A blogger in Polokwane … an experiment gone wrong

livefrompolo.gifI believe in affirmative action. This noble policy has ensured that this blogger has had plenty of experience with being thrown into the deep end and expected to sink swim. It’s old news by now that it seems that I have made history by being the first blogger to gain accreditation for the Mecca of the political calendar in the land. I know; my initial reaction was the same. Why would a reputable organisation such as the M&G send a politically ignorant, self-indulgent blogger without any experience of covering … anything, really, to the ANC conference?

The BS explanation from the powers that be is that they want something new — a fresh perspective that will deviate from “the norm”. (In essence: “We have enough knowledgeable, sane people to write credible analysis. We need a bit of madness.”) My personal reading of the situation is that I’m an affirmative-action appointee representing bloggers everywhere. I’m a guinea pig released into this setting just to see what will happen. Alrighty then.

I won’t bore you with the details of the alleged B&B (more of an Oliver Twist orphanage-type set-up) that the cheapskates put me up in. I will say two things, though. One: if the couple who are running Tannie Marietjie’s Boarding House were any weirder, the Addams Family would be the very picture of functionality. Two: these religious nuts are clearly Mbeki-ites — no shower in the house. That’s right; I took a bath this morning. Here, let me hold you while you regurgitate. I know, I know; taking a bath is an archaic, filthy, disgusting practice from the Dark Ages. The details are unwarranted.

So picture it, if you will, a short chubby man wandering around the University of Limpopo campus at about 8.45am this morning. I think I looked pretty good in my “good cap” too — apparently I remind women people of Samuel L Jackson in Jackie Brown. My brief was to kind of, sort of “walk around, look around and make observations”. So I threw myself into this task of, well, looking into this whole “walking around … looking around” situation with an energetic fervour that didn’t betray the fact that I’d spent the evening looking into the beer situation all over Polokwane until about 3am. At some point I’d found myself inside a joint called the Cock and Bull. (Insert your own juvenile joke here.)

I must confess that as an impressionable young man back in the late Eighties and early Nineties, I had flirted with the notion of carving myself a niche in the liberation movement. All I got for my troubles were a few nasty experiences such as inhaling copious amounts of tear gas and being chased down by an incredibly relentless SAP constable all the way from the Students’ Union Building of the (then) University of Natal, Durban, campus to the foyer of the EG Malherbe Library. As the blows from his baton rained upon me, my commitment to the struggle wavered somewhat. Read as: “My involvement from that point onwards was limited to authoring cryptic, subversive messages (‘Fuck De Klerk’) on the walls of the Students’ Union men’s ablution facilities.”

Walking around the Limpopo university campus this morning, I felt like I was back in the early Nineties during my klipgooier days. I didn’t realise that the rank-and-file of the movement still engaged in traditional ANC-speak:

ANC-speak: The comrade is not exhibiting revolutionary discipline as enshrined in the ethos of the movement and his utterances are not advancing the national democratic revolution …

Translation: He’s full of shit.

At this point I’m going to sommer post my notes from this morning and dazzle you with my deep, incisive and astute political acumen.

8.48am: Wandering around the perimeter of the conference area. I join a group of animated comrades from the Chris Hani region in the Eastern Cape. Some kind of briefing session and caucus. I sift through their ANC-speak rubble and get the message loud and clear — it is too late in the day to go back now. So Msholozi it is.

8.52am-9.10am: Security barring media from entering the marquee. After a few attempted suicide missions to try to gain illegal access and being ejected more forcefully each time, I retire to my perimeter vantage spot to lick my wounds. The revolutionary talk from the Eastern Cape firebrands is even more heated. I hear the first rendition of Umshini Wami inside the tent.

9.10am–9.49am: I finally sneak in by pulling out the big guns; I charm a security lady by doing my Sam L Jackson routine. I must use my powers judiciously in future. The VIPs start trickling into the marquee. Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula, Charles Nqakula, Terror Lekota are booed loudly as their faces appear on the big screen. Blade, Phosa are cheered loudly. Hmmm … a taste of things to come?

9.57am: I finally find myself a spot right in front of the podium where Mbeki and Zuma will be seated. Or so I think. It seems that I have taken someone’s spot — it belongs to a particularly aggressive woman from Reuters. After some half-hearted resistance, my land grab comes to a dramatic end and I am evicted after she brings reinforcements in the form of a male colleague. Crap. I wonder out loud if fistfights are commonplace in media circles.

