Like Family. Ena Jansen

Like Family - Ena Jansen


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       LIKE FAMILY

       LIKE FAMILY

       DOMESTIC WORKERS IN SOUTH AFRICAN HISTORY AND LITERATURE

       ENA JANSEN

      Published in South Africa by:

      Wits University Press

      1 Jan Smuts Avenue

      Johannesburg 2001

       www.witspress.co.za

      Copyright © Ena Jansen 2019

      Published edition © Wits University Press 2019

      Images © Copyright holders

      First published 2019

      http://dx.doi.org.10.18772/12019043511

      978-1-77614-351-1 (Paperback)

      978-1-77614-352-8 (Web PDF)

      978-1-77614-353-5 (EPUB)

      978-1-77614-354-2 (Mobi)

      All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the written permission of the publisher, except in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright Act, Act 98 of 1978.

      All images remain the property of the copyright holders. The publishers gratefully acknowledge the publishers, institutions and individuals referenced in captions for the use of images. Every effort has been made to locate the original copyright holders of the images reproduced here; please contact Wits University Press in case of any omissions or errors.

      Like Family received the support of research funds held by the author at the University of Johannesburg and the University of Amsterdam. Like Family is an updated and reworked translation of Soos familie: Stedelike huiswerkers in Suid-Afrikaanse tekste, 2015.

      Project manager: Elaine Williams

      Copyeditor: Lynda Gilfillan

      Proofreader: Janine Loedolff

      Indexer: Sanet le Roux

      Cover design: Hybrid Creative

      Typesetter: Newgen

      Typeset in 10.5 point Plantin

      CONTENTS

       Acknowledgements

       Note for Readers

       Introduction: Searching the Archive

       1Representations of Domestic Workers

       2Enslaved Women at the Cape: The First Domestic Workers

       3Migrant Women and Domestic Work in the City

       4Legislation and Black Urban Women

       5Domestic Workers in Personal Accounts

       6Oral Testimonies, Interviews and a Novel

       7Domestic Workers and Children

       8Domestic Workers and Sexuality

       9Domestic Workers in Troubled Times

       10Domestic Workers in Post-apartheid Novels by White Authors

       11Domestic Workers in Post-apartheid Novels by Black Authors

       12Domestic Workers Bridge the Gap

       Notes

       Artists and Photographers

       Bibliography

       Index

      Acknowledgements

      The South African tradition of white people employing domestic workers has meant that, from infancy, black women have been part of my life. The two who took care of my twin sister and me I knew only as Thandi and Katrina. But there were other ‘like family’ women, too, in the world I grew up in. Trui and Meisie worked for my Ouma and Oupa Myburgh in Darling, and Eisa worked for the Broeksma family in the Strand. Ou-Minnie, who came from Genadendal, was Alba Bouwer’s housekeeper, and I met her in Cape Town during my stay with Alba, who had given me and my sister her Rivierplaas books about the Free State farm where she and our father had grown up.

      Without Gerty Appolus, I cannot even imagine my parents in Somerset West, as Gerty has been taking care of their household every Wednesday for close on twenty years. June Esau, Alice Motau, Loretta Leonard and Krissie Pietersen have been their daily carers ever since 2016. Minnie Engelbrecht, who helped raise the four children of my sister Christine and her husband Kosie Smit in Stellenbosch, is fondly remembered. Nomahobe Cecilia Magadlela worked for me on Thursdays in Johannesburg until she retired to the Eastern Cape. Without the help and friendship of Mantwa Regina Lobie, San Bernardo in Cape Town, where I partly live, would not be the same.

      Like Family has had many sources of inspiration. Among the most important was my time in Johannesburg, in Tolip Street, when Cecilia started working for me in 1989. I wrote a short story about her daughter Rachel and three other black children who lived in Tolip Street; it was included in a textbook called Lees is lekker! (Reading is fun; 1996). The previous year, the story had been translated into Dutch by Riet de Jong-Goossens and was included in Kort Afrikaans (1995). At the time, Riet regularly stayed with me in Johannesburg and embarked on the initiative of establishing an education fund for Rachel.

      The original Afrikaans version of this book, Soos familie (2015), as well as the Dutch translation, Bijna familie (2016), are dedicated to Nomahobe Cecilia Magadlela. Our lives first became entangled in 1989, and it was her personal life story that opened my eyes to the ingenuity that migrant women employ in making use of opportunities in Johannesburg, but also to the extreme difficulties of their lives.

      I decided to dedicate Like Family to Nomahobe Cecilia Magadlela and to the memory of Auntie Meisie Cleophas, who worked for my grandparents in Darling near Cape Town in the 1950s. Year after year, she looked after my twin sister and me during school holidays, and she also accompanied our family to the Strand. In one lovely photograph taken on 11 September 1955, my sister and I are running hand-in-hand with her along the beach. Meisie is wearing white shoes and socks. She could easily


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