GAY IN THE COUNTRY
There is a lot to be said for small-town South Africa. At least, there is a lot to be said for coastal small-town South Africa: I’ve always believed no one would miss the Free State if it were flooded to make way for a picturesque little inland sea or covered – this is my humanitarian side coming through – from horizon to horizon in solar panels to ease the world’s energy crisis.
Similarly, I have enough friends from Benoni who claim to be from Joburg to know that Gauteng small towns won’t be winning any awards any time soon either.
But small coastal towns are fantastic. From the sleepy hamlets of the Transkei and the tropical greenery of KZN to the reassuringly ’boutique-y’ villages of the Western Cape and the unassuming dorps of the Eastern, our coastline is magical. In some parts magnificent and dramatic, in others gentle and forgiving, but everywhere beautiful.
My mother lives in just such a village. It is the kind of place that I would call salt-of-the-earth if I were feeling diplomatic. I have been served a cosmo in a beer mug there, and the only pizzeria in town eschews this newfangled mozzarella nonsense and uses cheddar on its pizzas. But it restores my soul to go home. After all, the Buddha was a rural fella.
So it was only natural that a couple of weeks into a new relationship I invited my boyfriend along on one of my weekend trips home. I phoned my mother to tell her and she suddenly sounded panicked. In a quintessentially South African moment that made me laugh out loud she blurted out “but what will the maid think?”
This is the same mother who told me on the night of my matric dance how proud she was of me for taking a guy, and how handsome we both looked. She dropped me off at Pride parades when I was still too young to drive and nursed me through all those ugly teenage breakups . But this was all while we still lived in Joburg; it turns out that being hip and liberal is partly situational. “Get a grip, mom” I said, and turned into Steve’s* driveway to pick him up.
The weekend got off to an unremarkable start. I ate too much, drank too much and could barely motivate myself to wander onto the beach (There is a strong disincentive to move when you find yourself on a veranda armed with gin and tonic and confronting uninterrupted views of sea, sand dunes and nature reserve). We had dinner. We went to bed. I refused to have sex because of the proximity of my bedroom to my mother’s, and we woke up to the tranquil sounds of waves crashing and birds singing.
It was so cheesily idyllic it seemed almost Scandinavian. In the feature film about my life there would definitely be an ABBA track to this scene. And perhaps the director would even throw in some animated butterflies.
Why is it that gay people are not entitled to rural life?
I went downstairs to make some coffee and ten minutes later a friend who lives a couple of houses down from my mother’s place arrived. “Do you know”, she said, accepting a cup of coffee, “that you are the Spawn of Satan?”
It is testament to my naive and very un-Satanic nature that my initial reaction wasn’t anger so much as slow-blinking incomprehension.
“Nombulelo said to me this morning that you are the Spawn of Satan. Because there’s a boy in your bed,” she explained.
Now do bear in mind that Nombulelo is not even my mother’s domestic; she is my friend’s. Which means that there must have been clandestine cell phone conversations between the two housekeepers immediately after the discovery of the sleepy Steven. I erupted into a fit of curses and indignation.
My neighbour looked a little alarmed by my rant and became downright terrified when my mother heard the news and joined in (If hell hath no fury like a woman scorned, try scorning her laatlammetjie son). I was on an emotional rollercoaster that fell from rage into the precipice of deep sadness that people who knew and loved me could be so brainwashed by institutional religion, and settled finally on fear.
By that evening I was tormenting myself with mental images of angry locals with pitchforks torching our house to the ground while chanting uyabaleka uSatane!** Needless to say, Steven didn’t get any that night either, and I barely slept. Every snapping stick outside sent me bolt upright and wide-eyed in bed.
I was surprised by how much Nombulelo’s comment had upset me. I don’t suppose anyone likes to be referred to as an evil demon, but it was hardly my first brush with Christian fundamentalism. My previous partner’s father has the delightful belief that gay people need to be exorcised. But it especially upset me because I had convinced myself that I was part of that little seaside community.
I had worked in the village for six months the previous year. People greet me by name in the shops and everyone knows my mom. I used to give Nombulelo a lift home after work every day. It was all very neighbourly. But it transpires that inclusion was conditional on my apparent heterosexuality.
Why is it that gay people are not entitled to rural life? I love living in the city, but I’d also like the option of a quiet seaside existence one day. Why does being liberal depend on a high population density? And does acceptance of gay people only come with the full spectrum of acceptance of drugs, prostitution, urban decay and crime? What kind of pick-and-mix is that?
I see now why small towns often have reactionary, camp, self-ghettoising gay communities. It is defensiveness. Our sexual orientation, which to me is no more interesting as a characteristic than having blue eyes or being Chinese, becomes a defining characteristic in small towns. It is met with denial and abhorrence by some and with curious fascination by the well-meaning.
Wouldn’t it be great if the barman casually enquired after my boyfriend while handing me my cosmo in a beer mug? But until that happens, perhaps I should listen to my mom and realise that in small towns, feeling welcome means deferring to what the maid thinks.
* Not his real name
** IsiXhosa for “run away Satan”
Thanks. Thanks Al, I really enjoyed your article. And how true it is. Sad. We saw the “figures” yesterday, that 80% of South Africans are saying being gay is wrong and unnatural. Just goes to show how much work there still is to do, to educate people. We must come out of our “self-ghettoising” hiding places, and take the punches, and SHOW people that we are not as different as they thought. Hopefully one day, we will get to a society where people will love each other as people.
