best counter
Search
Report & Feedback

Chapter no 6 – โ€Œโ€Œโ€Œโ€Œโ€Œโ€ŒLOOPHOLESโ€Œ

Born a Crime: Stories From a South African Childhood

My mother used to tell me, โ€œI chose to have you because I wanted something to love and something that would love me unconditionally in returnโ€”and then I gave birth to the most selfish piece of shit on earth and all it ever did was cry and eat and shit and say, โ€˜Me, me, me, me me.โ€™ โ€

My mom thought having a child was going to be like having a partner, but every child is born the center of its own universe, incapable of understanding the world beyond its own wants and needs, and I was no different. I was a voracious kid. I consumed boxes of books and wanted more, more, more. I ate like a pig. The way I ate I should have been obese. At a certain point the family thought I had worms. Whenever I went to my cousinsโ€™ house for the holidays, my mom would drop me off with a bag of tomatoes, onions, and potatoes and a large sack of cornmeal. That was her way of preempting any complaints about my visit. At my granโ€™s house I always got seconds, which none of the other kids got. My grandmother would give me the pot and say, โ€œFinish it.โ€ If you didnโ€™t want to wash the dishes, you called Trevor. They called me the rubbish bin of the family. I ate and ate and ate.

I was hyperactive, too. I craved constant stimulation and activity. When I walked down the sidewalk as a toddler, if you didnโ€™t have my arm in a death grip, I was off, running full-speed toward the traffic. I loved to be chased. I thought it was a game. The old grannies my mom hired to look after me while she was at work? I would leave them in tears. My mom would come home and theyโ€™d be crying. โ€œI quit. I canโ€™t do this. Your son is

a tyrant.โ€ It was the same with my schoolteachers, with Sunday school teachers. If you werenโ€™t engaging me, you were in trouble. I wasnโ€™t a shit to people. I wasnโ€™t whiny and spoiled. I had good manners. I was just high- energy and knew what I wanted to do.

My mom used to take me to the park so she could run me to death to burn off the energy. Sheโ€™d take a Frisbee and throw it, and Iโ€™d run and catch it and bring it back. Over and over and over. Sometimes sheโ€™d throw a tennis ball. Black peopleโ€™s dogs donโ€™t play fetch; you donโ€™t throw anything to a black personโ€™s dog unless itโ€™s food. So it was only when I started spending time in parks with white people and their pets that I realized my mom was training me like a dog.

Anytime my extra energy wasnโ€™t burned off, it would find its way into general naughtiness and misbehavior. I prided myself on being the ultimate prankster. Every teacher at school used overhead projectors to put their notes up on the wall during class. One day I went around and took the magnifying glass out of every projector in every classroom. Another time I emptied a fire extinguisher into the school piano, because I knew we were going to have a performance at assembly the next day. The pianist sat down and played the first note and,ย foomp!,ย all this foam exploded out of the piano.

The two things I loved most were fire and knives. I was endlessly fascinated by them. Knives were just cool. I collected them from pawnshops and garage sales: flick knives, butterfly knives, the Rambo knife, the Crocodile Dundee knife. Fire was the ultimate, though. I loved fire and I especially loved fireworks. We celebrated Guy Fawkes Day in November, and every year my mom would buy us a ton of fireworks, like a mini-arsenal. I realized that I could take the gunpowder out of all the fireworks and create one massive firework of my own. One afternoon I was doing precisely that, goofing around with my cousin and filling an empty plant pot with a huge pile of gunpowder, when I got distracted by some Black Cat firecrackers. The cool thing you could do with a Black Cat was, instead of lighting it to make it explode, you could break it in half and light it and it would turn into a mini-flamethrower. I stopped midway through building my gunpowder pile to play with the Black Cats and somehow dropped a match into the pile. The whole thing exploded, throwing a

massive ball of flame up in my face. Mlungisi screamed, and my mom came running into the yard in a panic.

โ€œWhat happened?!โ€

I played it cool, even though I could still feel the heat of the fireball on my face. โ€œOh, nothing. Nothing happened.โ€

โ€œWere you playing with fire?!โ€ โ€œNo.โ€

She shook her head. โ€œYou know what? I would beat you, but Jesus has already exposed your lies.โ€

โ€œHuh?โ€

โ€œGo to the bathroom and look at yourself.โ€

I went to the toilet and looked in the mirror. My eyebrows were gone and the front inch or so of my hair was completely burned off.

