The Pink Palace. Monday 2/4 and Tuesday 2/5, Somerset West in Cape Town (//Hui !Gaeb)
The overnight bus ride is actually pretty nice. The seats on this two-decker have a lot of room to recline, and there’s a leg rest that folds out from under the seat. It’s more high-end than the minibus I took from Johannesburg, but still pretty affordable. I’m not the only white passenger this time—it’s split about fifty-fifty, and the black passengers here most likely have more money than those who accompanied me on the minibus ride. There’s a very eclectic mix of movies in the evening and the next morning, with occasional Christian TV programs; the company that operates these buses is apparently very Christian. The bus makes a stop at Bloemfontein late evening before continuing southwest towards the Cape into the night. In the morning I wake up to see the glow of the sunrise over the desert-like plains region known as the Karoo in Afrikaans, before hills pop up that give rise to some mountains. The sprawling vineyards of the wine region start to appear in the valleys. I also observe more the town names on signs, noting the mix of names in African languages like Sotho and Xhosa as well as Dutch and English names. The bus passes by another Worcester a couple hours east of Cape Town (Worcester, Massachusetts is where I lived for most of the past six years before the traveling).
We pull into the main Cape Town station mid-morning, but I don’t get to see much of the city yet—I go straight to the nearby train tracks, where I take a little less than an hour’s ride out to a suburb called Somerset West. I’ll be staying with another WWOOF host, Avril, for just a couple days. She texted me that the train will be pretty safe for me as long as I take it in the middle of the day, since there will be some other people in the cabin with me but not as many as during the rush hours, where I’d be more of a target for pickpocketing, and she also warns me that I probably shouldn’t take it alone at night. The trains here are older and more rickety than the new Gautrain back in Joburg, and a lot of the windows are covered in stickers advertising the phone numbers of witch doctors promising to make people more money, bring back lost lovers, cure illnesses, and enlarge certain parts of the body. I’ll end up seeing a lot of these posted on walls in some streets for the many weeks I have left in my trip.
Avril, a woman of English descent in her sixties, picks me up at Somerset West and takes me to her home, which she’s affectionately named the Pink Palace. She only takes WWOOF volunteers for no more than a couple days at a time, as she doesn’t have a large farm, just a network of gardens around her house which she can use help with, though she’s in pretty good shape for her age. Avril’s still managed to fit a lot of plants into her space. I help her out for a few hours each day in the morning and afternoon, with tasks like trimming branches and grinding them up for mulch, digging some foundations for a new fence, and taking horse manure from her neighbor to be used as a fertilizer (there’s always shit involved sooner or later). Avril is without a doubt one of the nicest people I’ve ever met, and she’s absolutely passionate about all things trees and plants even though she really only got into gardening about ten years ago. She shows me some of the vineyards right next to her house, including the region’s invasive eucalyptus trees, and on Tuesday shows me more around Somerset West. It’s a suburb with its wealthier as well as its more middle-class parts, and everywhere, including Avril’s house which isn’t that big and extravagant, still has the same walls and electric fences I saw in areas around Joburg. Not too far from her is an old Dutch colonial estate, Erinvale. To me, it’s a deceptively charming symbol of the early days of the 350-year-long European white supremacist reign over the land. But it does have an undeniably impressive variety of unique flowers and very old trees all over the place that Avril delights in showing me.
As for Avril’s family, her kids have married and moved back to Britain, as many white South Africans have in recent years. She tells me they moved for their own reasons, they weren’t fleeing any of the fears of “white genocide” that I mentioned in the last entry, but that she wanted to stay in South Africa, simply because she likes it; it’s her home, despite all its problems. She loves the people, the mix of cultures, and most of all the land. And she even seems to like the guinea fowls that tear up her garden, even if she won’t admit it. Avril was always against the idea of apartheid, and was hopeful when there was the peaceful transition to a fully democratic government in the ‘90s, as were so many others from all backgrounds. But she too has been let down seeing the same things others have pointed out to me, how for many people across the country things have not changed or even gotten worse, and how the ANC has become more corrupt, especially under leaders like Zuma.
