About a week ago, I went to get my hair trimmed. I knew it
was time to get into the barber when my eight-year-old host sister and her
friend were playing with my hair and were able to tie the dilapidated mop on my
head into a few oddly placed pig-tails. After several embarrassing minutes of
trying to convince the two girls that I would not look good in a pony-tail, I
flattened the shag carpet on the top of my head and went inside to ask for a
ride to the mall in order to visit the barber in the morning. Thankfully,
Pastor agreed and I found myself waiting in the long line at the barber shop
early the next morning.
The shop was busy, which was no surprise, and thankfully I
had been smart enough to bring along a book to read to pass the time. After
nearly an hour of waiting, it was finally my turn to make my way to the chair
for the long overdue trim. Being the Scandinavian that I am, I look very much like
an Afrikaner, so it’s no surprise that every time I meet a new person in Port
Elizabeth, I am greeted in Afrikaans. After a few attempts at responding to the
barber in Afrikaans, I finally admitted that I am not from South Africa. The
woman was very gracious and laughed, told me my attempts were actually pretty
good, and we continued on in English.
As with the first time I went to get my hair cut, I went
through the usual questions. How do you find South Africa? Are you here for
holiday or are you here for work? What kind of work do you do? I have been
answering these questions for almost the entire five months that I have been in
Port Elizabeth. I explained to the woman that I was a part of the Young Adults
in Global Mission program through the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
and that I will be living here for the year and working in the community at a
few different NGO’s around the city. I also explained to the woman that I was
living with a Zulu family in a Colored neighborhood.
That’s when she asked me an unusual question, “Wow, do you
feel safe?” This question came seemingly out of nowhere. The woman hadn’t even
asked what my host parents did for a living. She didn’t even bother to ask what
neighborhood I had lived in. She might have had a different opinion on the
matter if she knew that I lived with a Pastor and that the neighborhood is very
young and filled with lots of kids who are in grade-school all the way through
to high school. There are also two brothers who are working their way through
university, one studying mechanical engineering and the other studying electrical
engineering. These two brothers are hoping to open a garage someday, something
they are getting started with out of their own home with the help of their
father.
This was more than likely a woman, who is about the same age
as my mother, showing her concern for a young traveler in a foreign country. Even though she was showing concern, her question revealed so much more though; it revealed the amount of perceived
danger she had as a product of years of apartheid influence. During the
apartheid era, signs were placed outside of townships warning white people of
the dangers of entering into the black townships. White people were often
warned by concerned parents not to bother black people because they may be dangerous.
Much like back home in Minnesota, I was warned of how dangerous places like
North Minneapolis and South St. Paul are.
While both the area’s that I currently live in and areas
back home like North Minneapolis and South St. Paul may be dangerous, the whole
point of accompaniment is to break through these kinds of stereotypes and the
singular stories that have caused many place to be considered dangerous.
It would be irresponsible to say that these places are completely safe, but it
would also be irresponsible to say that anywhere we live is completely safe. When
participating in international travels, safety is a big portion of the
preparations, and it was no different with YAGM. It is important to acknowledge
the perceived danger as well as the real danger that comes with any type of
traveling, and Port Elizabeth is no different.
The truth is I have
never once felt unsafe in my area. I have always felt welcomed by Pastor and
his wife, especially since they entrusted me to hold their small child only
minutes into meeting me, not knowing that this was probably the third time I
have ever held a baby. I have felt welcomed by the kids in grade-school who
have come to the stoop several nights a week to interrupt my quiet time by
trying to push me off the 5-foot ledge. I have always felt welcomed by the
number of people who remember the last YAGM who had served in Port Elizabeth,
some 8 years before my arrival. I have felt more welcomed in an area where I am
in the minority, but I am still a brother in Christ.
“Wow, do you feel safe?” Yes, I have always felt safe living
in an area that has become known as a dangerous area. I have feel safe because
these people have gone from being a foreign and unknown neighborhood to being
Leah, Lyra, Makayla, Pastor, Mbali, Steven, Matthew, Pastor Mike, Calvin,
Auntie Lorna, Auntie Vira, teacher Mona, teacher Samantha, teacher Lucia,
teacher June, Auntie Julia (never get on her bad side, she is feisty!), Auntie
Josita, Zanna, Thobeka, Candice, Sikilewe, Auntie Rachel, Auntie Rosa, brother
Steven, sister Reona, Auntie Dina, and so many more people that I don’t have
room to name here. These people have gone from being strangers, to being
family. Sometimes we need to push through some of the perceived danger to see
the real beauty in these neighborhoods that lies within the stories and the
lives that these people have to share with the world.
Proud of you, Evan, for living into truth like this. Maybe when you move back to MN you'll live on the north side by Conner and me, loving the diverse population we get to interact with on a daily basis and seeing God's creative work all over the place. May you continue to be formed and may you help form others through your good work. I'll continue praying for you! :)
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