From an adultโ€™s point of view, I was destructive and out of control, but as a child I didnโ€™t think of it that way. I never wanted to destroy. I wanted to create. I wasnโ€™t burning my eyebrows. I was creating fire. I wasnโ€™t breaking overhead projectors. I was creating chaos, to see how people reacted.

And I couldnโ€™t help it. Thereโ€™s a condition kids suffer from, a compulsive disorder that makes them do things they themselves donโ€™t understand. You can tell a child, โ€œWhatever you do, donโ€™t draw on the wall. You can draw on this paper. You can draw in this book. You can draw on any surface you want. But do not draw or write or color on the wall.โ€ The child will look you dead in the eye and say, โ€œGot it.โ€ Ten minutes later the child is drawing on the wall. You start screaming. โ€œWhy the hell are you drawing on the wall?!โ€ The child looks at you, and he genuinely has no idea why he drew on the wall. As a kid, I remember having that feeling all the time. Every time I got punished, as my mom was whooping my ass, Iโ€™d be thinking,ย Why did I just do that? I knew not to do that. She told me not to do that.ย Then once the hiding was over Iโ€™d say to myself,ย Iโ€™m going to be so good from here on. Iโ€™m never ever going to do a bad thing in my life ever ever ever ever everโ€”and to remember not to do anything bad, let me write something on the wall to remind myselfโ€ฆand then I would pick up a crayon and get straight back into it, and I never understood why.

โ€”

My relationship with my mom was like the relationship between a cop and a criminal in the moviesโ€”the relentless detective and the devious mastermind sheโ€™s determined to catch. Theyโ€™re bitter rivals, but, damn, they respect the hell out of each other, and somehow they even grow to like each other. Sometimes my mom would catch me, but she was usually one step behind, and she was always giving me the eye.ย Someday, kid. Someday Iโ€™m going to catch you and put you away for the rest of your life. Then I would give her a nod in return.ย Have a good evening, Officer. That was my whole childhood.

My mom was forever trying to rein me in. Over the years, her tactics grew more and more sophisticated. Where I had youth and energy on my side, she had cunning, and she figured out different ways to keep me in line. One Sunday we were at the shops and there was a big display of toffee apples. I loved toffee apples, and I kept nagging her the whole way through the shop. โ€œPleaseย can I have a toffee apple?ย Pleaseย can I have a toffee apple?ย Pleaseย can I have a toffee apple?ย Pleaseย can I have a toffee apple?โ€

Finally, once we had our groceries and my mom was heading to the front to pay, I succeeded in wearing her down. โ€œFine,โ€ she said. โ€œGo and get a toffee apple.โ€ I ran, got a toffee apple, came back, and put it on the counter at the checkout.

โ€œAdd this toffee apple, please,โ€ I said.

The cashier looked at me skeptically. โ€œWait your turn, boy. Iโ€™m still helping this lady.โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ I said. โ€œSheโ€™s buying it for me.โ€

My mother turned to me. โ€œWhoโ€™s buying it for you?โ€ โ€œYouโ€™re buying it for me.โ€

โ€œNo, no. Why doesnโ€™t your mother buy it for you?โ€ โ€œWhat? My mother? You are my mother.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m your mother? No, Iโ€™m not your mother. Whereโ€™s your mother?โ€ I was so confused. โ€œYouโ€™reย my mother.โ€

The cashier looked at her, looked back at me, looked at her again. She shrugged, like,ย I have no idea what that kidโ€™s talking about. Then she

looked at me like sheโ€™d never seen me before in her life. โ€œAre you lost, little boy? Whereโ€™s your mother?โ€

โ€œYeah,โ€ the cashier said. โ€œWhereโ€™s your mother?โ€ I pointed at my mother. โ€œSheโ€™s my mother.โ€

โ€œWhat? She canโ€™t be your mother, boy. Sheโ€™s black. Canโ€™t you see?โ€ My mom shook her head. โ€œPoor little colored boy lost his mother.

What a shame.โ€

I panicked. Was I crazy? Is she not my mother? I started bawling. โ€œYouโ€™reย my mother.ย Youโ€™reย my mother.ย Sheโ€™sย my mother.ย Sheโ€™sย my mother.โ€

She shrugged again. โ€œSo sad. I hope he finds his mother.โ€

The cashier nodded. She paid him, took our groceries, and walked out of the shop. I dropped the toffee apple, ran out behind her in tears, and caught up to her at the car. She turned around, laughing hysterically, like sheโ€™d really got me good.

โ€œWhy are you crying?โ€ she asked.