Avril also tells me more about the ongoing Cape Town water crisis. There’s been drought since summer 2015, though last year was when it really got bad. There are restrictions for every household and business on using water, so many have resorted to collecting rainwater and using what they call “gray water”—water that’s already been used for other things, like washing dishes—for watering plants. While some people around the world use gray water just because it’s all around less wasteful, here people have to, just like in Palestine. Avril too has an organic soap for washing dishes, so that the water for her plants doesn’t get chemical soap in it. She also takes me to the town’s beach, and I see that while the Cape hasn’t had enough clean water, there’s another problem looming—too much salt water. Avril points out small concrete walls along the street next to the beach that were built more recently after flooding from the sea during storms. But enough depressing stuff about water crises—it’s a beautiful area, and Avril points out the tip of the Cape Peninsula far out across the bay, where I’ll be visiting later once I’m in Cape Town. And the drought so far isn’t as bad as last year thankfully, so we have a great couple of days using plenty of gray water for the plants of the Pink Palace.
Where the clouds gather. Wednesday 2/6 to Friday 2/8, Cape Town (//Hui !Gaeb)
Wednesday morning my short stay at the Pink Palace ends on a nice note. I help Avril with rehabilitating the dried-up stream behind her yard. The stream was ruined in part by a giant slide of runoff during storms from the neighborhood up the steep hill next to the stream, and for the past few years Avril’s been slowly clearing weeds and putting rocks and planks into place to make it a nice place for things to grow and bloom. She drops me off at the train after lunch and I thank her for everything before heading back to the city, where I take a Taxify to the hostel I’m staying at for the next few nights. I haven’t really spent too much time in hostels so far during my travelling except for a couple in Jordan, staying mostly on the farms or with Couchsurfing hosts. But for much of the next year I’ll be in plenty of them. Usually people in hostels are pleasant, though some hostels have different vibes and cultures, like being more chill or more party, more or less communal activities. A lot of it comes down to the staff. Only occasionally do I ever end up in rooms with loud and inconsiderate people, though I heard some horror stories about some other people’s experiences. Most guests are from North America and Europe, unsurprisingly, though I start to pick up on the pattern that Germans and Australians especially travel a lot, and even though American youth proportionally don’t travel in hostels much, there end up being a lot of Americans in most hostels anyway because we’re such a big country to begin with.
So that Wednesday I grab some groceries for dinner, and get to know some of the other people in the hostel. Some of the other folks have years of travelling experience that’s fun listening to and learning from, especially if they have tips for me and some of planned destinations, in South Africa as well as elsewhere. I also meet a Yemeni named Moataz, who thinks that I look Arab from a distance and comes up to me trying to speak Arabic. Guess my skin got pretty tan from those weeks on the farm near Lesotho. I can only give him a few of the words I picked up in Palestine. Moataz’s English is pretty good, and he says he’s trying to find someone to see Bohemian Rhapsody with at the nearby mall tonight, since he’s really proud that Rami Malek is getting so much praise, being an Arab actor. I don’t have much else to do, so I figure I’ll go along. He guy keeps forgetting the name of the movie (“how do you say it? The Queen movie?”) and he’s snapchatting some of the big musical montage scenes to send to his friends. Then it gets to halfway through when Freddie Mercury kisses a man for the first time, and Moataz turns to me shocked and asks, “He was gay?” He doesn’t really seem to mind it, and keeps watching the rest of it and recording parts. The guy just had no idea that Freddie Mercury was gay.
Anyway, enough about some of the other travelers, back to my journey. The next day I have to take a quick shower, since there are water restrictions here too, and I go out to start exploring the city. While the townships surrounding Cape Town are notoriously neglected and impoverished, and therefore have more crime, the center of Cape Town is more prosperous and safer compared to those of Joburg and most other cities. During my time here it was safe for me to walk around the main areas and take the buses as a foreigner during the day, though at night I would take a Taxify unless I was walking back to my hostel with other people. Many of the black Africans around here are Xhosa, though their main homeland is further east, in the central-south part of the country. I can definitely hear the distinct clicking sounds as Xhosa speak their language around me on buses (the “xh” in Xhosa is pronounced as a very hard clicking “k” kind of sound).
