Weds – Capetown / Downtown

To immerse ourselves in the history and Kulcha of Kapetown, we joined a Walking tour through the centre 

It went from the trendy / arty Bo-Kaap area down to the City Hall.

B-K was originally  settled by East Cape Malays, ie slaves transported by those evil  Dutch traders from the East Indies. It is multi-cultural now but still heavily Muslim, and supported by a lot of arts grants. It also serves very  good curry.

Not a local girl who has lost her shaap. Like many Afrikaans words, it’s a shortened version of Dutch, in this case ” Boven Kaapstad”  ie Upper Capetown , being up on the slope to Signal Hill 
Aweh is a multi purpose local word : hello / thanks / bye/ please…. Simply adding an ‘H‘ at the front of it can achieve the same effect on Tyneside
View from Bo-kaap Mosque across to Table Mntn
We dropped in at a Methodist church which now operates mostly as a coffee shop, and features thought-provoking secular messages on posters inside.

Tour finished at the City Hall and its museum of the apartheid struggle –

Nelson himself addressed a huge crowd from City Hall on his release from prison in 1990.
A fascinating story of the apartheid struggle is housed within City Hall. Took me back to the stories and songs we learned from Frances Bernstein in ‘ Sing Freedom’

I’m painfully aware we barely scratched the surface of the social frameworks, history and tensions here.  The trouble is that tourists are constantly reminded of the risks of moving outside ‘safe’ areas – which can often just mean ‘into an adjoining block’. As we exited the Fort  ( see below) we were quickly warned against continuing in that direction , since muggers were operating about 100 yards away , in broad daylight.

Fort Of Good Hope

This was an odd and rather dispiriting place.  I quite like the fact it was pentagonal, and painted yellow. Otherwise…a bit dull.

A lot of empty space
Hello ! Hooray ! What a nice day for them
You can get up on top of the earth-filled walls, you which gives a good view of the mountains

The other strong initial impressions of Capetown are

  • Crazily strong winds.  It’s all anyone talks to us about – 30-40mph much of the day , which persisted through all our time here. Oddly, it doesn’t even seem to be coming off the Atlantic.
  • Traffic congestion.  Every morning when we have driven in to the centre it has taken nearly 3 times as long as on a clear road
  • The waterfront area is impressive but also generic : a paean to shopping, supping, and sailing trips, where those serving you are still depressingly single race . Although, the clientele does include some darker faces too. I guess that’s something.

However

Oddly enough, this was the one thing we did NOT see in Capetown .. why not ??

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