At Sandringham I got to know this one kid, Teddy. Funny guy, charming as hell. My mom used to call him Bugs Bunny; he had a cheeky smile with two big teeth that stuck out the front of his mouth. Teddy and I got along like a house on fire, one of those friends where you start hanging out and from that day forward youโre never apart. We were both naughty as shit, too. With Teddy, Iโd finally met someone who made me feel normal. I was the terror in my family. He was the terror in his family. When you put us together it was mayhem. Walking home from school weโd throw rocks through windows, just to see them shatter, and then weโd run away. We got detention together all the time. The teachers, the pupils, the principal, everyone at school knew: Teddy and Trevor, thick as thieves.
Teddyโs mom worked as a domestic for a family in Linksfield, a wealthy suburb near school. Linksfield was a long walk from my house, nearly forty minutes, but still doable. Walking around was pretty much all I did back then, anyway. I couldnโt afford to do anything else, and I couldnโt afford to get around any other way. If you liked walking, you were my friend. Teddy and I walked all over Johannesburg together. Iโd walk to Teddyโs house and weโd hang out there. Then weโd walk back to my house and hang out there. Weโd walk from my house down to the city center, which was like a three-hour hike, just to hang out, and then weโd walk all the way back.
Friday and Saturday nights weโd walk to the mall and hang out. The Balfour Park Shopping Mall was a few blocks from my house. Itโs not a big
mall, but it has everythingโan arcade, a cinema, restaurants, South Africaโs version of Target, South Africaโs version of the Gap. Then, once we were at the mall, since we never had any money to shop or watch movies or buy food, weโd just wander around inside.
One night we were at the mall and most of the shops were closed, but the cinema was still showing movies so the building was still open. There was this stationery shop that sold greeting cards and magazines, and it didnโt have a door, so when it closed at night there was only a metal gate, like a trellis, that was pulled across the entrance and padlocked. Walking past this shop, Teddy and I realized that if we put our arms through the trellis we could reach this rack of chocolates just inside. And these werenโt just any chocolatesโthey were alcohol-filled chocolates. I loved alcohol. Loved loved loved it. My whole life Iโd steal sips of grown-upsโ drinks whenever I could.
We reached in, grabbed a few, drank the liquor inside, and then gobbled down the chocolates. Weโd hit the jackpot. We started going back again and again to steal more. Weโd wait for the shops to start to close, then weโd go and sit against the gate, acting like we were just hanging out. Weโd check to make sure the coast was clear, and then one of us would reach in, grab a chocolate, and drink the whiskey. Reach in, grab a chocolate, drink the rum. Reach in, grab a chocolate, drink the brandy. We did this every weekend for at least a month, having the best time. Then we pushed our luck too far.
It was a Saturday night. We were hanging out at the entrance to the stationery shop, leaning up against the gate. I reached in to grab a chocolate, and at that exact moment a mall cop came around the corner and saw me with my arm in up to my shoulder. I brought my hand out with a bunch of chocolates in it. It was almost like a movie. I saw him. He saw me. His eyes went wide. I tried to walk away, acting natural. Then he shouted out, โHey! Stop!โ
And the chase was on. We bolted, heading for the doors. I knew if a guard cut us off at the exit weโd be trapped, so we were hauling ass as fast as we could. We cleared the exit. The second we hit the parking lot, mall cops were coming at us from every direction, a dozen of them at least. I was running with my head down. These guards knew me. I was in that mall all
the time. The guards knew my mom, too. She did her banking at that mall. If they even caught a glimpse of who I was, I was dead.
We ran straight across the parking lot, ducking and weaving between parked cars, the guards right behind us, yelling. We made it to the petrol station out at the road, ran through there, and hooked left up the main road. They chased and chased and we ran and ran, and it wasย awesome. The risk of getting caught was half the fun of being naughty, and now the chase was on. I was loving it. I was shitting myself, but also loving it. This was my turf. This was my neighborhood. You couldnโt catch me in my neighborhood. I knew every alley and every street, every back wall to climb over, every fence with a gap big enough to slip through. I knew every shortcut you could possibly imagine. As a kid, wherever I went, whatever building I was in, I was always plotting my escape. You know, in case shit went down. In reality I was a nerdy kid with almost no friends, but in my mind I was an important and dangerous man who needed to know where every camera was and where all the exit points were.