I start off at the original Dutch Castle of Good Hope from the 17th century, though I can’t get inside that day because of some parade thing going on. Several years ago, descendants of the indigenous Khoi-San gathered at this spot to celebrate an official second name for the city in their language: //Hui !Gaeb, “Where the Clouds Gather,” as they referred to the area before the Dutch colonized it (the // and ! symbols refer to hard clicking sounds that normal Latin letters can’t represent). I then spend much of the afternoon at the museum in District Six, the area in Cape Town where people of color were most targeted for forced removals to the Cape Flats township during apartheid in the ‘70s. Most original buildings were demolished except houses of worship, like the church now housing the museum, which showcases the lives of the communities before they were evicted. Some of the displaced have been able to return to the district since the end of apartheid, though it’s been a slow process overall.
On Friday I see more traces of Cape Malay culture in the city, first stopping by the Bo Kaap neighborhood. In the uniquely complex ethnic makeup of South Africa, there’s always another subgroup and culture to learn about. For well over a century now Bo Kaap has been the center of the mostly Muslim Southeast Asian community, originally brought as slaves by the Dutch, many from Malaysia, and they have gradually created their own small but unique culture here. The neighborhood is famous among tourists and South Africans alike for its very colorful houses just begging to be put on Instagram, which of course has made it a prime target for gentrification recently. Locals have responded with the Hands Off Bo Kaap campaign to keep themselves from being priced out by developers, who are already in striking distance from the high-end city center which Bo Kaap is very close to. The houses first residents, newly freed slaves almost 200 years ago, were originally painted so colorfully in celebration of their new freedom. The old Dutch slave quarters nearby is now also a museum, showing not only the horrors of the Indian Ocean slave trade but also the more uplifting role of music and art in the anti-apartheid movement across the whole country.
Friday evening I go to another synagogue for Shabbat, this time a Modern Orthodox one, and also the oldest congregation in all South Africa: The Gardens Shul, going back to 1841.* I have to show my passport to security guards and go through a metal detector when I enter, and there’s one guy who asks me some routine questions about me being Jewish, like the name of my congregation and rabbi back home, and I mention the summer camp I worked at too. Another congregation member told me that this is just general security, more because it’s a house of worship in a fancy building with lots of valuables, rather than because it’s a Jewish temple; I saw security outside of churches and some mosques as well throughout my trip (though I don’t imagine they get strict questioning about their religious background if they’re a visiting foreigner). The other guy says there isn’t a big problem with anti-Semitic attacks in South Africa today. The sanctuary is cavernous and beautiful, and the service is a pretty standard Orthodox one, some different melodies for prayers and songs like I noticed at the Reform service in Joburg. They’ve got a really nice (men’s) choir to sing with the chazzan, something that apparently is more common in British and European Modern Orthodox congregations.
I would love to go into the history of Jews in South Africa here, as its interesting especially to see where they fit in with the larger complex racial relations between different white, black, and Coloured groups over the years, but I’ll restrain myself—mostly. The overall patterns of immigration is pretty similar to the story of Jews in the United States. Like I mentioned briefly back in Joburg, most of the first South African Jews were Ashkenazi, immigrating directly from Eastern Europe, mostly Lithuania, late in the 19th century around the economic boom during the Gold Rush. So many came that at one point their community in Joburg was referred to as “Jewburg.” Though they weren’t subject to the same harsh early segregation laws like the black Africans and Coloureds, there were still many white leaders who didn’t consider the European Jews to be fully “white,” as we know was also the case in many other countries, and Jews unsurprisingly faced some discrimination early on, especially in public schools. Leading up to World War II many Boers/Afrikaners were pro-Nazi, especially since they still resented the British, and there were cases of Jewish South Africans fighting against Brownshirt rallies in the 1930s. This would foreshadow many Jews would later joining other white South Africans in the anti-apartheid movement and other left-wing causes, though they weren’t a monolith either; like with the rest of the whites, plenty of Jews remained apathetic to or fully supportive of apartheid.