โ€œBecause you said you werenโ€™t my mother. Why did you say you werenโ€™t my mother?โ€

โ€œBecause you wouldnโ€™t shut up about the toffee apple. Now get in the car. Letโ€™s go.โ€

By the time I was seven or eight, I was too smart to be tricked, so she changed tactics. Our life turned into a courtroom drama with two lawyers constantly debating over loopholes and technicalities. My mom was smart and had a sharp tongue, but I was quicker in an argument. Sheโ€™d get flustered because she couldnโ€™t keep up. So she started writing me letters. That way she could make her points and there could be no verbal sparring back and forth. If I had chores to do, Iโ€™d come home to find an envelope slipped under the door, like from the landlord.

Dear Trevor,

โ€œChildren, obey your parents in everything, for this pleases the Lord.โ€

โ€”Colossians 3:20

There are certain things I expect from you as my child and as a young man. You need to clean your room. You need to keep the house clean. You need to look after your school uniform. Please, my child, I ask you. Respect my rules so that I may also

respect you. I ask you now, please go and do the dishes and do the weeds in the garden.

Yours sincerely, Mom

I would do my chores, and if I had anything to say I would write back. Because my mom was a secretary and I spent hours at her office every day after school, Iโ€™d learned a great deal about business correspondence. I was extremely proud of my letter-writing abilities.

To Whom It May Concern:

Dear Mom,

I have received your correspondence earlier. I am delighted to say that I am ahead of schedule on the dishes and I will continue to wash them in an hour or so. Please note that the garden is wet and so I cannot do the weeds at this time, but please be assured this task will be completed by the end of the weekend. Also, I completely agree with what you are saying with regard to my respect levels and I will maintain my room to a satisfactory standard.

Yours sincerely, Trevor

Those were the polite letters. If we were having a real, full-on argument or if Iโ€™d gotten in trouble at school, Iโ€™d find more accusatory missives waiting for me when I got home.

Dear Trevor,

โ€œFoolishness is bound up in the heart of a child; the rod of discipline will remove it far from him.โ€

โ€”Proverbs 22:15

Your school marks this term have been very disappointing, and your behavior in

class continues to be disruptive and disrespectful. It is clear from your actions that you do not respect me. You do not respect your teachers. Learn to respect the women in your life. The way you treat me and the way you treat your teachers will be the way you treat other women in the world. Learn to buck that trend now and you will be a better man because of it. Because of your behavior I am grounding you for one week. There will be no television and no videogames.

Yours sincerely, Mom

I, of course, would find this punishment completely unfair. Iโ€™d take the letter and confront her.

โ€œCan I speak to you about this?โ€

โ€œNo. If you want to reply, you have to write a letter.โ€

Iโ€™d go to my room, get out my pen and paper, sit at my little desk, and go after her arguments one by one.

To Whom It May Concern:

Dear Mom,

First of all, this has been a particularly tough time in school, and for you to say that my marks are bad is extremely unfair, especially considering the fact that you yourself were not very good in school and I am, after all, a product of yours, and so in part you are to blame because if you were not good in school, why would I be good in school because genetically we are the same. Gran always talks about how naughty you were, so obviously my naughtiness comes from you, so I donโ€™t think it is right or just for you to say any of this.

Yours sincerely, Trevor

Iโ€™d bring her the letter and stand there while she read it. Invariably sheโ€™d tear it up and throw it in the dustbin. โ€œRubbish! This is rubbish!โ€ Then sheโ€™d start to launch into me and Iโ€™d say, โ€œAh-ah-ah. No. You have to write a letter.โ€ Then Iโ€™d go to my room and wait for her reply. This sometimes went back and forth for days.

The letter writing was for minor disputes. For major infractions, my mom went with the ass-whooping. Like most black South African parents, when it came to discipline my mom was old school. If I pushed her too far, sheโ€™d go for the belt or switch. Thatโ€™s just how it was in those days. Pretty much all of my friends had it the same.

My mom would have given me proper sit-down hidings if Iโ€™d given her the opportunity, but she could never catch me. My gran called me โ€œSpringbok,โ€ after the second-fastest land mammal on earth, the deer that the cheetah hunts. My mom had to become a guerrilla fighter. She got her licks in where she could, her belt or maybe a shoe, administered on the fly.

