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vonani-bila-reviews-kwanobuhle-overcast-the-new-collection-by-award-winning-poet-ayanda-billie/

 

JOHANNESBURG REVIEW OF BOOKS   5 MARCH 2020

 

KwaNobuhle Overcast

by Ayanda Billie

Deep South, 2019  60pp.       

 

Review by Vonani Bila

 

 

Poetry of social obliteration and intimacy

 

1.

 

KwaNobuhle Overcast is Ayanda Billie’s third poetry collection, after Avenues of My Soul and Umhlaba Umanzi. The book is divided into two main constellations: the visible dark and depressed

spaces – the cracks and murky pits of poor black people’s sorry existence – and, living side by side

with this agonising pain, poems of music and the tenderness of love.

 

The poems directly address social and economic injustice within a devastating Black Consciousness

frame. It’s a dirty life of misery, of dead dogs and donkeys and life-weathered men who jump

from Van Stadens Bridge in iBhayi or hang themselves from the ceiling because of love gone

berserk. But Billie transforms this township landscape of violence and rage into energetic

poetry and verbal song, in the mode of resistance poets like Mafika Gwala and Ingoapele

Madingoane. His work exemplifies what Argentine poet Alejandra Pizarnik calls the job of

poetry: ‘to heal the fundamental wound’, to ‘rescue the abomination of human misery by

embodying it’. The poems are short and uncluttered; magnetic and delicate; prodigious,

robust, organic; unpretentious, revealing; and vividly visual.

 

In Billie’s universe, the township bears a silence that is heartbreaking, with wounds still

bleeding from the swellings of apartheid’s monstrous disasters, while in the same breath

showing clearly how the democratic dispensation has failed abysmally to right the wrongs of

the past. In KwaNobuhle, as in most neglected townships and villages on the periphery of

development in South Africa, residents stare at empty JoJo tanks while babies die in

hospitals. Like so many other townships, KwaNobuhle experiences severe service cutoffs to

its poor and indigent citizenry, while the state cushions the interests of global institutions of

greed. Billie’s poems vividly show us—the readers and observers—that there’s nothing

beautiful about a disintegrating township sinking so low.

 

In ‘Buyile’, an elegiac poem steeped in a keen appreciation of history, Billie chronicles the

ghastly death of a young black man in the nineteen-eighties. The man was inspired by the

teachings and writings of Robert Mangaliso Sobukwe, founding leader of the Pan Africanist

Congress of Azania (PAC), whom Bishop Desmond Mpilo Tutu described as a man ‘of

transparent goodness … utterly free of bitterness’. Buyile, mu-Afrika of the Pan Africanist

Congress of Azania, is burnt to death by ama-comrade—an ANC mob that abhorred the

erudite. His Africanist compatriots give him a dignified burial, but ama-comrade scavengers

vandalise his final resting place by exhuming and burning him as a dead man again in his

coffin.

 

ama-comrade necklaced him

in broad daylight

while children were watching

 

after seven days

ama-afrika buried him

when the sun stood still

 

when they filled the grave

with the last scoop of the soil

anger evaporated

the police were there at a distance

watching with a smile […]

 

later ama-comrade came again

to dig him out from his grave

in the presence of the police

they burnt him in his coffin

screaming ‘mayibuye i-afrika!’

 

This kind of violence is characteristic of a mob that dances in the whirlpool of madness. The

lyrical, lamenting tone almost makes the poem bearable, but the subject is too violent for

even a melancholy comfort. The texture of this poem, like many others in the collection, is

physical and concrete, and the direct style achieves an immediacy of impact.

 

2.

