Sunday 19 April 2015

Durban: a living monument to the journey of a little boy and thirty Zulu warriors.


 Art work by Dheborah


When I was a nursing student, I cared for an old lady who, unable to walk,  had lived and slept in her armchair for the final eighteen years of her life. Once a sculptor, she told me of the statues that she had cast. One of these was the statue of a little boy that stood outside John Ross House, where I lived. In her day, when women couldn't open a bank account without their husband's signature, and in a time when a conservative South African society did not recognise, amongst other things, women's rights, this was historically significant. 

The story of John Ross is just one of the many stories of courage that built the city of Durban. Even during the most dangerous of times, the city was full of tales of goodwill. History is built on each and every one of these moments. Once an architectural masterpiece, the massive, turbulent city still contains glimmers of it's past. Some of the finest statues remind us that Durban had a history. If the mistake was made of removing or destroying them, as has happened in other torn cities, would we be saying that history didn't happen?

 'John Ross' was the name given in records, to a ship's apprentice (his real name was Charles Maclean) who made a  600 km journey for  supplies and medicine. John Ross was part of a small settlement in Natal, that had been built from survivors of a ship that had  floundered on a sand bar, off the Natal coast. The crew spent a few years repairing it to return to their own homeland.   At the time of his journey, records say that he was a boy of thirteen (some records indicate that he may have been as young as ten). He was accompanied by a group of 2 porters and later by a group of Shaka Zulu' own warriors. They walked a dangerous journey to Delgoa Bay (Maputo, Mozambique)across difficult, wild terrain, making crocodile-infested river crossings and walking through country inhabited by elephants, giraffe, lions, leopards, impala and giant herds of hefty wildebeest. Illness had come to the settlement. It was here, in Delgoa Bay,  that he first encountered evidence of the world's slave trade. It is said that these men saved the small  colony of this Zulu coast's shipwreck survivors. Years later, Maclean  died on board another ship, the  "Solent". I heard, yesterday, that during recent fighting in Durban streets, two beautiful, haunting sculptures had been defaced. The past has already happened. It is over. Build new memories on tales of courage and goodwill. When I remember the one simple tale of Maclean, I wish but one thing…it is time for a new monument, not destruction of the old. It is time for bronze sculptures of  ten brave and magnificent Zulu warriors to be made. Line them along the side of Durban city Hall and let them  guard the entrance to this amazing structure, in the name of, and in the spirit of the goodwill that has survived from the tragedies of the past.