Saturday, 30 November 2024

I Believe

Vocatus atqua non vocatus, deus aderit - Carl G. Jung 


While the Nicene Creed declared Pan dead; in worship, it made my dead bones live

Ndiyakholwa ku Thixo omnye: An incantation that sutured my mind 

When the world had wounded it with intellectual cerebrations 

Preventing a spillage of logical matter on the thin pages of my NIV Bible


In this finite dwelling of eternity, I found a place strong enough 

To accommodate all the parts of me and hold under the warring weight 

With the fourteen stations of the cross surrounding me at eye-level

I knew that anything life would throw at me would be thrown back onto those walls

Integrated into the stations commensurate with our worldly suffering


I learnt to walk amongst these isles, holding onto yellowwood pews 

Whose hard surface comforted many aging and faithful congregants

Before being whisked away by an eager adolescent chaperoning my blessing and hers 

A tradition I took up myself when my hip could carry the weight of a toddler 


While the church itself became the ship of Theseus 

Living up to its name and being resurrected in the name of modernity

Ndiyakholwa ku Thixo omnye remained: At the very least I had the one God I believed in

Words written in an anchoring prayer book which once belonged to my mother

On the cover page, her name, written in a font I could recognize anywhere

Always in black, she never wrote in blue, "Cosanostra," a pseudonym


A necessity during apartheid South Africa where only one narrative was tolerated

To both distance and proximally connect herself with her liberation art and liberation 

This woman who braved rubber bullets and bears a scar on her left inner thigh 

I could not connect her, the prayerbook and this church of the Resurrection


In my conscious lifetime, I do not recall seeing her proud frame in any of these pews 

The prayerbook in mint condition when she gave it to me, a witness of her absence 

After her confirmation, she was no longer able to sing the words with conviction

"Ndiyakholwa ku Thixo omnye?" 


Perhaps confirmation was merely an appeasement to my grandmother

She was never truly able to reconcile the reality of her life with this one God 

The stations of the cross may as well have been hieroglyphics 

Anachronistic images whose depictions of suffering had grown mould

Such a disappointment, two millennia after the crucifixion, black people suffer still


The glass in the windows which slowly accumulated at the bottom of the frame over time

She slowly drained onto the floor of this holy place only to slip through its cracks 

Anglicization that was Anglican could not wrap its liturgical tongue around her name

And could therefore not frame her existence or provide answers to her personal catechism


Into the contentious soil of Meadowlands from whence she came, she went

Making her way to Lenasia, her final resting place, but not immediately

She traded the creed and cross for Coltrane and his highly-skilled contemporaries

Wind instruments became the sharp end of the knife Batswana women are rumoured to hold


Not until she grew into her fullness with Jazz her perpetual leitmotif and lingua franca

And the blues affirming her values and dignity, even the Group Areas Act could not contravene

Growing beneath this sycamore of a woman who spread far and wide in my twinkling eyes 

With the ascetism of Clifford Brown, she nourished my pupation with diligence 


Ndiyakholwa ku Thixo omnye, and can therefore believe in this one woman 

Her confidence, and her ability, in true blues tradition, to wrangle desperate circumstances

Into a confident daughter, who has dared to live beyond her sociological predicaments

Whose lyricism and style of life confronts the racial pathologies of our time


Today, I can't walk through The Church of the Resurrection without bumping into pews

There has been a psychological domicide and displacement of spirt and unfamiliarity

A different community calls my name in my sleep and my waking hours are spent on my way

What remains is the spiritual penetration of the creed: Ndiyakholwa ku Thixo Omnye