Roses Under the Miombo Trees

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Roses Under the Miombo Trees Page 9

by Amanda Parkyn


  How I wish I had a photo of the cigarette girl! The white linen dress has vanished from my memory, but I remember the hairdo: my over-bleached hair (supposedly highlighted) newly permed, firmly sprayed and lasting without a strand out of place till the small hours. (My parents’ birthday cheque had bought me ‘a very superior hairdryer with a stand and hood like a huge bath cap, so one sits effortlessly as at the hairdresser’.)

  Then Mark was summoned to Salisbury for a residential course of a full fortnight, pitching me into a state of high anxiety. How was I to manage on my own for so long? My fragile confidence evaporated, for I was still very dependent on his steadying presence. It must have been this sort of situation, together with the constant travelling required of a junior rep., that Mark’s parents had had in mind when they had urged us to postpone our marriage until he was in a more established position. But of course we had refused. Little Paul was recovering from a gastric bug, and by the time Mark set off on the Sunday I had gastric problems of my own, which nothing but the odd sip of brandy seemed to shift. Our kindly young G.P., after laboratory tests proved negative, advised me that my trouble was just ‘nerves, worry and tension’. Don’t allow this to become a habit, he said, the odd nip of calming brandy won’t hurt, so thus fortified I set off to join Mark in Salisbury for the weekend as planned.

  The drive, although not that long, felt arduous and a little scary to me on my own, with long stretches of nothing but bush to either side and almost no traffic. (I am amused now to see how my fears contrast with Doris Lessing’s enjoyment of a similar drive. Having been born and brought up in rural Rhodesia, in her memoir Going Home she describes stopping the car to go off into the bush and sit under a tree for the pleasure of being alone there.) But as well as being reunited with Mark, who was free for parts of the weekend, Salisbury meant meeting up with old friends, and going shopping with the little spending money from my work, allowing me to splash out on a white handbag and white court shoes. And according to my letters, another treat was the television, such a thrill in fact that it formed part of the social scene, with friends coming round ‘ to supper and telly’ with our hosts the Cochranes. Sally was a hairdresser and gave Paul his first ‘hair cut’ – in reality just a trim of the wispy bits, so he looked ‘like a real boy’. I spun out my visit until the Tuesday morning, getting home, I wrote, ‘to find the house open, Daniel vanished and very little work done. Still, that’s the way they are, you just have to be on their tails all the time.’

  Paul’s first haircut

  No doubt I was, because in mid-September, with the cooler dry winter months giving way to warmth, I was working like mad to make everything nice for a visit from Mother, who flew up from Cape Town for a fortnight (Dad being too busy with board meetings to come). What an easy mother-in-law she was, undemanding, admiring, happy to busy herself with her grandson, playing with him with the toys she had brought. She helped me in the garden too, planting out dahlias and tending my roses – what thirsty plants I chose for that driest and hottest of seasons, whilst spurning pretty cosmos which flowered along the roadsides as a garden escape. We went to the baby clinic and out to innumerable tea parties; she even took our rather neglected young Alsatian in hand, buying him a brush to groom him of his moult. On 20th September we were busy with preparations for a drinks party we were to give in her honour the following evening. Mother was doing amazing arrangements with sheaves of flowers from my new borders, I making little sausage rolls, when the phone rang, and our domestic peace was interrupted.

  As far back as May, Mother had written to my Mum: I can’t help worrying about them in Rhodesia can you? If there were any real trouble Amanda and Paul could get down to us quickly. Mark I expect would have to stay on the job. But I don’t think it will come to that and don’ t lets anticipate it. No mention in any of my letters during those months of any ‘troubles’. But today’s caller announced herself as the local W.V.S. organiser, phoning to ask if I had got our emergency bags packed? Had I laid in tins of food, candles, a supply of water in containers? I had not, I said, feeling rather foolish, for I had put from my mind any real sense of an impending crisis, despite rumours in town of people getting ready to leave in a hurry. Soon Mark called from the oil depot with the news that Z.A.P.U. (Zimbabwe African People’s Union) had been banned overnight, resulting in a security alert. I wrote to my parents: You should know ZAPU – Simon must know – the African extremists’ party which took over from the NDP banned last year; everyone is delighted, as they have been terrorising, intimidating, burning and riot-rousing. People were worried not so much by that as by Europeans being driven to retaliate – much more dangerous! Anyway, enough of politics, because nothing is going to happen here, but I imagined your papers might have been mentioning ‘incidents’. Mother says she is a Jonah and is always arriving in places as political troubles start!

