Rating: Not rated
Tags: History, Lang:en
Summary
The inspiring true story of a young boy’s chaotic life
in a remote, wild, corner of East Africa. James’s childhood is spent on an isolated gold-mine
near Lake Victoria, Tanganyika, with just his sister and
mother; his father tragically dying through injuries sustained
from World War II. His upbringing is mainly left to a tribal
ayah called Amina and an elderly Swahili man, and he learns to
speak Swahili before English. In this unusual setting he soon discovers some stark facts
about life through tragedy and danger, but it is the local
watu, imbued with kindness and irrepressible humour, that save
him from despair, and with whom he learns to fish with
home-made lines, eat insects and famously abuse the European
hierarchy in real Swahili! Known as ‘Jimu’ to his friends, he marks out his
own country with a Sukuma boy named Lutoli, falls deeply in
love with the beautiful, but older, German girl Gretchen and
throws himself out of the back of a bus to avoid being sent
away to school.
James is fascinated with the history of Tanganyika back to
the time when it was a German Colony until 1918. The
unparalleled courage of the German leader Paul von Lettow
Vorbeck against the British is a beacon to the young boy of
what can be accomplished against adversity Above all James discovers the world, and life, a little by
education, a lot by accident, but overwhelmingly by fate and
happenstance, in circumstances few people in the developed
world have experienced. ** James Penhaligon is a multi-lingual consultant psychiatrist
in the United Kingdom. Born to Cornish parents, and raised deep
in the bush in Tanganyika, later to emerge as Tanzania, he
remains a fluent Swahili speaker, and has never been able to
escape his early influences, or the gaze it gave him on life
and the world. Despite having left Africa, and carving himself
a successful career in medicine, and later psychiatry, James
has always had a fascinating East African story waiting to be
told, and, finally, he has written it. The result is "Speak
Swhahil, Dammit !"
Once at school, in Arusha, James tends to mix with other
non-conformers and presents a dilemma to teachers – he is
a white boy with a ‘black spirit’. His gang gets up
to nefarious enterprises, bringing them into a state of
permanent conflict with the system.About the Author