South African Jews peaked at around 120,000, and now about 70,000 remain, as many have moved abroad in the post-apartheid years along with other whites. While self-identity with observance is always a tricky question, most South African Jews seem to identify as some type of Modern Orthodox, with a smaller proportion as some kind of Progressive/Reform, or just plain secular. I get some of this info from a couple people I talk to, but mostly from the very useful museum that the congregation has next door, in the synagogue’s old building. I find the info they have about Zionism later becoming more central to the community sadly ironic, as the state of Israel was one of the last countries, along with the US, that kept selling weapons to the apartheid government while most other countries placed embargoes in the 1980s (yes, I do feel another barb at Israel is relevant here). Still I get to see some great artifacts, as well as old articles documenting Jews combating the pro-Nazi rallies and antisemitism.
My brief first taste of Cape Town ends as I get ready to go to another farm for a week, after which I’ll return to the city to explore more. It’s been cool so far, but I’ve found during my first couple days that it’s hard to get a full reading, and not just because it hasn’t been much time. To really see all sides of life in Cape Town I’d need another local like Steve I had back in Joburg to take me around. Not that the fancy and historic city center is “fake” Cape Town, but it’s only half the story–there’s also the other dozens of neighborhoods and townships beyond. In Joburg, I got to see both some of the wealthier as well as the poorer areas. Here, it’s harder for me to do that. Beyond seeing the sites and museums around the center I can’t really grasp a strong feeling of the culture. I can try some food at restaurants and markets (and it is damn good, from ostrich to Malaysian curry to exotic fruits like baobab to braii barbecue), but the places aren’t the same as the hole-in-the-wall greasy spoons like the Nigerian spot or Paul’s Tavern that Steve showed me in Joburg, though it is amusing to see some self-styled comfort food spots like “New York Pizza Slice” and “New York Bagels.” I can see music performed in some places, sometimes even traditionally-influenced stuff, but it’s more of a neatly packaged experience for tourists, not some impromptu thing with a local audience. There is one night though when I track down some jazz, which has a big scene in South Africa, with an entire genre called Cape jazz.
*I should also mention here that there is another interesting Jewish group (of sorts) in South Africa that’s been around long before the first Lithuanians arrived—the Lemba people. The Lemba are a Bantu African ethnoreligious group in South Africa’s northeastern Limpopo region and Zimbabwe that follow some Jewish as well as Islamic traditions, having lived around there for at least over a thousand years. Their oral tradition teaches that they migrated from ancient Judea, then Yemen before moving down the East African coast over two thousand years ago. There’s a lot of debate between scholars in different fields about their exact history. I was really, really hoping I’d be able to meet some of them toward the end of my trip, but they were too remote for me in Limpopo, finding my own way around there would’ve been tough. Still cool to mention them as a whole other story of Jewish South Africa.
The ranch at Riebeek Kasteel. Saturday 2/9 to Sunday 2/17, Riebeek Kasteel
Saturday morning I take a bus to link up with my next WWOOF host, Greg (white, of British descent). I meet him near the motorcycle shop he runs, not really knowing what to expect. After about ten minutes a guy pulls up on a motorcycle and casually asks, “Ben?” I wonder if I’ll be riding with my backpack on the back of his ride to the farm, but he goes to put it away and picks me up in his car instead, and we drive to his house to pick up his girlfriend, as they’ll spend the weekend at the farm, and Greg picks up some groceries for me on the way. He’s in his late 30s, and started playing around with ag (that’s the hip way of saying agriculture) in the countryside only about six years ago. His mostly makes a living through his motorcycles business. When we get to the farm, a little over an hour from Cape Town, I also see that Greg rents some of the land to a couple of families with country houses. He points out some of the stuff going on around the farm, but I’ll see more tomorrow. For now I meet one of the farmhands working for Greg, a friendly Zimbabwean a couple years younger than me named Blessed, and I settle into his little cabin. There’s Blessed’s room, a bathroom, and the kitchen/main room, where I’ve got a little mattress.
