teendoc

teendoc
Location
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
Birthday
May 28
Bio
Adolescent medicine physician, egalitarian feminist, free thinker, veteran of the infertility wars & geriatric mom to the best (& most photogenic) kidlet ever. I plan to be a photographer, writer and knitting store owner when I grow up, whenever that might be. I've got a little something to say about everything. Mine are the musings of an eclectic mind. Enjoy your visit.

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JANUARY 27, 2011 12:36AM

The Impact of A Mug: A Souvenir Story

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I really thought that I was just bringing back some souvenir mugs. I had no idea that for my husband, one of the mugs would cause his skin to crawl as much as if he had awoken after having fallen asleep on an anthill. Let me explain.

The Souvenir

Last August, during my trip to Cape Town, I had a wonderful opportunity to visit the Apartheid Museum there. I've already let you know how much South Africa means to me on an almost genetic level. But having the chance to visit the Apartheid Museum was a unique pleasure that I had not experienced on my previous trips to this rich land.

As usual, after going through an experience, such as this visit, that was strong enough to cause a tectonic shift in my consciousness, I sought to find ways to bring the memories home for me to relive as much as I could. Typically, when we think of souvenirs, what generally comes to mind are the silly trinkets that fill every gift shop in every tourist trap around the world: refrigerator magnets, t-shirts, pencil holders and ashtrays emblazoned with names of locales from Buffalo to Bora Bora.  But when you recognize that the root of the word souvenir is the verb to remember in French you can see how sometimes a souvenir can be more than a bobble-headed hula girl for your dashboard. There are times for all of us when all we want is to look/hold/breathe in our souvenir so as to take us back to an experience that rocked our world. It was *this* type of souvenir that I wanted to find at the Museum.

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I drank in as much as the museum had to offer about South Africa's full history and the birth and death of apartheid. It was heavy and awesome, not in the hipster version of the word, but the true definition of inspiring awe. I knew that I had to have something to take home, some souvenir, that would immediately allow me to relive this experience whenever I needed to.

The gift shop did not have any gifts that fell under the category of "to relive this profound experience buy this." Instead there were posters, t-shirts, bookmarks, and bracelets; just the usual items with no major surprises. Of course, there were no bobble-headed hula girls for sale.

I opted to purchase a bracelet with the words, "respect, equality, freedom" encircling it, in addition to the logo of the Apartheid Museum. I also found a magnetic paper clip topped with a quote from Papa Mandela:

“To be free is not merely to cast off one’s chains but to live in a way that respects and enhances the freedom of others”

Boy did I love that! Yet what I found myself drawn to the most, and surprisingly so, were the mugs that had upon them some of the more hateful symbols of that past era. One mug in white read "Whites Only" in stark black text. The other in black with white text read, "Nonwhites Only." These were the apartheid versions of the Jim Crow signs from down South. They also mirrored the startling entry points to the museum itself.

You see, when you purchase your ticket to the museum, on the back of your entry ticket is your ethnic/racial designation for entrance. One entrance reads “Whites Only” and the other “Nonwhites Only.” You are asked to enter the entrance that corresponds to your racial designation on your ticket.

Both entrances take you through a brief glimpse into the lives of those classified as white or nonwhite, depending on your door. There are old ID cards with designations listed as white, colored, or black.  Also included are personal stories about how the classification was done and what effect it had on people’s lives. What was both surprising and not so surprising was that the untrained people doing the classification were not geneticists or ethnologists, but mid-level bureaucrats imbued with the power to determine one’s life caste simply by their visual assessment. Even those who were documented as being born to colored parents could be reclassified at the whim of these officials to black or Bantu, the lowest rung on the social ladder.

In my group of visitors to the museum, we were about evenly split between white and nonwhite. I could tell that many of my liberal white colleagues were a little uncomfortable about this in your face racial exercise lacking social nicety or the couching of the racial animus that we are more used to in present-day US society. Being asked to go through these entrances laid bare the dark and ugly that is a society divided by race.

