According to an upmarket resident-guide, some eighty percent
of the 25,000 visitors to Isandlwana – the site of the famous Anglo-Zulu battle
- are British. And of the remainder,
less than ten percent are black South Africans.
This in itself raises all sorts of interesting questions about the
history and politics of memory. Why, for example, are the British quite so
fascinated by this greatest defeat in the history of Empire, analyzing and
re-analysing its reasons; whereas for today’s Zulus, this battle is apparently insignificant
in the context of other dramatic upheavals that took place in the 19th
century under kings like Shaka, Dingane and Cetshwayo?
Isandlwana is a prominent sandstone outcrop that can be seen
from the surrounding hills and valleys, many kilometres away. The tall white stone cairns that mark the
fallen dead are scattered liberally across the hillside - nearly five thousand
were slaughtered that day, but the fallen Zulu were taken away, so the cairns (originally over 290 of them) only
mark the piles of British dead. The 22nd August
1879 was a new moon day; like many other cultures (including those who practice
Ashtanga yoga), the Zulus observed certain lunar customs. It was a day on which Zulu impi were not
supposed to fight. Uncannily, the same
day saw a partial eclipse of the sun to underwrite all that was already
auspicious or foreboding about the timing and location of the battle.
On a clear day the cairns can be seen from afar. The British badly underestimated the capacity and strategy of the Zulu army, thinking amongst other things that, like the Xhosa, the Zulu would likely use guerilla tactics. A highly disciplined force of 25,000 men who could march-run barefoot at 60 miles a day in sweltering heat and led by a commander aged over 70, nogal, was not exactly what they were expecting.
We learned on these ‘battlefield tours’ so much about
individual British soldiers yet relatively little about their Zulu counterparts.
This tourism in many ways hinges on postcolonial romanticism about Empire’s
values of heroism, resilience and courage – disregarding lesser details such as
an unprovoked and aggressive British incursion into Zulu territory. The focus on British individuals continues the
bias that imbued so many colonial history books – that white men were dynamic
individuals who were the agents of history-making, whereas women and natives were
the anonymous recipients of change.
Not only memory is interesting here, but
memorialization. The memorials are
starkly different: there are a variety of monuments to the British erected over
the years at Islandlwana and Rorke’s Drift, but only two or three monuments
created to commemorate the Zulu dead. The
Zulu monument at Islandlwana is perhaps more a work of art than anything else –
a striking ‘traditional’ bravery necklace of quills and lion claws, writ large
in earth-hue metal, in the shape of the ‘bull horn’ formation, the military
enclosure tactic developed by Shaka.
We stayed in the old farmhouse (c.1940) at Fugitives’ Drift in
the shade of grapefruit trees, under a three-quarter moon, vying with encroaching
weeds to use the outside shower. With Islandlwana
too in the far distance, it was suitably atmospheric. Fugitives Drift is so named for the two
British fugitive-soldiers who met their deaths by the flooded Buffalo river as
they attempted to save the Queen’s colours (the symbolic flag of regimental
pride and allegiance to Victoria) after fleeing the corpse-strewn hillside of Isandlwana. They stood for all the old-fashioned valour and
fortitude of Empire, the type that reminds me of Scott of Antarctica and more
latterly the college rowing clubs in Cambridge.
So where do the Buddhists come into all this? Well they didn’t make it to the veld of Isandlwana,
but they did make it to veld of Bronkhorstpruit which is 50km east of Pretoria,
and where J. and I visited last weekend.
Believe it or not, Bronkhorstspruit is home to the largest Buddhist
temple, Nan Hua Temple, in the southern hemisphere. The site was established in 1992 by the Taiwanese
Fo Guang Shan Buddhist Order to promote Buddhism on the African continent. There is a resident community of monks and
nuns, one of whom told me off for brushing my hands along the scented lavender
rows. I guess she thought I was (rather violently) trying
to pick it.
People of all colours and from all walks of life visit the
temple complex. To that extent, it is a
more South African experience than most other excursions one could choose. At lunch we enjoyed a vegetarian buffet at
the meagre sum of 30 rand per person, served on saucer-sized plates to foster
reflection on greed. Diners sit at slim
bench-tables, all facing in the same direction, and are encouraged to eat in
silence, whilst reflecting on the prayerful eating guidelines boldly displayed
above on the wall. We sat in the back
row with some of the kitchen workers who have mastered the art of piling voluminous
loads of noodles into the saucers. It’s
a fuss-free and functional affair, and about a hundred diners were in and out
of the hall in under 40 minutes.
From there we went on to the sleepy village of Cullinan,
famed for its diamond mine and the discovery of the largest diamond in the world
- yup, over half a kilogram. The stone was bought by the (recently defeated
Boer) Transvaal government and presented to King Edward as a birthday prezzie
c. 1905, before parts of it were later incorporated into the Crown Jewels. And this only 25 years or so after the Zulu
army decimated the British at Isandlwana.
Could things have been different?
The Boers aside, more twists and ironies of Empire as visions of Zuma’s five wives
rise before me… each wearing a 120 gram diamond.
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