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Power Lines: Two Years in South Africa's Borders
Country: United States of AmericaFormat: Hardcover
Publisher: National Geographic SocietyISBN: 9780792280125 Publication date: June 2002 Length: 151mm Width: 103mm Thickness: 13mm Weight: 249g Pages: 320 Illustrations: Illustrated Readership: General
Power Lines: Two Years in South Africa's Borders
Jason Carter, the grandson of former President Jimmy Carter, writes of a South Africa few people ever see. During his two years as a Peace Corps volunteer, Carter stayed with a rural family in Swaziland, a former black homeland near the Mozambique border. Jason Carter, the grandson of former President Jimmy Carter, writes of a South Africa few people ever see. During his two years as a Peace Corps volunteer, Carter stayed with a rural family in Swaziland, a former black homeland near the Mozambique border. South Africa is a country still racked by deep racial divides. The whites live much as other Westerners, with nice houses and nice cars. The blacks, Carter found, live in a world of grinding poverty and unemployment, where school children do not dare to hope, and where casual crime is accepted as a way to get back at whites. Even after Nelson Mandelais regime-shattering election as president, whites and blacks literally cannot communicate with each other. During his training Carter learned Zulu and Siswati, two of the many black languages, and with these tools he began breaking down racial barriers. Everywhere blacks befriended him, delighted to find a white person who spoke in their tongue. Carter was invited to engagement parties and funerals. He rode all over the country in overcrowded black taxis and hitchhiked in cars driven by both blacks and whites. In the process he found many people on both sides that want to reach out to each other. And that is Carters message. Even in a society as divided as South Africa, peoples desire to come together will triumph over all. Former president Jimmy Carter's grandson makes a well-meaning entry in a long-dormant genre, the Peace Corps memoir. Thirteen-year-old Jason Carter accompanied his grandfather on a humanitarian mission to Africa in 1988 and returned with vivid, contradictory images: one of idyllic landscapes, another of children his own age pressed into military service. One of them asked whether he knew Michael Jordan: "I was shocked," Carter writes. "Perhaps, I thought, the gap between Africa and America is not so huge as I guessed." Fast-forward a decade, and Carter, now a young Peace Corps volunteer assigned to the northern townships of South Africa, discovers that gap to be huge indeed, at least for blacks, even under Nelson Mandela's government. On the scene during a time of transition when that government was diligently seeking to remake itself to serve the hitherto disenfranchised majority, Carter offers a firsthand look at life in the townships, ranging from notes on matters of daily existence to larger commentaries on matters of freedom and justice. His narrative is in the main informative, though peppered with gee-whiz enthusiasms ("Hitchhiking is one of the most liberating experiences I can imagine") and liberal posturing ("Now that we were able to point fingers at other oppressors, we were ready to hold high the banner of justice"). Carter is at his best when he lets others do the talking, as the time a weary government minister tells him that the most surprising thing he learned about taking power was that "we just had no idea how much we had to do," or when a passer-by in a local shop comments on his globalizing mission: "Yours is the best way to colonize a people. Americans at least give you something in return." A book particularly suited for those contemplating a hitch in the Peace Corps themselves. (Kirkus Reviews)
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