One thing I respected about my mom was that she never left me in any doubt as to why I was receiving the hiding. It wasnโ€™t rage or anger. It was

discipline from a place of love. My mom was on her own with a crazy child. I destroyed pianos. I shat on floors. I would screw up, sheโ€™d beat the shit out of me and give me time to cry, and then sheโ€™d pop back into my room with a big smile and go, โ€œAre you ready for dinner? We need to hurry and eat if we want to watchย Rescue 911. Are you coming?โ€

โ€œWhat? What kind of psychopath are you? You just beat me!โ€

โ€œYes. Because you did something wrong. It doesnโ€™t mean I donโ€™t love you anymore.โ€

โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œLook, did you or did you not do something wrong?โ€ โ€œI did.โ€

โ€œAnd then? I hit you. And now thatโ€™s over. So why sit there and cry? Itโ€™s time forย Rescue 911. William Shatner is waiting. Are you coming or not?โ€

โ€”

When it came to discipline, Catholic school was no joke. Whenever I got into trouble with the nuns at Maryvale theyโ€™d rap me on the knuckles with the edge of a metal ruler. For cursing theyโ€™d wash my mouth out with soap. For serious offenses Iโ€™d get sent to the principalโ€™s office. Only the principal could give you an official hiding. Youโ€™d have to bend over and heโ€™d hit your ass with this flat rubber thing, like the sole of a shoe.

Whenever the principal would hit me, it was like he was afraid to do it too hard. One day I was getting a hiding and I thought,ย Man,ย if only my mom hit me like this, and I started laughing. I couldnโ€™t help it. The principal was quite disturbed. โ€œIf youโ€™re laughing while youโ€™re getting beaten,โ€ he said, โ€œthen something is definitely wrong with you.โ€

That was the first of three times the school made my mom take me to a psychologist to be evaluated. Every psychologist who examined me came back and said, โ€œThereโ€™s nothing wrong with this kid.โ€ I wasnโ€™t ADD. I wasnโ€™t a sociopath. I was just creative and independent and full of energy. The therapists did give me a series of tests, and they came to the conclusion that I was either going to make an excellent criminal or be very good at

catching criminals, because I could always find loopholes in the law. Whenever I thought a rule wasnโ€™t logical, Iโ€™d find my way around it.

The rules about communion at Friday mass, for example, made absolutely no sense. Weโ€™d be in there for an hour of kneeling, standing, sitting, kneeling, standing, sitting, kneeling, standing, sitting, and by the end of it Iโ€™d be starving, but I was never allowed to take communion, because I wasnโ€™t Catholic. The other kids could eat Jesusโ€™s body and drink Jesusโ€™s blood, but I couldnโ€™t. And Jesusโ€™s blood was grape juice. I loved grape juice. Grape juice and crackersโ€”what more could a kid want? And they wouldnโ€™t let me have any. Iโ€™d argue with the nuns and the priest all the time.

โ€œOnly Catholics can eat Jesusโ€™s body and drink Jesusโ€™s blood, right?โ€ โ€œYes.โ€

โ€œBut Jesus wasnโ€™t Catholic.โ€ โ€œNo.โ€

โ€œJesus was Jewish.โ€ โ€œWell, yes.โ€

โ€œSo youโ€™re telling me that if Jesus walked into your church right now, Jesus would not be allowed to have the body and blood of Jesus?โ€

โ€œWellโ€ฆuhโ€ฆumโ€ฆโ€

They never had a satisfactory reply.

One morning before mass I decided,ย Iโ€™m going to get me some Jesus blood and Jesus body. I snuck behind the altar and I drank the entire bottle of grape juice and I ate the entire bag of Eucharist to make up for all the other times that I couldnโ€™t.

In my mind, I wasnโ€™t breaking the rules, because the rules didnโ€™t make any sense. And I got caught only because they broke their own rules. Another kid ratted me out in confession, and the priest turned me in.

โ€œNo, no,โ€ I protested. โ€œYouโ€™veย broken the rules. Thatโ€™s confidential information. The priest isnโ€™t supposed to repeat what you say in confession.โ€

They didnโ€™t care. The school could break whatever rules it wanted.

The principal laid into me.

โ€œWhat kind of a sick person would eat all of Jesusโ€™s body and drink all of Jesusโ€™s blood?โ€

โ€œA hungry person.โ€

I got another hiding and a second trip to the psychologist for that one. The third visit to the shrink, and the last straw, came in grade six. A kid was bullying me. He said he was going to beat me up, and I brought one of my knives to school. I wasnโ€™t going to use it; I just wanted to have it. The school didnโ€™t care. That was the last straw for them. I wasnโ€™t expelled, exactly. The principal sat me down and said, โ€œTrevor, we can expel you. You need to think hard about whether you really want to be at Maryvale next year.โ€ I think he thought he was giving me an ultimatum that would get me to shape up. But I felt like he was offering me an out, and I took it. โ€œNo,โ€ I told him, โ€œI donโ€™t want to be here.โ€ And that was the end of Catholic school.