To be clear, these entrances were a mere fraction of all that was contained in the museum. It was perhaps a 25 foot walk before both passages became one common atrium. Yet there was something quite deep and disturbing about having to enter in this manner. You never shook the sense of having been tapped on the shoulder by the ghosts of the most racist recent past. But this entrance also contrasted beautifully with the museum exit and walk through the Mandela "stick" garden. The journey made you infinitely aware of how far this country had come and how much they had triumphed.

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In the gift shop I found myself reaching for those mugs as my souvenir, destined to create the combined sensations of repugnance and triumph that were the alpha and omega of my museum experience. This was the souvenir that I needed to take home. That was settled.

Back Home

The trip home left me jet-lagged and grungy. After scoring some make-up sleep, I set about unpacking the gifts and souvenirs from my long trip. I had found a gorgeous original print from a local artist that begged to be framed and hung in our family room. Of course there were also the requisite gifts for the kidlet and AdoringHusband. For the kidlet I had hoped to find a vuvuzela, the noisy symbol of the recently concluded World Cup. Unfortunately the Cape Town airport did not have one vuvuzela to its name. They had been all over Johannesburg, but I thought, why carry that thing through the airport bound to another city in South Africa? It would be simpler to buy it right before I returned to the States. Well that didn’t work out so well…or maybe it did, considering how noisy those things are. Instead the kidlet got a drum (slightly more quiet) and some clothes (very quiet).  AdoringHusband got a scarf with the colors of the South African flag and a few other goodies as well.

I then unpacked my souvenirs from the Apartheid Museum. I showed the bracelet to AdoringHusband, indicating that we would share its ownership. As is my luck, he then went to put it on, found it was a little too tight, and wasted no time in breaking it in his quest to have it fit. That must've been the shortest souvenir life on the history of the planet. Sigh… I then pulled out the magnetic clip with the Mandela quote and finally the mugs. As I unwrapped them, my white husband looked at me a bit queasily.

"Aren’t these cool?" I asked, entranced by them.

"They are…interesting," he responded nonplussed. He is a sweetie in that he always tries not to rain on my parade. His motto is that if I like them, he likes them too. But this time, he was clearly having some trouble.

On the first Sunday morning when I was conscious enough to wake and make the classic banana pancakes that the kidlet loves, I decided to use those two mugs for our coffee. Of course, considering our black/white/swirl family, I naturally handed the Whites Only mug to AdoringHusband. He reached out to take it from me as if there were a snake coiled within about to strike.

“What?” I asked, puzzled.

"I don't like this mug,” he answered.

"What's the matter with it?" I asked, totally confused.

"Do you see what it says? I don't like it. I don't like drinking from something that says this."

"But honey," I began attempting to soothe, "it's just a mug. A souvenir."

“I just don’t like it,” he grumped.

He managed to finish his coffee and I forgot about the whole incident. And honestly I wasn't trying to be insensitive. I just didn't understand what was so problematic about the mug.

Sometime later, I decided again do the coffee thing in our Apartheid Museum mugs. Having blanked on his previous reaction, I ended up repeating the sins of the previous week. This time, his stance was much more vehement.

"I don't like this mug and I'm not going use it. It makes me sick to think about holding it," he protested. Suddenly my memory kicked in.

"How about if I take the Whites Only mug and you take the Nonwhites Only mug?" I offered as a compromise.

"That works," he said with finality. "But I will not drink out of that Whites Only mug."

I was really, really confused. I didn’t know what he found so problematic about that mug. In my head it was clearly a symbol of an ugly past that had been defeated, overcome by the will of those in the country and in the world. But for my dear AdoringHusband, something more seem to be afoot. And since I can never leave well enough alone, I had to work to figure out what the issue was.

“Why does this mug irk you so much?” I began.

“Because of what it says! Don’t you see it? I don’t want anyone thinking I subscribe to that horrible ideology for even a moment.” His cheeks flushed with his pique.

“But honey,” again I tried to mollify, “this is just a mug in our house. Hello, I’m black and you’re white, remember? Do you see the irony of our drinking from mugs symbolizing the ugliness of apartheid while living together as a married couple with our swirl kidlet? It shows why this state sanctioned racism failed! The people chose equality over the ugly. That is the triumph here.”

