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A Carol for Christmas, 6th annual MMHC |
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Dec 14 09, 13:44
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Group: Gold Member
Posts: 783
Joined: 24-July 07
From: South Africa
Member No.: 457
Real Name: Walter Schwim
Writer of: Poetry & Prose
Referred By:Mistral
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A Carol for Christmas
December is hot and humid in Johannesburg. Breeze, strangled by buildings chooses not enter the city, preferring to sulk on the outskirts where it stirs shredded plastic bags between the haphazard rows of stinking shacks.
Every day, thunderheads build in the south then move in, storm-troopers clearing the city slums, washing litter from pot-holed streets into the grey poisoned waters of Braamfontein Spruit.
The turbulent sky is alive with birds. Opportunistic gray gulls swerve and ride the air-currents, diving down to grab any scrap of discarded offal tossed from the countless white minivan taxis moving like fat termites among a mass of black ants that teem the colourful sidewalks.
Sacred Ibis fly overhead in pulsating vee formations, beating their way upwind from garbage dump to the stagnant East Rand swamps while swallows, swoop and skim the grey concrete buildings, snapping up big shiny green bottle flies. Feral pigeons occupy every available ledge and rooftop.
Who knows what inhabits the sewers below?
And on the streets, amongst the throng of jostling bodies - move the vultures;
Beggars and street kids - minds blown on petrol and glue, hawkers of cheap Chinese imitation brands, pirated music, petty thieves, porn-brokers and scamsters. Lurking in the shadows are the syndicated gangsters; pimps, prostitutes, drug peddlers and car hijackers; gun dealers, fences and identity sellers.
Everything has a price . . . And the city never sleeps, even today.
An Indian shopkeeper looks out from his armoured sanctum within the steel cage that protects his meagre stock. Will the next “customer” pay up in Kalashnikov currency or 9mm parabellum ?
The sandstone walls of St Mary’s cathedral on Wanderers Street were not always so shabby and its red Romanesque roof not as faded.
The bell no longer tolls and the huge mahogany door is only unlocked for services.
Inside, however, city noises vanish! Peace descends upon the visitor staring up at soaring white-plastered columns and graceful arches - five stories high! Glossy parquet floors, beautiful stained glass windows and simple wooden benches remain just as they were back in the heady days of the gold-rush.
Next door, the “Chapel of Remembrance” lists some Eight thousand citizens who died in the second world war and its said that ghosts of the apartheid struggle walk the isles hand in hand with the some of early pioneers - like CJ Rhodes and other servants of her Majesty the Queen.
The magnificent pipe-organ still lifts its voice on Sundays, soaring through the airy dome, raising the spirits of three hundred worshipers - where once two thousand were seated!
Today is the 25th; congregants pack the pews, spilling out into Wanderers street. Worshipers from all over Africa add their voices to the great organ and hymns rise in a crescendo of praise that roars aloft - past the pigeons and swallows, past the soaring crows – into the belly of the cumulating storm who’s thunder reverberates between the buildings.
The Son of God smiles and touches the city with a beam of sunlight, bathing the cathedral in a glow of forgiveness . For one brief moment, everyone stops what they were doing to listen. Perhaps, somewhere in this man-made hell on Earth, one sinner will be touched by the holy spirit and be cleansed at last. © WW Schwim 14 December 2009
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