But that’s another story. At this time it was her priority to dump us safely back at the base where we were dissociated from her. As we arrived at her parent’s house she and Beatrice hurriedly grabbed their belongings from the boot. Once they had entered the house I sauntered around to the drivers door, only to find that Bob, miraculously recovered, had assumed the driver’s seat and was snarling at me to “get in, we’re going!”

“Are you sure, Bob?” I asked, in the hope that I may still recover the chance to pilot the Cream Dream.
“Yeah yeah, only a little bump on the head,” he said.
Ensconced in the back seat Padda just shook his head.
As it turned out, when we got back to the base Bob checked into the sick bay and was treated for concussion. After he was settled in his sickbed it occurred to him that we had arranged a night out on the town that evening, and he wasted no time in signing himself out again. As you can imagine, it was a cheap round for him that evening, what with the medication and concussion. We had survived another rigorous day in the South African Defence Force.

Monday 27 December 2010

Networks

I'm still here. To those good people who still return even though there is so seldom something new here, I haven't forgotten you. Promise. Life is just so full of things to do that, despite my desire to the contrary, I cannot sit still long enough to jot down all the things here that I would like to. Here are the latest figures on who's doing the most reading:

Switzerland: Well over 400

USA: Just over 100

Denmark: 26

South Africa: 18

Indonesia: 11

The rest (all at ten or less readers) are led by the UK at 10.

I see that the English Forum in Switzerland is responsible for the high readership here in Cheese-Land. Thank you, chaps. I read your forum often too. It's fun, interesting, helpful and entertaining.

To the Ami's (Swiss and German for Americans, pronounced "Ummies"), good for you. It's hard to keep a good nation down. Thanks for helping all us colonials whack the Krauts back then.

To the Danes, how many of you are expats? Viva the Vikings!

To the South Africans, shame on you!

To the Indonesians...uh...you just have to be expats???

Had a good Friday night a short while ago. My ex-apprentice phoned up and insisted that I join him for a "session" in the magazine. Sounds funny huh? I can't help but use the direct translation for the German word "Magazin" (pronounced mug-a-tsin), which is the term for the workshop/stores of a company.

In the bad old days, when I was a bricklayer and later foreman in the firm where he still works, we would have an informal, once-a-month bash after work on a Friday. This was something that I imported from South Africa. It's a great team-building exercise, and fun to boot. Nearly every job I've ever been in in SA was distinguished by an impromptu get-together after work from time to time, and I was horrified to find that the concept seemed unknown over here. The first time I suggested such a thing, typical questions and worries were "who's going to pay for everything?", "how much will I have to pay?", "what happens to the left-overs?", "what's your motive?", "what do you want in return?", etc.

Suffice it to say that after many years my colleagues came to understand my point, and there were many Friday evenings on the company premises where the fire burned merrily while beers were consumed happily and the smell of roasting meat and the sounds of cheerful camaraderie filled the air. When I left that company two years ago, the will to continue the parties seemed to fade. My ex-apprentice has now taken it upon himself to revive the tradition.

This time around was such a hoot. It's great to catch up on old stories and keep contact with people. Life has become so international these days, eh?! At our impromptu little party were: two Poles, a German, three Swiss, an Albanian, a South African (yours truly), a Macedonian, a Portugues and an Italian.

What's interesting here is that out of this group almost all have been able to help one or more of the others in a significant way that is not related to work. Here one must bear in mind that not everyone still works for the same company. This made me think of the network that I have been trying to build among these and other guys over the last few years. They have certainly grasped the concept, and it's gratifying to see how it all comes together for us when we need help. I hope to enlarge on this topic in a later post, because there is a rather funny tale about how we all helped one of the guys to move house, but as you readers know, there's no telling when that will be...

