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Poems from Other Cultures and Traditions.

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Title: Poems from Other Cultures and Traditions.


1
Poems from Other Cultures and Traditions.
'Nothing's Changed.'
Tatamkhulu Afrika.
2
This poem is centred in South Africa.
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From the seventeenth century many Dutch and
English people emigrated to South Africa, a
country rich in gold and other precious
minerals. The white population discriminated
against the black Africans from the first and
gradually took more and more control. This
eventually led to the establishment of Apartheid
in 1919
5
Under Apartheid, Africans classified as black
could not vote access the same level of
education move freely from one town to another
choose where they lived mix with white
people.
6
With time, organised groups of black Africans
began to protest against Apartheid. The Soweto
Uprising in 1976 was one of many. It left
hundreds dead. However, the Soweto uprising did
perhaps mark a turning point in South Africas
history as opposition to Apartheid
strengthened internationally. Many countries
stopped trading with South Africa and this put
real pressure on the government.
7
Hector Peterson aged thirteen dying after
being hit by a police officers bullet.
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The protests continued and world pressure led to
the release of Nelson Mandela, a black
activist, who had been imprisoned for twenty
seven years. Opposition from around the world,
combined with changes in the South African
economy, brought apartheid to an end and black
Africans received the vote in 1994.
Nelson Mandela became the first black president
of South Africa.
13
Nelson Mandela.
14
This is an autobiographical poem. Tatamkhulu
Afrika (1920-2002) lived in Cape Town's District
6, which was then a thriving mixed-race
inner-city community. People of all colours and
beliefs lived together peacefully, and Afrika
said he felt 'at home' there. In the 1960s, as
part of its policy of apartheid the government
declared District 6 a 'whites-only' area, and
began to evacuate the population. Over a period
of years, the entire area was razed to the
ground. Most of it has never been built on. The
poem was written just after the official end of
apartheid. It was a time of hope - Nelson Mandela
had recently been released from prison, and the
ANC was about to form the government of South
Africa. Tatamkhulu Afrika's life story is
complicated, but knowing something about it will
help you to understand the feelings expressed in
this poem.
15
Tatamkhulu Afrika's life Tatamkhulu Afrika was
brought up in Cape Town, South Africa, as a white
South African. When he was a teenager, he found
out that he was actually Egyptian-born - the
child of an Arab father and a Turkish mother. The
South African government began to classify every
citizen by colour - white, black and coloured.
Afrika turned down the chance to be classed as
white, and chose instead to become a Muslim and
be classified as coloured.
16
In 1984, the poet joined the ANC (the African
National Congress - the organisation leading the
struggle against apartheid). Arrested in 1987 for
terrorism, he was banned from writing or speaking
in public for five years. At this point, he
adopted the name - Tatamkhulu Afrika - which had
previously been his ANC code name. This enabled
him to carry on writing, despite the ban. Of his
own sense of identity, the poet said "I am
completely African. I am a citizen of Africa I'm
a son of Africa - that is my culture. I know I
write poems that sound European, because I was
brought up in school to do that, but, if you look
at my poems carefully, you will find that all of
them, I think, have an African flavour."
17
The poet returns to the wasteland that was once
his home, and relives the anger he felt when the
area was first destroyed. He sees a new
restaurant expensive, stylish, exclusive, with a
guard at the gatepost. He thinks about the
poverty around it, especially the working man's
café nearby, where people eat without plates from
a plastic tabletop. This makes him reflect that
despite the changing political situation, there
are still huge inequalities between blacks and
whites. Even though South Africa is supposed to
have changed, he knows the new restaurant is
really 'whites-only'. He feels that nothing has
really changed. The deep anger he feels makes him
want to destroy the restaurant - to smash the
glass with a stone, or a bomb.
18
Language The whole poem is written in the present
tense. Although he is recalling a past
experience, it is as if the poet is re-living the
experience as he writes. This is one of the
things that makes this poem vivid to read, and
easy to identify with. The viewpoint in the poem
is carefully established. The first stanza, for
example, puts us 'in the poet's shoes'. It is as
if we are walking with the poet across the rough
ground. As the poem develops, it is easy to
imagine where we are walking or standing, and
what we see I press my nose to the clear
panes
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