Sea Days - ART and Bruce?-

ART and Bruce?-
Hard to believe since "never the twains shall meet". I went to the Artist’s lofts to discuss sailing with the professional artist Joyce and her husband Wayne, lifelong sailors (heLeia mais
ART and Bruce?-
Hard to believe since "never the twains shall meet". I went to the Artist’s lofts to discuss sailing with the professional artist Joyce and her husband Wayne, lifelong sailors (he was the CEO of Beneteau) and found myself pulled into an art project.
One project led to a second and so on. Before I knew it, I had gone to 6 classes, creating: a sunset, sailing boats on the water, African warriors, a navigational lampshade, a “flying” butterfly, and balloons. and was part of today’s art show. Although I still have no artistic talent, I did have a lot of fun and learned a few things.Leia mais
Sunrise
Today we arrive in Capetown, South Africa. It’ 5am and we pull into our berth for the next 3 days as the sun rises over a beautiful city.
Cape Town-
We began our visit to South Africa with a view of Table Mountain and then a tour of Capetown as we drove out of the City into the Wine Valley.
If you can imagine a perfect start to a week in South Africa, it would include:
- A Special Event designed for the Around the World Travelers
- Deep within the wine region of Franschhoek Valley in South Africa’s Western Cape was
an incredible afternoon visit to the 1,800 hectare Boschendal Winery and nature preserve dating back to 1685. https://boschendal.com/
- Unlimited wonderful fine wines: white, blush and red wines
- Wine Tastings and tours of the Farm, the Manor House, and the Art Gallery
- Appetizers and canapes that had wonderful local and international flavors
- A served gourmet farm-to-table meal that could feed you for days, no matter what your tastes with 7 starters and 6 main courses … for everyone served family style
- Music - three live groups that were so wonderful, starting with African music, then exciting African/reggae/pop Marimba music and then mellow lunch music to accompany the food by Acoustic Elements. https://acousticelement.co.za/
- An opportunity to “shop” at the winery stores and bring home any 2 presents …free - we selected a wonderful gift set of red wine and a set of animal shaped glass wine stoppers.
- Did I forget to mention that the weather was perfect all day and the scenery was unreal. Only God can make such a perfect setting for us.
Everyone had a great time!
20 photos and 2 videos.Leia mais
see text in 1 of 3 posting
20 photos and 2 videos.
see text in 1 of 3 posting
20 photos and 1 video.
FULL MOON & Table Mountain National Park outside our window and the Itinerary for the next leg of our adventure! Today 200+ passengers get off and some new friends will join this leg.
We arrive in Cape Town, South Africa to a beautiful view of the city and the Table Mountain in our background at the Waterfront. South Africa’s oldest city and legislative capital is a mix of upscale, modern and many struggling neighborhoods with a significant cultural heritage. It is Africa’s third main economic center and business technology hub. It is a major tourist attraction with much to see. With 11 languages, it is interesting to get around, but most people spoke some, if not fluent, English. It would be a good place to retire to but the government corruption and unrest in the city makes it less desirable.
We decided to change our plans, cancel our city tour, and spend the day at the Jewish Museum and St Johns Street and Great Synagogues, Holocaust Museum & Libraries and other related attractions (and then the next day at Robben Island). Our plans were later changed by “events”…read on.
The museum was a wonderful place as we were the first ones in and enjoyed for 2 hours knowing they were closing early and would be closed for two days for Passover. It tells the story of the Jewish immigrants to South Africa and how the community built up and served the Jewish cycles of life including birth, growth love and loss with its own rituals and traditions connecting the individual to the family, to the community and past generations.
In 1652, the first Europeans that settled in the Cape of Good Hope were those that used it as a supply station for passing ships but the Dutch East India Company only recognized the Dutch Reformed Church and were strict about only working with those observers. In 1804 when they lost control of the Cape to the British, religious tolerance was established. By 1880 there was an estimated population of 4,000 Jews in Cape Town mostly from England and Germany. Later Eastern European (mainly Lithuania) Jews came here in large numbers to find work, mostly as merchants, tailors, and butchers and later diamond mining and dealers (all the obvious ones). They settled in a vibrant inner city area (District 6) and brought many traditions of Jewish life. At the end of the Century, Jews began to increase in Johannesburg as well as Cape Town.
