from http://bookshybooks.blogspot.com/2016/03/belated-thoughts-on-two-very-different.html
This is my very belated thoughts on two books I read at some
point towards the end of 2014 and the beginning 2015 (did I say it was very
belated). Two books that I am reviewing not because I intend to draw parallels
between them, although there could be some - they do cover themes of
migration/being a migrant, bring us closer to the psyche of migrants and have
multiple characters that are central to the story.
I'm sharing my thoughts because I think they are two very
beautiful books that cover the theme of (Im)migration (be it trying to get
there or what happens once you are there) in their own unique ways. African Titanics is extremely poetic and
says a lot in a really short book about migrants journeying across the
Mediterranean; while The Maestro, The
Magistrate and The Mathematician takes us into the psyche of three very
different Zimbabwean immigrants once they have settled in Scotland.
African Titanics
by Eritrean novelist, Abu Bakr Hamid Kahal, was originally published in Arabic
in 2008.Thanks to Darf publishers, we got the English translation (translated
by Charis Bredin) in 2014. This is a short, but poetic novel about a group of
African migrants journey across the Mediterranean. The main character, Abdar -
is a young Eritrean man who was 'plucked from Eritrea, swept across the
Sudanese border and on into Libya, in the dark night', and in 122 pages we get
a sense of not only Abdar, but other migrants' journey - through the desert and
across sea - and what happens along the way.
The journey isn't cheap - Abdar will require one thousand
dollars for passage aboard the Titanic to Lampedusa in Italy. There is also no
guarantee of safe arrival on the other side - even with the best captains of
the Titanic. The journey to the Titanic is also arduous - in Land Rovers being
driven across the desert; lost and thirsty in the desert and hovering between
life and death.Then the wait in Tripoli for the few survivors from the desert
journey who still want to carry on at the smuggler hide-out. There you learn
just how many migrants have passed through this place over the years - their
many messages of fear and doubt, in Arabic, French, English, Amharic and
Tigré - on the wall as they wait
for their own departure on the Titanic. Of Terhas - another Eritrean women
whose body was wasted during the desert journey but survived; and young Malouk,
the great Liberian storyteller with his faithful companion - his guitar that he
has owned since he was fourteen - and his many stories and poems. There's also
a treacherous late night border crossing in Tunisia; and the journey across the
sea hasn't even begun.
This is a perilous journey that these men and women take and
without saying it we know that not everyone will make it to Europe, but beauty
in African Titanics is that it does
not only focus on the extremely dangerous journey that this group of migrants
go through, but it also brings out the conversation, music, poetry and stories
migrants share with each other as they attempt to get to Europe; of their hopes
and dreams in the midst of despair; and the bravery of men and women who enter
these Titanics not knowing whether they will get to the other side or not. This
is a beautiful, haunting novel,
and while it was first published i 2008 before the height of the crisis
gripping Europe, it brings us closer to the humanity of men and women who make
the decision to go to Europe.
Second is The Maestro,
The Magistrate & The Mathematician by Tendai Huchu, first published by
'amaBooks in 2014. This is Huchu's second novel - following The Hairdresser of Harare. I like
Huchu's writing, there is humour present throughout the pages of this novel - even
if sometimes the topic is quite bleak. One of my favourite parts of the book
would have to be his descriptions of Edinburgh - I've been to the city twice
and only for a few days. So never enough to really know it, but I got a sense
of the terrain and the streets through The Magistrate who wandered the city
with his walkman in tow, as he held on to pieces of home through music (guess
that's another parallel - music and migration).
So who are the Three M's and what's this story all about?
Well, it's about three very different Zimbabwean migrants in Edinburgh trying
to figure things out, in a certain period in both the UK and Zimbabwe's
political and economic history - pre-2010. There's The Magistrate. Baba Chenai
who was a big deal in Zimbabwe - a magistrate - but now lives with his wife and
their fifteen-year-old daughter. His wife is the main breadwinner, his daughter
is growing up (a little too quickly) and unemployed, until recently - he got a
job as a caregiver in an old persons home - he's trying to come to terms with
his new life and identity in Edinburgh with music as his companion as he walks.
Then there's The Mathematician, Farai, doing his PhD on some
complex topic I can't wrap my head around but it's about hyperinflation - and
he has found the work of a deceased Angolan economist who wrote on fiscal
policy in Angola whose work he finds quite influential for his own writings.
Living with his friends and flatmates, Brian and Scott, Farai seems to be
prefer 'slumming' it even though he is wealthy, or at least his family is. He
also seems to be conflicted between a longing for Zimbabwe, as well a sense of
alienation from it.
Finally, there's The Maestro - isolated with his drugs,
literature and endless stream of consciousness. A white Zimbabwean, stacking
shelves in Tesco - he definitely reveals that you're not spared from the
harshness of being an immigrant just because you might be the same race as the
indigenes. The Maestro is the most broken, the most fragile, the most alone
(internally) of all the immigrants in the story. Then there's a fourth migrant - the infuriating Alfonso -
who strange enough grew on me as the story went on; who is connected - loosely
or otherwise to these three men. For one, he gives The Magistrate a new purpose
in life, through politics, even though initially he is reluctant to take part
in any of it.
Through these three characters, Huchu captures how
frustrating and tiring it can be to find a place to belong once you're far away
from home, and the many ways to escape - drugs and books with The Maestro - or
be closer to home - music with The Magistrate escapes in his music.
Together both African
Titanics and The Maestro, The
Magistrate & The Mathematician capture the many experiences of
(Im)migration from the scorching Sahara to freezing Edinburgh, shaped by hope
and despair.
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