On a different note, with the run-up to Christmas and year-end I have been swamped with end-of-year inventory checks, wrapping up of last-minute, minor construction sites that of course all must be finished "by Christmas" (even though the quotes only went out in December), and of course that dreaded task of billing. Naturally the brass want all sites (especially if they're big, lucrative ones) financially wrapped up and the billing up to date by the end of the year, but this year every single site had to completely current as far as the financials go. This is because here in the land of fondue and chocolate we have a new VAT percentage as of the 1st of January, so there must be no bills for work done this year sent out next year or the customer will start kicking and screaming about the fact that he has to pay more tax to the government.

I knew this was going to be a big job, but the carrot at the end of the stick is of course the break between Christmas and New Year. I have been editing my book and had planned to use this week of rest to finish that and start sending out query letters to prospective agents. Also planned was a launching online so prospective customers could order the book via Amazon, Noble & Barnes,etc. or download the e-version on their Kindles. Something else planned was an aggressive "attack" on the blog, with more Police and Army tales (I see that they are by far the most popular of the stories). Altogether, a veritable feast of writing was in the cards. Was...

Alas, after two years of being flu-free I have been floored by the flu, and boy, do I mean floored! Hit me the day before Christmas and only now am I returning from my zombie-like state. In the few lucid moments I've enjoyed over the last few days, I have joined Facebook. I've always put this off with the reasoning that I don't have enough time yet, and I was right. From the minute I registered yesterday, every waking moment has been used to catch up on where all the good ole boys (and girls) are and what they've been up to. Not too hard when you're stuck in bed anyway and propping the laptop on your lap between dozing is so easy. However, now that I have made the graduation from bed to desk, I shall be attacking the stories again. Hope to have something good up for you all this week.

For now, even though I missed Christmas, I would like to wish you all a merry Christmas and a happy, healthy and prosperous New Year.

Regards,
...

Sunday 5 December 2010

Grumpy Old Men

This morning I finished a book that was brought to me all the way from my beloved Underberg in South Africa. The book in question was written by a notoriously grumpy old man who has lived in the district of Underberg for many, many years, and who just happens to be one of those world-class raconteurs that we very rarely get to cross paths with in our lives. When I closed the book, I took the time to lean back and reflect on the years I had known him, and how we had met. After that, I decided to write about it here. Before this, however, I went on the Internet and googled him. Knowing him as I do, I very much doubted that he would be active on the web, but knowing how randomly one’s personal details can find their way into cyberspace these days, I gave it a try anyway. Sure enough, there he was. Under an article on what to do at “Splashy Fen” (Underberg’s reply to Woodstock) were a number of entries concerning local attractions. One of these was the Himeville museum. Himeville is five kilometers from Underberg, and despite the ancient feuds that raged between these two isolated outposts over the last hundred or more years, they are both a part of the so-called “Underberg district”, and their inhabitants and the inhabitants of the farms that surround both towns are all happy to call themselves locals within the context of the greater area. My friend is now curator of the local museum in Himeville, though he would fit in as one of the exhibits too. I know he’ll have a good laugh at that one should he ever read this.Unfortunately, like so many of his kind, computers and the Internet are foreign concepts to him, so I shall have to send him a printed version of this entry.

Anyway, unbeknown to him his home number was also listed on this site, so I gave him a call. We spent a delightful 45 minutes on the phone. The sound of his voice, the cultured colonial English rolling off his tongue in his well-modulated baritone, brought back a flood of memories. It was as if the last 12 years had never occurred. We discussed the weather, politics (both local and international), local affairs and past characters and events, and bemoaned the decline in standards in South Africa and the world in general. We could have been standing in the queue at the local farmers co-operative for all the change in our conversation. I have thought of him often over the years, but to hear his voice again was quite electrifying. To those of you who have read the rest of the blog, he is the gentleman with whom I would share my finds out in the wilderness as related in the entry entitled “Forgotten Places”. To read this one, go to the column on the right of the page you’re looking at now and look under “Popular Posts”. It should still be one of the four there. It used to be the most popular, which has prompted me to share more of my Underberg tales with you.
Well, I’d like to tell how I met my friend, and as I have his permission to share his name with you all, I shall, for the first time ever, use a real name.

Time: Sometime in September 1994.
Place: Underberg, Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa.

