Lewis Nkosi. The Black Psychiatrist / Flying Home, by Astrid Starck-Adler and Dag Henrichsen.
From the introduction of Lewis Nkosi: The Black Psychiatrist / Flying Home, by Astrid Starck-Adler and Dag Henrichsen.
"All stories have a starting point; naturally" wrote Lewis Nkosi, when he sat down in Basel, Switzerland, in 2008 to write a first sketch of an autobiography he never could commence to write. The eminent South African writer, journalist, critic and literary scholar, born in 1936 in Durban, exiled from apartheid South Africa in 1960, returning home for the first time in 1991 and finding at last, in 1998, domicile in Basel, died in Johannesburg in 2010. During his last years, and as part of his memoir project, he embarked on travels in his country, linking up with family members, friends and colleagues, searching for family graves and visiting former schools and working places. The grave of his grandmother Esther Makhathini, who raised him, was particularly important to him. Fifty-two years after her death he finally stood at a gravesite in Chesterville (Durban) that once was hers and grieved, tucking away a small bottle with sand into his jacket's top pocket and patting it closer to his heart. [...]
The Starting Point
All stories have a starting point, naturally. My life-story commences in a life of a parentless and homeless child. I never saw my father; my mother died when I was seven and my grandmother, to whom my first novel Mating Birds is dedicated, brought me up: To Esther Makhathini who washed white people's clothes so that I could learn to read and write. In consequence, I spent most of my childhood being shunted around from friends' to relatives' houses while my grandmother did laundry to put me through school, and these schools were so numerous and my teachers so various that a great deal of my research will entail a search for an army of dead relatives, old teachers (one of whom, Mr Dubazana, a great teacher and revered choir master incredibly [sic] died last year). Then, of course, there are the old school friends and acquaintances. Going to find these individuals will, no doubt, help me to reconstruct my childhood. After boarding school at Eshowe I worked briefly as a common labourer at a chemical plant for the manufacture of fertilizers. Later I worked at a paint-making factory in Durban and as a timekeeper on a building site. The next move was joining the Ilanga lase Natal before going on to join DRUM in Johannesburg. It is now common knowledge that DRUM writers constitute an important segment among a group of individuals who were in the forefront of the development of modern African literature in South Africa. This group by itself deserves a fuller story. Then as reporters for Drum and Golden City Post we were enabled to follow the vicissitudes of political resistance in all its aspects, Sophiatown, Alexandra, Cato Manor, District Six were its outposts. Nat Nakasa and I used blankets to collect bodies at Sharpeville [during the massacre of I960]. These locations form a backdrop to our lives. They deserve memorialisation since many of them have been erased. I hope my Memoirs will help to do this. The first part of this story comes to an end with my departure into exile. I left the country in November 1960 after Sharpeville when I was awarded a Nieman Fellowship at Harvard [in the US]. Without any explanation or justification, which the Government was not obliged to offer, my application for a passport was turned down. Where blacks were concerned this was routine procedure. [...]
This is an excerpt from: Lewis Nkosi. The Black Psychiatrist / Flying Home, by Astrid Starck-Adler and Dag Henrichsen.
Title: Lewis Nkosi. The Black Psychiatrist / Flying Home
Subtitle: Texts, Perspectives, Homage
Editors: Astrid Starck-Adler; Dag Henrichsen
Publisher: Basler Afrika Bibliographien
Switzerland, Basel 2021
ISBN 9783905758887 / ISBN 978-3-905758-88-7
Hardcover, 15 x 22 cm, 468 pages, a few colour photographs
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