Last night, rain thrashed
the palms and eucalyptus trees. A lightning bolt quenched half
the lights on Makerere campus. Today, I'm woken up by the squawking
of houdada ibis executing their daily flypast. Faint prayers drift
from the mosque; beyond that, traffic stirs in Wandegeya. Yesterday
was the presidential election. Today is the day of reckoning.
Outside, grass is lush with overnight rain, sun streaks an apricot
sky, thin cloud evaporates. White cattle egret feed on the lawns.
Maribou storks with bald heads wander like doddery professors
working out their tenure.
The domestic staff discuss the election in low, earnest voices.
Everyone who has voted has a purple thumb to prove it. President
Museveni is campaigning for a third term of office on a ‘No Change’
mandate. His opponent, Col. Dr. Kizzi Besigye has taken Kampala.
CNN News features the UK: burning cows, slaughtered sheep, roadblocks,
beds of disinfected straw across farm tracks. The first lambs
were just stumbling in the fields when I left North Yorkshire,
two weeks ago.
Jjuuko is late because his taxi firm is reluctant to let him
risk a car today. He arrives, unruffled, and we drive to Mengo
Senior High, where I’m to run a workshop. The road is badly potholed,
taking us through ramshackle townships where women carry yellow
jerry cans of water on their heads or queue at stand pipes. We’re
stopped by a group of soldiers in scarlet berets, carrying automatic
rifles. They search the car, then wave us on.
We turn up a rutted, red dirt road. The car gyrates. Traffic
weaves as cars, taxis, mopeds, motorcycles and bicycles pass each
other on any side of the track. When we arrive at Mengo the campus
is deserted. The teacher we’re supposed to meet is still in his
home village, where he’s returned to vote. Most people are lying
low to see which way the wind will blow.
Back to the British Council office at Rwenzori Courts. I check
my emails and work on my report on the Ugandan literature infrastructure.
It’s almost non-existent: few publishers, few journals, and a
generation of writers silenced, dead, or exiled during the Amin
era. I go out to buy a sandwich and am followed by ragged street-boys
who beg a few shillings. Here in Nakasero, there are beggars and
street-traders everywhere, staking out their claim to a scrap
of pavement outside the banks and European hotels.
The sky has cleared and the sun is merciless. I’ve forgotten
my hat, lured by an overcast morning. Pavements glare, white walls
and windows dazzle. Jjuuko arrives and we drive back to Makerere.
The city is eerily quiet. Even Wandegeya market is almost deserted.
The parched afternoon turns into a mild and beautiful evening.
The light is serene, the sky stretched like a faded shirt over
the trees. I sit on the terrace reading Henry Kyemba's State
Of Blood, an account of the brutality and waste of the Amin
years. Uganda’s gaps, blanks and silences, are beginning to make
a kind of fractured sense.
The sky fills with scavenging kites, circling on thermals that
build huge thunderheads at the horizon. A praying mantis lands
on the table, its slender body vivid green, its triangular head
inquisitive as a child's, its eyes prominent as rubies. Like Uganda,
it seems naive, beguiling and sinister all at the same time. Beyond
Makerere, the election results roll in, piling up Museveni's majority.
I’ve arranged to meet Joseph Mugasa, a young Ugandan poet who
teaches English at Makerere College School. He arrives with his
new book, The Pearl, self-published and hot from the press.
He is full of energy, idealism and hope. He recites a few of the
shorter pieces, including his love-poem ‘Anguish’, which is much
in demand whenever he performs. Curiously, it’s more influenced
by John Donne than any contemporary poet writing in English. When
he reads, I notice purple ink, fresh on his thumb.
Joseph leaves, but we arrange to meet again at Femrite (women’s
writing cooperative) next Monday. I wander down into Wandegeya
to eat at the Afro-Chinese café. The city is picking up
speed, getting back to its tumult of traffic, pedestrians, and
diesel fumes. A man in a grey suit passes me, a briefcase in one
hand, a live chicken dangling from the other.
Later, a full moon glides over the mosque, the dark clots of
Eucalyptus trees. It’s slightly irregular, as if a rough tongue
has lapped at the surface. Clouds slide over each other, skeins
of pale silk. A far-off chanting has begun as results are confirmed,
carrying from all points of the city. Makerere is quiet, but the
cries surge and fade and surge again from the glittering hills
beyond. A lone demagogue, drunk on beer and election fever, delivers
his harangue to a deserted campus as he meanders home. The moon
looks down impassively. No change.
Graham is now working on a project which will offer on-line
support for writers in Uganda.
published in Literature Matters, Issue
30
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