Funnily enough, I didnโ€™t get into trouble with my mom when it happened. There was no ass-whooping waiting for me at home. Sheโ€™d lost the bursary when sheโ€™d left her job at ICI, and paying for private school was becoming a burden. But more than that, she thought the school was overreacting. The truth is she probably took my side against Maryvale more often than not. She agreed with me 100 percent about the Eucharist thing. โ€œLet me get this straight,โ€ she told the principal. โ€œYouโ€™re punishing a child because heย wantsย Jesusโ€™s body and Jesusโ€™s blood? Why shouldnโ€™t he have those things? Of course he should have them.โ€ When they made me see a therapist for laughing while the principal hit me, she told the school that was ridiculous, too.

โ€œMs. Noah, your son was laughing while we were hitting him.โ€

โ€œWell, clearly you donโ€™t know how to hit a kid. Thatโ€™s your problem, not mine. Trevorโ€™s never laughed when Iโ€™ve hit him, I can tell you.โ€

That was the weird and kind of amazing thing about my mom. If she agreed with me that a rule was stupid, she wouldnโ€™t punish me for breaking it. Both she and the psychologists agreed that the school was the one with the problem, not me. Catholic school is not the place to be creative and independent.

Catholic school is similar to apartheid in that itโ€™s ruthlessly authoritarian, and its authority rests on a bunch of rules that donโ€™t make any sense. My mother grew up with these rules and she questioned them. When they didnโ€™t hold up, she simply went around them. The only authority my mother recognized was Godโ€™s. God is love and the Bible is truthโ€” everything else was up for debate. She taught me to challenge authority and question the system. The only way it backfired on her was that I constantly challenged and questioned her.

โ€”

When I was seven years old, my mother had been dating her new boyfriend, Abel, for a year maybe, but at that point I was too young to know who they were to each other. It was just โ€œHey, thatโ€™s momโ€™s friend whoโ€™s around a lot.โ€ I liked Abel; he was a really nice guy.

As a black person back then, if you wanted to live in the suburbs youโ€™d have to find a white family renting out their servantsโ€™ quarters or sometimes their garage, which was what Abel had done. He lived in a neighborhood called Orange Grove in a white familyโ€™s garage, which heโ€™d turned into a cottage-type thing with a hot plate and a bed. Sometimes heโ€™d come and sleep at our house, and sometimes weโ€™d go stay with him. Staying in a garage when we owned our own house wasnโ€™t ideal, but Orange Grove was close to my school and my momโ€™s work so it had its benefits.

This white family also had a black maid who lived in the servantsโ€™ quarters in the backyard, and Iโ€™d play with her son whenever we stayed there. At that age my love of fire was in full bloom. One afternoon everyone was at workโ€”my mom and Abel and both of the white parentsโ€” and the kid and I were playing together while his mom was inside the house cleaning. One thing I loved doing at the time was using a magnifying glass to burn my name into pieces of wood. You had to aim the lens and get the focus just right and then you got the flame and then you moved it slowly and you could burn shapes and letters and patterns. I was fascinated by it.

That afternoon I was teaching this kid how to do it. We were inside the servantsโ€™ quarters, which was really more of a toolshed added on to the back of the house, full of wooden ladders, buckets of old paint, turpentine. I

had a box of matches with me, tooโ€”all my usual fire-making tools. We were sitting on an old mattress that they used to sleep on the floor, basically a sack stuffed with dried straw. The sun was beaming in through the window, and I was showing the kid how to burn his name into a piece of plywood.

At one point we took a break to go get a snack. I set the magnifying glass and the matches on the mattress and we left. When we came back a few minutes later we found the shed had one of those doors that self-locks from the inside. We couldnโ€™t get back in without going to get his mother, so we decided to run around and play in the yard. After a while I noticed smoke coming out of the cracks in the window frame. I ran over and looked inside. A small fire was burning in the middle of the straw mattress where weโ€™d left the matches and the magnifying glass. We ran and called the maid. She came, but she didnโ€™t know what to do. The door was locked, and before we could figure out how to get into the shed the whole thing caughtโ€”the mattress, the ladders, the paint, the turpentine, everything.