10.02am: After some more wandering, I finally lay claim to a stake of a piece of real estate to the right of the podium. As I sit down, I make eye contact with Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma. From my sharp oblique angle, I think she just winked at me. Damn this cap for making me look so attractive. But then again, she might have had something in her eye. Still; I’m smiling smugly to myself.

10.03am: I’m seated just to the right of the “Isithwalandwe” (former struggle heroes) and “Former NEC members” row — the used-to-be-important-once-upon-a-time (UTBIOUAT) part of the marquee. I catch Makhenkesi Stofile casting furtive glances from the NEC podium at Andrew Mlangeni, one of the Isithwalandwes seated next to Ahmed Kathrada. The look in his eye has a bunny-caught-in-the-headlights connotation — is he going to be part of the UTBIOUAT in five years’ time? The extended singing of Umshini Wami reverberating through the tent cannot be a source of comfort. The smell of mutiny hangs in the air.

10.06am: Popo Molefe walks towards the podium. He trips on the tip of my elongated, girly shoes that my wife insists are “very in” and almost falls. I reel in my outstretched leg to avoid a potential international incident. What if that had been the ambassador of Iran and he had fallen, hit his head and died and now the Iranians allege that I am a CIA agent? It could happen — especially with my whole podgy Sam Jackson thing I have going over here.

10.08am-10.14am: “Terror” Lekota goes up to the mic. He is booed for a full six minutes while the Umshini Wami rendition goes on unabated. He tries unsuccessfully to interject with futile shouts of “Amandla!” and “Ayihlale phansi ibamb’ umthetho! [Yo, mah niggaz, sit your asses down!]“.

10.15am–10.46am: Sweet Jesus, Mary, Joseph and the college of saints! I sense some serious venom towards Lekota. The delegates are emulating that arm-roll motion that disgruntled Bafana fans (Whoever says “Is there any other kind?”, please grow up) use to communicate that they want a particular player substituted. There is a drawn-out back-and-forthing over the issue of the adoption of the agenda. This is going to be a long day.

10.53am: The ANC electoral commission has been up on stage for a while, at pains to explain the electoral process. The chair of the electoral process, Bertha Gxowa, dazzles all and sundry with some incredible breakthrough thinking. Apparently, in this election, the candidates with a higher tally of votes will be declared the winners. Wow.

11am: Dr Manto walks off the stage with a mysterious smile on her face — like someone who knows something we all don’t. She’s dressed in an oversized, paramedics-like Red Cross shirt that comes to her knees. Two journos from one of the Scandinavian countries struggle to contain their giggles. I think they should grow up — what’s funny about Manto?

11.08am: An increasingly agitated Terror is still on the podium displaying an incredible lack of clarity around due process in the adoption of the electoral rules. It’s the vote counting: manual or electronic? Yawn. Finally, Motlanthe and Netshitenzhe save the day by whispering in Lekota’s ear a few times. Terror looks extremely confused and shouts out: “Who’s that? Who are you? Where are you?” several times to try to identify speakers from the floor.

11.26am: Finally, Mbeki starts to speak. Wait, scratch that. Mbeki starts reading from his 42-page presidential report in his usual level monotone. I hope he’s not planning on reading the whole thing.

11.49am: Sweet Jesus! I think he is seriously planning to read the whole damn thing word for word. We’re only on page seven but my butt is already sore. B-b-but everybody has a copy of the report! What’s the point of this exercise? Surely he should have a compressed version and refer us to the voluminous document for reference? There’s a murderous glint in the eye of one of the delegates at this point as Mbeki drones on, ratting off stats laboriously.

12.01pm: The president drones on. I’ve logged on to my PC now and I’m keeping myself entertained by Googling stats that are contrary to the president’s. I wonder if I’d make a name for myself if I stood up and protested vigorously: “I object, Mr President! The Mafisa initiative did not distribute R42,2-million to 5 211 farmers. I just Googled it and that figure is inflated.” I wonder if my M&G posse would intervene as they dragged me outside. Riaan does not inspire confidence — I think he’d pretend not to know me and let the thingamabouncers beat me up.