I hadn’t been long in town as the new “Chief of Underberg Protection Services” when I had the pleasure (some would say misfortune) of meeting Mr. Michael Clark. By now I had left the provincial traffic police for a new position in Underberg, for those of you who have only read the “Screaming Patrolmen” and “Shooting the Spider” tales, and was rather un-firmly ensconced in Underberg. It was a responsible position that required a responsible attitude which I will elaborate on another time. Suffice it to say that under the circumstances in which I first saw the terrifying Mr. Clark in action, I was forced to remain hidden behind a door.

I had an office in the old building that housed the original Underberg Health Committee. Health Committee was the name given to the town council of a town so tiny, insignificant and poor that its municipal seat of office didn’t even warrant the title of Town Board, which was what they got if the town was marginally more noticeable. This was followed by the title of Municipality, and if a town had this status then they were well on the way to getting included on a map sometime in the future.

Back to the point. Housed within this little building were the town clerk, the local sheriff (yours truly), a front office clerk-cum-secretary who handled day-to-day town business (permits, accounts, etc.) and a back office lady who dealt with all matters to do with transportation, such as the issuing of licenses, renewal of registration plates, etc. At the time there was no town clerk, so we were all without a boss. I was the only man about. The front office was operated by a geriatric of doubtful vintage (she lived down the road with her boyfriend of similar age to herself) and the back office by a young girl of my own age who was as quiet as a mouse and had a heart of gold. The old bat reigned supreme in that establishment. I was only 21 and the young lady in the back office (who later became, and still is, my sister-in-law) was a year younger. The old girl was probably only about 67 or so, but she looked and acted about 80. At least to our young eyes. She was an extremely domineering and shrill old woman, and she would go out of her way to make life unpleasant for the two of us. She knew how to operate though. Moments after she had nearly caused me to draw my pistol and fill her with lead, she would be bringing in a tray of tea and biscuits, all beautifully laid out on a silver tray with cups and saucers and the whole works, with some comment such as “here you are my dear, have some tea!” Whilst munching on a biscuit and sipping delicious hot strong tea, I would think back over the last hour and suppose to myself that maybe I had just misinterpreted her intentions and misread her words. Perhaps she wasn’t so bad after all. These musings would then be shattered by the crash of my office door flying open and her shrieking incomprehensibly at me while she waved some form in my face. “Did you tell Mrs. So-and-so that I’m the one who deals with this application? Well! Speak up, boy, I don’t have all day, you know. I’m a busy woman and I won’t have the general public all flocking up here to waste my time!”

I would be hastily trying to choke down the remains of my half-chewed biscuit and get to my feet, my face red hot with rage and humiliation, ready to inform her that that was precisely what her job was about and that the only reason she was actually still employed at her advanced state of decay was to deal with the very “general public” that she so despised, but before I could even open my mouth she would have slammed my door and been back at the little glass window giving the poor unfortunate on the other side a further dressing down. I hated this treatment of the town citizens, and it was one of the reasons that I eventually came to realize that, despite her moments of kindness and the fact that she didn’t even realize how she was perceived, I actually truly disliked her.

One day I was sitting in my office with the inter-leading door to the front office open. It was shortly before lunch time, so I was winding up my paperwork and preparing to nip off home for a bite to eat. My aged protagonist was ensconced in her knitting in front of her typewriter, just out of my line of sight. All I could see through the doorway was her reflection in the glass panel that separated her from her tormentors when they summoned up the courage to visit the seat of the town authority. Through the hole in the glass I heard the sound of the front door opening and closing, followed immediately by the sharp and hurried sound of typing. How she got her knitting safely stowed and her fingers flying over the keys in such a short space of time befuddles my brain to this day. I had by now stood up and was putting on my jacket, preparing to leave. As I passed the inter-leading door, I got a glimpse of her, just as a deep baritone voice made itself heard over the clacking of the electric typewriter.
“Good morning.” An instant of silence and then the clacking resumed. After another ten seconds or so had passed there came another “Good morning”, followed by the same pause in typing and then more clack-clacking. I now had the door to my office open and was in a unique position whereby I could look through the door between my office and hers as well as out the glass panel in the door that separated our side of the building from that of the public. Standing there in the area before her counter was an elderly gentleman with a weathered look about him, his eyebrows rather tussled and bushy, and his large, elf-like ears sprouting the odd clump of hair similar in appearance to the ones protruding from his nostrils. He wore an old blue jersey and some corduroys of indeterminate age. The holes in his sleeves reminded me very much of the ones in my father’s sleeves. Not ones there through poverty, but simply there because the owner saw no good reason to rid himself of his favourite garment simply because it had begun to show a few minor signs of wear. In fact, the gentleman in question reminded me unmistakably of my own father in all respects. A similarity that was to be borne out in the next few minutes.