 

The extent of the destruction, dehumanisation, deep-seated divisions and self-hate – including

self-annihilation – in under-developed black townships like the Eastern Cape’s KwaNobuhle

shouldn’t be viewed as a shocking and isolated phenomenon. KwaNobuhle, with about

300,000 residents, is a product of forced removals. The township was built in 1967, after

people were moved from Langa, Xaba and New Gubbs as a result of the notorious Group

Areas Act. Although KwaNobuhle means ‘a place of beauty’ in isiXhosa, some shack

dwellings nearby the township still make use of the disgusting ‘bucket system’, whereby a

bucket is used to collect the faeces and urine of a household or group of households, and then

carted away by municipal truck. It was one of the most degrading features of an apartheid

system that condemned poor black people to a life of indignity, and twenty-five years into

South Africa’s freedom there are people who still suffer this degradation. In the poem

‘Apartheid’, we realise that this barbaric system taught us to hate one another with passion, to

always see the negative in ourselves.

 

Do not talk about apartheid

Forget about it

The smell of teargas, kicking of doors

Naked black bodies in mortuaries

Sink the past with bloodstain

In a dishwashing basin

We must not lose ourselves over nothing

Let us hug the beast

And carry the hopes of wounded hearts

Baptize our children

In the name of a cruel religion

 

No matter how many South Africans have exercised their right to vote in this quarter of a

century of democracy, in Billie’s lexicography the sulphurous atmosphere of the past persists.

It’s a place and space of an endless malaise of brutality. In a tiny but solemn four-line

anecdotal poem, ‘When they hijacked me’, Billie the poet is the victim, narrator and actor,

rendered helpless by senseless violence:

 

When they hijacked me

 

i gave them the keys

i did not protest

because I was asking God

why in front of my child

 

The poet Rainer Maria Rilke once remarked: ‘The purpose of life is to be defeated by greater

and greater things.’ But Billie shouldn’t be defeated by hallucinating idiots high on nyaope

and tik or tjoef. No one should.

 

In KwaNobuhle, life and death are often one. The township bathes in blood. The poem ‘I am

not the only one’ transports me to countless Saturday funerals in villages and townships:

 

On my way to the spaza shop

They are assembled

Like bats in a cave

 

A group of boys without moustaches

With okapis on their back pockets

Ready to stir the peace

Sorry Buda ndicela R2

 

They can make you dance

Without music playing

You will leave this earth

Without saying goodbye

To your children.

 

3.

 

In the early nineties, the notable Soweto performance poet Ike Mboneni Wangu Muila was

attacked by thugs in central Jozi and suffered permanent brain injury. Since then his mobility

has been limited, he struggles to walk briskly, and I doubt he can run.

 

In 2015, I was shot five times in my home by thugs, before my little children. I live with a

bullet lodged in my left thigh. I walk, though like a crab, and I cannot run, even though I was

a regular jogger with a dream to run the Comrades Marathon one day.

 

In July 2019, the poet Moses Mtileni was shot and killed by armed thugs who broke into his

home in Tembisa. He was thirty-six.

 

In March this year, scrap metal tsotsis broke into the poet Mxolisi Nyezwa’s spaza container

in Motherwell and cleaned it out. Nyezwa has stubbornly lived most of his life in the

township of New Brighton. Perhaps he is now contemplating packing his bags and moving

elsewhere, perhaps to a gated suburb of barbed wire and high walls. There, although he may

not hear his favourite maskandi music next door, he wouldn’t have to watch people being

felled like trees in broad daylight.

 

4.

 

The litany of these stories of cruelty is mind-boggling. Can the country be repaired, given the

flood of social and political mindlessness? Billie is not optimistic about the future of South

Africa. The poem ‘Birth mark’ illustrates why township life is like a curse.

 

This township is unforgiving

It breaks up homes

Drives boys to smoke tik

Nyaope and all colourful substances

To dance on the ceiling naked

Laugh at their mothers crying

 

Boys become hyenas

Find their dreams in dustbins

Klap their fathers

Their skins taste of salt behind prison cells

Show no trace of their birth

 

In 2016, I was a guest of the Mandela Bay Book Fair, an initiative Billie and fellow poets