I knew we couldnโt run forever. We needed a plan. As Teddy and I booked past the fire station there was a road off to the left, a dead end that ran into a metal fence. I knew that there was a hole in the fence to squeeze through and on the far side was an empty field behind the mall that took you back to the main road and back to my house. A grown-up couldnโt fit through the hole, but a kid could. All my years of imagining the life of a secret agent for myself finally paid off. Now that I needed an escape, I had one.
โTeddy, this way!โ I yelled. โNo, itโs a dead end!โ
โWe can get through! Follow me!โ
He didnโt. I turned and ran into the dead end. Teddy broke the other way. Half the mall cops followed him, half followed me. I got to the fence and knew exactly how to squirm through. Head, then shoulder, one leg, then twist, then the other legโdone. I was through. The guards hit the fence behind me and couldnโt follow. I ran across the field to a fence on the far side, popped through there, and then I was right on the road, three blocks from my house. I slipped my hands into my pockets and casually walked home, another harmless pedestrian out for a stroll.
Once I got back to my house I waited for Teddy. He didnโt show up. I waited thirty minutes, forty minutes, an hour. No Teddy.
Fuck.
I ran to Teddyโs house in Linksfield. No Teddy. Monday morning I went to school. Still no Teddy.
Fuck.
Now I was worried. After school I went home and checked at my house again, nothing. Teddyโs house again, nothing. Then I ran back home.
An hour later Teddyโs parents showed up. My mom greeted them at the door.
โTeddyโs been arrested for shoplifting,โ they said.
Fuuuck.
I eavesdropped on their whole conversation from the other room. From the start my mom was certain I was involved.
โWell, where was Trevor?โ she asked.
โTeddy said he wasnโt with Trevor,โ they said.
My mom was skeptical. โHmm. Are youย sureย Trevor wasnโt involved?โ
โNo, apparently not. The cops said there was another kid, but he got away.โ
โSo itย wasย Trevor.โ
โNo, we asked Teddy, and he said it wasnโt Trevor. He said it was some other kid.โ
โHuhโฆokay.โ My mom called me in. โDo you know about this thing?โ
โWhat thing?โ
โTeddy was caught shoplifting.โ
โWhhaaat?โย I played dumb. โNoooo. Thatโs crazy. I canโt believe it.
Teddy?ย No.โ
โWhere were you?โ my mom asked. โI was at home.โ
โBut youโre always with Teddy.โ
I shrugged. โNot on this occasion, I suppose.โ
For a moment my mom thought sheโd caught me red-handed, but Teddyโd given me a solid alibi. I went back to my room, thinking I was in the clear.
โ
The next day I was in class and my name was called over the PA system. โTrevor Noah, report to the principalโs office.โ All the kids were like, โOoooohhh.โ The announcements could be heard in every classroom, so now, collectively, the whole school knew I was in trouble. I got up and walked to the office and waited anxiously on an uncomfortable wooden bench outside the door.
Finally the principal, Mr. Friedman, walked out. โTrevor, come in.โ Waiting inside his office was the head of mall security, two uniformed police officers, and my and Teddyโs homeroom teacher, Mrs. Vorster. A roomful of silent, stone-faced white authority figures stood over me, the guilty young black man. My heart was pounding. I took a seat.
โTrevor, I donโt know if you know this,โ Mr. Friedman said, โbut Teddy was arrested the other day.โ
โWhat?โย I played the whole thing again. โTeddy? Oh, no. What for?โ โFor shoplifting. Heโs been expelled, and he wonโt be coming back to
school. We know there was another boy involved, and these officers are
going around to the schools in the area to investigate. We called you here because Mrs. Vorster tells us youโre Teddyโs best friend, and we want to know: Do you know anything about this?โ
I shook my head. โNo, I donโt know anything.โ โDo you know who Teddy was with?โ
โNo.โ
โOkay.โ He stood up and walked over to a television in the corner of the room. โTrevor, the police have video footage of the whole thing. Weโd like you to take a look at it.โ
Fuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuck.