All of a sudden, there was a loud bang as the man crashed the base of his clenched fist down on the wooden counter and bellowed “I said GOOD MORNING!”. The clackety-clack of the typewriter ceased instantaneously, and I quickly shifted position so that I could look back into the old she-wolf’s lair. She turned to her would-be customer with a look of absolute disbelief on her face, her mouth hanging open in surprise. I was frozen in delight. This was bound to be interesting, most interesting indeed! I shifted again to get a view of the old chap. He had a grim set to his features and was eyeing her like an eagle on high studying the movements of its prey far below. She leapt to her feet and fired her opening salvo.
“Can’t you see I’m busy!!” she screeched.
“No, you’re bloody well not!” he replied, leaning her way and fixing her with a beady look from under his beetled brows.
“I certainly am,” she yelled, “and I won’t have just every Tom, Dick and Harry waltzing in here and interrupting my work!”
The gentleman gave her a look that would have melted rock and with a slight increase in his already impressive volume replied. “You’re bloody well sitting here knitting on public time, time that I pay for, you old bag, and time that therefore belongs to the public, so get up off your lazy backside and give me the service I expect!”
By the end of this sentence, his voice had taken on the power and volume of a Berg thunder storm, matched only by his thunderous visage. The old girl was apoplectic. There was a moment of silence, during which I wondered if she was in the throes of a coronary seizure brought on by her rage at this unheard-of attack on her supremacy.
“What?! WHAT did you say?” I heard her squeak in a choked voice. “What did you say to me, you…you horrible, uncouth man!!?”. By now she was panting in her rage and quite unable to find her voice, so indignant was she. I had shifted closer to the door in order to get a better view of the stranger through the little glass pane, and was now crying tears of pure mirth at the scene being enacted in front of my eyes. This grizzled old gent was like an incarnation of my dreams, a rugged apparition from the past. The formidable ***** was simply no match for a man of his ilk, and he knew it. He loomed over the counter, his nose inches from the glass, and said, “I suggest you stop wheezing and get on with it before I REALLY lose my patience!”

This last shot seemed to defeat the tyrant, for she snatched up the form from where he had thrown it under the glass and flopped into her chair with an indignant little “Oh!” and began processing whatever it was that he had come for. I wiped the tears from my cheeks and straightened up, the laughter-induced cramps in my belly not yet gone. A last fit of giggles convulsed me before I was able to compose myself into the serious chief of the traffic police that I was supposed to be and step into the room in which he stood. As I closed the door behind me and turned to leave, I found myself face-to-face with him. He gave me the once-over and harrumphed in disdain before turning his attention back to the office in which his now cowed adversary was silently attending to his needs. With a last smile of delight at his broad back, I exited through the front door. Once outside I broke out in howls of unrestrained laughter again. I was so incapacitated by mirth that I must have lingered longer than I intended to, for suddenly I heard the door slam behind me and there he was.