The next day Blessed and Greg show me more of the farm. The surrounding area of Riebeek-Kasteel is beautiful. It’s one of the oldest colonial towns in the country, named after Jan van Riebeek himself, the first leader of the early Dutch colony. 30% of people in the area are black (probably Xhosa) or white, while most are “coloured,” that South African term for mixed race. Most of them speak Afrikaans as well as English. Greg breeds a lot of cattle, and I learn that the brown-white ones are part of the English heifer breed. The herd is currently about fifty strong. During the past couple seasons of drought Greg’s had to run sprinklers for their grazing grass to grow fast enough for them, though of course there are restrictions on how much water he can use. There are some fruit orchards as well, a worm farm for composting fertilizer, and a field where Greg is having Blessed start to plant corn.
I work just four or five hours each day, and I get to help out more with the cattle here than I did near Lesotho. Blessed knows a lot about keeping them healthy, having worked with cattle a lot on his dad’s farm back in Zimbabwe, for which Greg is very thankful. A lot of the time we just keep an eye on them if they’re grazing near gardens, or we herd them out to and back from further fields where they graze during the day. We still haul a huge bale of hay at the end of each afternoon for them all to eat, so they keep fattening up. Blessed takes care of the more complicated stuff like monitoring their nursing behavior and health. Some days we’re joined by Jim and his father Abraham, two locals Greg hires to sometimes help Blessed. They’re both ethnic Coloureds, so they speak Afrikaans as well as English. I get into helping Abraham on his project, repairing the barbed wire fences for the cattle. We scavenge for thin but strong branches to tie to the metal rods hammered into the ground, pulling the wire taut across the whole line of them. Abraham mutters to himself and me as we work, and he takes to calling me “Mister B” whenever he needs me to pull some wire, hold a pole, or pass a tool. “All I can say is, thank God for my life, Mister B,” he’ll say every now and then after lamenting all the suffering around South Africa and the rest of the world.
While I was involved in weeding around large stalks of corn back near Lesotho, here I get to help out with the planting stage. For a couple of afternoons I help Blessed and Jim plough a small field and plant a lot of corn seeds, as well as some gourd. The rest of my time I help Blessed with odd jobs like spreading horse manure fertilizer around the fruit and olive trees (there’s always shit). Blessed does much more than I do since he works full time for Greg, so I become our cabin’s chef for the next week (though Blessed helps me prepare pap once, not too different from boiling rice), using a little hotplate unit to put together meals out of the ingredients and abundant frozen meat that Greg left us. I’m pretty proud of the meatballs I improvise out of ground beef, egg, and onion to go with some pasta. Blessed tries to split the food evenly between us, and I have to go all Jewish mother on him, telling him to take more of it since he’s bigger and has to work more. Sometimes the electricity for the cabin and everyone else in the area cuts out for a few hours though, as the whole country’s power system begins to implement load-shedding in some locations, but I’ll talk more about that towards the end of the trip, as it happens more then.
Blessed and I just chill in our free time, and he shows me a giant cactus tree nearby with the same prickly pear fruits I had at the other farm, and he shows me how to pick them without getting my fingers pricked (in Shona he calls them chinana). He tells me more about how he came Zimbabwe a year ago, to find more work since the Zimbabwean economy is still in the crapper. Just like Ahmed and Ishmael who helped drive me around on my first day in Joburg, Blessed also hopes to go back as soon as things get better back home. He too got mugged by tsotsis (slang for thieves) when he crossed the border on his way to Joburg. He was then accused by police in Joburg of being a tsotsi himself based on his appearance (this part of the story I didn’t fully catch with Blessed’s English; his first language is Shona), but he was able to stay clear. From Joburg he made his way to Cape Town to meet his uncle, who works at Greg’s motorcycle store, before he put his farm skills to work for Greg.
Jim’s English is fluent, and he likes asking me a lot about life back in the US. “And how is it over on your side?” he’ll ask, always referring to the Americas as the “other side” of the ocean. But there’s something I started to realize when I would talk with some of the guys on the farm near Lesotho, and I realize it more and more when I talk to Jim–I don’t actually know how most people in the US live. Sure I know the basics about American society and culture, how the economy overall is doing, but it’s hard for me to answer a lot of Jim’s questions because I’m just one out of over 300 million Americans, with my own particular background and experiences. I can tell him that I grew up in a much more privileged background than most, but there are still lots who have it better than me, and even more who have it harder than me. I can tell him the average costs of living and incomes, but I make sure to say that it’s also very different depending on where someone is living, which state, urban or rural, access to education, and all that. And from now on, whenever I ask anyone in a country I’m visiting about what life is like, I’ll make sure to say that I understand their particular experience doesn’t always apply to everyone else in that country. I do as good of a job as I can, and Jim is still pretty shocked that many Americans can make around $40,000 a year in urban areas, which converts to over half a million South African rands, though I tell him that the rising costs of living in those areas makes it really hard to live securely, especially for raising a family.