Mxolisi Nyezwa, Monde Ngonyama and Mangaliso Buzani from New Brighton have

organised for years now. Billie provided me with lodgings in his house in KwaNobuhle, and

he took me on a tour. He told me that scores of people work at Volkswagen – one of the

biggest car factories on the African continent – ‘but the blue-collar workers are underpaid’. In

the township, I saw residents with spades, hammers, planks and wheelbarrows trying to erect

shacks. Billie told me that some residents were waiting for RDP houses, while others were

complaining that the available RDP houses were vacant or rented out, with the owners living

in Joburg or Cape Town. I heard stories of residents who were demanding refuse bins, but

there was no coherent waste management plan in the township. I saw stray dogs, probably

carrying rabies, feeding on piled-up and stinking rubbish heaps. Billie told me of how water

was scarce and expensive because of the crippling drought, and that the Kouga Dam’s water

was dwindling. ‘People must boil water to avoid health hazards,’ he said. The people around

me were free, but starving despite the freedom they had. This phony liberation is well

captured in ‘The empty house’:

 

In the grey alleys

A pack of dogs moves in ranks

From street to street

Following a hot bitch around dark corners

In the collapsing rdp houses

Decay looks out through broken windows;

A tired grandmother sits on a three-legged couch

breathing heavily in the wind.

Morning in the empty house, a longing for the laughter

of children.

 

The free-floating associative poem ‘Beginning of a song’ is reminiscent of the concrete and

well-articulated narrative that is emerging elsewhere in South Africa, from poets like Angifi

Dladla, Mangaliso Buzani, Mxolisi Dolla Sapeta and Musawenkosi Khanyile, who make

poetry from observing the actual conditions in which most people live—conditions that are

too painful or embarrassing for many writers to describe.

 

The old man with big glasses

Pushing a wheelbarrow

Collecting food for his piglets

Found a child in a black plastic bag

Curled, dead

He called the people

The sun went slowly blind

 

Women began to sing in tears

From the depths of the sea

Sending off a child to her ancestors

Calling and calling them

 

And it is not just South Africans who are suffering because of the ANC-led government’s

failure to meet people’s basic needs. Illegal and undocumented migrants have flooded into

villages, townships and cities. Many live in destitute conditions. Others may yearn to return

home, but fear political instability and persecution. In many parts of South Africa, when

refugees become prosperous, local people often respond with hatred; perhaps because of a

latent anger really caused by the failures of a corrupt government to deliver on its election

promises. Despite Africans’ common experience of oppression, colonialism, slavery and

racism, migrants are demonised, accused of committing violent crimes and snatching away

‘our jobs’ and ‘our women’. In the past, black South Africans were called all sorts of horrible

names, like kaffir, non-white, Plural, nigger or Bantu. Now, in independent South Africa, the

so-called African foreign nationals are called makwerekwere, grigambas or makomver

[derived from kom van ver in Afrikaans]. They are far from safe in a country rife with

xenophobia and discrimination, as ‘On a hospital bed’, with its richness of linguistic

hybridism, illustrates:

 

mkhuluwa

we held up

the somali shopkeeper

 

with okapis

in daylight

with children inside

 

i looked him dead

in the eyes

 

we want money

wena

 

with a pleading voice he said

why my friend?

 

i gave him one hole

in the chest

 

who’s your friend

kwerekwere

 

5.

 

In such a dark space, we must find light where we can. Billie finds his in music and love.

Like many people from the Eastern Cape, he is a jazz fan – the province boasts an

extraordinary jazz heritage – and his love for the genre fired him up to pay homage to the

legendary Winston ‘Mankunku’ Ngozi through poetry. At the launch of KwaNobuhle

Overcast, during the Mandela Bay Book Fair last year, I heard Billie read this vigorous poem

with finesse, in a syncopated and rhythmic fashion as if he was interpreting a musical score,

thrilling his audience, including high school learners unfamiliar with jazz or an icon such as

Mankunku Ngozi:

 

Yakhal’ inkomo

for what we lost

Mankunku called all the stars

 

He blew dust from the moon

so that light would be there above us

so that light would be there to smile at us

 

The beauty of the verbal storm that flourishes in Billie’s jazz style is also evident in a poem

like ‘Horn Screaming’, with its hypnotic cadence. The poet pays tribute to the free-spirited

flautist and saxophonist Zimasile Ngqawana, affectionately known as Zim, who died after

suffering a stroke during a rehearsal in Joburg in 2011, aged fifty-one. Zim was born in New

Brighton in iBhayi, not far from Tinarha where Billie was born in 1975. In ‘Horn Screaming’

we savour, listen intently and dance to the eerie jazz invocations of Ngqawana, and find

ourselves at one with Africa, in communion with happy ancestors. Here we discover the vital

joy of life.