My heart was pounding in my chest.ย Well, life, itโs been fun,ย I thought.
Iโm going to get expelled. Iโm going to go to jail. This is it.
Mr. Friedman pressed Play on the VCR. The tape started. It was grainy, black-and-white security-camera footage, but you could see what was happening plain as day. They even had it from multiple angles: Me and Teddy reaching through the gate. Me and Teddy racing for the door. They had the whole thing. After a few seconds, Mr. Friedman reached up and paused it with me, from a few meters out, freeze-framed in the middle of the screen. In my mind, this was when he was going to turn to me and say, โNow would you like to confess?โ He didnโt.
โTrevor,โ he said, โdo you know of any white kids that Teddy hangs out with?โ
I nearly shat myself.ย โWhat?!โ
I looked at the screen and I realized: Teddy was dark. I am light; I have olive skin. But the camera canโt expose for light and dark at the same time. So when you put me on a black-and-white screen next to a black person, the camera doesnโt know what to do. If the camera has to pick, it picks me as white. My color gets blown out. In this video, there was a black person and a white person. But still: It was me. The picture wasnโt great, and my facial features were a bit blurry, but if you looked closely: It was me. I was Teddyโs best friend. I was Teddyโs only friend. I was theย single most likely accomplice. You had to at leastย suspectย that it was me. They didnโt. They grilled me for a good ten minutes, but only because they were so sure that I had to know who this white kid was.
โTrevor, youโre Teddyโs best friend. Tell us the truth. Who is this kid?โ โI donโt know.โ
โYou donโt recognize him at all?โ โNo.โ
โTeddy never mentioned him to you?โ โNever.โ
At a certain point Mrs. Vorster just started running through a list of all the white kids she thought it could be.
โIs it David?โ
โNo.โ
โRian?โ
โNo.โ
โFrederik?โ โNo.โ
I kept waiting for it to be a trick, for them to turn and say, โItโsย you!โ They didnโt. At a certain point, I felt so invisible I almost wanted to take credit. I wanted to jump up and point at the TV and say, โAre you people blind?! Thatโs me! Can you not see that thatโs me?!โ But of course I didnโt. And they couldnโt. These people had been so fucked by their own construct of race that they could not see that the white person they were looking for was sitting right in front of them.
Eventually they sent me back to class. I spent the rest of the day and the next couple of weeks waiting for the other shoe to drop, waiting for my mom to get the call. โWeโve got him! We figured it out!โ But the call never came.
South Africa has eleven official languages. After democracy came, people said, โOkay, how do we create order without having different groups feel like theyโve been left out of power again?โ English is the international language and the language of money and of the media, so we had to keep that. Most people were forced to learn at least some Afrikaans, so itโs useful to keep that, too. Plus we didnโt want the white minority to feel ostracized in the new South Africa, or else theyโd take all their money and leave.
Of the African languages, Zulu has the largest number of native speakers, but we couldnโt keep that without also having Xhosa and Tswana and Ndebele. Then thereโs Swazi, Tsonga, Venda, Sotho, and Pedi. We tried to keep all the major groups happy, so the next thing we knew weโd made eleven languages official languages. And those are just the languages big enough to demand recognition; there are dozens more.
Itโs the Tower of Babel in South Africa. Every single day. Every day you see people completely lost, trying to have conversations and having no idea what the other person is saying. Zulu and Tswana are fairly common. Tsonga and Pedi are pretty fringe. The more common your tongue, the less likely you are to learn others. The more fringe, the more likely you are to pick up two or three. In the cities most people speak at least some English and usually a bit of Afrikaans, enough to get around. Youโll be at a party with a dozen people where bits of conversation are flying by in two or three different languages. Youโll miss part of it, someone might translate on the fly to give you the gist, you pick up the rest from the context, and you just figure it out. The crazy thing is that, somehow, it works. Society functions. Except when it doesnโt.