All in all there’s not as much for me to report on here like at the farm near Lesotho, but it was a nice productive as well as relaxing week among the flora and the fauna, and that’s actually it for my time on farms for South Africa—I ended up squeezing most of it into the first half of this trip.
Cape Town, take 2. Monday 2/18 to Monday 2/25, Cape Town (//Hui !Gaeb), and Cape Point
Monday I say goodbye to Blessed, and Jim gives me a ride to the Riebeek Kasteel train station, and I head back into the city. For the rest of the day I just get to know people around my new hostel. Tuesday I meet a guy named Bram who’s been doing a cool work exchange thing on a boat for almost five months with a bunch of other volunteers, and they’re currently making port for a few days, taking a break from sleeping below deck. Bram invites me along for a walk to the docks to see the vessel, the Picton Castle, and introduces me to the some of the old timer American sailors in charge of the voyage, and I end up getting shanghaied into helping them stitch together new sails for a couple hours. I’m down for the experience, as long as they don’t give me too much responsibility. I gather around the heavy white material with several other crewmembers, mostly young first-timers like Bram, and help carefully feed it through the heavy-duty sewing machine. I get rewarded with a tour of the boat and some lunch. It was built as a British fishing ship in 1928, and served as a minesweeper in World War II around Norway. These days it’s being used for long distance sail-training voyages like these.
It’d be cool to join the crew of the Picton Castle then and there and just sail away with them, but I’ve still got a lot of South Africa to see, and all my other trips planned after this one. Maybe one day I’ll get to do an adventure by sea. Bram and I hang around the port a bit more before heading back to the hostel. I continue to listen to other experienced travelers around the hostel. There’s one guy from Oregon who had been to Mozambique, where I had wanted to go for a week at the end of my trip here, but I soon learn it’s probably not worth it—while he says he had an interesting time in Maputo, the capital, there’s really not much to do, and there’s not much transportation for tourists to easily get to the more remote places worth seeing. He also tells me how the police are very corrupt, especially at the border, and regularly take travelers’ passports for no good reason and refuse to give them back until given a bribe.
A few other guests share their own stories about getting robbed; one tells me how some guys took his bag in a remote part of town, but they tried to tell him to calm down as they did it, that they weren’t going to hurt him. I guess Curly, who gave me my hat back after robbing me last month, wasn’t the only polite one. I also hear some nice stories about locals helping travelers before disaster strikes. Some other travelers who wandered into downtown Joburg like I did were actually stopped by locals who told them that it wasn’t a good idea for them to go there by themselves, and the local would then actually guide them to a safer street, sometimes even take them for a meal with their family (of course in my case, locals helped me after the fact). I also kind of experienced this once too–when a man came up to me in Cape Town pretty aggressively asking for money, two other (black African) men passing by asked me if I needed their help. The beggar disappeared quickly, and I thanked them.
I also meet Alex at this hostel, another member of the tribe from the US, and we hit it off. He and Katrien, a Belgian working in the hostel, are looking for people to climb Table Mountain with the next day. Wednesday morning we’re joined by a guy from Chicago and a French girl, and we head to the foot of the huge mesa. It’s a pretty steep climb up due to the mountain’s shape, with chain ladders in some higher parts. We get progressively more impressive views the higher we get, and after we reach the top the clouds soon clear and we take in the grand look around Cape Town, the different beach areas, the townships stretching far out, the other hills rising up from the mostly flat land, and even Robben Island through the fog out in the distance. Once you’re up top you realize it’s not actually all that flat. The climb back down is more dangerous, as it’s easy to slip on the smooth stone steps and tumble, but we all make it back down in the afternoon unharmed and get lunch.
