It is very inspiring to learn about the hardships and beauty of living in Africa. I know many of the poorest people would never trade living there for anything.
Once I was hired to be a groomsman for an African wedding here in the states. It was a culture shock for me, but I felt very lucky to be invited as one of their own. There was two of us light skinned groomsmen hired to match the many lovely dark skinned bridesmaid sisters. All of the African men and women were authentic and pure, without any disrespectful speech to anyone. One was telling me about Johannesburg where is family grew peaches. They sold the best ones and ate the bruised and broken ones that will not sell. The reception had many speeches and ceremonial gifts of fabrics, clothing, and valued goods used in trade. I tried to wriggle out of not dancing, but the bridesmaid I was paired with insisted, and we did something a bit like a conga line into a dance circle. I think this must have been a very large family that had saved up riches all their lives to celebrate this wedding.
Anyway, African culture always awakens these memories for me, and I wanted to share back. Thanks.
@creativetruth our (buckaroo and myself) Grandfather was a well respected Author, could speak 5 African Languages and knew the culture better than anyone https://www.thriftbooks.com/a/aubrey-elliott/744336/ I guess he saw what we do. I am sure is where @buckaroo got her incredible writing skills from, me not so much! The book top far right is Cove Rock where my Dad @quailbreeder still resides. There really is something very special about this place albeit all the drama. Cheer$;)
Aaaaah thank you for the compliment @craigcryptoking. And yes, Gramps was an amazing man
Fascinating.
I did a quick library search and none of these are available in my area. My state claims to be "super woke" in all ways, yet they don't seem to have many books on African culture unless it's about Trevor Noah. Oh my!
I'll keep your link in mind in case I want to consider purchasing one. The photography on the cover alone is amazing. In some cases, I do buy books based on the cover, but also when well-recommended.
I think only available in RSA and the UK. Trevor Noah, uhmmm ye... one of our worst exports yet, lol, he was cool in RSA and had a South African accent, humble etc a year after hitting the STATES totally changed, arrogant, don't like him at all anymore. Cheer$;)
Other than the fact that he is now just a globalist pawn spewing their nefarious agenda, much like the rest of the mainstream 'funny guys'!
What a beautiful experience and memory for you @creativetruth! I'm sure you learned a lot more than dancing ;) Thank you for sharing your story. I'm looking at sewing dolls, but with the authentic theme, so what we call shweshwe material. Maybe they'll eventually make it over the pond.....