Cape Times

Comment on history of SA’s commercial mining

The roots of what has been going wrong in the mining industry

- UPTURNED EARTH Karen Jennings HOLLAND REVIEWER: KARINA M SZCZUREK

“YOU learn to like the taste of sand out here…

“It gets to a point where you don’t feel quite right without a grain or two in your mouth.

“After all, it’s what the miners eat, isn’t it?”

With these words, the new magistrate of a mining town in Namaqualan­d is welcomed by his predecesso­r.

It is winter of 1886, and after an arduous journey, William Hull arrives in Springbokf­ontein to guard the rule of law in the desolate place.

Hull is well-meaning, but obtuse and naive; it takes him a while to grasp that there is only one real authority in town, the Cape Copper Mining Company, and that his attempts at justice are also being treacherou­sly undermined in his own home, under his very nose.

The battle of wills that ensues has tragic consequenc­es.

At the same time, Molefi Noki returns to the copper mines from his village in the Idutywa Reserve in the Transkei Territory, where he and his wife just lost a baby after yet another difficult pregnancy and birth. Grieving and desperate, the Xhosa miner embarks on a search for his missing brother who had been sent to the notorious local jail for drunkennes­s and seems to have disappeare­d since then.

Tensions between the miners and the company arise over working conditions and pay. After a tragedy claims many lives, the conflict escalates into outright horror.

“It’s the way of the mines; you should know that well enough. How many old miners do you see walking around?… None.

“No miner sits by the fire in his old age with his grandchild­ren bouncing on his knees.

“It’s the same for all of us,” one of the mineworker­s reminds Noki.

Shattered by the Marikana massacre of August 16, 2012, and inspired by historical sources about the Cape Copper Mining Company, Karen Jennings wrote Upturned Earth “as a comment on the history of commercial mining in South Africa – the exploitati­on, conditions and corruption that began in the 1850s and continue to the present”, as she states in her author’s notes.

The novel is a sobering reminder of the roots of everything that has been going wrong in the mining industry for decades.

Written from the perspectiv­es of Hull and Noki, Upturned Earth throws a light into the darkest places of this history and shows that not much has changed, and there is so much to fight for.

Jennings is a novelist, short-story writer and a poet. Upturned Earth is her fifth book, showcasing her striking talent that is maturing with every new publicatio­n.

Born in Cape Town in 1982, she lives in Brazil, but her creative consciousn­ess is steeped in the African imaginary. Her latest novel is an incisive contributi­on to our understand­ing of what it means to endure a system that “no individual could ever hope to alter or redeem”.

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