  Paul with his Cape Town Granny

  I wonder now how reassured my parents were by my breezy overview of the situation, including my casual reframe, suggesting that retaliation by Europeans posed more of a threat than ZAPU-led violence. In any case I was far too preoccupied to heed the WVS lady’s urging and buy in supplies, for our big drinks party must go ahead the next day, which indeed it did, with 24 friends to meet Mother, and Mark dispensing drinks on the stoep. Mother’s flower arrangements drew much admiration.

  By mid-1962 ZAPU were tired of negotiation, which had yielded nothing but this compromise of a constitution and the prospect of ‘racial partnership’. They wanted confrontation and they wanted democracy to mean one man, one vote. So with Joshua Nkomo still on his travels abroad trying to drum up support, ZAPU activists had continued to lead a campaign aimed at discouraging blacks from registering to vote at the end of the year, and at general destabilisation of white rule. Hence their campaign of violence that had spread to white targets, with the threatened prospect of retaliation.

  Our little family, including Boy and Twist (note new flower border)

  White Rhodesians meanwhile were getting much more windy than my letters conveyed. The prospect of black rule alarmed even the most liberal. Just north of the now fragmenting Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, the Belgian Congo had in 1960, with no preparation or necessary infrastructure, been abruptly declared independent, and what had unfolded there was vivid in the minds of white Rhodesians. To say that the country had been ill-prepared for self-government was an understatement. There were no Congolese doctors, or army officers; only a handful of children had completed secondary education; there were only 30 university graduates – though 600 priests. But it was a land rich in mineral wealth, resulting in a scramble for power involving western powers as well as local rivalries. The inevitable result had been almost immediate violence, and the ensuing chaos had led whites to flee. My cousin John, who had been posted to Lusaka at the time, remembers the scenes: Having commandeered anything with wheels – cars, lorries, ambulances, fire engines and other vehicles, they came pouring into Lusaka, where a depot with essential supplies of clothing and other necessaries was hurriedly set up. (This was the sad start of the Congo’s slide, with its enormous natural mineral wealth, into years and years of civil war and holocaust).

  These scenes were vivid in the minds of white settlers all over southern Africa, and this, together with the economic downturn and rapidly falling confidence, meant that it was hard for Sir Edgar Whitehead to sell his United Federal Party’s policies aimed at developing a black, educated middle class and at gradual multiracial power sharing. His party, he was promising, would repeal discriminatory laws, including most importantly the Land Apportionment Act, which kept the black population in over-populated, over-grazed tribal trust lands, and in locations outside towns and cities – a proposal greeted with horror by many white people. Nor, in the face of ZAPU’s campaign, was he having much success in getting qualifying blacks to register as voters.

  Much more attractive to many whites was a newly formed right wing party called the Rhodesian Front. Th
eir policies were far more straightforward: what was needed now was stability and the status quo, with whites retaining total control, under which most blacks would be better off anyway. Continued ‘separate development’ would allow Africans gradually to learn the ways of democratic government, over many generations, under the guiding hand of the white man. This new party was led by three men most of us had never heard of: Winston Field, Clifford Dupont and Ian Smith.

  The only other mention my letters made of the ‘troubles’ at that time was a few days later: We thought ZAPU was upon us last night as Boy was barking furiously at 3 a.m. which he has only done once before – bark I mean – but we were still here this morning. Things seem to be pretty quiet now, but the army and police reserve are still out, so Mark didn’t go away for the night as he had planned… PS Paul’s 5th tooth is through, top centre, v. big!