“And what the bloody hell are you laughing at?” he demanded to know. This was too much, and I doubled over in mirth once again, all thoughts of professionalism cast aside in the joy at seeing a real old character of the past do his thing. The wonderful accent, with its overtones of British Imperialism, the tatty old clothing that told the world to go jump, the expectation of a member of the public from his public servants and the classic manner in which he had dealt with a typical, rude bureaucrat had endeared this man to me without his even knowing who I was. Like all Underbergers, he had of course heard about the new young upstart in town who was to fulfill the hated and despised role of “traffic cop”. For the locals, it didn’t matter what grandiose visions I may have had, or that the times and laws had changed, giving the local law enforcement far more powers of criminal investigation if they so chose. I would remain a traffic cop, a being put on earth to plague and harass regular souls as they went about their business, relieving them of their hard-earned cash and generally performing a function that they deemed completely unnecessary in their day-to-day lives.
I straightened up and attempted a serious look. This was not the time to make an attempt at conversation. That could come later. “Oh, I’m sorry,” I replied, “it’s just something personal. Have a good day, sir!” With that, I scampered off to my vehicle and left. I could see the old gent in my rearview-mirror, standing there gazing after me with a puzzled expression on his face.

There is more to tell about the famous Mike Clark, but I will relate it in another entry. For now, I wish to let those of you who would care to read more about Underberg and the rich tales it has to tell know where to get hold of copies of some of the excellent books written by this wonderful man.

These are the titles:

The Saga of Sani Pass and Mokhotlong (also available on www.abebooks.co.uk )

Ihlanyati

The Lighter Side of the Berg and other Stories

The author’s name is Michael Clark, and books can be ordered via the following address:

Mr. M. Clark
PO Box 122
Himeville
3256
South Africa

Alternatively, post a comment on this blog and I will telephone Mike with your order after making contact with you. His writing gives one an insight into how life in one of the true last outposts in the wild country of the Drakensberg really was. I was privileged enough to have experienced the waning remnants of this lifestyle, and it was a pleasure to read his stories. Those of you who have enjoyed my tales will undoubtedly relish the stories Mike has to tell.

In closing, I must mention that in spite of my decision to make the next entry one of the tales of my military adventures, I am going to continue with the story of how I met Mike properly for the first time, and how he became my friend. It’s been great thinking of you, Mike, and I thoroughly enjoyed your book. I know you never thought of me in the same light that I thought of you, and I understand. Just know that your humour, your knowledge and your great insight (not to mention your pessimism, your complaints and your incessant grumbling) have never left my memory. I considered you one of my best friends in Underberg. Keep the home fires burning, and don’t stop writing…

Monday 29 November 2010

Expulsion of Foreign Criminals?

On Sunday, the 28th of November, the Swiss public voted in one of their "direct democracy" referendums. The initiative, proposed by the conservative Swiss People's Party (SVP), proposed that foreigners automatically lose their residency permits on conviction of certain crimes. It received the majority vote, and now the government has to work out how to implement this within a legal framework.

The question is: Is this morally acceptable or not? The problem for most liberals arises from the fact that it is such a sweeping proposal. For instance, one of the proposed crimes to be included in the list that automatically gets a foreigner evicted on conviction is breaking and entering. Very broad terminology. There is no mention of the scale involved, or the intent to commit violent crime, etc. So if Messrs. Milovic, Smith and co. break into a mansion in the dead of night, armed to the teeth and ready to remove the van Gogh collection at all costs, and unexpectedly encounter Herr Müller having a late night cognac in his study, and Herr Müller jumps up and runs for his alarm panel, shouting Hilfe at the top of his voice, Mr. Smith could quite likely end up filling Herr Müller with lead from his Uzi. Following the results of the referendum, Milovic, Smith and co. will, after conviction, be evicted from the country. As far as I know, they'll have to serve their sentences here first, unless there is some sort of agreement with their home country (can't quite see that one working with Albania, but anyway...).

Excellent stuff, I say!

