August 16th, 2012
“My Love Affair with a Mountain Village”
I rise each morning with the sun and, of course, the
neighborhood roosters that act as the village’s alarm clock, faithfully
ushering in each new morning with their cacophony of crowing.
This is, by far, my favorite time of day. The homestead is still quiet, the rest
of my family still savoring their last few moments of sleep while I quickly
rise to savor my only few moments of solitude around the homestead. I swing open the wooden door to my
thatched-roof rondavel; the warm air, still heavy with sleep, rushes out as the
crisp morning air rushes in to replace it. The valley lays below me, a velvet blanket glittered with
silver lights scattered here and there. Daylight has just begun to peek above the hills, the
sky blushing a soft pink along the horizon.
I slip outside, still in my pajamas. Having the homestead to myself means
that this is the only time of day that I get to leave my house without modestly
donning a knee-length skirt or dress first. Immediately, my neck cranes upward to catch a glimpse of the
moon precariously hanging in the little darkness that remains above the
mountain top, a few stars still faintly twinkling their last twinkles of the
night. Here, I love that I can
mark the passage of time in moon cycles.
In fact, in Siswati, the word for “month” (inyanga) also means “moon.” At home, I’m too busy and distracted to notice things such
as the waxing and waning of the moon.
Since arriving in Kudzeni, it has become one of the highlights of my
day.
Spring is on the way…I can feel it tickling my skin. The African sun has yet to break the
Swazi winter, leaving the mornings pleasantly cool. The valley below still lays blanketed in a thin layer of
mist, not yet ready to rise and face a new day. I cautiously make my way down to the pit latrine in the
dawn’s faint light. On the way, I pass
my family’s kraal, where the cows lay snuggled under their usual tree, the low
branches offering some shelter from the biting wind. They lazily raise their heads from slumber to acknowledge my
presence. Sometimes I even mumble
a greeting in reply, “Kusile inkhomo.” (Good morning Cows). In this moment, I feel as if it is just
the cows, the mountain, and I ready to greet the sun’s first rays.
By the time I have finished my morning rounds, the sky has
brightened, the stars all faded, the rocky hillside red above me, bathed in an
early morning glow. Likewise, the
homestead begins to awaken around me.
As I retreat to my hut, I hear the first cries of my sisi’s baby, the
door to the main house slamming repeatedly as my younger bosisi dress for
school, the clamor of hooves as our herd of goats rush past my hut to spend the
day grazing the mountainside.
Six days a week, I set off down the dirt road for training,
my two dogs, Tiger and Boss, following along behind me, their entire backsides
wagging with excitement. I hear
faint cries of “Bongiwe!” coming from the children on the homestead up the
mountain from mine. I always smile
and return their waves, loving the feeling of belonging that their greetings
give me. When we reach my
neighbor’s homestead, we are joined by Heather (a fellow volunteer) and her
puppy, Kona. Together, the five of
us make our way down the mountain, the puppies wrestling contentedly,
occasionally rushing off into the tall grasses in pursuit of some ever-elusive
prey. We pass groups of timid
school children, marching purposefully in the opposite direction on their way
to the local primary school. They
all smile and offer shy waves, giggling as we pass. After seven weeks, we have become a part of their morning
routine, just as they have become a part of ours.
After hours of tedious training, my mind breathes a sigh of
relief when the bus finally drops me at the base of my beloved mountain each
evening. I almost always opt for
the “shortcut” home, following a narrow, dirt path that weaves through thick,
brittle grasses then under and around a grove of mango trees before depositing
me back on the main road halfway up the mountainside. The heat hangs so heavy by the afternoon that the edges of
the surrounding mountain tops always appear hazy and blurred at this time of
day. But as I complete the final
leg of my journey, crossing a small stream and climbing ever higher up the
mountain, there is a merciful drop in temperature.
Cold evenings are spent huddled around the fire in our
outdoor kitchen, chatting with my bosisi as they prepare the evening meal. As darkness descends, life on my
homestead begins to draw to a close.
My bhuti gathers the wares of his small outdoor shop and safely stows
them away for another day. My babe
and oldest sisi arrive home from a long day of work in the city on the last bus
of the evening. In the distance, I
hear the yapping of my dogs and the shrill whistles of my bhuti, followed by
the vibration of dozens of hooves on the packed earth as the goats and cows are
herded back down the mountain and into their kraals for the night.
As the first stars begin to shine, I retreat to the
sanctuary of my own hut. Although
evenings remain crisp, I now fall asleep to the lullaby of crickets singing
below my window, and once again, I am reminded that spring is on it’s way.
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