“I see your point,” he calmed slightly, “but when I drink from the Whites Only mug, it feels like I’ve bought in lock, stock and barrel into the ugliness.”

“So what does it mean for me to drink from the Nonwhites Only mug?” I posed. “Does this mean that I too have bought into the racist ideology?”

“No, no. Don’t be silly,” he sputtered. “For you to drink from either mug shows the triumph of the blacks and coloreds.”

“Ok, now you’ve confused me. I could see triumph by my drinking from the Whites Only mug, but not the Nonwhites Only one.”

“Yes but the whites were the perpetrators and blacks and colored in South Africa were the…”

“Victims?” I interjected, arching an eyebrow.

“No, not victims,” he corrected quickly, knowing that I enjoy being thought of as a victim about as much as I enjoy being thought of as a helpless female. “They were the disenfranchised.”

I thanked the Goddess once again that I had married a man of intellect and nuance.

“Either mug you drink from represents triumph over those who sought to rob you based only on the color of your skin,” he finished.

“But Mase, don’t you see? These were souvenirs from the Apartheid Museum. This museum was built so that all South Africans, hell all people, can celebrate the triumph over state sanctioned racism! What kind of souvenirs would you find in the gift shop of the Holocaust Museum?”

“I dunno. But if you saw me walking down the street wearing a swastika on a t-shirt, you would form a negative opinion about me, wouldn’t you?”

“That’s not the same thing.” I countered. “This is a museum souvenir! Even if I were out with either of these mugs, the fact that they both say Apartheid Museum would give the person reading them pause in the way a shirt with a swastika or iron cross wouldn’t.”

“Wait a minute. Wait just a minute. ‘Apartheid Museum’ is actually written on the mugs?”

“Well of course! Look,” I said, waggling the Whites Only mug toward him.

He sat back suddenly as if all the wind had just been punched out of him. He then began shaking his head.

“What?” I asked, even more confused.

“I never saw it,” he replied softly.

“Never saw what?”

“The words ‘Apartheid Museum.’ I never even saw them,” he finished sadly. “I don’t think my eyes ever moved past ‘Whites Only.’ I saw those words and rejected everything else. Those two words are the antithesis of everything I’ve ever believed.”

I reached for his hand and sat holding it for a while saying nothing. Eventually I broke the silence.

“You see, my love, these souvenirs are indeed a symbol of triumph. Over apartheid, over Jim Crow, over anti-miscegenation laws, over the government sponsored belief that we are not born equal. There’s still much work to be done, of that there is no doubt. But now, today, let’s just drink our coffee and say amandla.”

And we did.

Author tags:

travel, race, south africa, souvenirs

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Comments

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What a thought provoking post! Thanks for detailing your experience in South Africa. I'm from Africa myself but never did visit South Africa. I plan on doing that someday.

And I may have to side with your husband a little on this one...seems like it would be a little awkward for him :-) Have you thought of having them displayed in your house instead? As your memento of S. Africa? Just a suggestion. I do love how the whole journey through those times has helped to empower you. Cheers to that! And Cheers to this post!
This belongs on the cover. No questions asked.
Terrific story on so many levels.
@Tea Scrolls: Thank you. And thanks for your suggestion. One of the things that my husband has always loved about me (though I've never seen it as worthy of being considered remarkable) is that I never shy away from issues that are uncomfortable. This is not to say that I will push my ideology over my husband's comfort level. Absolutely not. But in having the discussion we had, and in moving forward with understanding, he later chose to drink out of the mug himself with no urging or prompting from me.

I will respect his choices with regard to use or nonuse of the mugs, but for me they will remain souvenirs of this important experience for me every time I use one. Again thanks for your thoughts!

@Cartouche: Thank you, my friend.