12.44pm: More droning. My admiration for the president is well documented and everything, but if I listen to another five minutes of this, I might have to adopt my own armed struggle on pure principle. Anything to make him stop. I see some wet paint in the process of drying plucking its nasal hair to get some excitement in the sheer boringness of this whole exercise. Is this guy trying to get as many people as possible not to vote for him? Oh, wait; this is one of those ANC traditions that I know nothing about, being a yellow-bellied fallen comrade and all that.

1.13pm: The torture continues unabated. I send my wife an SMS: “Are you watching this? We are only on page 29, ferchrissakes! Suicide is starting to become an attractive option.” I think I have successfully moulded my used-to-be-sweet wife into my image. “This is great for me. I have managed to put both our brats to sleep by placing them in front of the TV,” is her response. Karema Brown ofBusiness Day, seated to my right, is now lying flat on her back. Ohmygod! She’s pointing a gun at her head to end it all … oh, sorry — she’s busy sending SMSs as well. I can only guess …

1.16pm: Dr Manto has been outside twice already. Now I see Comrade Blade stand up and, on unsteady legs, walk out. His eyes are bloodshot and he’s staggering — I think he’s been napping. I yawn. A delegate yawns. We all have a collective yawn.

1.27pm: I now have pain in muscles and cartilage in places where I didn’t even know I had joints. There’s a serious ergonomic damage crisis waiting to happen here. (Note to self: Loads of money waiting to be made by placing a dozen massage tables in the media centre this evening.)

1.54pm: The nightmare ends. This is not what I had in mind. Ah, well; I have a source of comfort — Umshini Wami fills the tent again. Damn, that song is contagious — I’m starting to hum along.

This is an experiment gone horribly wrong.

silwanekanjila@gmail.com

40 Responses to “A blogger in Polokwane … an experiment gone wrong”

  1. Pete #

    No, I think it’s an experiment whose time has come. Like Zuma and his machine gun. Infectious definitely – if I’d had to listen to all 2 hours and 45 mins of the prez’s speech I would also have sung for Zuma’s machine gun (as distasteful as that is really).

    December 16, 2007 at 8:07 pm
  2. Anonymous #

    I can’t believe your president actually talked for three hours.

    December 16, 2007 at 9:43 pm
  3. Paddy #

    You lost the plot? It was his farewell speech.

    December 16, 2007 at 10:26 pm
  4. Chris Bennett #

    This is writing between the lines at its best. Even Boris Johnson couldn’t have done better. Chris, KZN

    December 17, 2007 at 6:39 am
  5. Liansky #

    I woke up, flipped through the channels, and came across ETV’s coverage of Polokwane. I so totally forgot about Polokwane.
    Ok, so there i was, forced to watch Deborah Patta (i’ll profile her later, and the picture aint pretty [like she's always wanted to be]) interviewing Goddamn Malala (the coconut) and Friedman (the guy who really really really wants people to acknowledge his great intellect as to compensate for everything else).
    So, thinking to mjyself, “Goddamn, i don’t wanna hear your opinions, give me the conference”.
    The last straw was when Friedman started to speak as if he had a right to comment on Mbeki… buit wait… did i just.. Oh my God, this is also most probably playing in SABC. How stupid of me.. and yes.. there it was… the channel of the black masses proudly showed black democrarcy in all it’s black glory. Praise the Lord.

    December 17, 2007 at 7:15 am
  6. Owen #

    Well said.

    December 17, 2007 at 8:25 am
  7. Zamo #

    I wish i had taped that mundane speech to curb my insomnia. What a way to put the nation to sleep Mr Pres. Great political lullaby!

    December 17, 2007 at 10:20 am
  8. Llewellyn #

    Now we see the monumental buffoonery that passes for leadership in SA. If you want intelligent, mature, compelling debate check out Animal Planet. There’s a thrilling episode on the role of pheromones in the mating habits of the Western Patagonian aardvark. I’d follow a headless chicken through the Gates of Hell before pledging allegiance to that weird agglomeration of carbon-based metabolism in Polokwane.

    December 17, 2007 at 10:25 am
  9. I don’t do politics. And I sure as hell didn’t watch this comedy festival, but this is one of the funniest pieces I’ve read in ages.

    If you keep this up, I might just be able to hold a political conversation in future.