 

In his obituary for Ngqawana, poet and critic Sandile Ngidi affirmed, ‘He kept the soul of his

music rooted in indigenous sounds, yet also incorporated progressive phrasing and cadences

to attain universal relevance.’ I saw Billie perform ‘Horn Screaming’ at the inaugural

Vhembe International Poetry Festival at the Timbila Writers’ Village in Shirley, Limpopo, in

  1. He snapped his fingers to illustrate the unwritten staff notation of the poem. The

audience, mainly of poets, was mesmerised, joining in the chorus and cheering, as if

summoning v[h]adzimu themselves. Like poetry by Federico García Lorca, Lesego

Rampolokeng, Keorapetse Kgositsile, Benjamin Zephaniah and Amiri Baraka—who were all

driven by music—‘Horn screaming’ embodies the musicality and insistent rhythms of jazz:

 

vadzimu

vadzimu

where noise is silenced

screams trapped

with a note

from a bleeding heart

crowded with faces […]

 

zimology

in cold silence

your spirit crowds me

your san songs

are the light coming through

to a sad-eyed blackman

today, i begin to live

a brief solace.

 

More solace is found in his family, especially in his beloved wife Dieketso, his companion of

more than fifteen years. If his poetry is to be believed, his is a blissful and sensuous marriage.

In ‘Finding love’, he weaves through potent lines—referring to his wife, who hails from

KwaZakhele—in confessional mode:

 

i found love in a storm

in my country

in kwazakhele

in streets that smell of violence

where terror rules.

 

i lifted my arms

to catch a shooting star

my eyes are satisfied.

 

In another minimalist love poem, ‘In the morning’, Billie writes movingly of love’s quotidian

pleasures:

 

silently i know

i could not stand emptiness

without you

i could not survive a day

without the hiss from the kettle

as you make coffee for me

 

6.

 

Billie also captures everyday life by incorporating a mixture of languages in his work,

especially isiXhosa words and phrases. These allusions and idiomatic expressions seem to

suggest a transcendental truth, making his poetry intense yet accessible, honest, searching. In

the blunt and explosive ‘No time for amagwijo’, the speaker’s voice is furious, fed up with

the government’s hollow promises:

 

president

i have no time for a song

for dolo phezulu

for viva chief yam

wathint’ abafazi wathint’ imbokodo.

 

This lyrical and rhythmical crescendo is addressed to the comical figure of former president

Jacob Gedleyihlekisa Zuma, whose name has become synonymous with corruption. The

speaker charges into prophetic utterance, Ingoapele Madingoane-style, suggesting that the

government’s failure to take care of the poor will prove costly. In the engaging form of folk

praise and with Struggle cadences, the speaker summons the power of those who are serious

to take this country forward, towards some notion of a unified consciousness:

 

i have no time for toyi-toyi

i have come to give you a message

from the streets blocked with burning tyres

from the empty jojo tanks in the villages

from the children whose schools are locked for months […]

 

i have not come here to count the stars

and make sketches in the sand

babies are dying at dora nginza hospital. […]

 

After reading this collection, I’m inspired to join this pro-African march to economic

progress and genuine freedom. The freedom to speak and act freely, to reincarnate our dying

languages, including the evocative languages of healers and poets. The freedom to till the

land and grow a sustainable economy, the freedom to build an egalitarian and critical literate

society.

 

I yearn to see the grey cloud hanging over KwaNobuhle like a veil of glaucoma removed

permanently. As Thomas Sankara, dedicated pan-Africanist, anti-imperialist and leader of

Burkina Faso, would address his people, ‘Homeland or death, we will win!’

 

 

******

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