I was able to find another Couchsurfing host, Bob, for the next few days, so that night I take a Taxify to some (walled) apartment complexes) further out of the city center. Bob’s originally from Uganda, now working here as a programmer. He’s very welcoming, though as we get to talking about our respective countries and cultures, he starts saying some interesting stuff that’s a bit odd for me to hear, especially about South African women. He goes off about how they have no respect, that you can’t trust them, and I just listen with interest. As Bob winds down his rant, he then nonchalantly asks me if I want him to help find me an African girlfriend. Not really sure what he’s going for, I just politely say that with me travelling and all that and not looking to move here right now, it sounds nice but probably isn’t the best idea. He continues his ranting about women from other parts of the world, and it doesn’t seem to really be racial as much as it is cultural and based on very anecdotal personal experiences—he says that you can’t trust European girls either, since he once met a couple of them from France or Germany while travelling, got their numbers and texted them later but they never responded, even though he said with outrage that they had been getting along. But Bob says he’s had more success with the few American girls he’s met, that they were more responsive. He then gets around to asking me if I know any women back home who’d want to marry an African husband, and I just say I’m sure they’d be open to it but they’d want to meet him first and everything, date, get to know each other and all that. I vaguely try to say that I’m sure there are European women out there too who aren’t flakey, that he only met two, and that not all American women are perfect, but I just met this guy and he’s hosting me and everything, so I don’t push too hard. He’s probably not a fan of the Guess Who song. Well, other than that though he’s a good host, and his place is nice.
Thursday I take a bus into town during the day and hit up a couple of the art museums with the crew from the hostel again, before going back in the evening to catch up with Bob at his place and watching some soccer (football, as they call it literally everywhere else in the world). Friday I go on a tour to see what the Cape Peninsula has to offer beyond the city. The guide/driver is Wilson, a very experienced tour guide who speaks at least six languages from what I remember; he’s originally from Zimbabwe. There are 8 of us in the kombi, mostly Americans and some Brits. We drive through some beach towns along the many cliffs and bays, mostly old colonial British sites, though Wilson also takes us past one of the impoverished townships on the outskirts of the city. He points out a cluster of beachfront mansions just a couple miles away, some of the most expensive in the whole country. We also stop off at an isolated artists’ studio with a huge outdoor gallery of Shona springstone sculptures, like the Zimbabwean ones I saw displayed in the Atlanta airport. The main attraction though is the tip of the peninsula, the scenic Cape Point and the more famous Cape of Good Hope, though it’s the higher Cape Point that actually marks the point furthest southwest on the whole African continent. It was here that Portuguese explorer Bartolomeu Dias rounded 500 years ago as Europeans searched for a route to trade in India, though there’s some evidence that ancient Greeks and Phoenicians did it over 2,000 years ago. Wilson tells us that this is also not the point where the Atlantic and Indian oceans meet—that’s actually at another cape over a hundred miles further east.
We also have to be careful not to have any food out while walking around here, as the baboons have no chill and are known to grab people’s food and bags right out of their hands, sometimes injuring people in the process. It’s fun to watch them strut around though like they own the place. The less dangerous wildlife we see around the rest of the peninsula includes farmed ostriches, gangs of seals & sea lions basking on rocks, and of course the Boulders Beach penguin colony—yes, apparently some penguins don’t need to be in cold regions. There are over two thousand of these little guys living the life here, and in one part you can just lie on the beach next to them. Though the African penguin species (also known as jackass penguins for their donkey-like sound) is endangered, this colony was booming so much in the 90s that they were running around onto people’s lawns in the nearby town and tearing up plants, so they had to be sectioned off here. I’m not one to brag about being in tropical places while my friends and family are back home in the winter, but it is nice thinking I’m here and not in the middle of a New England winter, or worse the polar vortex in the Midwest where a friend posted a video of throwing water up in the air outside and watching it instantly turn to ice before hitting the ground. Our last stop of the day is the town of Muizenberg, with rows of multicolored shacks along the beach, almost as if the designers knew years ago that Instagram was going to be a thing one day. The south Atlantic water here is pretty cold though.