    December 17, 2007 at 10:45 am
  10. ross #

    Great post Ndumiso… I felt physically ill after watching the processions yesterday – partly because the prospect of Jeremy Cronin as finance minister makes me scared, partly because of how useless everyone was (Mbeki, the ANCYL, Lekota, the ANYCL, Deborah Patta, did I mention the ANCYL..) But I’m feeling a whole lot more relaxed and upbeat now – thanks to the power of witty quasi-journalistic blogging!

    December 17, 2007 at 11:43 am
  11. Ndumiso Ngcobo’s personal narrative from Polokwane is the only true blog I’ve read so far in the welter of history-in-a-hurry reports coming from the ANC circus. The others adopt the tone of the commentator or the critic – but he gives us the feel of the place and the people from a 1st person perspective. Including th bath at the B&B: why can’t others pick up on this sort of detail? Answer: because they are stuck in the habit of observing public events where private worlds do not intrude. Media blogs in general are stuck fast in the reportorial mode that outlaws genuine personal reflection. They can’t hack it, these old hacks. Ngcobo’s description of how he squirmed through 2 1/2 hours of droning presidential self-exculpation is a classic of inward observation(though it neatly mirrors Mbeki’s plain lack of political instinct better than anything else written about it). Go for it, man, you’re the best of the observers on the spot.

    December 17, 2007 at 12:14 pm
  12. neo #

    I wonder what Manto was hiding under the huge t-shirt. Maybe you should be our private eye and go under to find out…..what do you think?

    December 17, 2007 at 2:50 pm
  13. Amanda Vermeulen #

    Great piece.

    December 17, 2007 at 3:30 pm
  14. Damian Visser #

    Brilliantly written! Seems like the experiment worked after all. The detail is the thing…and the humour. Are you sure you aren’t David Bullard in disguise?

    December 17, 2007 at 3:39 pm
  15. Mpumelelo Ka Ndlovu #

    Umshini Wami – a threat Zuma supporters are using.
    Zuma’s leadership ethics are very questionable as evidenced by the sex and the business ‘transaction’ scandals. He is just riding on the freedom fighter credentials. I pitty ANC if he wins the vote.

    December 17, 2007 at 5:18 pm
  16. Liansky #

    White ppl loved ure blog. Congrats

    December 17, 2007 at 5:46 pm
  17. Jonn #

    Brilliantly written Ndumiso. Are we getting some more coverage on the rest.

    Can you not follow Manto and see where she goes to drink….oops, sorry,….I meant….to think.

    Jonn

    December 17, 2007 at 6:06 pm
  18. Daniel #

    A masterpiece in terms of the ability to put views across in a witty and entertaining manner. Great stuff!!

    December 17, 2007 at 9:25 pm
  19. Wow!!! Ndumiso, you are brilliant, this is brilliant!
    So nice of you to bring us all the details we wouldn’t have seen anywhere else…SABC may claim to be No. 1 Newsleader but they didn’t tell us about Manto’s outfit or that Nkosazana-Zuma is actually a flirt hehehehe thanks for the gossip LOL.

    As for the Pres, really, that was one damn LONG speech bro! Did y’all really have a copy of that report before he READ it?? Hehehehe Thatha T Bose!!!

    December 17, 2007 at 11:06 pm
  20. khanyisa #

    I am not a political person but this power race between Zuma and Mbeki got me tuned to the telly on sunday. let me be honest, i liked it when Zuma’s supporters booed Terror cos i am a Zuma fan. I am tired of Mbeki and his people.

    The funny thing is, everyone keeps mentioning the fact that Zuma is not educated and i think it is childish to even base their argument on things like that. A lot of people who are in government are not educated but still have high positions. they should just let uMtshini has his way. maybe he will create employment to the masses of young people who are out there, cos Mbeki only provided internships and learnerships which are making young people more frustrated once the year is done, you are back to square one. Mr uneducated, Mtshini or whatever name they can call u, i want you to know that i support u 100% and i know you will make a good president.

    December 18, 2007 at 8:40 am
  21. MKT #

    Hola Ndums,

    great piece dude…u should have told me you’re going that side i would have accomodated you at my home place and spare u the B & B bath.lol.

    the conference is in Turfloop, Mankweng, 25km from Polokwane, why do u hacks speak and write more of Polokwane than Turfloop where the conference is actually taking place ?

    u forgot to mention the humidity – i saw on tv a lot of delegates flipping the programmes up and down using them as additional air cons. Mankweng being my homeplace, i knew the heat in a marque is gonna be unbearable.

    nice piece bru.