  Maybe my casual way of writing about the situation was intended to calm my parents’ fears, but I cannot remember ever feeling really scared. Whilst the images of whites fleeing the Congo remained vivid in my mind, I believe I still had absolute faith in the authorities to keep order, reinforced by that sense of invincibility of the young. By November we must have felt things were back to normal, for I wrote of Mark having been away for the entire week. Whitehead’s United Federal Party held its pre-election congress with a goodly proportion of black delegates and, despite the low numbers of blacks registering to vote, he seemed to believe he was getting his message across. October, known as ‘suicide month’ with its relentless dry heat and a sense that the rains would never come, dragged on; huge clouds built up, only to dissolve into a white-blue sky. But in November the breaking rains – just showers at first, then drenching downpours – at last broke the long dry spell. Green suddenly sprouted everywhere, the land was tillable, Daniel planted his maize seed and both he and I were released from the endless work of watering. All around our homestead, the musasa trees, without any appreciable leaf fall that I had noticed, suddenly burst into their fresh spring russet, giving them a strangely autumnal appearance. Perversely, that was sometimes what I longed for – a cool, misty autumn day with the smell of decaying leaves and bonfires and a nip in the air.

  The state of emergency ended and our social life got back on track: the Smiths held a beatnik party where we all wore black and bopped till the early hours. Mother was promising to send me hipster pants for Christmas, and I was busy making the cake, mincemeat and other goodies so unsuitable in that climate. In a nod to events in the outside world, I wrote in November: ‘ What price Cuba eh? I daren’t listen to the news these days.’ We seldom bought a newspaper, and although the Rhodesian Broadcasting service relayed a fair amount of British and some world news, it all seemed very far away.

  As the pace of electioneering hotted up, even Mark and I, who did not qualify to vote, decided we should attend a hustings. We believed that Whitehead’s United Federal Party had the right answers, and went to hear him put them forward. For some reason that meeting remains one of my most vivid memories of the time. We were at the back of the hall, so that I could pop out and check on Paul, asleep in his carrycot in the car, sitting among a number of black people, with most of the white audience at the front. There on the brightly lit platform stood this mild mannered, bespectacled man, holding only a few notes, his voice quiet and reasonable, as if giving a lecture on politics to a class of students who he was certain would get the point of what he was saying. But in front of him, as he must have expected when he came to Gwelo, were ranged the solid figures of white farmers from this agricultural heartland. Whitehead came across as sincere – I just kept wishing he would do a more assertive job of selling his vision. But as the consequences of his plan became clear to his listeners, the atmosphere became heated. It was said that he was deaf, but his questioners made sure he heard them. I remember a farmer, stocky and tanned in his khaki drill, rising to demand: Are you telling me that this would end up meaning that my wife would have to sit next to a black woman at the hairdressers? And he didn’t like the answer, which of course was that, ultimately, yes, she would. Someone asked: And how long do you expect it to be, before we get to this stage, of racial equality in government? Perhaps fifteen years, was Whitehead’s reply, perhaps longer. As the front of the hall erupted into indignation, I suddenly noticed two young black men sitting just in front of us, shaking their heads; one turned to the other, saying with quiet vehemence: That’s too long, too long.

  On 14 December came the elections. I remember well our astonishment at the result, which Martin Meredith in The Past is Another Country called ‘a shattering defeat for moderation’. The Rhodesian Front had gained 35 of the 50 white seats, Whitehead’s U.F.P. was left with 15 white seats and the support of 14 African MPs who between them attracted a total of only 1,870 votes. We were stunned: this new, unknown little party had seized power, on a manifesto that made clear power was to remain in the hands of white people for the foreseeable future.

  As the dust settled, for once Mark and I scanned the newspapers: there came a realisation that many of the Africans who had registered to vote – and they were only a small proportion of those who qualified – had simply abstained. If only a few thousand more had turned out, it could have been victory for Whitehead’s United Federal Party. As it was, the Rhodesian Front would go on to run Southern Rhodesia its way for another seventeen years. Its determination that white rule would be preserved at all costs was to lead within a few years to bitter conflict and bloodshed, before Robert Mugabe’s ZAPU finally led the country into independence in 1980.

