Sunday Times

A Long Walk from Westbury to Sandton

The author says she wants to inspire with her journey from poverty to prosperity, writes

- Anna Stroud

Jesmane Boggenpoel’s debut My Blood Divides and Unites explores what it means to be classified “Coloured” in SA. At the same time, her personal story of grappling with poverty and identity becomes a wider story about racial oppression. The author deploys gripping testimonie­s from a diverse group of people to show that whether you live in SA, Rwanda, Nepal, the US or elsewhere, race and reconcilia­tion remain universal issues we need to speak about and solve.

Born in Westbury in Johannesbu­rg in 1972, Boggenpoel is a chartered accountant with a master’s degree from Harvard, a World Economic Forum Global Young Leader and a leading business executive.

But the journey didn’t leave her unscathed.

She writes poignantly about her father, a mine constructi­on carpenter who had suffered a mental breakdown when she was a child.

“I wasn’t angry about apartheid when I was young. Instead, I was angry at Daddy because I felt he didn’t provide for us properly and that we were terribly poor as a result,” she writes. Her father had been a bright and eager to learn child, but little by little, the cruelty of apartheid chiselled that away. Boggenpoel says

that when she decided to write My Blood Divides and Unites, “It was the first time I had spoken to my father about his story. I finally understood his journey.”

Boggenpoel’s story from poverty to prosperity drives her to break the chains of economic oppression for others. She advocates for investing in technology to improve areas like education, water, health and agricultur­e. “We should come up with ideas that solve problems for poor people,” she says.

The author wants her story of coming from a place of drugs and gangsteris­m to inspire people — to show that you are more than your environmen­t. She also seeks to demonstrat­e the devastatin­g impact of apartheid to an internatio­nal audience. Finally, she hopes to share her message of unity across the world which remains divided along racial and cultural lines.

Can we reconcile our difference­s and heal from our shared past? “It starts with small steps,” she says, “and having conversati­ons with people viewed as ‘other’ and understand­ing their story.” For her, restoratio­n is about respect, empathy and acknowledg­ing past wrongs. @annawriter_

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 ??  ?? My Blood Divides and Unites ★★★★ Jesmane Boggenpoel, Porcupine Press, R265
My Blood Divides and Unites ★★★★ Jesmane Boggenpoel, Porcupine Press, R265

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