    December 18, 2007 at 8:46 am
  22. Ndumiso Ngcobo #

    Damian, don’t be silly. Bullard couldn’t carry my rain-soaked boxers.

    MKT – I know, I know. Our national obsession with tents rears its ugly head again.

    Gotta go, I feel another hallucination coming. The voices inside my head are getting louder…

    December 18, 2007 at 10:50 am
  23. Mphehliwayo the 1st #

    Good post man, but you know me, i want updates on the Nkosazana Zuma situation.

    December 18, 2007 at 10:59 am
  24. Paul #

    I vote Ndumiso. A third term for Bullard will push the current account defict towards 10% of GDP as all the Bullard yes-men stock up on imported cigars and brandy. I call on all loyal patriots to show support for Ndumiso by buying lots of SAB products, thereby boosting our economy and our national spirit.

    Liansky, mfana wam’, I pray that the UCT admin do not block your account. The internet may be therapeutic for you. For the record, everybody loves Ndumiso – white, black and various brown shades.

    December 18, 2007 at 11:13 am
  25. heartwarmer #

    I want to be like Ndumiso when I grow up!

    December 18, 2007 at 12:40 pm
  26. Terry #

    Hey, Ndumiso! You were there. That camera bouncing up and down during SABC’s coverage of Thabo’s speech, was this caused by the passage of the elephants in the room: the arms deal, HIV/AIDS fiasco, Zimbabwe, … ?

    December 18, 2007 at 1:41 pm
  27. Fan #

    Ndumiso Mary George would have been very proud with your witty humor and command of english

    December 18, 2007 at 1:44 pm
  28. Nomfundo #

    Vote Silwane for President 2009!

    December 18, 2007 at 2:13 pm
  29. Vikta #

    Next update mfowethu … ikuphi ?

    December 18, 2007 at 3:26 pm
  30. Ndumiso, why cant you persuade the delegates to vote you as, how do the comrades say it, the compromise candidate?

    December 18, 2007 at 3:54 pm
  31. Something very Alice in Wonderlandy about this all…

    December 18, 2007 at 4:50 pm
  32. Phumzile #

    Hayi my brother, you always kill me with your witty sarcasm and humour. I’m at the office and I’m laughing out loud like an idiot; reading this blog. Keep up the good work!

    December 18, 2007 at 5:27 pm
  33. Liansky #

    Hey there ndumiso. You do know that the black ppl supporting this blog are actualy white ppl trying to validate youre disrespect of our black leader (i do suspect fred khumalo to be one of them cause u cant really tell with him)… except for the zuma supporter. Thats a classic zuma supporter (dumb, dumb and dumberer).

    December 18, 2007 at 10:05 pm
  34. Nonhlanhla Mntungwa #

    Hhayi Mchana, very entertaining indeed. Some of us South African folks living in foreign countries depend on humorous pieces like yours to keep us sane as well as bring us up to speed.
    Oh my gosh! To think that I have been beating myself up all these years for abandoning the struggle. You mean you did it too! Time to come out of the closet all you ‘bloody’ deserters!

    Seriously man,when are they sending you back again? Waiting in great anticipation for your next piece.
    PS.My husband wants to know where you bought that cap?

    December 18, 2007 at 10:40 pm
  35. Zuki #

    Mapholoba! Mashiya Amahle! great social comentating of a political scene…2009 here we come. Ndumiso for president!

    December 19, 2007 at 3:11 pm
  36. Annonymus #

    This is the funniest commentary I’ve read of the Polokwane conference!

    December 20, 2007 at 2:30 pm
  37. SE Mahlangu #

    @Liansky

    “@#$@, there ain’t a white man in this room
    that would change places with me.
    None of you would change places with me.
    And l’m rich!

    That’s how good it is to be white.

    There’s a white, one-legged busboy
    in here right now…

    that won’t change places with my black ass.

    He’s going, ”No, man, l don’t wanna switch.
    l wanna ride this white thing out.

    ”See where it takes me.” ”

    - Chris Rock

    Why the hell are you so racist and what do white people have to gain by pretending to be black ? Or do you think just because I am black I don’t know how to use a computer ?

    December 22, 2007 at 1:24 am

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