Now, young Gopal Munsamy, whose parents came here from India two years before he was born, has grown up into a reasonably typical young man of average academic achievement and the usual lack of respect and discipline that most youth have today, In other words, he's not much different from his neighbour, young Fritz Sigrist. He speaks Swiss German as a first language, as he has never been schooled in his parents mother tongue and only ever gets to speak Hindi or whatever with them anyway. Part of his bad attitude in life is that in order to fit in with his peers, he has to try really hard to distance himself from his parents language, culture and customs. He has never been to India and has no idea and no interest whatsoever in what life is like over there. In fact, he couldn't care less. Gopal's father has spent the last eighteen years working in the kitchen of a two star restaurant in Zürich as a dishwasher on the nightshift, so there isn't any money to go around for much, let alone pocket money for the kids. Like all foreigners of working class in Switzerland, the "Kinderzulage", or child allowance, that the Canton pays him every month is simply added onto the meagre salary in order to help make ends meet. Unfortunately for Gopal, our young potential Swiss-of-colour has taken up smoking in the last year. The only good attribute he possesses is his honesty, drummed into him by his dad's tales of how he ran a successful traders stall back in the good ole days, so when he finally succumbs to his addiction and smashes the window of a Kiosk stand one night, his fumbling attempt at theft goes wrong and he is caught and charged.

Gopal gets extradited to a strange land that is totally foreign to him, and his family are left with little choice but to follow.

Right or wrong?

I personally think such a thing would be rather bloody harsh, and when I voted I allowed myself to believe in the SVP's promise that such worst-case scenarios as this and others that were touted by the liberals would obviously be treated differently. Overtones of Nazism? Perhaps I was naive, but I am sick of the decay that I've had to watch set in in the last nine and a half years. One of the things I love about this country is the respect for law and order. One is safe over here. One's possessions are safe over here. This is changing. In the beginning, I marvelled at the lack of crime in the newspapers. As a South African the lack of violent crime fairly leapt off the pages at me. I remember laughing at the amount of articles detailing crimes such as people taking a tram without a ticket, or the snatching of a handbag in Zürich, wondering if the reporters truly had nothing better to do with their time. Until I realised that this was the locals idea of crime! Once I got to terms with that, I settled down to enjoying life in a place where one could ride a train or walk in the city with one's wife at night, or leave your bicycle standing unchained outside the shop while you bought a loaf of bread, etc. I never learned to leave my house unlocked, and I still automatically lock the car doors when in the centre of town, but it was just nice to know that if you did forget, well, you weren't likely to become a victim.

This has changed. At the age of ten, my son used to catch a train on his own to the next big city for his orthodontist appointment. When he was thirteen, I had to forbid this. First the muggings started, then they became violent. After that the rape started, and the next will be killings. The worst of this is that I have never yet read an account of such a thing where the perpetrator is not a foreigner! By the way, something that amuses me over here in this liberal, first world country is a certain little habit they have that so reminds me of the bad old days in SA when I was a tot. Back then, if there was some major road accident for example, the newspapers would carry reports along the lines of "three people were killed, and 13 blacks". This is, thank goodness, a thing of the past now, but here in Switzerland they always report on things along this vein: "Yesterday evening, a Swiss woman was raped by two Serbs, a Croat and a Nigerian on the late night train to blablabla". They're very correct about it all, though. If the perp has managed to get himself naturalised at some stage then he gets described as a Swiss. Only the qualifying little add-on gives the game away, namely "of migrant (or Balkan/Eastern European/African/Middle Eastern, etc.) heritage". Now you tell me, is this necessary? It sure is interesting to me, 'cause I think the hard facts should be made public, but I don't know how good it is for the attitudes of the Swiss to their foreigners...

Anyway, to get back to the point, I don't believe in any kind of crime. As a guest in a foreign country I certainly wouldn't be surprised if they told me to leave after I'd been caught committing crime, of any sort whatsoever. So, for better or for worse, I'm in with the SVP. OK, I admit it, they do tend to stink of zealotry from time to time, and there are flavours of extreme right-wing within the cauldron, but I feel I have to make my stand somewhere.

Just hope they don't go back on their promises now and really send ole Gopal back to (H)India...

(Still, if they do, his dad's buddies kids might just think twice before they nick that next handbag...hmmmn...)