  The general mood among local whites, particularly the farming community, was delight, ours was gloom, but Christmas rescued us. We spent the long holiday weekend in Bulawayo staying with the Thompsons, driving down in our newly acquired little pale blue Mini estate car with its timber trim. On dirt roads it bounced and rattled horrendously, but fortunately the main road was metalled, for the Mini was laden with everything from buckets of flowers and festive food to our Christmas gifts from England, the rear portion taken up with Paul ‘leaping around in his cage’. Now almost walking, Paul loved nothing better than to be with the Thompsons’ three little boys and their stock of toys – mainly cars. I can still see him with a dinky car clutched in his little fat fist, learning to roll it along the floor with earnest brrmm-brrmm noises. And their Nanny was never far away and seemed seldom to be off duty, allowing us the treat of a frenetic social whirl. We twisted till midnight at a party (‘me in my little black’), caught up with friends at endless coffee, tea and drinks parties, joined Mark’s colleagues and their families for the children’s party and an evening braaivleis. The rains had well and truly broken and on Christmas morning we hurried through drenching rain and mud to early Holy Communion before helping the little boys tackle a mountain of parcels. And of course we had the full, heavy, unsuitable Christmas dinner: a 12lb turkey, a ham done in pineapple we had brought and my Christmas pudding (delicious!) with Mark’s brandy butter. Then, with Drambuie and Cherry Heering in hand, and no doubt with dyspepsia setting in, ‘ we saw the old Queen [she was 36 at the time] on telly, but thought her ghastly, grim and stupid talk about the wretched commonwealth as if it was really a heaven on earth which no one here thinks it is, and she never smiled once.’ We returned to Gwelo reluctantly, feeling very flat, but greeted by excited animals and a cheery Daniel who, despite my intermittent grumbles, had done as expected, feeding Boy and Twist, mowing the lawn and keeping our homestead secure.

  I looked at our home with new eyes now though, for a conversation with the General Manager at the company’s braaivleis had left Mark and me in no doubt that our lives were soon to change radically.

  CHAPTER 7

  A post-Christmas bombshell; of visits and farewells

  Regardless of any political crises or developments, there was always a lot of speculation in the company about where you might be sent next. You had no say, but hoped that your next posting would be a step up – a larger sales area, a spell
at a branch office or ultimately to head office. The company spanned both Southern and Northern Rhodesia; colleagues joked with Mark that so far he had been posted to smaller and smaller places – from Salisbury to Bulawayo to Gwelo – so where smaller from here? Watch out, they joked, you might land up in Mpulungu! This was the company’s remotest posting, at the northern-most tip of Northern Rhodesia. Very funny, we said, thanks but no thanks.

  Now my post-Christmas letter to my parents ended with: You had better take a breath and sit down, because our latest bombshell is that we are being transferred again, sometime in the middle of next year. We shall only have been in Gwelo 18 months at most. It is hardly any use telling you where we are going, because it is the farthest flung post in the whole of the company’s Rhodesian operation and 400 miles even from a railway. Abercorn in N. Rhodesia. If you haul out an atlas, it is on the bottom tip of Lake Tanganyika, surrounded by Congo, Tanganyika and Nyasaland, in fact by hordes of black men. There is one company man there, covering a vast area, and also for the depot on the lake shore at Mpulungu, the place actually on the lake. Abercorn is 22 miles and 2,500 feet up in the hills. Mr Whitehead dropped this bomb at the braaivleis, unofficially, and we await confirmation… there is no doubt it is a good thing for Mark, as he is so very much on his own there with a lot of responsibility, and they said not more than 2 years. From what we can gather from the rare people who know anything about the place, it is beautiful country, lovely climate (strawberries all year round etc and no winter) but the town is horrible with 3 European shops and 200 people [I meant white people] at most, but a nice club and a small lake nearby which is bilharzia free for bathing and sailing. I doubt if we shall find out more than that till we get there. Certainly we shall be better off, with a raise, NR cost of living allowance and nearly all your rent paid if not a company house. But no cinema, doing all your shopping by post, no nice hairdo’s etc etc spring to mind. However we shall just have to make the most of its advantages. As soon as we know more about it all I will tell you, in the meantime you now know as much as we do, and more if you have a decent atlas!

 

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