The first Synagogue was established in 1841 with the first Rabbi in 1849 and an actual building was consecrated in 1863 as the Spiritual Center of Jewish Life in Cape Town (first in South Africa) and Julius Mosenthal, who had built a large shipping business here in 1858 became the first Jew elected to the Cape Legislative Assembly in1858. Jews were settling into this new world. An interesting fact was that Oudtshoorn (nicknamed Jerusalem of Africa) was a town of over 1,500 Jews in 1910 and had established a large business in the Ostrich feather industry. Although a lot of Jews from Eastern Europe left Russia and came to the U.S in this timeframe, 40,000 came to South Africa to work in the gold and diamond fields. This growth continued in the 1930’s when there were 90,645 Jews in South Africa (5% of the white pop and 1% of the total pop) mostly in Johannesburg. The community was/is mostly Ashkenazi but there is an old Sephardim group that lived on Rhodes Island starting in 1553 and they established a Community in Cape Town in the1950’s.
Jews and Human Rights-
While many Jews along with most of the South African Whites lived quietly with segregation and apartheid, a large number challenged the inequities of life in South Africa and sought a more humane and just society. Some Jewish Organizations seemed to be driven by Jewish values but others by social ideals (liberalism and socialism). Their efforts for human rights covered equal education. health care and social welfare services. In the1970’s the United Jewish Women (UJW) were very outspoken against apartheid and fought for equality, often more than the Jewish Community at large. It was always a tough balance since the Jewish Community was a minority and did not want to appear as a subversive organization and contrary to the government.
As a very organized community, Jewish life centered around the formation of Hebrew congregations. At the end of the 19th Century, they built Synagogues, consecrated burial grounds, provided philanthropic assistance and created educational facilities (in particular when apartheid introduced Christian National Education into state schools). The first South African Zionist Federation were started in the 1898s and grew into support for the establishment of the State of Israel.
In the 1960-70’s there were 120,000 Jews in South Africa but now there are only 51,000 with 12,000 of them living in Cape Town and the remainder mostly in Johannesburg. We are told that there is little antisemitism but there are anti-Israel protests whenever there is a Jewish holiday. Sure enough, this was the eve of the first seder and the first day of Passover and a Palestinian protest was beginning to form around noon, right outside the Jewish Complex here. We were quickly escorted out to be safe and unfortunately did not get to see the Holocaust Museum www.ctholocaust.co.za or the Great Synagogue (see the video of the forming of the protesters outside the Synagogue as we left). As you will see in the next post, we did get to enjoy the afternoon in Cape Town as we strolled through the city and visited other venues.Leia mais
The “race classification” board (1959-1991) was created for formal humiliating hearings as blacks came before a panel to argue about what "race" they should be labelled. Aparteid Population Registration Act classified every South African as belonging to one of at least seven "races" and accordingly granted or denied them citizenship rights on a sliding scale from "White" (full rights) to "Bantu" (with the fewest). The classification was subjective, and families were split apart when pale or darker skinned children or parents - or those with curlier hair, or different features – were placed in separate categories.
We then visited the first black church in South Africa, which is now a museum for African art and exhibits. Very interesting and powerful.
Our visit to the Iziko (in isiXhosa means health) Museum https://www.iziko.org.za/ was part of our Garden tour and is the center of the complex of 11 National museums. We went to the gallery and enjoyed some very unique historical and contemporary art. See the photos of some selected pieces we enjoyed. Don’t miss Messages from the Moat.Leia mais
ViajanteWe were surprised and had to take a photo! Hope you are doing well!!
Robben Island is a UNESCO World Heritage site.
Although the Island has been the place of isolation for 500 years for those that have been exiled as criminals, lepers, and mentally ill, it is most recently remembered from 1960-91 as a home for “political prisoners” (they never used that term but rather called them “criminals”). The most well known is Nelson Mandela for his 27 years in captivity for speaking out against the apartheid (“apartness” in the language of Afrikaans), racial segregation, system. Segregation which began in early 1900’s became much worse in the 1950’s when neighborhoods were separated, and Blacks were moved out of the city (i.e., District 6 where 60,000 Blacks were moved out to make it more White). Later, many of those that spoke out were “convicted” and sent to Robben Island. Thank God it has been a museum since 1997 to tell the story and preserve history.
Robben Island was a maximum-security standalone prison that existed for many years but mostly built up around WWII between 1931-60 when the Island was an Army/Navy base. During this military period, the Island was not used as a prison but used to protect Allied interests up to 1945. Even then, racial segregation remained, as Black people were housed in separate inferior accommodations, while White male soldiers and engineers lived in the southern region of the Island in barracks in the village. The Department of Prisons took over the Island in 1961, dismantled some of the guns and established the infamous Maximum-Security Prison which is what the Island is mostly known for today.