The flames moved quickly. Soon the roof was on fire, and from there the blaze spread to the main house, and the whole thing burned and burned and burned. Smoke was billowing into the sky. A neighbor had called the fire brigade, and the sirens were on their way. Me and this kid and the maid, we ran out to the road and watched as the firemen tried to put it out, but by the time they did, it was too late. There was nothing left but a charred brick- and-mortar shell, roof gone, and gutted from the inside.

The white family came home and stood on the street, staring at the ruins of their house. They asked the maid what happened and she asked her son and the kid totally snitched. โ€œTrevor had matches,โ€ he said. The family said nothing to me. I donโ€™t think they knew what to say. They were completely dumbfounded. They didnโ€™t call the police, didnโ€™t threaten to sue. What were they going to do, arrest a seven-year-old for arson? And we were so poor you couldnโ€™t actually sue us for anything. Plus they had insurance, so that was the end of it.

They kicked Abel out of the garage, which I thought was hilarious because the garage, which was freestanding, was the only piece of the property left unscathed. I saw no reason for Abel to have to leave, but they made him. We packed up his stuff, put it into our car, and drove home to

Eden Park; Abel basically lived with us from then on. He and my mom got into a huge fight. โ€œYour son has burned down my life!โ€ But there was no punishment for me that day. My mom was too much in shock. Thereโ€™s naughty, and then thereโ€™s burning down a white personโ€™s house. She didnโ€™t know what to do.

I didnโ€™t feel bad about it at all. I still donโ€™t. The lawyer in me maintains that I am completely innocent. There were matches and there was a magnifying glass and there was a mattress and then, clearly, a series of unfortunate events. Things catch fire sometimes. Thatโ€™s why thereโ€™s a fire brigade. But everyone in my family will tell you, โ€œTrevor burned down a house.โ€ If people thought I was naughty before, after the fire I was notorious. One of my uncles stopped calling me Trevor. He called me โ€œTerrorโ€ instead. โ€œDonโ€™t leave that kid alone in your home,โ€ heโ€™d say. โ€œHeโ€™ll burn it to the ground.โ€

My cousin Mlungisi, to this day, cannot comprehend how I survived being as naughty as I was for as long as I did, how I withstood the number of hidings that I got. Why did I keep misbehaving? How did I never learn my lesson? Both of my cousins were supergood kids. Mlungisi got maybe one hiding in his life. After that he said he never wanted to experience anything like it ever again, and from that day he always followed the rules. But I was blessed with another trait I inherited from my mother: her ability to forget the pain in life. I remember the thing that caused the trauma, but I donโ€™t hold on to the trauma. I never let the memory of something painful prevent me from trying something new. If you think too much about the ass-kicking your mom gave you, or the ass-kicking that life gave you, youโ€™ll stop pushing the boundaries and breaking the rules. Itโ€™s better to take it, spend some time crying, then wake up the next day and move on. Youโ€™ll have a few bruises and theyโ€™ll remind you of what happened and thatโ€™s okay. But after a while the bruises fade, and they fade for a reasonโ€” because now itโ€™s time to get up to some shit again.

 

 

I grew up in a black family in a black neighborhood in a black country. Iโ€™ve traveled to other black cities in black countries all over the black continent. And in all of that time Iโ€™ve yet to find a place where black people like cats. One of the biggest reasons for that, as we know in South Africa, is that only witches have cats, and all cats are witches.

There was a famous incident during an Orlando Pirates soccer match a few years ago. A cat got into the stadium and ran through the crowd and out onto the pitch in the middle of the game. A security guard, seeing the cat, did what any sensible black person would do. He said to himself, โ€œThat cat is a witch.โ€ He caught the cat andโ€”live on TVโ€”he kicked it and stomped it and beat it to death with aย sjambok,ย a hard leather whip.

It was front-page news all over the country. White people lost their shit. Oh my word, it was insane. The security guard was arrested and put on trial and found guilty of animal abuse. He had to pay some enormous fine to avoid spending several months in jail. What was ironic to me was that white people had spent years seeing video of black people being beaten to death by other white people, but this one video of a black man kicking a cat, thatโ€™s what sent them over the edge. Black people were just confused. They didnโ€™t see any problem with what the man did. They were like, โ€œObviously that cat was a witch. How else would a cat know how to get out onto a soccer pitch? Somebody sent it to jinx one of the teams. That man had to kill the cat. He was protecting the players.โ€

In South Africa, black people have dogs.

You'll Also Like