LOL. Sounds like we need to raise a bit of hell – us demon spawns of Satan – do disclose this seaside resort…LOL
Don’t flood the “States” !. Wazzup Al ?
Man you see the thing about the Free State is you have to get out of there to appreciate it for what it is. Having grown up in a small FS town and now living in Jozi – I’ve realised that in many ways the Free State can be a magical, beautiful, bizarre and twisted place. I love it ! I love the flatness and the space and the sky and the people and the wors !
My opinion. Hi Al
Thanks for the great article. I must however disagree with a few points. My partner of 12 years and I, moved to a small town in the Free State, called Smithfield, 2.5 years ago. So, personally I wouldn’t like the Free State to be flooded! Life here is wonderful, and the people are amazing. Before our move, friends and family cautioned that because we’re gay (and moving to the Free State) that there would be issues around that. I am happy to tell you that there have been none. So I think this is one very different small town. There is quite a big gay community here, and everyone seems to get on with their own lives, and it seems (in general) that sexual orientation is not on most peoples minds. If you’re in the area, I think it would be worth it to come experience it for yourself.
Best Regards
Brendan
Lovely article, very bittersweet … I think it’s hilarious how our highly appreciated domestic workers have such an effect on us!
warning. Al, you shouldnt have been calling your mom while drinving to Stevens place. First this is forbidden and it s dangerous … hope at least you didnt forget to put the warnings when turning.
People like you must really be protected by angells to behave such and keep safe.
Well tell me when you open your farm so that we come and buy our eggs and milk … Cheers
By the way I find country guys the sexiest, if any Free state or Karoo guy wants to contact me.
i wanna b a city boy. its not leka to be gay in the country. it’s a living hell.
Country…. That is the curse of the country side!!! But u so hot u don’t really need to worry now do you!! A big boy like you should be able to protect yourself and your hubby…
coment on article. well welcome to the club of poofters ,shirtlifters,holnaaiers and all the other derogitary names i was beatern (hospitalized) and the police did nothing-so much for equality we still fight for our freedom in this beautifull land wheere we are””””all equal””-ha,ha, but they are all jealous of our style and comitment to life stick in there be strong AND PROUD -from an oldish poofter who’s been there and got the dildo- the more they hate us the more they got to hide.
Just a thought. We must just remember that, although yes it’s bad and there are people that are very homophobic, we have one of the most liberal constitutions with regards to gay rights in the world. Look at America, their gay rights are absolutely appauling!
I agree that it’s not acceptable, but it will just take time. We’ve already come a long way, we’ve just got to keep going and make everyone understand that this is who we are, and nothing they say or do will ever change it!
And going to small villages like you did Al, with your boyfriend, exposes the people living there and makes them realise that it’s real, and there’s nothing that they can do about it!
Domestic(s) Bliss in Rural SA…. Being very close to the people who work for me in Johannesburg, I was strangely rather petrified to come out to any of them. It became rather ridiculous; I had been out to everyone in the world since forever, yet we all ignored the mornings I had a man in my bed. Our domestic worker and I would have our usual banter and then she’d ask him if he was married. I guess we were both constantly skirting the rather blatant issue. But after going through a break-up with a boyfriend who lived with me for about a year, my dear friend/DW seemed to go through a morning process just about as painful as mine!
Now after two years of living in sin with another partner, she, and her family, again are very attached. Yet we never let the G-word pass our lips, and from time to time she still asks when we’re both getting married (to girls) – albeit with a naughty twinkle in her eye.
This aside, my partner is from a small freestate town. I never thought I’d ever venture into the part of the world I’d always thought befitting the insertion of a country-wide enema if it had to come to that. But I’ve been surprised! While I was spat at and told “dis vokken vekeerd” for walking through Hatfield, Pretoria with my arm around a beautiful black girl, this little sout-piel English boy from Jo’burg has been embraced by an astounding number of Afrikaans farmers!
I’m paraded around town, I’m introduced to every friend and distant relative (who all greet me by name with glorious affection on return visits, besides my not remembering who on earth they are), I’m asked to babysit their kids (who ask about me constantly, and make me very conscious of my failure as a polyglot), drink beer with the ooms, that curious concoction of branewyn en coke with everyone else, sokkie at the weddings, give cooking tips to the tannies, discuss bakkies with the neefies. There’s a lot more love around than in a city. Perhaps I’m lucky and have struck gold, but it certainly has shattered my ideas of small towns. I love going to visit! I eat to much, I drink too much, but I leave looking forward to the next time!
Perhaps I have been dealt a lucky hand, but what I see, both “domestic and rural” makes me think none of it is half bad.
Domestic bliss. You have indeed struck gold, lol.
Hang on to it!
MISmatch!. ha ha, what I love is the totally unrelated image of megatwink crouching “in the country” meant to drag us in. interesting read in any case. xx
small town boy. Well being from a farming area and working and living between Pretoria and Cullinan. I must just point out if you are open and just be your self, enjoy life as it comes them there is no problems. The think about the small town is that every one knows everyone thats why is seem so bad, they also speak there minds….. in places like JHB and PTA very few know each other so who talks and makes that the twons talk you can say a complex (flats) are much more like a small town with the chatting about the Gay boys next door. I love it here and have the best of both worlds. My folks are from PA in the EC and we go there and there are the heads that turn but so we get the same thing in JHB.
Long Run. Go for a good LONG run on the beach / road, work up a good sweat, get the heart racing, get the heart pumping – head for 170 beats per minute and soon the frustraton will drop.
ha. excellent article! the maid comment was hilarious!