Interestingly, the quote (no one knows who said it) that fits this situation where the world just watched is: “Evil can only flourish if a few good people do nothing”. Mr. Mandela’s (as everyone on the Island refers to him out of respect) story is one of triumph of the human spirit over adversity, suffering and injustice. South Africa is an example that there is hope and things can always change. UBUNTU is a term used to mean HUMANITY. Hear Mr. Mandela’s description here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Experience_u…
As we learned from the passionate guide that provided us with the orientation of the Island, “this was never about South Africa, never about apartheid, and never about racism”! It was more about the process of breaking down a people, dividing them in order to conquer them, and making them fight amongst themselves. This is what happened with the Blacks of South Africa, who despite their being a majority in the population (80% of the people in SA were Black), they could not coordinate an effort to fight apartheid. It was about controlling their minds, indoctrinating an entire Nation, making them feel inferior, controlling the media to be fearful of Blacks and controlling the education system to get out false information on why apartheid was good for the people. Does this sound like a model from Nazi Germany and many other current breakdowns of civilization in our world? Yes, which is why we are told it’s not a Black/White racism issue.
Our first guide (who had traveled with Mandela and had interesting anecdotes to tell) took us to the ferry for the hour trip to the Island. Our guide once we got there was very knowledgeable, and you could tell that telling this story was his mission, and so important to him that everyone should know what happened during this time. After an overview of this secluded Island, we were driven around the Island to see the port of entry, the quarry where the prisoners worked, the airport, the hospital, the town that built up to support the prison (churches and homes), how they got food and utilities there and then we arrived at The Prison. We had an hour of “personal time” in the Prison with Itumeleng Makwela, a former political prisoner that was here during end of the years of Mandela’s stay (DON’T MISS OUR VIDEO … see link https://youtu.be/v2PJi-TJz14).Leia mais
Sadly, in the 1960s political and common law prisoners were held together in the general section of the 7 prisons we saw there and spent their days serving hard labor. Some of the prominent leaders of the different liberation organizations were held in the isolation block’s B section, where high walls were constructed to separate and prevent communication between political prisoners in the different sections.
The general and single cell sections of the Maximum Security Prison were designed to separate prisoners and prevent contact between them. The prisoners held in the single cells had far less contact (Mandela and his more influential friends) with their fellow prisoners and were locked in their cells for considerably longer hours. The food given to prisoners was generally insufficient in quantity and of poor quality. Additionally, prisoners of different races were given different food. White prisoners were fed 4 ounces of mielie meal or mielie rice and 7 ounces of fish or meat per day. Colored and Indian prisoners were given 14 ounces of mielie meal and mielie rice per day and six ounces of meat or fish four times a week. African prisoners were given 12 ounces of mielie meal and mielie rice per day and only 5 ounces of meat or fish four times a week. Daily, prisoners had to strip and jump around to dislodge any concealed object and bend over to prove it. Most of the brutality and physical abuse that prisoners experienced were associated with hard labor and beatings while they worked quarrying lime and stone, chopping wood, crushing stone, making, or repairing roads with picks and shovels, dragging seaweed from the beaches and the sea. Psychologically, over the years they were prevented from education, their letters were censored as were visits and they had little access to outside news. Prisoners were given minimal clothing with African prisoners getting short pants to separate them and were not provided with underwear. There were no beds and prisoners had to sleep on thin mats on a cement floor.
Between 1962 and 1966 prisoners were subjected to physical abuse, given poor food and were not allowed to participate in sport, recreational, cultural and other such activities. A mass “Hunger Strike” in 1966, by a thousand prisoners, caressed the tides of change and the gradual improvement of conditions surfaced. Conditions regressed again under Colonel Badenhorst, a commanding officer in charge of the Island between 1970 and 1972.
Robben Island had 20 quarries used to build all the buildings and road and many buildings back in Cape Town. Political Prisoners were forced to work the Bluestone Quarry (which we saw). Prisoners worked there every day for 6 month stints, many until exhaustion. When Mandela came back many years later, he and other Black leaders put up a stone monument there for those that had given their blood and guts and often their lives. Ironically, this is the site that much of the “revolution” plans to end apartheid was developed from leaders that may never have met each other and had different ideas and philosophies but shared out of desperation. It was the only place political prisoners were not isolated from others and where Mandela, Sobukwe, Biko and other leaders could discuss (as they worked) their ideas and share their thoughts as they developed plans to build a new World. The only other place they got to interact was the gardens (note: this is where they hid drafts of the Long Walk to Freedom).
To get a full understanding of all the years of Robben Island and what transpired there, see:
https://www.robben-island.org.za/timeline/Leia mais