An inspiring biographical account of a young boy’s chaotic life in a remote, wild, corner of East Africa.
Born
in Africa, James’s childhood is spent on an isolated gold-mine near
Lake Victoria, Tanganyika, with just his sister and mother; his father
tragically dying through injuries sustained from World War II. His
upbringing is mainly left to a tribal ayah called Amina and an elderly
Swahili man, and he learns to speak Swahili before English.
In
this unusual setting he soon discovers some stark facts about life
through tragedy and danger, but it is the local watu, imbued with
kindness and irrepressible humour, that save him from despair, and with
whom he learns to fish with home-made lines, eat insects and famously
abuse the European hierarchy in real Swahili!
Known as ‘Jimu’ to
his friends, he marks out his own country with a Sukuma boy named
Lutoli, falls deeply in love with the beautiful, but older, German girl
Gretchen and throws himself out of the back of a bus to avoid being sent
away to school.
Once at school, in Arusha, James tends to mix with
other non-conformers and presents a dilemma to teachers – he is a white
boy with a ‘black spirit’. His gang gets up to nefarious enterprises,
bringing them into a state of permanent conflict with the system.
James
is fascinated with the history of Tanganyika back to the time when it
was a German Colony until 1918. The unparalleled courage of the German
leader Paul von Lettow Vorbeck against the British is a beacon to the
young boy of what can be accomplished against adversity
Above all
James discovers the world, and life, a little by education, a lot by
accident, but overwhelmingly by fate and happenstance, in circumstances
few people in the developed world have experienced.
US Kindle Edition
UK Kindle Edition
Monday, May 21, 2012
FREE -- US & UK Kindle Edition -- Speak Swahili, Dammit! by James Penhaligon
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