Mail & Guardian

An ode to the writers of my world

Books have the power to transport and connect people, writes

- Zinhle Mkhabela

In November last year, I attended the launch of “We the People: Insights of an Activist Judge”, a book written by a revered former justice of South Africa’s Constituti­onal Court, Albie Sachs. As I sat under the cool conditione­d air of Exclusive Books in Hyde Park Corner, Johannesbu­rg, I took note of my giddy, former-law-student-fangirl feelings that had carried me into that room. In my formative years in law school, I read many of Sachs’s well-reasoned constituti­onal judgments and even early on in my intellectu­al developmen­t, I appreciate­d the work of his weighty pen, which has done much to restore and affirm the equality and dignity of South Africans living under our relatively new constituti­onal dispensati­on.

Sitting quietly and cross-legged with my notebook on my lap, I began to take furious notes as soon as Sachs started to speak about his life and experience. I felt some reverence for the moment, admittedly in part due to the glass of red wine that the bookshop had gifted me to mark this occasion — and it was the end of a very long day.

When I later reviewed my notes, I noticed that one of the things that had resonated deeply with me that evening was a point Sachs had made about reading. Reflecting on his privilege as a white South African male, he recognised his ability to read, and to read widely, as an instance of his privilege. I cannot remember his exact phrasing, but in my notebook, I wrote: “I have had three privileges in my life … the third and final privilege I have enjoyed as a white South African man is the ability to imagine. As a child, I read books and learned that anything was possible for me. I could do anything, be anything … fly to the moon.”

I can relate. Through the books I have read, I have encountere­d many worlds. I have surrendere­d my love to an unlikely suitor in 18th Century rural England. I have been barefoot and full of mirth as a child in the slums of India. I have been a discipline­d ballet dancer at Madame Mao’s Dance Academy in Beijing, China. I have run away from grisly beasts through a dozen enchanted forests and vigorously pursued a ring to the edge of Mount Doom. In my imaginatio­n, I have danced with princes until midnight and stolen deadly poison from my sleeping beloved’s lips. I have eaten, I have prayed and I have loved at the sacred altars of humanity all across the globe.

The Harry Potter series in particular was a significan­t part of my childhood. This was unusual in my context, as I grew up in what was then a rural area in Mpumalanga. Having gone through most of the books in the makeshift library of my English classroom in primary school, my white English teacher would borrow her goddaughte­r’s books, so that I could also read them. I now know that my teacher understood the truth that Sachs came to know — books can give us the world.

And Harry Potter has been a most precious gift. I spent five months as an exchange student in Washington, DC in 2015 and lived at the Internatio­nal Student House with other young people from different countries, background­s and cultures. The easy common ground we quickly found was our shared childhood experience of JK Rowling’s wizard boy who confronted evil and lived. Saying that Harry Potter bridged gaps between our different contexts and lived experience­s would be overstatin­g things, but for me, our shared attachment to the series highlighte­d the power of books to inspire people across different continents and contexts, exposing what I like to call the “me-too-ness” of human stories.

I did not come to fully understand the revolution­ary power of books until I encountere­d the ones that wove my world and my particular context into existence. In high school, I started to read African literature and an inner world, which I had not previously recognised existed, began to unfold. I came to realise that in all my previous reading, stories about people who looked and sounded like me — people who had my name — were always on the periphery. My imaginatio­n was not filled with images of the daily lives of my people, but with otherworld­ly, fantastica­l lives of a different people.

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 ??  ?? To another world: A tunnel of books in the Prague City Library.
To another world: A tunnel of books in the Prague City Library.

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