Saturday I finally get ready to head out to Robben Island, the prison where Nelson Mandela and other political prisoners were held, and where Joe Biden claims he was trying to visit before getting arrested in Soweto, over 800 miles away. OK, Joe. I also get to reunite and have lunch with Rachel, the French woman who was on the Nassers’ farm in Palestine! She’s spent the last couple months going down through Kenya and Rwanda continuing to meet with people involved in situations of conflict resolutions, meeting people involved in the reconciliation process after the Rwandan genocide. She just came to South Africa, since there’s obviously plenty to throw herself into down here; she just met with Gandhi’s granddaughter in Durban (of course).
I take a large boat filled with over a hundred other tourists out to the island. The prison was one of the main centers for holding anti-apartheid leaders like Mandela starting in the 1960s. It had been used in the British and Dutch colonial days for political prisoners resisting colonization as well. The tours are led by former political prisoners from the apartheid days, which adds a sense of poetic justice. My group’s guide, Ntando Mbatha, was imprisoned for five years in the late ’80s after protesting apartheid’s education policies as a student. He tells us that the prison guards became slightly less repressive over those years, as beyond the prison the regime had begun to gradually move towards ending apartheid. Still it was hard of course, and Ntando joined a hunger strike at one point; he shows where he slept on the floor some nights when he didn’t have the energy to get into his bed. He and the younger inmates also took inspiration from the older ones more experienced at surviving on the island. Ntando takes us through the complex’s main areas, including the cell Mandela was in for 18 years, and the garden that he and other prisoners tended to in the courtyard.
Saturday night I thank and say goodbye to Bob, planning to head back to the hostel for my final couple days in the city, but the good old one is full, so I stay one night in a different one in the more lively Sea Point district. It’s a weird hostel, almost laid out like a nice hotel in the lobby and the hallways, except the rooms have several bunk beds. There’s two Germans in my room, getting ready for a night out, one around my age and the other older in his 50s, I get the impression they’re a father and son. I’m minding my own business going through my bag and getting settled when the son calls over and introduces himself, I forgot his name, wasn’t really paying attention. He had this wild look on his face, his eyes darting all over the place. “I’m Ben,” I say briskly, not trying to keep any conversation over. He goes on to tell me that the two of them are getting ready to go out with some local girls downstairs. “Prostitutes,” his father puts in a thick German accent, rather matter-of-factly, from behind him. “Yeah…they’re white, of course,” the son adds. “Oh,” I say blankly, nodding slowly at them for a moment before returning to my business. They spray on deodorant and rush out. I go to grab some dinner and chill out on the roof, and when I come back two hours later, the Germans are back in bed and asleep. Guess they didn’t last too long.
In the morning I’m relieved to get out of this odd room, and I go back to the Backpackers hostel. I take most of Sunday easy, catching up with some of the folks still there, and planning some of my next few days in Durban. Later I take a small hike up Signal Hill, a popular spot for sunset, and for good reason—it’s packed with people picnicking, some playing instruments. I befriend a nice older German couple next to me, and they share some of their wine as well as an Uber back down into the center. They didn’t mention anything about meeting prostitutes later, though. Anyway, the next day I get a hearty lunch from the steamy Eastern Food Bazaar, say goodbye to the hostel, say farewell to Cape Town, and go to the bus station.
There’s an older white man in line who notices me with my giant backpack, and we chat a bit, and he learns I’m a foreigner. “But how do you travel around here?” he asks me. I mention that I’ve just been taking buses between cities, sometimes trains. He looks around at the other people waiting, mostly black or Coloured, and he mutters, “No, I mean with all the black people, it is very dangerous….” I could tell him about getting mugged my first day. Of course it’s a fact that it’s more dangerous here than in other African countries. I could also tell him about the people who have welcomed and helped me since I arrived, Ahmed and Ishmael, Steve, the guys on the farm near Lesotho, the Mashologus, Blessed, all the helpful taxify drivers I’ve had. I just vaguely tell him that I’ve managed, and that I’ve found more people to be friendly to me, and turn away. We all get on the double-decker and begin the twenty-two hour ride to Durban.