@Jeanette: I thank you.
This piece took me on a trip with you . . . by the end, I found I had tears in my eyes. You and your husband are an excellent couple, and I thank you for letting us in on coffee conversation. I applaud the way in which you approach difficult subjects . . . always gives me something to think about.
WOW! I read the whole thing and was still surprised at the ending. I would have felt exactly like your husband. I would have missed the Apartheid Museum. Even reading it, I missed it. Great post! Thank you!!!
Wow. This is an incredible story, so thought-provoking... I'm not sitting comfortably with that mug either. Visceral reactions are powerful.
I know I was raised to have the guilt on my shoulders of every single white who came before me with racial hatred in their hearts-- that would be the hard part for me, the reminder of the guilt of 'my people' every time I drank tea....and I know history/life/people is/are not that simple or cut-and-dried, but still.
I love that you wrote this, and I so appreciate this peek into your world as well...how cool your husband listened, you listened..a nice couple sharing coffee. : )
We have to remember to look deeper than the labels. Beautifully written and shared.

I have been to many old plantations in the South and the Caribbean, they are haunting and often horribly beautiful. When I first came to the States and was on vacation in Florida, I recall "coloured only" signs at a water fountain. I couldn't understand it, was the water different? Now if we can only put some work and energy into the rights, education, reproductive health of the women of the world, particularly women of Africa who suffer such horrifying percentages of rape and murder.
Enjoyed this well thought out post. Congrats on EP TD!
I am always interested to hear about other's perceptions and experiences when visiting South Africa. Your piece was well written and for once I did not cringe in shame...I was born and lived there until I turned 40.
Funnily enough, Chinese citizens were classified as "non white', but if you were Japanese you were "white". Crazy, crazy.
Next time try and visit a town called Darling where Pieter Dirk Uys, a playwright, actor and activist has created a museum. Uys is a transvestite who always made fun of the Nationalist Government; one of his satires was called "Adapt or Dye" and he poked fun at everyone, Winnie Mandela included.
Thanks for sharing you experience!
Thank you everyone for your kind words. I am so glad that my sharing has caused some pause for consideration. There is no greater compliment than that.
I was born in Texas at a time when the Jim Crow laws were still in effect throughout the South. I remember the separate facilities for white folk and "colored" folk. Those days are long past, but I fear the hatreds have persisted, unspoken and not admitted in polite society, but lurking just beneath the surface.
This is an excellent post. I'll never forget going to the caves in the port of El Salvador, Brasil where slaves from Africa were kept when they first arrived. I literally could not be there after a couple of minutes. The misery was seeping out of the walls and I couldn't breathe.
Wow, thank you for this post. That apartheid has been consigned to the dustbin of history and that South Africa can embrace the leadership of Nelson Mandela makes me realize it's way too soon to give up on humankind. (May apartheid STAY forever in that dustbin, too.)

I have to admit like your husband, at first drinking from the Whites Only mug would have given me pause, but you and the museum are right in that it represents a triumph. It sounds to me like the Apartheid Museum does a great job of making people not only look at displays in the museum, but also feels how terrible apartheid was on a visceral level. It's not just interesting things to look at--it's an experience that really teaches. I had a similar experience while visiting the Holocaust Museum in D.C; the visitors come out understanding much more about what they've seen and about the history behind it than they did when they went in.

Wish I could rate this twice.
Makes me think...

In particular of the civil rights museum in Memphis. It's a 'must see' in this country and does not get enough mention.

R, of course. E
Congrats on the EP. I doubt I would have noticed the Museum part of the sign either. I hope many others will read this honest and compelling post.

BTW: Your husband is a keeper; but I don't have to tell you that! ;-)

Monte
Yes, thought provoking indeed. I wonder why a museum dedicated to equality of all people would promote and create a commodity out of such negative ideology. It just makes me wonder what the people who have been hung, beaten, or simply humiliated because of the color of their skin would think about a pair of coffee cups like this. I'm sorry, but it just makes no sense to me. Promote love, tolerance, peace, brotherhood...if you are going to choose treasures.
Thank you all for your positive thoughts and feedback.

Tokul Vintage: You'd have to be able to understand the South African response to racism which is very different than the US or European way. No worries that you don't get it. The people from South Africa visiting the museum get it...boy do they get it.

Thanks again!