Independent on Saturday

Social media and history collide

WENDY JASSON DA COSTA wendy.jdc@inl.co.za It retails at R350 and is from the stable of heritage publisher Micromega. Order online at www.madeindurban.co.za for countrywide delivery.

IN THE late 1800s the captain of a ship documented the journey of those passengers who boarded his vessel travelling between India and South Africa.

Now, 162 years later, the descendants of those who embarked as indentured workers and headed to Durban mistakenly hoping for a better life, finally have pictures and notes detailing those journeys. The priceless records, which nobody even thought existed, saw the light of day in a seminal book, The Indian Africans, launched last week.

Much has been written about indentured workers from India – how they landed in South Africa, what they did and the contribution they made to the country as it is today.

However, until now their names and stories were faceless. That all changed when social media and history collided almost 160 years later.

That’s when Stewart Fairbairn, a man in Sydney, Australia, took to Facebook and posted pictures and notes taken from the diaries and clippings of his grandfather, Max de Gruyter.

As a ship’s captain, De Gruyter had taken indentured workers, passengers and cargo to various places around the world, including Durban.

De Gruyter documented those journeys and had taken images and made journal entries of the indentured workers.

It came to the attention of the writers and one of them, Selvan Naidoo – curator of the 1860 Centre in Durban – was able to get those documents from Fairbairn. Finally, researchers could connect ship records to names and faces.

“What sets this book apart is that it shows for the very first time actual photographs taken on board indenture ships,” said publisher Anivesh Singh.

Technology and social media played a huge role in every aspect of the book. One of the authors, Kiru Naidoo, said: “We had the grandson of De Gruyter scan those images and then Dropbox it to us, so that worked very well.”

In the book, the Naidoos and their fellow memory-keepers Paul David and Ranjith Choonilall weave together a series of vignettes that tell the stories of the indentured workers, the communities they built and the legacy carried forward by their descendants who were born here.

Durban lawyer Zandile Qono wrote the book’s emotive foreword. She said the stories should be retold constantly “so that our children and their’s (sic) can share in the pride that we are a nation born of struggle.

“My own birth was in exile in Senegal. My parents were driven from the land of their parents’ birth by apartheid violence and land dispossession. In my parents’ veins coursed the revolutionary spirit of amaXhosa.”

For Qono, freedom came at a price. “As a child embraced in another part of our great continent, I was denied the beautiful melodic tongues of my parents, isiXhosa and Tamil; my conversations with my friends were in Wolof and French. I was robbed.”

Qono says freedom without a documentary record rings hollow. Kiru Naidoo agrees. He says writing the book was a moving and liberating experience. “There’s a saying that until the lions have their historians, the tale of the hunt will always be told by the hunter. We are now the lions, so it’s not a third party telling our story.”

It was a painstaking process to put the book’s 374 pages together and to piece together the documents. “Some were just fragments of paper and we had to go in and decipher things.”

Then they found documents that could only belong to spy agencies and the Bureau for State Security, the country’s former intelligence agency, because they were so detailed, he said.

The book touches on various milestones. They tell the story of the heroic Padavatan Six who saved 176 people from drowning when the banks of the uMngeni River burst in October 1917 and more than 400 market gardeners of “indentured ancestry” drowned. Without the six men’s help, the death toll would have been higher.

The book talks about the formation of the Aryan Benevolent Home in 1927. It also explains why education was so important in the Indian community and the role of people like ML Sultan, who donated funds for the development of a technical college in 1941, known today as Durban University of Technology. It also gives insight into the successes of political activists and the failure of young people to speak the languages of their ancestors.

The book attempts to mention all those who made a contribution to South African society and ends with the chapter Beyond Indenture, a look at all those writers, scientists, musicians and activists who have succeeded despite their humble beginnings. The Indian Africans is an emotional and informative must-read.

METRO

en-za

2022-11-26T08:00:00.0000000Z

2022-11-26T08:00:00.0000000Z

http://independentonsaturday.pressreader.com/article/281633899247553

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